Why Obamacare Is Pushing Up Health Insurance Premiums

Now that Obamacare has been enacted, Americans across the nation are seeing their health insurance bills spiking, leading to what has been a documented slide in full-time hiring, a drop in consumer discretionary spending, not to mention stagnant and declining real wages. In short: a broad economic contraction (yes, yes, who could have possibly foreseen this).

But how is it that insurers set their prices? As Bloomberg explains, insurers are calculating what to charge for health plans in 2015, which is no simple task. Actuaries can’t easily forecast how often the millions of new Obamacare enrollees will go to a doctor. New federal rules and expensive drugs will also increase costs. Wrong guesses could wipe out profits.

Here is a quick and dirty way to understand why premiums are going up.

1. Cost of claims

This one’s easy. Insurers know what they paid in claims for the previous year and use it as a basis for the year to come.

2. Benefit changes

Past payouts are no longer a reliable predictor, though, especially with so many new Obamacare patients. And doctor visits will increase, because plans that didn’t cover maternity care and mental health must do so under the health-care law. That will bump up the premiums of some plans.

3. Rising prices

Actuaries adjust for what they call medical trend, or how fast the cost of care* is rising. From 2014 to 2015 it’s expected to rise as much as 6.8 percent. That includes changes in cost (the price of an MRI) and utilization (how many MRIs are performed).
 
* One tough thing to anticipate is how much new drugs will cost. Doctors are flocking to prescribe Sovaldi, a cure for hepatitis C with an $84,000 price tag. The drug cost UnitedHealth $100m in the first quarter of 2014—a sum the company called “a multiple of what we expected.”

4. Risk pool

Demographics help insurers estimate what it will cost to cover their customers. Older people typically need more care, and women of childbearing age are more expensive to insure than men*. These costs are built into plans.
 
* In some states, including Louisiana and Mississippi, enrollment on healthcare.gov by women accounted for almost 60% of sign-ups. That could drive up rates if insurers haven’t planned for it.

5. Provider networks

Health insurers can negotiate better rates from medical providers by promising to steer them more patients. They can also save money by avoiding expensive providers.

6. Geography

Insurers can vary premiums based on location. Medical care is more expensive in some rural areas where there are fewer doctors and in places with less competition.

7. Reinsurance

Obamacare set aside $10 billion in 2014 to help insurers cover higher-than-expected claims in the law’s first year. That pool shrinks to $6 billion in 2015. Insurance companies will make up the difference by raising prices on some plans.

8. Taxes and fees

Insurers will pay $11.3 billion in fees in 2015 to fund Obamacare programs. That’s about 3 percent of premiums, up slightly from 2014.

9. Profit and risk load

Insurers plan for 3 percent to 5 percent profit. More uncertainty may prompt them to increase their risk load, a cushion against unexpected losses.

Source: BusinessWeek




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Sunday (Un)Humor: Create Your Own Caliphate

It’s a good time to be in Iraq, if you’re a crazed Muslim zealot bent on creating a caliphate, that is. As Mark Fiore explains in a format even the most iPad-addicted youf of today, Iraq is suddenly back on everyone’s radar now that ISIS is taking over large chunks of that formerly-occupied nation. Here, in 120 seconds, is how they did it (and how you can too)… “now, sit back, relax, and enjoy a miserable theocratic existence…”

 




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The Individual Is Rising – A Book Excerpt

A Book Excerpt in Two Parts

From

The Individual Is Rising

By Joe Withrow

 

 

Part two of this book excerpt can be found exclusively at TwoIceFloes.com

To subscribe to ‘Dispatches’, a periodic newsletter from Cognitive Dissonance and TwoIceFloes Creations, please click here.

 

 

(Cognitive Dissonance – While I edited this book for Joe I am not participating in any revenue from the sale of this book. However I did purchase several copies for personal use as well as to give to family and friends.

In fact if you are looking for an inexpensive, easy to read explanation of what is going on in the world, where it is headed and ways to prepare for the inevitable change, all in a form you can hand to family and friends, this just might be the book for you.)

 

 

From Chapter Four – A New Paradigm is Forming

 

From the American perspective, one does not have to go back very far in history to recognize that the fundamental principles underlying our society have dramatically changed.  The American spirit was once firm on the principles of personal liberty, property rights, free markets, and non-intervention.  This is the spirit that attracted immigrants from all over the world to flock to American shores.  Freedom was quite popular. 

That spirit has been dulled over the past one hundred years and the principles underlying American society have shifted drastically.

Personal liberty was gradually traded for “the greater good for the greatest number” and the illusion of government provided security.  Property rights gradually became subject to all manner of governmental rules and regulations.  Free markets were destroyed by constant government intervention as America accepted the Keynesian/socialist notion that it was, and is, the role of government to centrally plan the economy.

But the future is calling and the paradigm is rapidly shifting.  They won't mention this shift on the television or in the major publications, however, so those still mired in the 20th century way of thinking do not yet realize that it is happening.  But if we look around our world we can quite clearly observe the shift in motion.

Look at the explosion of alternative media resources on the Internet.  While estimates suggest that only five companies (Time Warner, News Corp, Viacom, Bertelsmann AG, Walt Disney) control more than three quarters of all major media properties (television, cinema, book publishers, magazines, newspapers), there is now a myriad of alternate media sources working diligently to provide unfiltered news and information.  The Internet has allowed alternative media to flourish, and people are beginning to see that most mainstream ‘news’ is little more than state propaganda.

Look at the explosion of books and documentaries based on the principles of personal liberty and free markets.  More and more people are waking up to the reality of what has happened over the past century and they are trying to spread the message as best they can.

The deterioration of popular support for the corrupt political system and the equally corrupt and enabling mass media is becoming too obvious for even the ideologically blind to ignore.  Support for politicians is at an all-time low in modern history and people are starting to realize that it is the entire political system that is corrupt rather than one or the other political party.  For example: 

  • Michelle Obama recently cancelled a speech she was scheduled to give at a Kansas high school after nearly 2,000 people signed a petition in protest of her appearance.
  • Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice recently cancelled her scheduled speech at Rutgers University as faculty and students publically protested her appearance citing her “efforts to mislead the American people about the presence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.”
  • Attorney General Eric Holder cancelled his speech at a police academy graduation due to protests asserting that he was an ironic choice given his “tactics of obfuscation and redirection of blame”.
  • Former Vice President Dick Cheney had to cancel multiple appearances in Canada because it was “too dangerous” for him.
  • Former President George W. Bush had to cancel a speech at a Jewish charity gala in Switzerland because he was worried about possible legal action against him for alleged torture.

Read the comments sections on mainstream financial articles that suggest the economy has recovered and the Federal Reserve is the hero – people just aren't buying it anymore.  To counter the teetering support for the political and financial systems, the mainstream media has been working hard to paint the status-quo in a positive light.  Many people aren’t buying the rhetoric and they are actively calling the bluff.

Additionally, it is remarkable how many localities are pushing for secession throughout the world.  Northern California, Texas, Colorado, Vermont, Scotland, Belgium, Bavaria, Catalonia, and Venice are all areas in which residents have voiced support for secession in some capacity due to the ills of government interventions.

Look at the explosion of support the Ron Paul Revolution attracted during his presidential campaigns of 2008 and 2012.  Ron Paul’s efforts awoke a legion of young people dedicated to carrying the message of liberty forward.  The seeds of liberty have been firmly planted in the minds of these young people and those seeds have only begun to blossom.  We will truly witness the historical significance of Ron Paul over the next several decades as these young people develop into principled leaders with a clear understanding of personal liberty and free market economics.

As Ron Paul so often said:  “The Revolution is alive and well…”

History has shown, repeatedly, that the human spirit cannot be conquered.  You may be able to suppress the human spirit for one hundred years or so, but never forever.  The human spirit will always rise.

History has also shown that the collectivist tyrants will do everything in their power to suppress the human spirit and maintain power, and the present day situation is no different.  There are now cameras on every stop light and federal taps on every cell phone for this reason.  Federally funded SWAT teams are now operational in nearly every town and city, and heavy duty military vehicles and equipment are deployed in every major metropolitan city for the same reason.

The PATRIOT Act, which effectively repealed the 4th amendment, was passed for this reason.  The National Defense Authorization Act, which declared the United States a battleground and every American a terrorist suspect, was passed for this reason.  The Department of Homeland Security has purchased millions of rounds of hollow point ammunition, which is illegal under international law, for this reason.  The REAL ID act, which requires States to upload every single American's photograph into a federally monitored facial recognition system, was implemented for this reason.

The power elite are not content to go quietly into the night, to be filed away into the dustbin of history's mistakes so seamlessly. 

Instead, they are prepared to use force to maintain their lordship over the individual.  They are prepared to meet the individual on the battlefield.  What has completely gone over their head, however, is that the individual does not fight on the battlefield of force, but rather the battlefield of thoughts and ideas.

Victor Hugo once said "No army can withstand the strength of an idea whose time has come."

Our time has come.

The revolution is already in motion.  It is a peaceful and intellectual revolution – not one of violence or force, and that is why it will succeed.  The collectivist power elite are ill-prepared to fight on the intellectual battlefield because the results of their ideology are in: they failed and they can no longer convince the individual otherwise.

Brushfires of liberty are burning in the minds of men once again.  And what is so amazing is that this liberty revolution is not constrained to America this time; it is world-wide.  Not only are Americans awakening to the long-forgotten principles of liberty, but so are individuals all over the world.  There is a fierce anti-Euro, anti-collectivist movement sweeping all of Europe as these words are being written.  Meanwhile, much of Asia is becoming more free-market oriented by the day.

History has demonstrated that dying paradigms are sometimes capable of holding on for much longer than anyone can believe.  But they can never last forever.  The current paradigm may be able to linger for a while longer, but make no mistake about it – a major paradigm shift is currently underway.

And make no mistake about it – the individual is rising.

 

Joe Withrow

aka ZH's joegalt

 

Joe Galt

 

 

 

The Individual Is RisingIndividual Rising Back Cover

 

 




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FIRE Takes on Campus Speech Codes

The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE)
announced its plans to file lawsuits against any university with an
inappropriate, unconstitutional speech code, as
Robby Soave noted here earlier this week:

“Universities’ stubborn refusal to relinquish their speech codes
must not be tolerated,” said FIRE President Greg Lukianoff during a
press conference.

For now, suits have been filed against Ohio University, Iowa
State University, Chicago State University, and Citrus College in
California. These universities have all trampled students’ free
speech rights, according to FIRE.

Lukianoff explained that FIRE would not hesitate to expand the
suits until all universities abandon their speech codes, which were
ruled unconstitutional decades ago but have endured at more than 50
percent of colleges, according to the foundation’s research.

In May, Reason TV talked with Lukianoff about another free
speech battle emerging on campuses across the country: mandatory
“trigger warnings” on material that might trigger memories of past
traumas in students. Watch the video below. Original text is
beneath.

Orginally published on May 8, 2014.

“It’s really not anyone else’s business to tell someone when
they are mentally and emotionally ready to deal with things,” says
Bailey Loverin, a University of Santa Barbara (UCSB) junior who
authored a resolution to mandate that professors issue “trigger
warnings” before presenting material that might trigger memories of
past traumas in students.

Feminist and social justice blogs popularized the concept of the
trigger warning, with writers encouraging each other to label posts
that might trigger flashbacks to sexual assault or domestic abuse.
As the popularity, and scope, of the trigger warning idea grew,
some bloggers began listing potential triggers, ranging from rape
and violence and suicide to snakes and needles and even “small
holes.”

Oberlin College attracted some media attention when its Office
of Equity Concerns posted, and later removed, a trigger warning
guide advising professors to avoid triggering topics such as
racism, colonialism, and sexism when possible. The memo also
suggests introducing discussions of potentially triggering works
with language such as this: We are reading this work in spite of
the author’s racist frameworks because his work was foundational to
establishing the field of anthropology, and because I think
together we can challenge, deconstruct, and learn from his
mistakes.

Loverin says that her trigger warning resolution is much more
narrowly tailored to protect sufferers of post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD). But she also goes a step further than anyone has
at Oberlin by proposing that trigger warnings in the classroom be
mandated.

“I don’t feel that it’s a problem asking for this to be
mandated,” says Loverin. “You’re always going to have someone
that’s going to argue, ‘Why? This is ridiculous. I shouldn’t have
to do this because I don’t feel it. Why should anyone else?'”

Loverin’s resolution passed the student-run Academic Senate and
now awaits review by the faculty legislative body. Greg Lukianoff,
President of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education
(FIRE), worries that mandated trigger warnings would set a
troubling precedent on campus. He points to an incident that
occured on the UCBS campus only days after the resolution passed
wherein an associate professor of feminist studies stole a sign
from pro-life protesters and then pushed one of them away when she
tried to take the sign back. The professor’s defense?

“What she argued was that the display was triggering,” says
Lukianoff. “It’s a very unforunate part of human nature. If you
give us an excuse to shut down speech with which we disagree, we’re
very quick to see it as an opportunity.”

Visit http://ift.tt/QrLY7s for
downloadable versions of this video.

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One German’s Take On The Latest US Spying Scandal

It was only a summer ago when it was revealed, courtesy of Edward Snowden, that the NSA had been listening in to the cell phone call of German chancellor Angela Merkel. This resulted in a prompt summoning of the US ambassador to Germany for a stern talking down and… nothing else. Fast forward to this summer when over the weekend another spying incident was revealed, this time involving what according to Germany is a double agent spying for the US (it is not quite clear why the US would need even more spying when it already has virtually every form of German communications bugged and intercepted).

According to Reuters, an employee of Germany’s BND foreign intelligence agency has been arrested on suspicion of spying for the United States, two lawmakers with knowledge of the affair told Reuters on Friday.

The German Federal Prosecutor’s office said in a statement that a 31-year-old man had been arrested on suspicion of being a foreign spy, but it gave no further details. Investigations were continuing, it said.

The case risks further straining ties with Washington, which were damaged by revelations last year of mass surveillance of German citizens by the U.S. National Security Agency, including the monitoring of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s mobile phone.

 

The man, who is German, has admitted passing to an American contact details about a special German parliamentary committee set up to investigate the spying revelations made by former U.S. intelligence contractor Edward Snowden, the politicians said.

 

Both lawmakers are members of the nine-person parliamentary control committee, whose meetings are confidential, and which is in charge of monitoring the work of German intelligence agencies.

 

The parliamentary committee investigating the NSA affair also holds some confidential meetings. The German Foreign Ministry said in a statement that it had invited the U.S. ambassador to come for talks regarding the matter, and asked him to help deliver a swift explanation.

 

“This was a man who had no direct contact with the investigative committee … He was not a top agent,” said one of the members of parliament, who spoke on condition of anonymity. The suspect had offered his services to the United States voluntarily, the source said.

 

Merkel’s spokesman Steffen Seibert said: “We don’t take the matter of spying for foreign intelligence agencies lightly.”

 

When asked whether Merkel had discussed the issue with President Barack Obama during a phone conversation on Thursday night, he merely said they had talked about foreign affairs. The U.S. embassy in Berlin, the State Department in Washington and the White House all declined to comment.

Ironically, Germany’s Sueddeutsche Zeitung newspaper and the broadcasters WDR and NDR first reported that the alleged spy was first detained on suspicion of contacting Russian intelligence agents. He then admitted he had worked with Americans. Well, there goes that scapegoat.

Bild newspaper said in an advance copy of an article to be published on Saturday that the man had worked for two years as a double agent and had stolen 218 confidential documents.  He sold the documents, three of which related to the work of the committee in the Bundestag, for 25,000 euros ($34,100), Bild said, citing security sources.

Supposedly the buyer was the US, which probably explains the following update:

  • GERMANY ASKED U.S. AMBASSADOR FOR EXPLANATION: FOREIGN MINISTRY

Truly an “unprecedented” escalation, just like last summer. Because how on earth will the US continue spying on one of its closest allies if the ambassador is asked to explain himself. Sarcasm aside, one does wonder: just what dirt does the US have on Merkel to keep the chancellor meekly quiet in her corner?

This is precisely what one of our German readers was wondering earlier, when framing the situation. His observations are as follows:

This NSA spying is really becoming completely ridiculous.

 

Gauck über US-Spionage: “Jetzt reicht’s auch einmal” (translated: Gauck on U.S. espionage: “That’s about enough “)

 

Why Merkel is sooo silent – me thinks the NSA is blackmailing her (and likely most other gov. leaders too) because of her past in the DDR.

 

Consequences of all this will lead to exactly this outcome:

 

The public will refuse to buy things made by US corporations – MS, Apple, Google, Verizon, Amazon, Ebay, …. etc etc etc etc.

 

We avoid already Chinese products because of their use of poisons and the low quality in general.

 

We will avoid American products too because America is the worst liar of all states in our generation and we have enough of their spying and stealing (of other countries gold) and pointing with fingers and meddling in foreign affairs (which is also unprecedented) – when they have the most biggest shit on themselves.

 

I have never been anti-American – really and I have a lot of and most of my friends over their (thanks to internet) – but this and the last administration (or in fact a few criminals behind it) has done soooo much damage to the american poeple, to the image of America all over the globe, so that it is no wonder that finally the whole world will think about them as the biggest shitplace on this planet.

 

I’m 58 and have seen a lot in my life – but I think Gauck is spot on: “Jetzt reicht’s auch einmal”.

 

And I think many Europeans think alike.

 

This will NOT end well for America. Unfortunately the American people will likely have to pay a very high and very painful price for haven given up their Constitutuional rights in exchange for coke, burgers, tv, porn and games.

Well, dear German friend, when it comes to such key decisions as constitutional rights vs coke, burgers, tv, porn and games, all we can say is “priorities.”




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“There Is No Honest Pricing Left” – The Epochal Error Of Modern Central Banking

Submitted by David Stockman of Contra Corner blog,

David Stockman, Director of the Office of Management and Budget under Reagan, former Congressman, and author of the bestseller The Great Deformation: The Corruption of Capitalism in Americadiscusses his book, the gold standard, bailouts, and the problems the American economy faces today.

Mises Institute: In the book, you oppose Bernanke’s view of the Great Depression, which you point out relies heavily on the views of Milton Friedman.

David Stockman: Bernanke has cultivated this idea that he is a brilliant scholar of The Great Depression, but that’s not true at all. What Bernanke did was basically copy Milton Friedman’s misguided and very damaging theory that the Federal Reserve didn’t expand its balance sheet fast enough by massive open market purchases of government debt during the Great Depression. Bernanke therefore claimed that monetary stringency deepened and lengthened the depression, but in fact interest rates plummeted during the crucial 1930-1933 period: credit contracted due to genuine and widespread insolvencies in the agricultural districts and industrial boom towns, causing bank deposits to shrink as a passive consequence. So Bernanke had cause and effect upside down – a historical error that he replicated with reckless abandon in response to the bursting of the housing and credit bubble in 2008.

Friedman’s error about the great depression led him, albeit inadvertently, into the deep waters of statism. He claimed to be the tribune of free markets, but in urging Nixon to scrap the Bretton Woods gold standard he inaugurated the present era of fiat central banking. He held that the central banking branch of the state could improve upon the performance of the free market by targeting the correct level of M1 (money supply) and thereby ensure optimum performance of aggregate demand, real GDP, and inflation. That’s Keynesianism through the monetary control dials, and has led to outright monetary central planning under Greenspan, Bernanke, and most of the other central banks of the world today.

MI: You blame many of our current woes on the movement away from monetary and fiscal discipline started decades ago. Yet, why did it take so long for the U.S. economy to get into the deep trouble we’re in today? Have things gotten worse in recent years?

DS: Although central banking does cause moral hazards and lends itself to abuses, there have been periods in which monetary and fiscal discipline have been employed. Fed Chairman William McChesney Martin, for example, really did take the punch bowl away when the party got started because he took monetary discipline seriously. Fiscal discipline under Eisenhower and the gold standard behind Bretton Woods helped put off the day of reckoning for quite a long time. But fiscal discipline went out the window with Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon, and the elimination of the weak gold standard behind Bretton Woods certainly didn’t help. The deficit spending of the Reagan years made things even worse.

The Greenspan and Bernanke years then opened the door the massive abuse of the system we see today. Greenspan took the Federal Reserve, which for years had been run by far more cautious and conservative men, and turned it into a machine for fine-tuning every aspect of the economy. Bernanke has continued this, and taken it even further.

MI: Among many conservatives and Republicans, it is often claimed that the Reagan years were a victory for free markets and that the 1990s vindicated this strategy. Is this the case?

DS: In the early days of the Reagan years I thought, with many others, that the Reagan Revolution would in fact lead to smaller government. I turned out to be wrong, and politics overwhelmed any commitment Reagan had to making government smaller. The reality was huge growth in the deficit, more government spending, and the laying of the groundwork for the huge debt-based problems we have today.

During the Reagan years and since, the GOP has made peace with tinkering with the economy through the central bank, and joined the Democrats in wanting to gin up so-called aggregate demand and stimulate growth. Dick Cheney declared that deficits don’t matter, and the Republicans abandoned any serious commitment to taking a true hands-off approach to the economy.

In spite of this, the perception remains that the Reagan years were a period of laissez-faire, and this in turn has led to the myth that the fiscal indiscipline of the 1980s led to the boom of the nineties. In reality, the 1990s were a period of monetary profligacy, with a big expansion in the money supply under Greenspan, and a real acceleration in the Fed’s drive to manipulate economic growth and employment from the Fed. This in turn led to the dot-com bubble which burst in 2000-2001.

MI: We’ve been told that deregulation of the financial sector caused the 2008 crisis, and that a lack of regulation allows the “One Percent” to prosper while the “99 Percent” suffers.

DS: Fundamentally, the financial crisis was a product of the Fed’s repeated blowing up of bubbles, and not of deregulation. Moreover, any suffering inflicted on the 99 Percent by our system doesn’t come from the free market, it comes from the crony capitalism that is now our economic system. The Blackberry Panic of September 2008, in which Washington policy makers led by former Goldman Sachs CEO Hank Paulson, panicked as they saw Wall Street stock prices plummet on their mobile devices, had very little to do with the Main Street economy in the United States. The panic and bailouts that followed were really about protecting the bonuses and incomes of very wealthy and politically well-connected managers at banks and other heavily leveraged businesses that were eventually deemed too big to fail. What followed was a massive transfer of wealth from the taxpayers and middle-class savers, in the form of bailouts and zero interest rates on bank deposits imposed by the Fed, to the so-called One Percent.

As I show in my book, none of this was necessary to save the larger economy, since the losses that would have taken place as a result of the collapse would have been largely limited to Wall Street. What the bailouts did was preserve the wealth of wealthy and powerful Wall Street players. Meanwhile, we’ve seen no real economic recovery in the rest of the economy.

This transfer of wealth continues, by the way, in the form of relentlessly low interest rates, and an ongoing war by the Fed on safe and stable investment tools such as savings accounts and low-risk bonds. Indeed, this is a deliberate policy to get people away from these safer investments, and to get them investing in more volatile and higher yield investments. The idea is that the Fed can somehow force bigger returns on these riskier investments, and this will lead to a wealth effect. People will then think they’re richer, and we can then spend ourselves into a recovery. This is a terrible doctrine, but that’s what rules Washington right now. It actively works against middle-class people who want to work and save and invest their money responsibly and conservatively.

MI: It seems that the Fed today tries to manage everything from growth to employment to the mortgage rate. Has this always been the case?

DS: The Greenspan-Bernanke-Yellen Fed has become a tool for central planning and manipulation of the economy, but it hasn’t always been that way. One way to reverse this dangerous and unstable deformation of policy would be to return to the vision of Carter Glass, and employ the Fed as a “banker’s bank.” In such a situation, the Fed takes its cues from the market. The market sets prices (i.e., interest rates on money and debt), and the Fed only provides additional liquidity, in exchange for sound collateral, at a penalty rate, when the banks needed liquidity.

The system we have now is one in which the Fed decides, through a Politburo of planners sitting in Washington, how much liquidity is necessary, what the interest rate should be, what the unemployment rate should be, and what economic growth should be.

There is no honest pricing left at all anywhere in the world because central banks everywhere manipulate and rig the price of all financial assets. We can’t even analyze the economy in the traditional sense anymore because so much of it depends not on market forces, but on the whims of people at the Fed.

MI: Is there any way to fix things before a major crisis comes?

DS: You’re not going to have legislation to change the mandate of the Fed, and I don’t see how you’ll get new people on the Fed who think differently from the current group. Even if you get rid of Bernanke, then you just get Janet Yellen. I just don’t see the political will right now to make any great reforms or cut spending significantly.

I think the political realities of the situation make the most likely scenario one in which there will be some kind of real financial collapse and disorder that will require a total reconstruction of the system. It’s impossible to say how that will be done, and this may be the chance to go back to a gold standard or to a very sharply circumscribed remit for central banks.




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Global Investment Climate: Pieces falling into Place

Investors learned last week that the US created 1.38 mln net new jobs in H1, the most for a six-month period since 2006. They learned that US vehicle sales in June also reached an 8-year high. For its part, the ECB emphasized that the TLTRO facility could inject around 1 trillion euros into the banking system for loans to businesses and households. It also announced that the rules of engagement will allow banks that already work closely together to tap the TLTRO facility collectively.

 

In Japan, the Tankan was mixed as sentiment among large businesses deteriorated a little more than expected, but capex plans increased. Separately, data showed that overall household consumption collapsed in May, warning that the impact of sales tax increase, coupled with base wages and return on savings not keeping pace with inflation, may have compress demand longer than Japanese officials may appreciate.

 

These developments were not game changers. The dollar remains within the two yen range (JPY101-JPY103) that has largely confined the price action since early April. It recovered into the middle of that range with the help a 10 bp net increase in US Treasury yields. At 207 bp, the US premium is at its 200-day moving average. The dollar managed to resurface above its 200-day moving average against the yen (~JPY101.80) and finish the week above it.

 

The euro has been confined to a two cent range ($1.35-$1.37) for the past six weeks. The decline from near $1.40 appears to have be participants anticipating the June rate cuts. The euro was actually stronger against the dollar before the ECB’s July meeting than it was at the June meeting.

 

If last week’s developments were not able to break the dollar out of its ranges, the events in the week ahead are unlikely to either. The May industrial production reports from the largest euro area countries will likely confirm the general impression that investors already have. Germany has lost some momentum. Spain is performing well. France and Italy are struggling.

 

The main release from Japan will be its May current account figures. There are two key components. The trade balance and the investment income balance. The former is in deficit, despite (or because) the significant decline in the yen. The latter is in surplus and sufficiently so that it should overcome the trade deficit and put the external account into surplus.

 

US data cycle is also at a low ebb in week ahead. The JOLTS data on the labor market may receive more attention by economists given that Fed Chair Yellen has referred to it. However, it is not a market mover. It follows on the heels of a national survey and is unlikely to dissuade investors and policy makers that the Fed is drawing nearer its mandates.

 

The FOMC minutes rarely provide market moving material either. Note that the minutes often give air to a wider range of opinion that the Fed’s statement following the meetings, as non-voters also participate in the meeting. Yellen’s willingness to play down the recent upticks in inflation and play down risks to financial stability are not necessarily universally shared. As QE3+ will be wound down in a few more months, discussions of the Fed’s toolkit to manage policy, such as reverse repos, are bound to increase, and there is plenty of scope for difference of opinion.

 

The heuristic point we make is worth repeating in this context.  Yellen and Dudley (and we expect Vice Chairman Fischer to join them) generate the important policy signals. It is not that the others do not have important things to say, far from it. However, when trying to discern the signal from the noise, Yellen and Dudley (and Fischer) can be counted on for the signal.

 

The consumer credit report is unlikely to move the markets either, but it nevertheless offers important insight. Most of the household consumption that has taken place during this cycle has not been financed with revolving credit (that is credit cards). The bulk of the credit that has been extended is for auto and student loans. However, in April, revolving credit rose by $8.8 bln, which is most in seven years. To put this in perspective, consider that even including it, the 12-month average growth in revolving credit is a little less than $1.7 bln. The May report will lend credibility to this turn or show it as a fluke. We are more inclined to expect the former, which is to say that the de-leveraging of the American household may have very well run its course.

 

The Bank of England meets, but for investors, this is a non-event. It is too early to look for a rate hike. The minutes will not be published until July 23. Although some members see conditions that may soon justify a rate hike, no one seems prepared to pull the trigger now. Expect a unanimous decision to keep rates on hold.

 

Separately the UK reports industrial production figures for May. Recall that the May manufacturing PMI edged lower to 57.0 from 57.3. Barring a significant surprise, it should be consistent with the preponderant of evidence indicating the UK economy continues to expand at a robust pace (just shy of 1.0% quarter-over-quarter pace)

 

The combination of the growth differentials, strength of sterling and some structural factors has contributed to the UK’s large external deficit. The visible (goods) trade balance is expected to be near the six month average of GBP8.8 bln. The overall trade deficit (including services) is expected to have narrowed sharply to GBP1.6 bln (six-month average is GBP1.66 bln deficit) from a GBP2.54 bln deficit. 

 

It is a big week for Chinese data, but the general sense that with the aid of targeted government support, the economy has stabilized is unlikely to change. The inflation China is experiencing is concentrated in foodstuffs. Goods and service price inflation is running below 2.0%, and producer prices are still falling (albeit at a slower pace). Official efforts to rein in the shadow banking activity likely means that yuan bank loans should account for a larger share of aggregate social financing.

 

Arguably the most interesting data will relate to reserve growth and trade. In Q1, reserves jumped $126.8 bln on a Q1 trade surplus of $23.1 bln. Reserve growth then outstripped the trade surplus by a factor of 5. This is a prima facie case that the reserve growth was more a function of sterilizing the capital inflows than recycling the trade surplus.

 

Assuming a $37 bln trade surplus in June, as the consensus forecasts, that would bring the trade surplus to about $91 bln in Q2. Export growth may have accelerated (consensus is for around 10% increase after 7% in May). Imports fell 1.6% in May and are expected to have risen by around 5.5% in June. Reserves are expected to have risen by about $30 bln. Such results would be consistent with capital outflows from China in Q2.

 

The IMF’s models suggest the yuan is near fair value. The US Treasury recognizes the large reserve growth as evidence that it is not. Treasury officials have it made it clear. It would rather China buy US goods than buy Treasuries. The next round of Strategic and Economic Dialogue talks will be held on July 9-10 in Beijing and Secretaries of State, and Treasury (Kerry and Lew) will lead the US delegation. A Deputy Secretary of Defense will also meet his counterpart.

 

In light of the economic and political context, some yuan appreciation would not be surprising, within, of course, a limited framework. In fact, the dollar’s peak against the yuan was two months ago (April 30, almost CNY6.27). It finished last week near CNY6.2050. The dollar could ease into the CNY6.15-CNY6.18 range.

 

The Swedish krona and Norwegian krone are the weakest of the major currencies against the dollar last week. The krona’s 1.6% decline brings its losses for the year to almost 6%. It is the weakest of the majors. The 50 bp cut by the Riksbank last week was more aggressive than the market expected. Moreover, that the Governor and First Deputy were outvoted (4-2) creates some uncertainty. At the same time the large move renders the coming data, including CPI, less important. The krona can continue to under-perform.

 

Norwegian krone lost 1.0% to essentially double the year-to-date loss. The losses were mostly in sympathy with its neighbor, but there has been a more dovish shift in the central bank’s stance. The krone weakness buys the central bank time for inflation to fall, it which case it can cut rates, or for the economy to pick up. It should outperform the krona.




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Global Investment Climate: Pieces falling into Place

Investors learned last week that the US created 1.38 mln net new jobs in H1, the most for a six-month period since 2006. They learned that US vehicle sales in June also reached an 8-year high. For its part, the ECB emphasized that the TLTRO facility could inject around 1 trillion euros into the banking system for loans to businesses and households. It also announced that the rules of engagement will allow banks that already work closely together to tap the TLTRO facility collectively.

 

In Japan, the Tankan was mixed as sentiment among large businesses deteriorated a little more than expected, but capex plans increased. Separately, data showed that overall household consumption collapsed in May, warning that the impact of sales tax increase, coupled with base wages and return on savings not keeping pace with inflation, may have compress demand longer than Japanese officials may appreciate.

 

These developments were not game changers. The dollar remains within the two yen range (JPY101-JPY103) that has largely confined the price action since early April. It recovered into the middle of that range with the help a 10 bp net increase in US Treasury yields. At 207 bp, the US premium is at its 200-day moving average. The dollar managed to resurface above its 200-day moving average against the yen (~JPY101.80) and finish the week above it.

 

The euro has been confined to a two cent range ($1.35-$1.37) for the past six weeks. The decline from near $1.40 appears to have be participants anticipating the June rate cuts. The euro was actually stronger against the dollar before the ECB’s July meeting than it was at the June meeting.

 

If last week’s developments were not able to break the dollar out of its ranges, the events in the week ahead are unlikely to either. The May industrial production reports from the largest euro area countries will likely confirm the general impression that investors already have. Germany has lost some momentum. Spain is performing well. France and Italy are struggling.

 

The main release from Japan will be its May current account figures. There are two key components. The trade balance and the investment income balance. The former is in deficit, despite (or because) the significant decline in the yen. The latter is in surplus and sufficiently so that it should overcome the trade deficit and put the external account into surplus.

 

US data cycle is also at a low ebb in week ahead. The JOLTS data on the labor market may receive more attention by economists given that Fed Chair Yellen has referred to it. However, it is not a market mover. It follows on the heels of a national survey and is unlikely to dissuade investors and policy makers that the Fed is drawing nearer its mandates.

 

The FOMC minutes rarely provide market moving material either. Note that the minutes often give air to a wider range of opinion that the Fed’s statement following the meetings, as non-voters also participate in the meeting. Yellen’s willingness to play down the recent upticks in inflation and play down risks to financial stability are not necessarily universally shared. As QE3+ will be wound down in a few more months, discussions of the Fed’s toolkit to manage policy, such as reverse repos, are bound to increase, and there is plenty of scope for difference of opinion.

 

The heuristic point we make is worth repeating in this context.  Yellen and Dudley (and we expect Vice Chairman Fischer to join them) generate the important policy signals. It is not that the others do not have important things to say, far from it. However, when trying to discern the signal from the noise, Yellen and Dudley (and Fischer) can be counted on for the signal.

 

The consumer credit report is unlikely to move the markets either, but it nevertheless offers important insight. Most of the household consumption that has taken place during this cycle has not been financed with revolving credit (that is credit cards). The bulk of the credit that has been extended is for auto and student loans. However, in April, revolving credit rose by $8.8 bln, which is most in seven years. To put this in perspective, consider that even including it, the 12-month average growth in revolving credit is a little less than $1.7 bln. The May report will lend credibility to this turn or show it as a fluke. We are more inclined to expect the former, which is to say that the de-leveraging of the American household may have very well run its course.

 

The Bank of England meets, but for investors, this is a non-event. It is too early to look for a rate hike. The minutes will not be published until July 23. Although some members see conditions that may soon justify a rate hike, no one seems prepared to pull the trigger now. Expect a unanimous decision to keep rates on hold.

 

Separately the UK reports industrial production figures for May. Recall that the May manufacturing PMI edged lower to 57.0 from 57.3. Barring a significant surprise, it should be consistent with the preponderant of evidence indicating the UK economy continues to expand at a robust pace (just shy of 1.0% quarter-over-quarter pace)

 

The combination of the growth differentials, strength of sterling and some structural factors has contributed to the UK’s large external deficit. The visible (goods) trade balance is expected to be near the six month average of GBP8.8 bln. The overall trade deficit (including services) is expected to have narrowed sharply to GBP1.6 bln (six-month average is GBP1.66 bln deficit) from a GBP2.54 bln deficit. 

 

It is a big week for Chinese data, but the general sense that with the aid of targeted government support, the economy has stabilized is unlikely to change. The inflation China is experiencing is concentrated in foodstuffs. Goods and service price inflation is running below 2.0%, and producer prices are still falling (albeit at a slower pace). Official efforts to rein in the shadow banking activity likely means that yuan bank loans should account for a larger share of aggregate social financing.

 

Arguably the most interesting data will relate to reserve growth and trade. In Q1, reserves jumped $126.8 bln on a Q1 trade surplus of $23.1 bln. Reserve growth then outstripped the trade surplus by a factor of 5. This is a prima facie case that the reserve growth was more a function of sterilizing the capital inflows than recycling the trade surplus.

 

Assuming a $37 bln trade surplus in June, as the consensus forecasts, that would bring the trade surplus to about $91 bln in Q2. Export growth may have accelerated (consensus is for around 10% increase after 7% in May). Imports fell 1.6% in May and are expected to have risen by around 5.5% in June. Reserves are expected to have risen by about $30 bln. Such results would be consistent with capital outflows from China in Q2.

 

The IMF’s models suggest the yuan is near fair value. The US Treasury recognizes the large reserve growth as evidence that it is not. Treasury officials have it made it clear. It would rather China buy US goods than buy Treasuries. The next round of Strategic and Economic Dialogue talks will be held on July 9-10 in Beijing and Secretaries of State, and Treasury (Kerry and Lew) will lead the US delegation. A Deputy Secretary of Defense will also meet his counterpart.

 

In light of the economic and political context, some yuan appreciation would not be surprising, within, of course, a limited framework. In fact, the dollar’s peak against the yuan was two months ago (April 30, almost CNY6.27). It finished last week near CNY6.2050. The dollar could ease into the CNY6.15-CNY6.18 range.

 

The Swedish krona and Norwegian krone are the weakest of the major currencies against the dollar last week. The krona’s 1.6% decline brings its losses for the year to almost 6%. It is the weakest of the majors. The 50 bp cut by the Riksbank last week was more aggressive than the market expected. Moreover, that the Governor and First Deputy were outvoted (4-2) creates some uncertainty. At the same time the large move renders the coming data, including CPI, less important. The krona can continue to under-perform.

 

Norwegian krone lost 1.0% to essentially double the year-to-date loss. The losses were mostly in sympathy with its neighbor, but there has been a more dovish shift in the central bank’s stance. The krone weakness buys the central bank time for inflation to fall, it which case it can cut rates, or for the economy to pick up. It should outperform the krona.




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Katherine Mangu-Ward on the Best/Worst of Obamacare Propaganda

These ads, hosted
at doyougotinsurance.com, are so ridiculous that they
prompted Mother Jones to run an
article informing readers that the campaign was, in fact,
“real.” A team effort by the Colorado Consumer Health Initiative
and ProgressNow Colorado Education, the series focuses heavily on
sports injuries, sex, drinking—and various combinations of the
three. The primary takeaway from the ads is that you should sign up
for your taxpayer subsidized health insurance now so that you can
engage in borderline risky behaviors later. This one is part of the
#brosurance category, explains Katherine Mangu-Ward, but don’t
worry: there’s something for the ladies as well. Check out the six
best/worst pieces of Obamacare propaganda.

View this article.

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