ECB Keeps Rates Unchanged, Deposit Facility Rate Stays Negative

Unlike a month ago, this time there are no NIRP announcement fireworks from the ECB which just announced it kept all rates unchanged, with the main refinancing operation rate flat at 0.15%, while the deposit facility continues its existence in NIRP purgatory at negative 0.1%.

From the press release:

At today’s meeting the Governing Council of the ECB decided that the interest rate on the main refinancing operations and the interest rates on the marginal lending facility and the deposit facility will remain unchanged at 0.15%, 0.40% and -0.10% respectively.

 

The President of the ECB will comment on the considerations underlying these decisions at a press conference starting at 2.30 p.m. CET today.

As explained earlier, the focus today will be on Draghi’s conference where much more clarity on the TLTRO program (not to mention the ABS purchase) is expected. However, with an epic data avalanche out of the US at the same time, we wouldn’t be surprised if a few algos blow a gasket in the confusion what is the more important headline.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1mbj9L6 Tyler Durden

What if ‘Seinfeld’ Aired Today?

This week marks
the 25th anniversary of the debut of Seinfeld
. Popular
wisdom holds that Seinfeld was “a show about
nothing
.” And of course this isn’t exactly true—the show was
about relationships, social niceties, narcissism, and modernity.
More specifically, it was a show about the conflation of these
things.

Unlike the characters on Friends—our other 1990s
über-sitcomthe Seinfeldian gang wasn’t so much a
makeshift urban family as a group of people who found each other’s
company varying degrees of advantageous and esteem-boosting. These
were not good people, to put it mildly. “Seinfeld
was
defiantly not lovable,” writes Matt Zoller Seitz in New
York
, describing the world they inhabited as “a kind of
open-air prison of social ritual”. 

But Jerry, George, Kramer, and Elaine dissected, in minute and
unflinching detail, all the quirks and agitations of daily life
that generally went unremarked upon. They pointed out the absurdity
of situations we’d all found mildly flabbergasting. They said the
things we all wished we could (or someone would, at any rate) say,
before the Internet came along to satisfy these sort of
wish-fulfillment needs. 

In reruns, Seinfeld works best when its central
conundrums hinge more on interpersonal dynamics than technology. I
now find it delightful how many issues could apparently arise from
answering machines. At the time, though, these types of things were
surely novel dilemmas. Which is why, right now, the best tweets
from the “Modern Seinfeld” Twitter account are the ones
about technology (“Kramer creates an app that gives you ideas for
other apps”).

Modern Seinfeld (@SeinfeldToday) isn’t
affiliated with Jerry Seinfeld or NBC (and Larry David apparently

isn’t a fan
). It’s a parody account, based on the simple
premise: “What if Seinfeld were still on the air?” The
account—launched in
2012
—is run by comedian, playwright, and TV writer Jack Moore,
who currently writes for a new ABC show called Manhattan Love
Story
and was an editor for Buzzfeed, and Josh
Gondelman, a web producer for John Oliver’s Last Week
Tonight
and writer for New York
magazine
. The @SeinfeldToday tweets that seem the most spot on
and clever to me are probably the ones that best typify the
answering machine phenomenon—in 15 to 25 years, our star-crossed
text messages and Instagram issues will seem quaint, it not
completely unrecognizable: 

Jerry gets paranoid about his girlfriend’s past when her iPhone
automatically connects to the wi-fi at Newman’s apartment.

— Modern Seinfeld (@SeinfeldToday) June
3, 2014

Elaine’s BF notices she has no Instagrams with black people. She
awkwardly tries to take pics w/ black co-workers to prove she’s not
racist.

— Modern Seinfeld (@SeinfeldToday) April
28, 2014

Jerry’s GF always smokes an e-cig in bed. GF:”But it’s vapor.”
J:”You say that like vapor’s something I want. I don’t want vapor!
No vapor!”

— Modern Seinfeld (@SeinfeldToday) April
16, 2014

Jerry’s girlfriend won’t stop saying that she “literally can’t.”
“What?! Can’t what?! Finish your sentence!”

— Modern Seinfeld (@SeinfeldToday) March
18, 2014

George swipes right for every woman on Tinder. E:”What if you’re
not attracted to her?” G:”If she’s attracted to me, I might
be!”

— Modern Seinfeld (@SeinfeldToday) December
21, 2013

Jerry’s Twitter’s hacked. People like “Hacked Jerry” better.
George tries to get trampled on Black Friday so he can sue.
Everyone is polite.

— Modern Seinfeld (@SeinfeldToday) November
30, 2013

Kramer and Newman search Brooklyn for a McDonald’s rumored to
carry the McRib year-round. A Twitter troll slowly drives Jerry
crazy.

— Modern Seinfeld (@SeinfeldToday) April
25, 2013

A Twitter troll slowly drives Jerry crazy… There’s
something immensely sad about this (entirely plausible) plot point.
In New York, Seitz mentions how Seinfeld catchphrases
today would be made into ample memes and gifs.
Seinfeld was—in its time, at least—saved from the
gif. Which brings us to a much shorter-lived show that also debuted
in 1989, in August: Saved by the Bell.

To younger members of Gen X and older millennials, this is part
of the childhood canon. I think we all died a little inside
yesterday in the Reason D.C. office when we realized that none of
our interns and a few of our youngest staffers had no idea who
Jessie Spano was. By a quick show of birth years, we pipointed 1990
as the crack in this generational divide. I shudder to ask them
about the Soup Nazi—though I suppose Seinfeld is a
show you’re more prone to watch in reruns as an adult than
Saved by the Bell. (Another show launched in
1989, The Simpsons, is still airing after all these
years.)   

Since I’m just digressing at this point, I’ll point you to some
of Reason’s Seinfeld coverage from way back (#TBT!).
Here’s Charles Oliver in
2000
, smacking down the idea that “Homer Simpson and Jerry
Seinfeld (are) symbols of a spiritual rot in American popular
culture.” And here’s Nick
Gillespie writing
 about the show in 1995, back when it was
still “difficult to think of (TV) as a possessing an aesthetic
dimension.” If Seinfeld aired today, it’s hard to imagine
it even making the top 10 or 20 indicators of cultural rot list;
but I can see Alyssa Rosennberg writing think pieces about its
gender dynamics and Salon’s contrarian takes on George’s
hairline. The biggest differences for a modern Seinfeld probably
wouldn’t be the technology or types of problems our characters
confronted but the cultural conversation around it. 

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via IFTTT

Frontrunning: July 3

  • Obama Decries Big Bonuses at Bank Trading Desks as Risky  (BBG)
  • India central bank seeks to swap gold to improve reserves quality (Reuters)
  • There goes Q3 GDP: Arthur Strengthens to Become First Atlantic Hurricane (BBG)
  • Airports Serving U.S. Tighten Checks on Stealth-Bomb Threat (BBG)
  • Fear, cash shortages hinder fight against Ebola outbreak (Reuters)
  • Brent Declines as Libya Rebels Say Ports Are Open (BBG)
  • Shiites Train for Battle in Iraqi Holy City (WSJ)
  • Dimon’s Cancer Has 90% Cure Rate With Demanding Therapy (BBG)
  • Goldman says client data leaked, wants Google to delete email (Reuters)
  • ECB Watchers in the Dark Look to Draghi for Illumination (BBG)
  • Saudi Arabia Sends 30,000 Troops to Iraq Border (Reuters)
  • Dollar Bulls Practicing Art of Stealth Capitulation (BBG)
  • Deadly Violence Escalates in Israel After Palestinian Youth, Israeli Teens Killed (WSJ)
  • Stevens Renewed Jawboning Hits Mark to Spur Aussie Drop (BBG)
  • U.S., UK officials prepare inspection order for all F-35s (Reuters)
  • U.S. Gives New Contract To Firm That Vetted NSA Leaker Edward Snowden (WSJ)

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

* Violent clashes erupted in Jerusalem over the killing of an Arab teenager that Palestinians blamed on Jewish settlers, raising fears of a spiral of vengeance spurred by the earlier killings of three Israeli teenagers. (http://on.wsj.com/1qxOzP9)

* The Department of Homeland Security awarded a $190 million contract to the company accused of methodically defrauding the government while carrying out background checks on millions of people, including Edward Snowden. (http://on.wsj.com/1iZdbxK)

* Japan said Thursday it would lift some sanctions on North Korea in return for Pyongyang’s decision to open an investigation into the fate of Japanese citizens it abducted decades ago. (http://on.wsj.com/1marDSz)

* Two U.S. senators have asked the U.S. Commerce Department to provide details about recent federal rulings that may allow exports of some American oil that hasn’t gone through the traditional refining process. (http://on.wsj.com/1iZdk4q)

* Facebook said that since the study on emotions, it has implemented stricter guidelines on Data Science team research. Since at least the beginning of this year, research beyond routine product testing is reviewed by a panel drawn from a group of 50 internal experts in fields such as privacy and data security. (http://on.wsj.com/1qoOj3w)

* Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen pushed back against the notion that the central bank should consider raising interest rates to address concerns about financial stability. (http://on.wsj.com/1o3rwWf)

* Federal regulators are looking at commissions that buyout firms receive for helping companies they control get goods and services at discount prices, as part of a stepped-up probe of private-equity fees. (http://on.wsj.com/TPREfg)

* The announcement by JP Morgan Chase CEO James Dimon that he will undergo treatment for throat cancer puts the spotlight on succession at the U.S. banking giant. (http://on.wsj.com/1lB6zQP)

 

FT

Telefonica SA 8.6 billion euro takeover of KPN’s German mobile unit E-plus won conditional approval from Brussels, after Spain’s largest telecom operator promised to rent out part of the merged company’s network capacity and divest some radio wave spectrum to smaller rivals.

Rival banks will have to consider the benefits of clearing the French lender’s dollar transactions, following BNP Paribas’s $8.9 billion settlement with U.S. authorities for violating sanctions against Sudan, Cuba and Iran that forced the behind-the-scenes role of correspondent banking into the open.

Chinese authorities have informed U.S. consular officials that “on grounds of privacy” they will not be able to attend the trial of British investigator and his American wife and business partner who have been detained in China because of their work for drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline, sources said.

Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen has mounted a forceful defence to keep monetary policy loose signs of a rise in asset prices, and has argued that the central bank did not need to raise interest rates to tackle financial instability as it had other tools at its disposal.

With another regulator saying that will quiz Facebook on its psychological experiment, the social networking site’s chief operating officer, Sheryl Sandberg, told NDTV in an interview that the company will not try to control its users’ emotions.

Venture Capitalist Tim Draper, a billionaire who is campaigning to split California into six states, has emerged as the sole winning bidder of bitcoins worth about $18 million auctioned by the United States Marshals Service.

 

NYT

* Standard General, a little-known hedge fund backing Dov Charney, the ousted executive of American Apparel, is in talks with the company’s board over the possibility of bringing in new leadership, including a cadre of experienced board members, while keeping the company’s signature manufacturing in the United States. (http://nyti.ms/1z9cI12)

* Privacy and Civil Liberties Oversight Board, the federal privacy board that sharply criticized the collection of the phone records of Americans by the National Security Agency, has concluded that the surveillance program is largely in compliance with both the Constitution and a surveillance law that Congress passed six years ago. (http://nyti.ms/1s0Jcpt)

* Security researchers at the RSA Security division of the EMC Corp have uncovered what they believe is a significant cyber-crime operation in Brazil that took aim at $3.75 billion in transactions by Brazilians. (http://nyti.ms/1iYg9Tn)

* Venture capitalist Tim Draper, winner of the government auction of nearly 30,000 Bitcoins on Friday, intends to make the coins available for use in emerging markets via a partnership with the Bitcoin exchange start-up Vaurum. (http://nyti.ms/1mmAkei)

* The Weinstein Company, best known for its Oscar-winning film operation, is exploring plans to spin off its TV division into a separate company that could be sold to a strategic partner or taken public. (http://nyti.ms/1iYgF41)

* Federal auto regulators, criticized recently for not acting aggressively enough on safety issues, turned some of their fire on Chrysler on Wednesday, saying in a harshly worded letter that the automaker was taking too long to repair 1.6 million recalled Jeep sport utility vehicles. (http://nyti.ms/1oqkA8K)

* Target is “respectfully” asking its customers to not bring firearms into its stores, even where it is allowed by law. Molly Snyder, a Target spokeswoman, said that Target’s move was a “request and not a prohibition.” (http://nyti.ms/1masx1n)

* The Wall Street Journal has cut between 20 and 40 staff members in recent weeks, according to people with knowledge of the matter, as part of a re-evaluation of its newsroom that came at the end of its financial year. (http://nyti.ms/VfVwY7)

* China said it would permit banks to set their own exchange rates for the renminbi against the dollar in deals with clients, in a step to relax controls to make the currency more market-driven. (http://nyti.ms/1iZgK71)

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

** On the eve of a Throne Speech outlining Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne’s plan for her new majority mandate, Moody’s has issued a stark warning on Ontario’s growing deficit. The bond rating agency has changed its outlook on the province to “negative,” cautioning its credit rating could be downgraded if it doesn’t show progress either cutting spending or hiking revenues. (http://bit.ly/1lVPNAO)

** Kyle Lowry, the basketball veteran who led the Toronto Raptors to their first postseason appearance in five years, said on Wednesday on Twitter he’s staying put. Lowry’s deal is $48 million through four years with an opt-out after the third year, according to multiple reports. (http://bit.ly/1qAINfN)

Reports in the business section:

** Auto sales stayed in overdrive last month in Canada, putting six-month deliveries ahead of the record pace set last year. Canadians snapped up 175,428 new cars, trucks, crossovers and mini-vans in June, up 2 percent from 171,608 a year earlier and making last month the best June on record. (http://bit.ly/VgTBm4)

NATIONAL POST

* Toronto Mayor Rob Ford admitted Wednesday to using “every drug that you can think of” including crack, marijuana, cocaine and magic mushrooms but not heroin and never in his office, in his first one-on-one interviews since returning from addiction treatment. (http://bit.ly/VgTXsQ)

* Environment Canada is warning that tropical storm Arthur could impact Atlantic Canada this weekend. The Canadian Hurricane Centre says the storm is expected to intensify to hurricane strength overnight as it moves north-eastward up the East Coast of the United States. (http://bit.ly/1xl71eB)

FINANCIAL POST

* The Globe and Mail narrowly avoided a strike on Wednesday, with the parties agreeing to return to the bargaining table on Tuesday after unionized workers voted overwhelmingly to reject a contract offer from management. (http://bit.ly/1lVRcY1)

* Canada is one step closer to having a new airline after Canada Jetlines Ltd announced plans to raise $10 million and list on the TSX Venture Exchange. (http://bit.ly/1z9NZcY)

 

China

SHANGHAI SECURITIES NEWS

– China’s securities regulator will soon publish rules that will expedite delisting of loss-making publicly traded firms as part of efforts to reform the country’s capital markets.

– The China Insurance Regulatory Commission, the country’s insurance regulator, has started a crackdown in Shanghai on illegal sales of wealth management products by insurance agents.

SHANGHAI SECURITIES

– Harvest Fund Management Co will sell a product that will allow Chinese investors to subscribe to IPO shares of Alibaba Group Holdings Ltd <IPO-BABA.N>.

SECURITIES TIMES

– Chinese electronics retailer Suning Commerce Group Co Ltd , which has acquired video site PPTV, may roll out Internet TV products to join the war to penetrate consumers’ living rooms.

PEOPLE’S DAILY

– In an editorial, the People’s Daily warned Japan not to disrupt the current international system and said China will have enough power to construct a world of peace and mutual prosperity.

CHINA DAILY

– Chinese President Xi Jinping told former U.S. Treasury secretary Hank Paulson the United States should objectively view China’s national conditions and policies, and the two sides should avoid suspicion, confrontation and “plant more flowers, not thorns” in their relations.

Britain

The Telegraph

SECURITY TO BE STEPPED UP AT UK AIRPORTS AMID TERROR FEARS

Security at British airports is being increased after the United States called for heightened precautions amid reports two terror networks are working together on a bomb that could evade existing measures.

The Guardian

NHS CANCER CARE: PLANNED SWITCH TO PRIVATE CONTRACTS IN 700 MLN STG PLANS

Cancer care in the NHS could be privatised for the first time in the health service’s biggest ever outsourcing of services worth over 1.2 billion pounds.

The Times

SHARE PRICE RIGGING ON LSE IS RIFE, MPS ALLEGE

Regulators are under pressure to open an investigation into the suspected manipulation of the closing prices of ordinary shares traded in London after it was claimed in Parliament yesterday that attempted market abuse was rife.

Sky News

BAE SYSTEMS WINS U.S. DEAL FOR ‘ANTI-INSURGENT’ MISSILE

UK defence contractor BAE Systems has been chosen to further develop its ‘anti-insurgent’ missile system for the U.S. military.

 

Fly On The Wall 7:00 AM Market Snapshot

ECONOMIC REPORTS

Domestic economic reports scheduled for today include:
Non-farm payrolls for June at 8:30–consensus 211K
Unemployment rate for June at 8:30–consensus 6.3%
Jobless claims for week of June 28 at 8:30–consensus 314K
International trade balance for May at 8:30–consensus deficit $45.1B
ISM non-manufacturing index for June at 10:00–consensus 56.2

ANALYST RESEARCH

Upgrades

Athlon Energy (ATHL) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at UBS
Cree (CREE) upgraded to Outperform from Perform at Oppenheimer
Downgrades
Comerica (CMA) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Citigroup
Lazard (LAZ) downgraded to Outperform from Strong Buy at Raymond James
RSP Permian (RSPP) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at UBS
ResMed (RMD) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Deutsche Bank
Sibanye Gold (SBGL) downgraded to Sell from Neutral at UBS

Initiations

Chatham Lodging (CLDT) reinstated with an Overweight at Barclays
Ericsson (ERIC) initiated with a Hold at Jefferies
KeyCorp (KEY) assumed with a Neutral at Citigroup
PAREXEL (PRXL) initiated with a Hold at KeyBanc
Regions Financial (RF) assumed with a Neutral at Citigroup
Sterling Bancorp (STL) initiated with an Outperform at Raymond James
SunTrust (STI) assumed with a Neutral at Citigroup

COMPANY NEWS

American Railcar (ARII) announces resignation of Carl Icahn from board
Ares (ARES) to acquire Graphite Capital stake in London Square for GBP 110M
Coach (COH) sees ‘Transformation Plan’ charges related to inventory $75M-$85M
Impax (IPXL) acquires two generic products from Actavis
Medtronic (MDT) announces insulin pump more effective than daily injection
Qualcomm (QCOM) acquires Wilocity
Salesforce.com (CRM) announces strategic partnership with Deutsche Telekom
Tekmira (TKMR) receives notice of clinical hold for TKM-Ebola Phase I trial
Wausau Paper (WPP), Starboard reach agreement
Yahoo (YHOO) shuts down less popular products to focus on core areas

EARNINGS

Companies that beat consensus earnings expectations last night and today include:
SYNNEX (SNX)

NEWSPAPERS/WEBSITES

Barrick Gold (ABX) hires bank to sell Golden Sunlight mine, WSJ reports
Dethroned American Apparel (APP) CEO gives stake to hedge fund, Reuters says
Facebook (FB) Data Science group had little oversight, WSJ reports
lululemon (LULU) founder exploring taking company private, WSJ reports
NHTSA says Chrysler too slow to amend older Jeep issue, Reuters says
LED lighting to reach 94% of street lighting by 2023, DigiTimes
Occidental (OXY) ends Middle East stake sale effort without deal, Bloomberg says
SEC looking into buyout firm (KKR, BX) commissions, WSJ reports
Volkswagen denies reports of PACCAR (PCAR) takeover, Dow reports

SYNDICATE

Access Pharmaceuticals (ACCP) files to sell $23M of common stock
American Residential Properties (ARPI) files to sell 6.6M shares of common stock
Centene (CNC) files to sell 746,369 shares for holders
Good Times Restaurants (GTIM) files to sell 2.09M shares for holders
Knightsbridge Tankers (VLCCF) files to sell 18.6M shares for holders




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1o4cBLz Tyler Durden

What Analysts Are Looking For In Draghi’s Announcement Today

There is far less on the ECB table today compared to a month ago when expectations were massive and Draghi didn’t fail to satisfy (with the usual set of half-baked, non-existant programs a la the OMT which still doesn’t technically exist, 2 years after it was first revealed) and nobody expects any major announcements out of Mario Draghi. If anything, the market hopes the ECB head will use the press conference today to elaborate on the missing technicalities of the TLTRO. With inflation printing at 0.5% again, concerns of deflation will likely be mentioned once again. When it comes to the EUR reaction, the most bearish case would be for Draghi to discuss QE, and providing details of how a bond monetization operation would look like. More than the EURUSD, a bigger risk lies for peripheral bonds which are at risk if Draghi unveils details of TLTRO today that could hurt the periphery carry trade.

Here is what various sellside firms believe could be the outcomes of today’s press conference, via Bloomberg:

RBS

  • Any prevention of the TLTRO being used for government bond carry trade is the biggest risk for periphery today, write strategists in a note
  • Expect Draghi to be vague on the treatment of government bonds and perhaps reference the ECB’s new regulatory powers

BNP Paribas

  • EGB market will pay close attention to any further details on the TLTRO, strategists write in a note
  • Environment could turn volatile in early afternoon as U.S. payrolls data released, which could support core bonds with periphery still at risk

Barclays

  • If the ECB fails to refresh confidence around its already announced measures, weakening of peripheral bond trading in recent days could continue a bit longer, writes strategist Cagdas Aksu in a note
  • ECB could provide some information on the technical details of the TLTROs, as well as the date of their allotment in Sept. and Dec.
  • ECB may also provide some technical details on the benchmark levels that will determine quarterly TLTRO borrowing in 2015 and 2016

Citigroup

  • There is a high level of anxiety in the markets with regards to additional TLTRO details that might make it more difficult for banks to hold funds for a “long period,” writes strategist Alessandro Tentori in a note
  • Together with strong U.S. data, a neutral ECB could result in some profit-taking on carry trade positions that have been very successful since the start of this year




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

Flat Equity Futures Prepare For Big Move Following Econ Data Avalanche

Once again, US equity futures are roughly unchanged (while Treasurys have seen a surprising overnight bid coming out of Asia) ahead of an avalanche of macroeconomic news both in Europe, where the ECB will deliver its monthly message, and in the US where we will shortly get jobless claims, ISM non-manufacturing, trade balance, nonfarm payrolls, unemployment, average earnings, Markit U.S. composite PMI, Markit U.S. services PMI due later. Of course the most important number is the June NFP payrolls and to a lesser extent the unemployment rate, which consensus expects at 215K and 6.3%, although the whisper number is about 30K higher following yesterday’s massive ADP outlier. Nonetheless, keep in mind that a) ADP is a horrible predictor of NFP, with a 40K average absolute error rate and b) in December the initial ADP print was 151K higher than the nonfarms. Those watching inflation will be far more focused on hourly earnings, expected to rise 0.2% M/M and 1.9% Y/Y. Should wages continue to stagnate and decline on a real basis, expect to hear the “stagflation” word much more often in the coming weeks.

Asia is having a relatively subdued session this morning with many in wait-and-see mode for the events to come later today. The AUDUSD dropped around 40pips and Australian government bonds have rallied after the RBA governor warned that the market was underestimating the chance of an AUD decline and that the RBA has not contemplated policy tightening despite a rising housing market. The AUD has also come under pressure following a weak retail sales report (-0.5% mom vs unch expected). In China, the HSBC services PMI printed at the highest level in more than a year (53.1 vs 50.7 expected) which follows the stronger than expected official manufacturing PMI earlier this week. Equity markets are mixed with the Nikkei (-0.3%) underperforming despite a higher USDJPY (mainly due to a stronger USD than a weaker JPY). In Indonesia, ahead of next week’s presidential elections, the country’s debut EUR sovereign bond has attracted 7x the issue amount of EUR1bn, pricing at MS+195bp for 7-year money.

Perhaps the biggest news out of China has nothing to do with the actual economy and all to do with its banks, where Securities News reported that in June alons the 4 largest banks, Industrial & Commercial Bank of China Ltd., China Construction Bank Corp., Bank of China Ltd. and Agricultural Bank of China Ltd. surged to 2.2 trillion  yuan in June. This is over almost 10 times the increase in May, when deposits rose by 278.2b yuan for the four banks.This is equivalent to $350 billion in dollar terms or about 4 months of the original $85 billion POMO combined! Just in case someone was curious who is providing all the liquidity on the margin these days…

Despite the looming risk events, stocks traded higher in Europe this morning, although gains were led by the more defensive sectors. Utilities was the only sector to trade in the red, where a number of large cap Spanish based companies traded ex-dividend. As a result, the Spanish IBEX-35 index underperformed its peers and traded lower in Europe. In terms of US specific news, President Obama said the banking industry is set to face further changes in order to limit excessive risk-taking beyond the changes written into the Dodd-Frank financial law, with changes potentially including bank restructuring. (WSJ)

U.S. jobless claims, ISM non-manufacturing, trade balance, nonfarm payrolls, unemployment, average earnings, Markit U.S. composite PMI, Markit U.S. services PMI due later.

Market Wrap

  • S&P 500 futures little changed at 1968.1
  • Stoxx 600 up 0.2% to 346.5
  • US 10Yr yield up 1bps to 2.63%
  • German 10Yr yield up 2bps to 1.31%
  • MSCI Asia Pacific down 0.1% to 147.3
  • Gold spot down 0.3% to $1322.4/oz

Bulletin headline summary from RanSquawk and Bloomberg

  • Treasuries little changed, 10Y yields near highest since June 20 before report forecast to show U.S. economy added 215k jobs in June with unemployment rate holding at 6.3%.
  • Stocks in Europe are seen broadly higher (Eurostoxx 50, +0.37%), though gains were led by the more defensive sectors given the looming risk events due to take place later today.
  • Apart from digest the release of the US monthly jobs report and ECB, today will also see the release of the weekly US jobs and Trade Balance reports ahead of a US holiday tomorrow.
  • ECB issues rate decision at 7:45am ET; Draghi press conference set for 8:30am, coinciding with U.S. jobs report for first time since 2008
  • Obama said in a radio interview to be aired today that an “unfinished piece of business” is to address banks that “take big risks because the profit incentive and the bonus incentive is there for them”
  • Airports including London Heathrow, Europe’s busiest, stepped up security checks with unspecified measures in response to U.S. warnings amid concern that a new  generation of bombs could evade existing scans
  • Decheng Mining pledged the same metals stockpile three times over to obtain more than 2.7b yuan ($435m) of loans in China’s Qingdao port, a person briefed on the matter said, citing preliminary findings of an official investigation
  • The bloodshed in eastern Ukraine has reached a “dramatic climax” in the past few days, prompting Russia, Ukraine, France and Germany to pledge to work for a comprehensive cease-fire in another round of talks by July 5, according to Germany’s foreign minister
  • Hundreds of police cleared protesters from a sit-in that disrupted Hong Kong’s financial district yesterday, arresting 511 people who stayed on after a mass rally opposing China’s insistence to vet candidates for the city’s  2017 leadership election
  • Sweden’s central bank lowered its main interest rate by a more-than-estimated half a percentage point and predicted no increases until the end of next year to shield the largest Nordic economy from deflation
  • The Australian dollar headed toward its biggest two-day drop since January as RBA governor Stevens said investors were underestimating chances of a significant fall in the currency
  • Sovereign yields mostly higher. EU peripheral spreads narrow. Asian stocks mixed. European equities, U.S. stock futures gain. WTI crude, gold and copper fall

US Event Calendar

  • 8:30am: Trade Balance, May, est. -$45b (prior -$47.2b)
  • 8:30am: Change in Nonfarm Payrolls, June, est. 215k (prior 217k)
    • Change in Private Payrolls, June, est. 215k (prior 216k)
    • Change in Manufacturing Payrolls, June, est. 10k (prior 10k)
    • Unemployment Rate, June, est. 6.3% (prior 6.3%)
    • Average Hourly Earnings m/m, June, est. 0.2% (prior 0.2%)
    • Average Hourly Earnings y/y, June, est. 1.9% (prior 2.1%)
    • Average Weekly Hours All Employees, June, est. 34.5 (prior 34.5)
    • Change in Household Employment, June (prior 145k)
    • Underemployment Rate, June (prior 12.2%)
    • Labor Force Participation Rate, June (prior 62.8%)
  • 8:30am: Initial Jobless Claims, June 28, est. 313k (prior 312k)
  • Continuing Claims, June 21, est. 2.560m (prior 2.571m)
  • 9:45am: Bloomberg Consumer Comfort, June 29 (prior 37.1)
  • 9:45am: Markit US Services PMI, June final, est. 61 (prior 61.2)
  • Markit US Composite PMI, June final (prior 61.1)
  • 10:00am: ISM Non-Manufacturing Composite, June., est. 56.3 (prior 56.3)
  • 7:45am: ECB seen holding main refinancing rate at 0.150%, marginal lending facility at 0.400%, deposit facility rate at -0.100%
  • 8:30am: ECB’s Draghi holds news conference in Frankfurt
  • 9:00am: Start of Berlin event featuring Merkel, Draghi and others
  • No POMO

ASIAN MARKETS

  • Asian stocks fall with the ASX outperforming and the Kospi underperforming.
  • MSCI Asia Pacific down 0.1% to 147.3
  • Nikkei 225 down 0.1%, Hang Seng down 0.1%, Kospi down 0.2%, Shanghai Composite up 0.2%, ASX up 0.7%, Sensex up 0%

EUROPE 

Absorption of supply from Spain and France, together with good size redemption/coupon related flow, failed to support Bunds. Instead, prices remained under pressure amid profit taking ahead of the upcoming ECB policy meeting and also after prices touched on contract highs yesterday. The ECB is widely expected to keep rates unchanged and Draghi will likely use the press conference to elaborate on the technicalities of the TLTRO operations. Focus will also be on the NFP, with expectations buoyed following the release of much better than expected ADP report yesterday. Of note, given the US holiday tomorrow, price action is expected to be exaggerated by consequent thin volumes.

  • 16 out of 19 Stoxx 600 sectors rise; chemicals, tech outperform, utilities, construction underperform
  • 72.5% of Stoxx 600 members gain, 24.2% decline
  • Eurostoxx 50 +0.3%, FTSE 100 +0.3%, CAC 40 +0.4%, DAX +0.4%, IBEX -0.3%, FTSEMIB +0.5%, SMI +0.5%

EQUITIES

Despite the looming risk events, stocks traded higher in Europe this morning, although gains were led by the more defensive sectors. Utilities was the only sector to trade in the red, where a number of large cap Spanish based companies traded ex-dividend. As a result, the Spanish IBEX-35 index underperformed its peers and traded lower in Europe. In terms of US specific news, President Obama said the banking industry is set to face further changes in order to limit excessive risk-taking beyond the changes written into the Dodd-Frank financial law, with changes potentially including bank restructuring. (WSJ)

FX

GBP bucked the recent trend and underperformed EUR, following the release of lower than expected UK Services PMI. Elsewhere, AUD fell overnight after the governor of the RBA said that investors underestimate the chance of a ‘significant fall’ in the AUD, while EUR/SEK advanced to its highest level since 2011 this morning after the Swedish Riksbank cut interest rate by 50bps to 0.25% against expectations of a cut of 25bps. At the same time, the central bank also said that it sees repo rate averaging 0.29% in Q3 2014 vs. Prev. forecast 0.66%, 0.22% in Q4 vs. Prev. forecast 0.65%.

COMMODITIES

Spot gold traded lower overnight and in Europe this morning, as expectations for a better than expected NFP jobs report following the release of consensus beating ADP report continued to weigh on prices. Looking elsewhere, firmer USD and the recent re-opening of the Las Ranuf and Es Sider oil ports in Libya ensured that WTI and Brent crude futures traded lower, albeit marginally.

* * *

As usual, DB’s Jim Reid concludes the overnight recap

The US economy bulls certainly enjoyed the heat of the strong +281k ADP report yesterday (+205k expected) – the highest reading since November 2012. This hasn’t changed DB’s forecast of +225k today for both the headline and private payrolls though. DB also continues to expect a one-tenth decline in the unemployment rate to 6.2%. The market is at +215k and 6.3% respectively. In terms of renewed optimism, we’ve been here many times before in this cycle but given the weather distortions it was always inevitable that there would be a Q2 data spurt at some point. But will it be sustainable? The market might not put quite as much weight on data now as they will in say August/September when surely the weather impact will have been completely worked through by then.

Nevertheless the bond market reacted hawkishly yesterday with a 6-7bp selloff in 10yrs immediately after the ADP data. The weaker-than-expected US factory orders (-0.5% vs -0.3% expected) and a dovish Yellen speech didn’t do much more than slow the pace of the selloff. 10yrs closed at 2.626% (+6.2bp on the day) and the 2s/30s curve steepened by about 5bp. While treasuries had their largest sell-off in a month, the reaction in other asset classes was more nuanced. US equities traded in a narrow range, and though futures dipped shortly after the data release, they quickly retraced lost ground and the S&P 500 closed at +0.07%. Also an interesting reaction was seen in spot gold, which recovered well following the ADP print to be virtually unchanged on the day – perhaps helped by the soothing words from the Fed chair. The US dollar index gained 0.15% which hurt a number of EM currencies such as the Mexican Peso (-0.4%) and the Brazilian Real (-1.0%).

So as touched upon above, Yellen’s IMF lecture proved again to be dovish with the Fed chair downplaying the role of monetary policy as a tool to promote financial stability and highlighting that using rate policy to tackle asset price inflation may come a cost to the Fed’s inflation and unemployment mandates. For the second time in less than a month though, Yellen has brought up the signs of excess in credit markets. Recall that at her post-FOMC press conference she highlighted that was certainly watching developments in the lower-grade corporate bonds and the high yield market. Yesterday she again noted corporate bond spreads have fallen to low levels, suggesting “that some investors may under-appreciate the potential for losses and volatility going forward”. Yellen also noted that credit terms of leveraged loans have eased significantly but that overall measures do not suggest that non-financial borrowers are taking on excessive debt. Despite this core message, by our reading Yellen left the door slightly ajar by noting that “there may be times when an adjustment in monetary policy may be appropriate to ameliorate emerging risks to financial stability”. Indeed the Fed Chair cited the experience of the mid-2000s where perhaps policymakers should have reacted to the growing house price bubble. But she again reiterated that monetary policy was and is a very blunt tool to tackle house price inflation and one that would likely leave large costs in terms of increases in unemployment. Her comments were consistent with those from the BoE’s chief economist Andy Haldane who said yesterday who said that monetary policy is sometimes “the last line of defence” against financial stability risks.

One market that has benefited from the benign rate environment this year, especially since February, has been EM. DB’s GEM equity strategist John-Paul Smith is sticking with his bearish 2014 view on the back of China and dollar concerns. On the first of these concerns, he notes that despite the continual stream of downgrades to Chinese GDP estimates, investors are unlikely to regain confidence until expectations begin to bottom out which will not happen until there are clear signs of productivity growth. From a micro perspective, there is little indication that the much vaunted Chinese reform program is having much impact, while there are growing signs that parts of the industrial and materials sectors are starting to succumb to a debt trap. On the second concern, JP continues to believe that the ongoing contraction in economic growth rates across most of the EM universe will help to underpin low US Treasury yields but will also lead to a major dollar rally at some point in H2 2014, which is the most likely catalyst for a correction in EM assets. JP is maintaining his forecast for a -10% fall in the MSCI EM compared with flat DM.

Asia is having a relatively subdued session this morning with many in wait-and-see mode for the events to come later today. The AUDUSD dropped around 40pips and Australian government bonds have rallied after the RBA governor warned that the market was underestimating the chance of an AUD decline and that the RBA has not contemplated policy tightening despite a rising housing market. The AUD has also come under pressure following a weak retail sales report (-0.5% mom vs unch expected). In China, the HSBC services PMI printed at the highest level in more than a year (53.1 vs 50.7 expected) which follows the stronger than expected official manufacturing PMI earlier this week. Equity markets are mixed with the Nikkei (-0.3%) underperforming despite a higher USDJPY (mainly due to a stronger USD than a weaker JPY). In Indonesia, ahead of next week’s presidential elections, the country’s debut EUR sovereign bond has attracted 7x the issue amount of EUR1bn, pricing at MS+195bp for 7-year money.

Aside from payrolls today we have the monthly ECB meeting which should be a relatively quiet affair given last months major policy announcements. There will be some interest in how dovish Draghi sounds and whether he opens the door for more action at a later date if necessary. There might be more questioning around the ECB’s plans for ABS purchases especially after the FT article we mentioned yesterday suggested that progress on hammering out the details has been slow so far. EURUSD has softened for the past two days, but this came after sizeable gains on Monday and Friday.

In terms of European data, the services PMIs are the initial focus where consensus is looking for a small uptick in Spain and Italy. Euroarea retail sales for May are released shortly afterwards. The ECB releases its policy statement at 12:45pm LDN and this will be followed by Draghi’s press conference 45 minutes later. It will be a hectic few minutes with Draghi’s press conference due to start at the same time as US non-farm payrolls, the May trade report and jobless claims are released. Expect the ECB press conference journos to be distracted for a few minutes as Draghi starts. The non-mfg ISM rounds out today’s busy calendar.

Back stateside it’s worth expanding on the US trade report which is expected to show a deficit of -$45.0bn in May. Recall that much of the disappointment in Q1 GDP (and subsequent downward revisions) came from weaker trade. Indeed net exports previously subtracted subtracted -153bps from Q1 growth.

Before we signoff today, we should note the growing chatter around a potential government shutdown when the current government funding bill reaches its end in September. Given the proximity to midterm elections in November, there could be elements of both the Democrats and Republicans who could use the looming government funding deadline as a chance to score political points. DB’s Head of Government Affairs Frank Kelly hosted a call yesterday on this topic. His overall view was that it’s unlikely that we will see  a shutdown come September given what’s at stake, particularly for Republicans, in the mid-term elections but there will certainly be headline risks over the course of July-September. These headline risks will encompass what Congress plans with respect to Exim Bank whose charter expires at the end of September. A number of more conservative Republicans want the Exim Bank’s charter to either expire or continue subject to reforms. The US highway trust fund, which is running low on funds, is also a point of contention and there is still significant disagreement between Republicans and Democrats on how to fund it.

So look forward to more US political noise as we approach mid-terms!!!




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1iZjb9Z Tyler Durden

Andrew Napolitano on the Obama Drone Memo

Last week, the Obama administration released a
long-anticipated legal memo. It consists of 40 highly blacked-out
pages, the conclusion of which is that the president can order the
CIA to kill Americans who are present in foreign countries and who,
in the opinion of high-level government officials, pose a threat to
Americans but may be too difficult to arrest.

Conveniently, the memorandum never mentions the Fifth Amendment
to the Constitution, which famously commands that if the government
wants the life, liberty, or property of any person, it can only do
so via due process. As we mark the anniversary of America’s birth
as a free nation, Andrew Napolitano notes that our Founders
thought they were establishing a society based upon
natural rights and the rule of law—but perhaps they were wrong.
Perhaps we have merely gone from an inherited tyrant to an elected
one.  

View this article.

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Brickbat: The Eyes of Texas

A Texas judge has sentenced
Clifford Hall to six months in prison for delinquent child support
payments. Hall thought he was making the payments, but a clerical
error by
his employer
 kept the money from reaching the child’s
mother. When Hall found out about the error, he not only made sure
the back payments got to her but gave her an extra $1,000. That
didn’t satisfy the judge, nor the appellate court which upheld the
ruling.

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The BRICs Are Morphing Into An Anti-Dollar Alliance

While numerous massively indebted administrations around the world hope to divert the attention of what’s left of their struggling middle class away from its daily impoverished existence and distract it with flashing lights and glitzy animations showing another all time market high on a daily basis, a significantly more important shift taking place behind the scenes is appreciated by very few: the ongoing de-dollarization of the world. For the latest example of how increasingly more countries are setting the stage for the final currency war, we go again to Russia where VOR’s  Valentin Mândr??escu explains that slowly but surely the BRICS – that proud Goldman acronym which was conceived to perpetuate the great American way of life by releasing trillions in US-denominated debt in heretofore untapped markets – are morphing into an anti-dollar alliance.

BRICS is morphing into an anti-dollar alliance, From VOR

Before the crucial visit to Beijing next week, the governor of the Russian Central Bank, Elvira Nabiullina met Vladimir Putin to report on the progress of the upcoming ruble-yuan swap deal with the People’s Bank of China and Kremlin used the meeting to let the world know about the technical details of its international anti-dollar alliance.

On June 10th, Sergey Glaziev, Putin’s economy advisor published an article outlining the need to establish an international alliance of countries willing to get rid of the dollar in international trade and refrain from using dollars in their currency reserves. The ultimate goal would be to break the Washington’s money printing machine that is feeding its military-industrial complex and giving the US ample possibilities to spread chaos across the globe, fueling the civil wars in Libya, Iraq, Syria and Ukraine. Glaziev’s critics believe that such an alliance would be difficult to establish and that creating a non-dollar-based global financial system would be extremely challenging from a technical point of view. However, in her discussion with Vladimir Putin, the head of the Russian central bank unveiled an elegant technical solution for this problem and left a clear hint regarding the members of the anti-dollar alliance that is being created by the efforts of Moscow and Beijing:

“We’ve done a lot of work on the ruble-yuan swap deal in order to facilitate trade financing. I have a meeting next week in Beijing”, she said casually and then dropped the bomb: “We are discussing with China and our BRICS parters the establishment of a system of multilateral swaps that will allow to transfer resources to one or another country, if needed. A part of the currency reserves can be directed to [the new system].” (Prime news agency)

It seems that Kremlin chose the all-in-one approach for establishing its anti-dollar alliance. Currency swaps between the BRICS central banks will facilitate trade financing while completely bypassing the dollar. At the same time, the new system will also act as a de facto replacement of the IMF, because it will allow the members of the alliance to direct resources to finance the weaker countries. As an important bonus, derived from this “quasi-IMF” system, the BRICS will use a part (most likely the “dollar part”) of their currency reserves to support it, thus drastically reducing the amount of dollar-based instruments bought by some of the biggest foreign creditors of the US.

Skeptics will surely claim that a BRICS-based anti-dollar alliance will not manage to deprive the dollar of its global reserve currency status. Instead of arguing against this line of thought, it is easier to point out that Washington is doing its best to enlarge the ranks of the enemies of the dollar. Asked by the Russia 24 channel to comment on Nabiullina statements, Sergey Kostin, the president of the state-owned VTB bank and one of the staunchest supporters of anti-dollar policies, offered an interesting perspective on the situation in Europe:

“I think the work on ruble-yuan swap line will finalized in the nearest future and the way for ruble-yuan settlement will be open. Moreover, we are not the only ones with such initiatives. We know about the statements made by Mr. Noyer, chairman of the Bank of France. As a retaliation for what Americans have done to BNP Paribas, he opined that the trade with China must be done in yuan or euro.”

If the current trend continues, soon the dollar will be abandoned by most of the significant global economies and it will be kicked out of the global trade finance. Washington’s bullying will make even former American allies choose the anti-dollar alliance instead of the existing dollar-based monetary system. The point of no return for the dollar may be much closer than it is generally thought. In fact, the greenback may have already past its point of no return on its way to irrelevance.




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

China In The Golden Age Of Central Bankers – “Whatever It Takes”

Submitted by Ben Hunt via Salient Partners' Epsilon Theory blog,

A compassionate man once caught a turtle. He wanted to make it into soup, but unwilling to be accused of taking life, he boiled a pan full of water and, placing a narrow rod over the pan, said to the turtle, “If you can get across the pan, I will set you free.”

The turtle was in no doubt as to the intentions of the man. But he did not want to die. So, summoning up all his will, he accomplished the impossible.

“Well done!” said the man. “Now … please try it again.”

Cheng Shi (12th – 13th century AD)

It doesn’t matter whether the cat is black or white, as long as it catches mice.
Deng Xiaoping (1904 – 1997)

In approaching a problem a Marxist should see the whole as well as the parts. A frog in a well says, “The sky is no bigger than the mouth of the well.”
Mao Zedong (1893 – 1976)

What the caterpillar calls the end, the rest of the world calls a butterfly.
Lao Tzu (604 – 531 BC)

Everything ends badly. Otherwise it wouldn’t end.
Brian Flanagan (Tom Cruise), “Cocktail” (1988)

Jake Gittes:

How much are you worth?

Noah Cross:

I have no idea. How much do you want?

Jake Gittes:

I just want to know what you’re worth. More than 10 million?

Noah Cross:

Oh my, yes!

Jake Gittes:

Why are you doing it? How much better can you eat? What could you buy that you can’t already afford?

Noah Cross:

The future, Mr. Gittes! The future. … You see, Mr. Gittes, most people never have to face the fact that at the right time and the right place, they’re capable of ANYTHING.

Robert Towne, “Chinatown” (1974)

John Huston as Noah Cross, “Chinatown” (1974)

Deng Xiaoping was a survivor. That’s why I love this picture of the man, here 80-something years old, looking for all the world like Emperor Palpatine of Star Wars fame, still dying his hair jet-black and chain-smoking his Panda cigarettes. Purged not once but twice. Wife and daughter dead in childbirth. Friends mowed down by the Kuomintang. Eldest son tortured by Red Guards before being thrown out a 4th-story window. You think this veteran of the Long March, who lived in caves and ate rats … when the war was going well, wasn’t willing to do ANYTHING to set the future course of the modern Chinese State? You think that Tiananmen Square kept this guy up at night?

Deng Xiaoping and his ally/mentor, Zhou Enlai, are the architects of modern China, of China as a Great Power. For 30 years Zhou tempered the Maoist ideology of permanent revolution, preserving the kernel of a stable army and stable government bureaucracy, setting the stage for a pragmatic successor to Mao. But it was Deng who was able to out-maneuver the Gang of Four and seize control of the Army and the Party after Mao’s death (and Zhou’s) in 1976, replacing that Maoist ideology of permanent revolution with a market-driven ideology of modernization and economic growth. Deng wasn’t interested in political purity, but in economic results. It’s not the color of the cat, as he famously said, but its ability to catch mice.

Deng’s political genius – the core attribute that made him such a consummate survivor – was his ability to sell his vision of economic modernization and growth as an end in itself to other political and military leaders. Permanent revolution is … tiring … and doesn’t really pay that well. Deng offered a vision of stability and wealth, and by 1979 that vision proved to be enormously successful in uniting what Clausewitz called the iron triangle of a Great Power – Army, Government, and People, acting as one for a common goal. Economic growth was, to paraphrase “The Big Lebowski”, the rug that tied the whole room together.

Importantly, Deng’s unifying vision of economic growth and modernization was socialist and nationalist in nature, not liberal and individualistic. Deng was no petty oligarch, stashing away billions in foreign bank accounts during his tenure as Paramount Leader, and this was a big part of what made his transformation of the Chinese nation so successful. Deng was authentic. He was a survivor and he was a patriot. He was a Dude, enforcing at the highest levels of the Party and the Army an understanding that economic growth was (primarily) in the service of the nation rather than (primarily) in the service of personal aggrandizement. Sure, there might be the occasional provincial governor egregiously lining his family’s pockets rather than kicking up to the central authorities in Beijing, but this has only been a problem for the Chinese government for … oh, the past 3,000 years or so, and it’s nothing that a few show trials and public executions can’t bring back in line. No, the important thing was that China’s top political and military leaders shared Deng’s vision of market-oriented AND socialist/nationalist ideologies existing hand-in-hand. And for a while there, they did.

Today, however, the Chinese State faces two existential threats, each stemming from or accelerated by the Great Recession and Western policy responses to that crisis of market confidence. 

First, QE and other “emergency” Western monetary policies of the past five years threaten the grand political unification of Deng Xiaoping from without.

Second, massive wealth inequality and concentration driven largely by those same monetary policies threaten it from within.

The external threat to Chinese political stability comes from the explicit purpose of recent monetary policy: to paper over anemic real economic growth with financial asset inflation. It’s a brilliant political solution to the political problem of low growth in the West, because our political stability does not depend on robust real economic growth. So long as we avoid outright negative growth (and even that’s okay so long as it can be explained away by “the weather” or some such rationale) and prop up the financial asset values that in turn support a levered system, we can very slowly grow or inflate our way out of debt. Or not. The debt can hang out there … forever, essentially … so long as there’s no exogenous shock. A low-growth zombie financial system where credit is treated as a government utility is a perfectly stable outcome in the West because our elections and political powers don’t hinge on strong economic growth. They hinge on social issues and notions of identity. They hinge on the preservation of wealth, the preservation of benefits, and the preservation of rights. All good and important things in the Western political context. But for China? Not so much.

Chinese political stability under the unified coalition formed by Deng Xiaoping depends on robust and real domestic economic growth. Not the veneer of economic growth as can be constructed within capital markets. Not the liquidity-driven asset price inflation of Western monetary policy. Chinese political stability depends on the actual production of actual things by actual people working in actual factories, and the prospects for that real economic growth are made significantly worse the longer the West persists in favoring financial asset inflation and the ossification of a low-growth status quo. Why? Because the domestic Chinese market is not advanced or rich enough to support the politically necessary rates of Chinese economic growth. I’m sure it will be one day, but that day is not today. That day will not be with us for decades to come. And until that happy day for China arrives, real economic growth will depend on developed world export markets in the US and Europe. Those export markets are more uncertain and structurally weak from a Chinese perspective than at any point since Deng Xiaoping forged his coalition, and that’s a risk that the Chinese regime will do ANYTHING to redress.

The internal threat to Chinese political stability is even more destabilizing and pernicious than the external threat. I don’t care what you think about the specifics of Thomas Piketty’s book, if you don’t recognize that the growing concentration of global wealth within a tiny set of families is a big problem and getting bigger worldwide, you’re just not paying attention. No country in the world is more vulnerable to the political problems caused by wealth inequality and concentration than China. Why? Because socialism may well be, as Deng said, fully consistent with free market practices on a nationalist, mercantilist level, and it’s mostly consistent (or at least can co-exist) with a free market ideology focused on individual advancement and individual wealth creation in the 99%. But wealth creation and wealth accumulation in an era of massive and coordinated central bank liquidity is a totally different animal than wealth creation and accumulation when Deng consolidated power and struck his grand bargain in the late 1970’s. The unfathomable riches available today to the very top of the economic pyramid – the 1% of the 1% of the 1% – are so enormous that they threaten to obliterate the links that Deng created between Army, Party, and People.

Have there always been rich people and rich families in China? Of course. But the scope and meaning of “rich” is so different today in 2014 than it was in 1984, or 1994, or even 2004 as to be a laughable comparison. It’s not just that concentrated private wealth in the modern manner has created an entire class of hyper-privileged Chinese families with the ability to bypass State control. It’s not just that these hyper-privileged families wield political power independently of any State apparatus.  Most importantly – and most damagingly for Deng’s political coalition – these hyper-privileged families largely arose from personal aggrandizement of positions within the core Chinese political institutions of Party and Army. The meaning of Party and Army has changed in China, from one of unquestioned political legitimacy as THE guardians of Chinese socialism to one of highly questionable legitimacy as a vehicle for personal wealth.  For the majority of Party and Army office holders – those who did not make vast fortunes from their office, those who seek a patriotic return to the unquestioned political legitimacy of these institutions – this is an entirely intolerable development and they will do ANYTHING to change it back. Even among those Party and Army leaders who have managed to acquire great fortunes, there is a widespread recognition that – while the West may be able to accept, even celebrate, unlimited private wealth – China cannot. Not if it wants to remain a politically unified Great Power.

The common thread between the external and internal threats to Deng’s stable political architecture is Western monetary policy and its support of a particular system of global market liberalism. What does China intend to do about it? I believe that Chinese leadership increasingly sees itself as the turtle in the old fable of the turtle and “the compassionate man,” where the system is the pan of boiling water that the compassionate man (the West) sets up to turn the turtle into turtle soup. Through incredible focus and an application of all its resources the turtle walks on a narrow rod to cross the pan of boiling water, but having crossed once is now required to cross again. It’s the system that requires changing from the turtle’s perspective, and I believe that’s exactly what China will seek to do.

Changing the system does not mean withdrawing from the system or blowing the system up. Remember, China MUST continue to sell stuff into developed world export markets as a bridge to a more stable economic growth path based on domestic markets. Changing the system means changing the rules, the “correlation of forces” to use a good-old-fashioned Leninist phrase, so that China can still sell lots of stuff to the world in order to support its domestic factories and generate capital to build its domestic infrastructure, but in a way that can be controlled by the State and not usurped by these hyper-privileged families that have popped up over the past few years. China doesn’t want to be the turtle; it wants to be “the compassionate man” who sets out the pan of boiling water for other turtles to cross. China wants to control its own future, and to accomplish this, strong actions must be taken domestically and internationally.

Domestically, I expect two things.

First, the backlash against the privileged families, particularly those politically active second and third generation inheritors of both a mantle of authority and a vast fortune from Mao-era Party and Army leaders, will widen and grow. This is the right context for understanding the Bo Xilai “scandal” and trial. Murder a British “banker” who helped you quietly funnel more than $100 million into personal overseas accounts? No problem, and thank you for not stealing more. Use your control over a vast domestic fortune (billions of dollars seized from “organized crime” in Chongqing) to fund a personal political machine with national aspirations, in effect becoming a Chinese conflation of Michael Bloomberg and Rudy Giuliani? Sorry, Bub, time for you to go.

Second, and relatedly, the backlash against these Princes will be driven by a domestic media Narrative that China is engaged in an economic “struggle” with powerful outside forces, and that these hyper-privileged families are in effect siding with the enemy. Of course, the Princes can read the newspapers, too. Not only is the message loud and clear that you should keep your domestic wealth hidden and totally segregated from political purposes, but also that you’re only as rich as the wealth you can remove from China entirely. Hold that thought.

Internationally, I expect three things.

First, to construct the domestic Narrative of an economic struggle you need a foreign enemy, but it’s too risky (for now) to cast entire nations in this light. The next best thing? Japanese and American companies that sell expensive, industrially advanced stuff into China, and by “stuff” I mean both manufactured items and services. Recently companies like IBM and Cisco have reported a distinct slowdown in their Chinese business. My view? You ain’t seen nothing yet. As powerful as the “Buy American” marketing slogan has been in this country, the “Buy Chinese” slogan in China will be 100x more powerful.

Second, if there’s one historical lesson that all Great Powers know – particularly up-and-coming Great Powers like Germany in the 1890’s, Japan in the 1930’s, or Russia in the 1950’s – it’s that the only way to win the Great Game is to control enough natural resources so that the incumbent Powers can’t squeeze you dry. Resource independence isn’t a sufficient condition to change the rules of the system, but it’s certainly a necessary one. The resources that matter today are energy and technology, period, and this is the context in which we need to understand China’s actions in the South China Sea, in cyber-security, in Africa, and in its diplomatic relations with Russia. Achieving energy independence and technological parity – or at least reducing its vulnerability to being fatally suffocated if that’s what it comes to – is not a matter of choice to a China that sees itself under assault from the West within and without, but a matter of necessity.

Third, since Western monetary policy is the root of all evil from a Chinese perspective (okay, that’s a bit of poetic license, but not as much as you might think), the primary weaponry for China’s rule-changing efforts will also be monetary policy, particularly currency exchange rate policy. Here’s a chart that illustrates what I mean, and why I think that China is already embarking on the paths outlined above.

For illustrative purposes only. Past performance is not a guarantee.

First, take a look at the price level ratio of the Chinese renminbi and the US dollar (dark blue line above) to see what I mean when I say that the rules of the global trade system pose a structural challenge for China, and that the Chinese government is starting to challenge those rules. From 2005 through 2007 China strengthened the renminbi versus the dollar by more than 20%, assuaging US political pressure that the Chinese currency was too weak and created “an uneven playing field” in international trade. This was an easy concession by the Chinese regime, as domestic growth remained plenty strong and their domestic stock market rocketed higher. Not coincidentally, vast fortunes were built by the most politically connected and powerful Chinese families over this 3-year period. But then 2008 happened, plunging all markets and all economies into chaos. China decided that discretion was the better part of valor during the Great Recession, so the renminbi was kept steady against the dollar until the end of 2009. At this point it looked like domestic GDP growth and global markets were in the clear, and so China returned to the exchange rate policy that had worked so well for them in the 2005-2007 period. Oops. In a QE dominated world … in the Golden Age of the Central Banker … renminbi strengthening has been an unmitigated disaster.

How so? Take a look at the HSCEI/SPX ratio (red line above). Measured from the beginning of 2004, the broad mainland Chinese equity market rose to a price level 2.5x greater than the broad US equity market by March 2009 and the initiation of QE1. Since then, the US market has done nothing but go up and the Chinese market nothing but go down, so that the Chinese market’s price level is now only 50% higher than the US market in 2004 terms, down more than 80% from its peak relative price level.

Similarly, Chinese GDP growth (green line above), after a brief recovery along with the rest of the world in 2009 in response to the Fed’s adrenaline shot straight into the flat-lining heart of US capital markets, has done nothing but drift down in an alarming and totally unprecedented way. I know, I know … Chinese GDP data is terribly untrustworthy and is largely constructed out of whole cloth. But that fact just makes this chart even scarier! If the manufactured data is this steadily disappointing, imagine what the real GDP growth rates look like.

So what is China’s response? Since the beginning of this year, China has forced the renminbi down in value, making the currency weaker and making exports cheaper, in effect administering their own shot of adrenaline to the heart of their economy. I think this is just the start of a multi-year weakening of the renminbi, a sea change in Chinese monetary policy that will inevitably create broad political tensions with the US and make Japan’s devaluation/inflation course infinitely more difficult to achieve. For more than 40 years China has been willing to accept the lead of the US in determining the rules of the road when it comes to international trade. Now China is looking to call the shots. Modern trade wars are not fought with tariffs and quotas, but with exchange rates, and what China is doing with their currency is the modern-day trade regime equivalent of firing on Fort Sumter. 

Okay, Ben … interesting enough, but I’m not a forex trader. What does all this mean for portfolio construction, asset allocation, and risk management?

It means everything. It means that China intends to challenge the current system of global trade by forcing change in the monetary policy rules and relationships we have known for the past 40+ years. It means that ANYTHING is possible and NOTHING is off the table as the Chinese State combats an existential internal and external threat.

To use Mao’s phrase, the Chinese regime is not a frog in a well, seeing the limits of the sky in what the mouth of the well defines. If we want to be effective investors or allocators in the difficult years to come, we need to look beyond the mouth of the well, too. What’s beyond the mouth of the well? What are the specific policy choices China could make to restore political legitimacy to Party and Army while also driving real economic growth? Beyond forcing the renminbi down, staking out energy-rich geographies, “acquiring” technological know-how by any means necessary, and aligning with Russia on all of these issues … I have no idea. But I am certain that there is more to come, in both scale and scope. I am certain that whatever these policy choices may be, they will be outside every macroeconomic model, every sell-side report. I am certain that some historical correlations we treat today as ironclad market laws will be turned on their heads, wreaking havoc on portfolios that insist on treating the past as some immutable Truth with a capital T.

In this environment I think the most useful response from a portfolio construction perspective is to adopt what I call “profound agnosticism” about what the future holds. Or expressed with fewer $10 words, what’s required is to accept that no one has a working crystal ball right now. If ever there was a time when it makes sense to structure a portfolio in an adaptive fashion, where you start with a balanced allocation to a wide range of asset classes and then let the market tell you what’s working and what’s not, today is the day. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: the Golden Age of the Central Banker is a time for investment survivors, not investment heroes. China’s challenge to the Western status quo reinforces that claim 10-fold.

I’ll close with an observation of a less defensive sort, because the forthcoming Chinese challenge to the current monetary policy rules will present opportunities as well as dangers, and because a good risk manager is always looking for asymmetric risk/reward ratios in either direction. Here’s a 40-year price chart of 1 US dollar expressed in Hong Kong dollars. The vertical axis (number of $HK = 1 $US) is inverted because a higher number of Hong Kong dollars reflects a weakening of that currency.

For illustrative purposes only. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.

For the past 30+ years, the HK dollar – the world’s eighth most traded currency – has been pegged to the US dollar with rock-solid certainty. In the world of international trade, the HK dollar hard peg is the equivalent of the law of gravity, with all the certainty for future economic transactions that implies. As you can see clearly from the chart, there has been essentially zero volatility in the exchange rate since October 1983 and the creation of the currency board system.

 To use a geological analogy, the Hong Kong dollar is the most stable tectonic plate in all of global economics, and the fault line between the Hong Kong dollar tectonic plate and the US dollar tectonic plate hasn’t had a tremor in 30 years.  But here’s the thing. The stability of the Hong Kong / US dollar fault line is entirely due to politics. It’s stable because the Hong Kong government says that it’s stable. There is zero reflection of fundamental economic pressures in this exchange rate, because it is entirely a political creation. And if the politics change at a deep enough level, such that it is no longer in Beijing’s interest to maintain the hard peg, you will have a massive earthquake.

Very smart guys have predicted either an end to the hard peg or an end to the Hong Kong dollar altogether, and they’ve been entirely wrong. In 1995 Milton Friedman predicted that the currency could not survive the 1997 handover of Hong Kong to Beijing, a prediction that Jim Rogers has adopted as a policy prescription since 2007. In 2011 Bill Ackman famously went long the Hong Kong dollar, arguing that the fault line between the Hong Kong dollar and the US dollar could not withstand the inflation Hong Kong would be importing from the US (you can access a copy of Ackman’s 150-page slide presentation here). In investments as in comedy, timing is everything. So why do I think it’s different this time? Why do I think the clock is now ticking on an earthquake in the fault line between the Hong Kong dollar and the US dollar?

It’s different this time because China is under greater pressure, both externally and internally, to change the international rules of the road than at any time since Deng forged his domestic political coalition. It’s different this time because there are specific catalysts – the weakening of the renminbi, the creation of a domestic media Narrative that trumpets an economic “struggle” with the West, the claiming of vast swaths of strategic offshore territories, the acceleration of cyber-espionage, the strengthening of ties with Russia to create a new economic axis – that are forcing the Great Powers of the 21st century onto a collision course. It’s different this time because the hyper-privileged families of modern China need to get their wealth out of China ASAP, and parking it in Hong Kong (or in Hong Kong dollars) is no longer safe enough. I can’t tell you the timing, the odds, or the form of this or that earthquake-provoking event. My crystal ball is just as broken as anyone else’s. But I think where Epsilon Theory is useful is in providing the right lens for evaluating these events as they occur, and that this monitoring function can help investors and allocators alike interpret environmental risks as part of an adaptive framework.




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

China, Japan, And Aussie Services PMIs Drop (but Markit/HSBC Baffles…)

All around Asia, PMIs are tumbling. The last few days saw a number of nations’ manufacturing PMIs drop with the notable miraculous surge in China (at 2014 highs). Tonight saw the Services PMI side also tumbling with Australia first (at 2014 lows) and Japan fade back to 49 for its 3rd month in contraction. But (unlike the manufacturing side) China ‘official’ Services PMI faded from its rebound (55 vs 55.5). The drop in Services PMI makes some sense given the 8-month lows in employment indices within the manufacturing PMIs… But then the baffle ’em with total bullshit brigade arrived as Markit/HSBC unveiled their version of Services PMI which jumped to 53.1 – its biggest MoM on record – makes perefect sense.

 

Every other PMI measure dropped… even China’s official Services PMI… but HSBC/Markit soared by its most on record!!

 

Need moar made up data, stat!!!

Perhaps realizing how just over-zealously exuberanty this data was, Markit says…

Service sector firms were generally optimistic towards the 12-month business outlook in June.

 

That said, the degree of positive sentiment remained historically weak, despite improving upon May’s 11-month low




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1s0h99B Tyler Durden