Here’s A Chart You Won’t See On CNBC

“Record corporate cash”…”Record corporate cash”… “Record corporate cash”

That pretty much covers most of the conversation on prime time financial media and TV stations when discussing corporate balance sheets.

There is, however, one big problem with that mantra. As Zero Hedge first showed in January with “Corporations Have Record Cash: They Also Have Record-er Debt, As Net Leverage Soars 15% Above Its 2008 Peak” companies indeed have tons of cash. What isn’t discussed is where that cash came from. The answer: debt. Because while companies have record cash, they have recorder-er debt.

Today, we are happy that more are starting to notice this simple math problem. Here is Deutsche Bank’s Torsten Slok who is the latest to be struck by this “revelation”.

If you look at cash levels relative to debt levels you find that corporate cash holdings are at the lowest level in 15 years, see also the chart below. In other words, a very important reason why corporates have more cash is because they have taken on more debt via IG and HY issuance. Expect capex to accelerate going forward but keep in mind that debt levels for corporate America are at the highest level ever and there is a risk going forward that higher rates through debt-servicing costs and higher defaults could have a negative impact on the recovery and hence the terminal rate for both short and long rates.


Of course, as long as rates are low and keep declining, this record debt hoard is not a big issue.

Once rates start going up, however, nobody would possibly have been able to foresee the absolute massacre that will take place at corporations, levered with publicly tradable debt to never before seen levels.




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A. Barton Hinkle on Why Public Radio Is for Moochers

Spring is here, which can only mean
one thing: the public radio pledge drive. You’ve heard it before.
The fundraisers’ points all revolve around the theme of what a
wonderfully valuable service public radio provides: While other
media are cutting back on coverage, toeing a partisan line, or
selling out to the sleazy dollar of sensationalism, you need a
voice you can trust to bring you in-depth coverage of the stories
that matter. That sort of guff.

But the pledge drive also reveals an important fact about our
world, writes A. Barton Hinkle. And that fact is this: Public-radio
listeners are moochers. Brazen, shameless welfare kings and queens,
sponging off the generosity of others. Not all of them, mind you. A
small percentage contribute. But the vast majority are—how to put
this gently?—good-for-nothing, deadbeat, leeching, parasitic,
freeloading scroungers.

View this article.

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Bomb Blast Rocks Train Station Hours After China’s “Fists & Daggers… Strike-First” Warning To Terrorists

Police are the “fists and daggers” in the fight against terrorism, China’s President Xi Jinping said on a trip to the western Xinjiang region where authorities say members of a Muslim minority are waging a violent separatist campaign. As Reuters reports, this is the same region that sufferred the knife-wielding terrorist attack in the city of Kunming that killed 29 people and injured 140. However, his warning seems to have sparked further action – though not confirmed as a terrorist attack – as a blast occurred at a railway station in Urumqi, capital of northwest China’s Xinjiang region. Details about the blast and casualties are sketchy but local reports suggest up to 50 injured.

Xi Jinping sends a warning…

“The Kashgar region is the front line in anti-terrorism and maintaining social stability,” the official Xinhua news agency citied Xi as telling paramilitary police in the Silk Road city of Kashgar in western Xinjiang that has been at the center of much of the unrest.

 

“The situation is grim and complicated. The local level police stations are fists and daggers,” Xi said.

 

The report, carried widely in state media, showed photographs of Xi touring police facilities.

 

“You must have the most effective means to deal with violent terrorists,” Xi said at a police station where he was pictured inspecting a wall of various kinds of truncheons.

 

“Sweat more in peacetime to bleed less in wartime,” he said.

And this happens:

As Bloomberg reports, an explosion occurred at about 7 p.m. today near the south railway station in Urumqi, the capital of western China’s Xinjiang region, prompting police to evacuate people nearby, Xinhua News Agency reported.

Ambulances and police cars were sent to the scene, the official news agency said, citing unidentified government officials. Xinhua said it didn’t yet have details about the blast or possible casualties.

 

Train services have been suspended at the station, Xinhua said, citing a policeman on the scene. Police have cordoned off all entrances to the station square and armed officers have been deployed, it said.

 

President Xi Jinping vowed to deploy a “strike-first” strategy against terrorism in Xinjiang, Xinhua reported earlier today, citing Xi’s comments during a trip to the region from April 27 to today.

  • *POLICE EVACUATING AREA NEAR URUMQI TRAIN STATION: XINHUA
  • *TRAIN SERVICE SUSPENDED IN URUMQI AFTER EXPLOSION: XINHUA

 

 




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Chicago PMI Jumps To 6-Month High; 5 Sigma Beat

Following last month’s biggest miss in a year, Chicago PMI resurged to its highest level (and biggest beat) since October 2013. Optimism is rife in the report as the rise in new orders and production is now instantly extrapolated into escape velocity growth (as opposed to catch-up demand). Prices Paid dropped… which is odd if there’s so much awesome demand? Employment improved, but did not offset March’s decline. Of course, the 5 standard deviation beat of expectations is now considered the new normal…

 

 

“It’s a good start to the second quarter, and the increases in New Orders and Production lend support to growing views that US GDP growth is set to accelerate,”  Philip Uglow, Chief Economist at MNI Indicators said.

 

 

Index breakdown:

* Business activity has been positve for 12 months over the past year.
* Prices Paid fell compared to last month
* New Orders rose compared to last month
* Employment rose compared to last month
* Inventory rose compared to last month
* Supplier Deliveries fell compared to last month
* Production rose compared to last month
* Order Backlogs rose compared to last month
* Number of Components Rising: 5




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Does the Free Market Punish Racism? Live from LA’s Donald Sterling Protest

Last night, Reason TV talked with protesters outside the Staples
Center in Los Angeles just before the Clippers took on the Golden
State Warriors in an NBA playoff game.

What did fans think of Donald Sterling and his banishment by the
league’s commissioner? Do they think free markets punish racism
effectively? And what sorts of government policies do they think
are far greater threats to blacks than the odious 80-year-old
Sterling?

Click above to watch or click below for full text, downloadable
versions, and more resources.

View this article.

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In Repeat Of Its Q1 GDP Forecast Farce, Goldman Launches Its Q2 GDP Prediction At 3.0%

It was back on January 30 that the Goldman economist team made its first downward revision to what then was a 3.0% forecast to Q1 GDP. Exactly three months later we find that Goldman was off by only 97% when Q1 GDP printed at 0.1%. That’s ok – they are economists, and thus are expected to be massively, epically wrong. So here is Goldman with its first “tracking forecast” for Q2 GDP. It is…. drumroll…. 3.0%. How long until this number too is lowered to 0.1% (to be sure, all that rain in New York City has to detract at least 1%-1.5% from Q2 GDP right?).

From Goldman:

BOTOM LINE: GDP rose much less than expected in Q1, although the weak print appears to be largely due to one-off factors. The April ADP employment report was roughly in line with expectations. Employment costs rose less than expected in Q1, pointing to subdued wage pressures. We are starting our Q2 GDP tracking estimate at 3.0%.

GDP (advance) +0.1% for Q1 vs. GS 1.0%, median forecast 1.2%
Personal consumption +3.0% for Q1 vs. GS +2.3%, median forecast +2.0%
ADP employment +220k for April vs. GS +220k, median forecast +210k
Employment cost index +0.3% for Q1 vs. median forecast +0.5%.

MAIN POINTS:

1. GDP grew only 0.1% in Q1 (vs. consensus +1.2%). Personal consumption rose 3.0%, although the increase appears to have been largely due to special factors in services spending, including a weather boost to utilities and Affordable Care Act-related healthcare spending. Outside of personal consumption, business fixed investment disappointed our expectations, falling 2.1%. Equipment investment was particularly weak (-5.5%). Exports fell 7.6%, with net exports subtracting eight-tenths from growth. Residential investment declined 5.7%, reflecting weaker housing data. As we expected, inventory accumulation returned to a more normal level ($87bn), subtracting a further six-tenths from growth. Government spending was roughly flat on the quarter. Final sales to domestic purchasers—excluding the effect of inventories and net exports—rose 1.5%. Overall, we do not see Q1 growth as representative of the underlying trend, in light of weather distortions, the out-sized subtraction from net exports, and the drag from inventory normalization.

2. ADP employment increased 220k in April (vs. consensus 210k). The distribution of job gains by industry was similar to that seen in recent months, with the largest job gains in professional and business service jobs (+77k) and trade, transportation, and utilities (+34k). Construction employment added 19k, while manufacturing employment was a bit soft at +1k . March ADP employment growth was revised up by 18k to 209k. ADP has yet to prove itself as a reliable predictor of nonfarm payroll job growth, following methodological revisions in 2012.

3. The employment cost index—which measures total compensation costs—rose 0.3% at a quarterly rate in Q1 (vs. consensus +0.5%), a slowdown from +0.5% in Q4. On an unrounded basis, the gain was the slowest since 2009Q2. Wages and salaries also grew 0.3% in Q1 (vs. +0.5% in Q4) and an even slower 0.2% in the private sector. On an unrounded basis, wage and salary growth was the slowest in the 32-year history of the series. Benefit costs rose 0.4% in Q1 (vs. +0.6% in Q4). On a year-over-year basis, compensation costs for all civilian workers rose 1.8% and wages and salaries rose 1.7%. Overall, the report continues to suggest subdued inflationary pressure from the wage side.

4. We are starting our Q2 GDP tracking estimate at 3.0%.




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Meanwhile, Gazprom Sends Ukraine A New Invoice

As the day of the IMF’s release of funds to Ukraine draws near – solving all their problems with yet more debt, we are told to believe – Russia’s Gazprom has gently reminded the Ukrainian government that it owes them… $3.49 billion! and its due the 7th day of May!

 

  • *GAZPROM SAYS UKRAINE OWES $3.49B FOR GAS AS OF APRIL 30

As Bloomberg reports,

Gazprom preliminary estimate includes bill for natgas supplied in April, spokesman Sergei Kupriyanov says by e-mail.

 

The deadline for monthly payments 7th day of next mo., according to supply contract

 

Gazprom estimates Ukraine’s overdue debt through March at over $2.2b

 

Ukraine imported ~2.6bcm of natgas in April, Bloomberg calculations based on data from Russian Energy Ministry’s CDU-TEK unit; gas valued at ~$1.3b, based on current price charged by Gazprom

 

Gazprom raised price for Ukraine to $485/kcm as of April 1 vs $268.50/kcm

Just how is Washington going to cope when all it’s “aid” is flushed straight through to the nation whose economy it is trying to cause “costs” to via sanctions…?




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About That CapEx Spending Renaissance…

For all the talk that imminent, inevitable, “any second now” CapEx spending renaissance is getting, we can only assume we are looking at a wrong chart of the change in quarterly fixed income spending that plugs straight into the US GDP calculation. There is no other possible explanation.




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Before He Was Gonzo

Over at The Atlantic, Brian Kevin has written an
interesting
appreciation
of Hunter Thompson’s early career. By “early
career,” I don’t mean “those first four books he wrote before he
devolved into self-parody” (*); I mean the early dispatches he
produced before he had any books to his name at all. A few of these
are collected in Thompson’s 1979 collection
The Great Shark Hunt
, but aside from those, Kevin
says, “Little of Thompson’s pre-gonzo reporting exists outside of
microform.”

Someone should write an alt-history novel set in a world where he won.

Sounds like we’re missing out:

Like a lot of young reporters, Thompson stayed on the
move. Between 1960 and 1967, he filed dispatches from California,
the Appalachian South, the Caribbean, South America, and the
northern Rockies. His output consisted of everything from
straightforward reportage and service-y travel pieces to book
reviews and the occasional essay. And while he traipsed among
several different beats, Thompson’s early articles are, viewed
collectively, a kind of study in mid-20th-century frontiers: His
datelines are the battlefronts of the Cold War, the blurry social
boundaries of the counterculture, and the fading frontiers of the
American West.

Selections from the stories follow, along with Kevin’s comments.
Read the whole thing
here
.

(*
Hell’s Angels
,
Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas
,
Fear and Loathing: On the Campaign Trail ’72
, and

The Great Shark Hunt
. For my money the first one’s the
best.)

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