Iraq Receives First Fighter Jets From “Our Russian Friends”

Having offered “complete support” for Iraq’s embattled PM Maliki, the troubled nation receives its first shipment of “America deluded us” Russian fighter jets. As RT reports, the Iraqi Ministry of Defense on Sunday confirmed receiving five Su-25 fighter jets in accordance with the deal with Moscow. Iraqi Army Lieutenant General Anwar Hamad Amen Ahmed explained, “our Russian friends have also sent their own experts to assist us in preparing the aircraft. All the logistics have been planned for as well.” The proxy war continues…

 

 

As RT reports,

The first delivery of Russian Sukhoi fighter jets arrived in Iraq on Saturday, the country’s Defense Ministry said. Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is hoping the jets will make a key difference in the fight against ISIS.

 

The Iraqi Ministry of Defense on Sunday confirmed receiving five Su-25 fighter jets in accordance with the deal with Moscow. The jets were delivered by a Russian An-124 transport plane in a dismantled state, and are expected to be set up and become operational within 3-4 days.

 

“The Sukhoi Su-25 is an air-ground support and anti-terrorism mission aircraft. In these difficult times, we are in great need of such aircraft. With God’s help, we will be able to deploy them to support our ground forces on a mission against the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant militants within the next 3-4 days,” Iraqi Army Lieutenant General Anwar Hamad Amen Ahmed told RT’s Ruptly news agency at an airport receiving the jets.

According to Ahmed, Iraq will wage a “massive attack” on insurgents with the help of the jets.

“We have experienced pilots and other professionals. Our Russian friends have also sent their own experts to assist us in preparing the aircraft. All the logistics have been planned for as well,” the lieutenant general said.

 

 

At the same time, Maliki criticized the US for taking too long to deliver on its own contract after Iraq purchased F-16 jets from America.

Exceptional…




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A. Barton Hinkle on the Latest Lame Defense of the Washington Redskins

According to several members of the Virginia
General Assembly, the Washington Redskins is a private business
whose internal affairs—including the choice of whether to keep or
drop its controversial team name—should not be micromanaged by
federal officials. Yet as A. Barton Hinkle observes, the Redskins
do not exactly resemble a free-market operation. The team raked in
$6 million two years ago from Virginia taxpayers, for example, and
also benefits from the many other public advantages conferred by
government on the NFL.

View this article.

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Pending Home Sales Jump In May; Drop YoY For 8th Month In A Row

Pending home sales surged by 6.1% MoM in May; this is the largest jump since April 2010 (when first-time buyers scrambled to sign contracts before tax credits expired. However, exuberant spike aside, this is the 8th month in a row of a year-over-year drop in home sales. NAR is ever-optimistic suggesting “sales should exceed an annual pace of five million homes,” amid low rates, inventory and job creation (goldilocks?). The sales, unsurprisingly, are all high-end: “The flourishing stock market the last few years has propelled sales in the higher price brackets,” as lower-cost home sales plunge.

 

 

Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, expects improving home sales in the second half of the year. “Sales should exceed an annual pace of five million homes in some of the upcoming months behind favorable mortgage rates, more inventory and improved job creation,” he said. “However, second-half sales growth won’t be enough to compensate for the sluggish first quarter and will likely fall below last year’s total.”

May’s 6.1 percent increase was the largest month-over-month gain since April 2010 (9.6 percent), when first-time home buyers rushed to sign purchase contracts before a popular tax credit program ended.

It’s all high-end sales…

The flourishing stock market the last few years has propelled sales in the higher price brackets, while sales for homes under $250,000 are 10 percent behind last year’s pace. Meanwhile, apartment rents are expected to rise 8 percent cumulatively over the next two years because of tight availability,” said Yun. “Solid income growth and a slight easing in underwriting standards are needed to encourage first-time buyer participation, especially as renting becomes less affordable.”

What happens if stocks don’t keep rising?




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Q2 Rebound Fail: Chicago PMI Drops, Misses By Most Since March

Following last month’s “see, the Q2 rebound is a real thing”  exuberance, Chicago PMI re-tumbled in June to 62.5, its biggest miss in 3 months. This is the biggest headline drop since March as inventories rose, order backlogs fell, and new orders fell. On the bright side (despite the fall in new orders, employment rose). It seems the hopes and dreams of Q2 are fading.

 


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Draghi Disaster: European Household Loans Plunge By Most On Record

As anyone who has read our series on “Mario Draghi’s Monetary Nightmare” knows well, the biggest problem Europe faces is not inflation (or rather deflation according to its Keynesian voodoo priests)but loan creation: nearly 6 years after the Lehman collapse, the monetary transmission mechanism i.e., loan-funded growth in Europe continues to be abysmal, mostly due to lack of credit demand, which in turn means that any attempt by Draghi to unclog Europe’s monetary pipeline via NIRP, QE, or what have you, is set to fail. It also explains why the latest TLTRO expansion by the ECB (if it ever actually takes place of course: recall Europe’s OMT program still does not officially exist) has and will achieve nothing for the real economy but certainly has boosted carry trades into overdrive leading to record lows for all peripheral bond yields.

Alas, today’s ECB update on Monetary Developments in the Euro Area was as grim as always, with the all important series of Loans to the private sector sliding once again by 2.0% Y/Y, worse even than April’s -1.8% contraction, driven by a €43 billion collapse in loans to households. This happened even as the now largely meaningless M3 rose by 1.0%, an increase to April’s 0.7% Y/Y change.

In other words, Europe is in bad a shape as pretty much ever, and loan creation is just fractions above its all time low print of -2.3% from late 2013.

 

But that’s just part of the story, the part that we have long said will not change until there is dramatic debt destruction in Europe, and until the trillion or so in bad loans parked at Europe’s banks are somehow alleviated.

Where things get really messy is when one looks at the actual components of the contraction. As Goldman explains, “Euro area bank lending to non-financial corporations (NFCs) fell by €7.6bn in May, after a €6.3bn contraction in April. Lending rose in France and declined in Spain and Italy, while it was roughly unchanged in Germany. There was a significant decline in lending to households for house purchase related to sales and securitisation. Broad money growth rose from +0.7%yoy to +1.0%yoy, stronger than expected (Cons; +0.8%yoy).”

Lending to non-financial corporations, on a seasonally adjusted basis, declined by €7.6bn in May, after a €6.3bn fall in April. The decline was smaller (at €4.5bn) when adjusted for securitisations and sales and broadly similar to the April figure. While this is still clearly disappointing, the rate of decline in bank lending to NFCs has eased somewhat over the past year.

So far so good. But here is the punchline, and proof that anything the ECB can and will try to do, will be a complete disaster: Loans to households fell by €42.8bn (its largest decline on record), having risen by €5.1bn in April. This was mainly related to lending for house purchases (which do not count towards banks’ allotment in the TLTRO) and reflects sales and securitisation (when adjusted for this, lending to households rose €3bn, similar to the April figure).

The decline (on the unadjusted figures) was located in France, the country which so far has avoided any of the market wrath associated with its disastrous economic policies.

It wasn’t just France: by country, the largest decline in lending to NFCs occurred in Italy and Spain, where bank lending dynamics remain weak, with a further fall of €5.1bn and €3.0bn respectively (on our own seasonal adjustment). Lending volumes were roughly unchanged in Germany, while there was a €3.7bn rise in lending in France. The stock of loans outstanding has contracted by over 30% in Spain and by over 8% in Italy since July 2011.

In short, not only is Draghi’s nightmare about to spillover into the real world – because a complete collapse in household loan formation in Europe’s second “best” economy clearly spells out some nasty four letter words – but the ECB disaster is just waiting to unfold. It also means that as the ECB scrambles to figure out next steps, it will stop at nothing to prove that the BIS concerns about central banker idiocy were full deserved, and we expect Frankfurt to launch QE in the coming months even though European private sector clearly has no excess collateral which the ECB can monetize, considering the vast majority of debt parked at various European banks is already collateralized at the ECB as is.

Of course, it is only when one is cornered and has no way are the most idiotic decisions possible made. Which is why we can’t wait for the ECB’s reaction function to this latest abysmal data print, popcorn in hand.




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Enter to Win the 2014 Bastiat Prize!

ReasonIn the enduring spirit of Frédéric Bastiat’s
brilliant work, the Bastiat Prize for Journalism is given to
writers who educate readers by employing Bastiat’s simple, eloquent
and witty explanations of complex economic ideas, combined with a
clear understanding of markets and their underlying institutions.
Open to all published writers. Prizes include $10,000 to the
winner, $5,000 for 2nd Place, and $1,000 for
3rd. Enter at http://ift.tt/1rqVuXO by
July 31, 2014. 

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Argentina Must Pay $539 Million Today – Default Imminent

Today is the day that Paul Singer and his Elliot Capital Management team have been waiting for. Thanks to SCOTUS’ decision, as Bloomberg reports, Argentina is poised to miss a bond payment today, putting the country on the brink of its second default in 13 years, after a U.S. court blocked the cash from being distributed until the government settles with creditors from the previous debt debacle. The decade-long battle between Argentina and holdout creditors from the country’s $95 billion default in 2001 is coming to a head as the judge’s decision “closes Argentina’s options to finally force it to negotiate,” and “should now stop using these delay tactics and get serious.” Argentina sees it a different way, the ruling “is merely a sophisticated way of of trying to bring us down to our knees before global usurpers,” according to the economy minister Axel Kicillof.

 

Amid all this, Argentina’ MERVAL remains near all-time record highs… (as equity hopes of devaluation trump bond fears of default)

 

As Bloomberg notes, if non-payment were to occur today, default would not be officially triggered yet (forcing Argentina’s hand to negotiate)…

The nation has a 30-day grace period after missing the $539 million debt payment to seek an accord with a group of defaulted bondholders led by billionaire Paul Singer’s NML Capital Ltd. and prevent a default on its $28.7 billion of performing global dollar bonds. Both Argentina and NML have said that they’re open to talks.

 

A decade-long battle between Argentina and holdout creditors from the country’s $95 billion default in 2001 is coming to a head.

 

 

The judge’s decision “closes Argentina’s options to finally force it to negotiate,” said Jorge Mariscal, the chief investment officer for emerging markets at UBS Wealth Management, which oversees $1 trillion. “Argentina should now stop using these delay tactics and get serious.”

Buit Argentina is not happy…

The ruling “is merely a sophisticated way of of trying to bring us down to our knees before global usurpers,” Argentina said. “But he will not achieve his goal for quite a simple reason: The Argentine Republic will meet its obligations, pay off its debts and honor its commitments.”

 

In an e-mailed statement, the Economy Ministry said Griesa is abusing his power and acting outside of his jurisdiction as the restructured bonds are not part of the holdouts’ case.

 

“A judge is trying to impede a debtor from carrying out its obligations and creditors from getting paid,” the ministry said.

Elliott is hopeful…

Jay Newman, a money manager at Elliott’s NML Capital, said in an interview, “We are hoping to have the opportunity to negotiate with Argentina.”

We will see… can the world’s fragile rehpothecated markets handle a technical default on near $30bn? For now, no one seems worried.




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A.M. Links: ISIS Declares ‘Caliphate’ in Iraq, Bill Clinton Pushes Pot Legalization, Facebook Is Manipulating Our Feels

  • Jihadist militant group ISIS has declared that
    it is
    establishing a caliphate
    —a state ruled by strict Islamic law,
    and a longtime goal of many jihadists—on the territories it
    controls in Iraq and Syria. 
  • Former Procter & Gamble CEO
    Robert McDonald will be nominated
    by President Obama to serve
    as the new Veterans Affairs secretary. “He comes with the
    credentials they need at this time: management expertise and
    someone who has made a living making tough decisions,” said Bob
    Wallace, executive director of the Veterans of Foreign
    Wars. 
  • Bill Clinton
    urged states
    to step up their “laboratories of democracy” game
    and start experimenting with marijuana legalization. 
  • Though the FDA’s had ample time to meddle with small American
    craft brewers and cheesemakers lately, the agency is apparently

    too busy to inspect
    more than 1-2 percent of food imported from
    abroad. 
  • As the nation—or at least businesses and the chattering
    classes—anxiously await today’s Hobby Lobby decision from the
    Supreme Court, a poll shows 53 percent of Americans support
    Obamacare’s birth control mandate
     without exceptions for
    religious beliefs, while 35 percent are against it. 
  • Organizers for Initiative 71, a measure that would fully
    legalize marijuana possession in the District of Columbia, say
    they’ve
    gathered nearly 60,000 signatures
    , almost three times the
    amount needed to get the issue on the November ballot.  
  • Facebook frequently tweaks the user experience subtly for the
    purpose of product development, but the company has now revealed
    that some changes were part of
    a psychological experiment
    on whether different kinds of
    content could manipulate users’ emotions. The move is being widely
    panned as unethical. 

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Key Events In The Coming Holiday-Shortened, Very Busy Week

The holiday shortened and very busy week includes the following highlights: [on Monday] US Chicago PMI (expect a small move down to a still-strong level of 62), Euro area flash harmonized CPI (expect a slight fall to 0.40% yoy), UK GFK Consumer Confidence, Japan IP; [on Tuesday] US ISM Manufacturing (expect 56), Construction Spending, and Vehicle Sales, in addition to a host of PMI Manufacturing in various countries, Australia MP Decision (expect on hold with neutral bias), and South Korea exports (expect a modest 1%, vs. consensus at 5.1%); [on Wednesday] US ADP Employment (expect 215K, slightly above consensus), Factory Orders (-0.40%), and UK Construction PMI; [on Thursday] US Non-farm Payrolls (expect 210K, a touch below consensus) and Unemployment (expect 6.30%, in line with consensus and previous), MP Decisions by ECB (expect no change in policy) and Riksbank (expect 25bp cut), in addition to various Services and Composite PMIs; [on Friday] (US holiday) Germany Factory Orders and Sweden IP.

The week is relatively light on policy-maker speeches, with highlights including RBA’s Stevens, in addition to Merkel, Draghi, Schaeuble and Weidmann at a CDU event (on Thursday). Friday is a holiday in the US.

Deutsche Bank has a slighly more streamling breakdown:

  • Taking a closer look at this week’s calendar, the data docket starts off with the US Chicago PMI and pending home sales data later today. Ahead of the ECB meeting on Thursday, today’s advance Euroarea CPI print for June will be followed with interest and Bloomberg consensus is expecting no change from May’s 0.5% YoY run rates. In emerging markets, South Africa and Turkey report their latest trade data and Argentina’s dispute with holdout creditors comes to a head with a key payment on restructured bonds due today. Argentina indicated on Friday that it wanted to make payment but the transfer was effectively blocked by a US judge.
  • Tuesday will be all about the global manufacturing PMIs and US ISM with perhaps the greatest focus on the official Chinese PMI and the US ISM manufacturing for signs of a pickup in manufacturing activity. Japan reports Tankan business confidence and the Bank of England publishes its minutes from its last Financial Policy meeting in which it decided on new measures to take some of the heat out of mortgage lending. The RBA meets on Tuesday, but no change to policy is expected.
  • Yellen takes the stage with a lecture on financial stability at the IMF in Washington on Wednesday. Yellen had some fairly dovish words to say on financial stability at the last FOMC press conference, and one would expect a similar tone on Wednesday. The data docket features ADP employment, US factory orders and Brazil industrial production.
  • Thursday will be the key day this week with non-farm payrolls and the ECB meeting. The ECB is widely expected to stay put this month after the announcements at its June meeting, but as always Draghi’s press conference will be important. In terms of June’s payrolls, consensus is for a +215k gain in the headline and for unemployment to remain at 6.3%. The hawks will be watching for signs of wage growth but hourly earnings are expected to drop to a rate of 1.9% YoY from 2.1% in the previous month. Other data on Thursday’s calendar are US trade, jobless claims and the global non-manufacturing PMIs.  Turkey’s June CPI will be the key event to watch in EM. US markets shut early on Thursday for Independence Day.
  • Friday will be pretty quiet with the week’s major events out of the way and with US markets shut for holidays. German factory orders round off the week’s data docket. Finally Moody’s will publish the result of their review of Belgium and Netherland’s sovereign debt rating on Friday.

And here is Goldman’s event-by-event global macro summary:

Monday, June 30

  • Events: Canada holds by-elections in four districts.
  • United States | Chicago Purchasing Manager (Jun): GS62.0, consensus 63.0, previous 65.5
  • Canada | GDP MoM (Apr): Consensus 0.20% (2.10% yoy), previous 0.10%
  • Euro area | CPI Harmonized YoY (Jun): GS 0.40%, previous 0.50%
  • Euro area | CPI Core YoY (Jun A): Consensus 0.70%, previous 0.70%
  • Italy | CPI EU Harmonized YoY (Jun P): Previous 0.20%
  • Euro area | M3 Money Supply YoY (May): Consensus 0.70%, previous 0.80%
  • Denmark | GDP QoQ (1Q F): Previous 0.90% (1.40% yoy)
  • United Kingdom | GFK Consumer Confidence (June): Previous 0
  • United Kingdom | Mortgage Approvals (May): Consensus 61.7K, previous 62.9K
  • Japan | Industrial Production MoM (May P): Consensus 0.90% (1.60% yoy), previous -2.80% (3.80% yoy)
  • Japan | Housing Starts YoY (May): Consensus -10.50%, previous -3.30%
  • Australia | Private Sector Credit MoM (May): GS 0.50%, consensus 0.40%, previous 0.50%
  • New Zealand | Building Permits MoM (May): GS-3.00%, previous 1.50%
  • South Korea | Business Survey Manufacturing (Jul): Previous 81
  • Brazil | Primary Budget Balance (May): GS –R$11B, previous R$16.9B
  • Argentina | Economic Activity Index YoY (Apr): GS -1.80%, previous -0.90%
  • Also interesting: [DM] US Pending Home Sales and Dallas Fed Manf. Activity; Italy PPI; Denmark Unemployment; Australia TD Securities Inflation and HIA New Home Sales; NZ ANZ Business Confidence [EM] Bank Lending in Mexico and Philippines; Brazil Net Debt; Chile Copper Production, Retail Sales and Unemployment; Turkey Trade Balance; South Africa Money Supply, Private Sector Credit and Trade Balance; Poland CA and NBP Inflation Expectations; Thailand Trade Balance and CA.

Tuesday, July 1

  • Events: Germany’s Schaeuble discussion with German Foreign Press Group.
  • United States | ISM Manufacturing (Jun): GS 56.0, consensus 55.8, previous 55.4
  • United States | Construction Spending MoM (May): GS 0.70%, consensus 0.50%, previous 0.20%
  • United States | Total Vehicle Sales (Jun): GS 16.4M, consensus 16.30M, previous 16.70M
  • DMs | PMI Manufacturing (Jun): Euro area (F: GS 51.9, consensus 51.9, previous 51.9), France (F: GS 47.8, Previous 47.8), Germany (F: GS 52.4, consensus 52.4, previous 52.4), Italy (Previous 53.2), Japan (F: Previous 51.1), Denmark (Previous 60.2), Norway (GS 50.5, previous 49.8), South Korea (Previous 49.5), Spain (Previous 52.9), Sweden (GS 53.9, previous 54.1), Switzerland (Previous 52.5), UK (Consensus 56.7, previous 57), US (Previous 57.5).
  • Euro area | Unemployment Rate (May): Consensus 11.70%, previous 11.70%
  • Germany | Unemployment Change (000’s) (Jun): Consensus -10K (rate at 6.7%), previous 24K (rate at 6.7%)
  • Japan | Tankan Large Mfg Outlook (2Q): Consensus 17, previous 8
  • Australia | MP Decision: We expect the RBA to leave the cash rate unchanged (at 2.50%) and retain its neutral policy bias. That said, it has sounded incrementally more
  • on the outlook over recent times and we continue to forecast another rate cut this cycle (Sept: -25pb).
  • South Korea | Exports YoY (Jun): GS 1.0%, consensus 5.10%, previous (r) -1.00%
  • South Korea | CPI YoY (Jun): GS 1.80%, consensus 1.90%, previous 1.70%
  • EMs | PMI Manufacturing (Jun): China (GS 51.0, consensus 51.1, previous 50.8), China HSBC (F: Consensus 50.8, previous 50.8), Czech Republic (Previous 57.3), Hungary (Previous 50.1), India (Previous 51.4), Mexico (Previous 51.9), Poland (Consensus 51.4, previous 50.8), Russia (Previous 48.9), South Africa (Previous 44.3), Taiwan (Previous 52.4), Turkey (Previous 50.1).
  • Indonesia | CPI (Jun): Previous 7.30%
  • Thailand | CPI YoY (Jun): Consensus 2.51%, previous 2.62%
  • Romania | MP Decision: We expect the NBR Board to keep its key policy rate on hold at 3.5%, in line with consensus. However, following recent press reports citing an official source, we think that a cut to minimum RRRs on FX – and possibly also on RON – bank liabilities is likely. In addition, we expect that the NBR will maintain a dovish bias in its communications and see significant risks of a rate cut later in Q3, especially if inflation continues to surprise to the downside.
  • Czech Republic | GDP YoY (1Q F): Previous 2.50%
  • Peru | CPI MoM (Jun): GS 0.10% (3.40% yoy), previous 0.23% (3.56% yoy)
  • Also interesting: [DM] Japan Vehicle Sales; Australia RPData House Prices and Commodity Index; South Korea Trade Balance [EM] Brazil Trade Balance; Mexico Remittances; Venezuela CPI; Indonesia Trade Balance; Mexico IMEF Non-Manuf. Index.

Wednesday, July 2

  • Events: Speech by RBA’s Dabelle; Press Conference by Germany’s Schaeuble.
  • United States | ADP Employment Change (Jun): GS 215K, consensus 205K, previous 179K
  • United States | Factory Orders (May): GS -0.40%, consensus -0.30%, previous 0.70%
  • United Kingdom | Markit/CIPS UK Construction PMI (Jun): Consensus 59.8, previous 60
  • Canada | RBC Canadian Manufacturing PMI (Jun): Previous 52.2
  • Singapore | Purchasing Managers Index (Jun): Previous 50.8
  • Poland | MP Decision: While we think the MPC will leave rates on hold (at 2.50%), in line with consensus, we think this meeting will bring a change in communication and the MPC’s bias, that is an end to the current forward rate guidance and a shift to a neutral stance. Afterward, we expect the MPC to remain on hold through 2015H1, but see downside risks to our rate view. Current forward pricing suggests markets expect between one and two 25bp cuts in the next six months.
  • Romania | GDP YoY (1Q F): Previous 3.80%
  • Brazil | Industrial Production YoY (May): GS -3.1%, previous -5.80%
  • Also interesting: [DM] Euro area PPI; UK Nationwide House Prices; Australia Trade Balance [EM] Romania Retail Sales.

Thursday, July 3

  • Events: Speech by RBA’s Stevens, plus speeches by Merkel, Draghi, Schaeuble and Weidmann at CDU event.
  • United States | Change in Nonfarm Payrolls (Jun): GS 210K, consensus 214K, previous 217K
  • United States | Unemployment Rate (Jun): GS 6.30%, consensus 6.30%, previous 6.30%
  • United States | Average Hourly Earnings (Jun): GS 0.20%, consensus 0.20%, previous 0.20%
  • United States | Trade Balance (May): GS -$43.0B, consensus -$45.0B, previous -$47.2B
  • United States | ISM Non-Manf. Composite (Jun): GS 56.0, consensus 56.1, previous 56.3
  • Euro area | MP Decision: We expect no change in policy (with the main refinancing rate at 0.15%, in line with consensus and previous).
  • Sweden | MP Decision: We expect the Riksbank to lower the repo rate by 25bp (to 0.50%, vs. previous 0.75%), in line with consensus.
  • DM | Services PMI (Jun): Euro area (F: GS 52.8, consensus 52.8, previous 52.8), France (F: GS 48.2, Previous 48.2), Germany (F: GS 54.8, consensus 54.8, previous 54.8), Italy (Previous 51.6), Japan (Previous 49.3), Spain (Previous 55.7), Sweden (Previous 58.5), UK (Consensus 58.1, previous 58.6), US (Previous 61.2).
  • DM | Composite PMI (Jun): Euro area (F: GS 52.8, previous 52.8), France (F: GS 48.0, previous 48.0), Germany (F: GS 54.2, previous 54.2), Italy (Previous 52.7), Japan (Previous 49.2), Spain (Previous 55.6), UK (GS 57.0, consensus 58.9, previous 59), US (Previous 61.1).
  • Australia | Building Approvals MoM (May): GS 1.00%, previous -5.60%
  • EM | Services PMI (Jun): Brazil (Previous 50.6), China (Previous 50.7), India (Previous 50.2), Russia (Previous 46.1)
  • EM | Composite PMI (Jun): Brazil (Previous 49.8), China (Previous 50.2), India (Previous 50.7), Russia (Previous 47.1)
  • Turkey | CPI YoY (Jun): GS 8.40%, consensus 8.80%, previous 9.66%
  • Also interesting: [DM] US Jobless Claims; Euro area Retail Sales; Canada Int’l Merchandise Trade; Australia Retail Sales [EM] China Non-Manufacturing PMI; Hungary Retail Sales and Trade Balance; Hong Kong Retail Sales and PMI; Mexico Central Bank Economist Survey.

Friday, July 4

  • Events: [US Holiday] Speech by RBA’s Ellis.
  • Germany | Factory Orders MoM (May): Consensus -1.00%, previous 3.10%
  • Sweden | Industrial Production MoM (May): Previous 3.00%
  • Hungary | Industrial Production WDA YoY (May P): Previous 10.10%
  • Philippines | CPI YoY (Jun): Consensus 4.60%, previous 4.50%
  • Colombia | Minutes from MP Decision
  • Also interesting: [DM] Retail PMI in France, Germany and Italy; Germany Construction PMI [EM] Mexico Consumer Confidence; Czech Republic Retail Sales; Malaysia Trade Balance; Colombia Exports and PPI

Finally in table format:

Source:  Goldman, Deutsche, BofA




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Jacob Sullum on Washington’s Legal Marijuana Shortage

Washington’s
state-licensed pot stores are expected to start opening next week,
Jacob Sullum reports, but they won’t have much to sell. Sullum says
a slow state licensing process for marijuana producers, combined
with the difficulty of obtaining local approval for grow
operations, will result in shortages that are apt to be more severe
than those seen in Colorado after recreational sales
began there in January. The result could be prices almost twice as
high as those charged by medical marijuana dispensaries and
black-market dealers.

View this article.

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