The Drought Goes From Bad To Catastrophic

As we previously commented, when scientists start using phrases such as "the worst drought" and "as bad as you can imagine" to describe what is going on in the western half of the country, you know that things are bad. However, in recent weeks the dreadful situation in California has gone from bad to catastrophic as the U.S. Drought Monitor reported that more than half of the state is now in experiencing 'exceptional' drought, the most severe category available. And most of the state – 81% – currently has one of the two most intense levels of drought.

 

h/t @TimOBrien

 

As WaPo reports,

While California’s problems are particularly severe, that state is not alone in experiencing significant drought right now. There are wide swaths of moderate to severe drought stretching from Oregon to Texas, with problems impacting numerous states west of the Mississippi River.

 

Some of the most severe droughts outside of California are impacting large pockets in Oklahoma, Texas and, particularly, Nevada, where more than half of the state is currently experiencing one of the two most intense drought conditions:

 

 

*  *  *

As we concluded previously,

Most people just assume that this drought will be temporary, but experts tell us that there have been "megadroughts" throughout history in the western half of the United States that have lasted for more than 100 years.

 

If we have entered one of those eras, it is going to fundamentally change life in America.

 

And the frightening thing is that much of the rest of the world is dealing with water scarcity issues right now as well.  In fact, North America is actually in better shape than much of Africa and Asia.  For much more on this, please see my previous article entitled "25 Shocking Facts About The Earth’s Dwindling Water Resources".

 

Without plenty of fresh water, modern civilization is not possible.

 

And right now, the western United States and much of the rest of the world is starting to come to grips with the fact that we could be facing some very serious water shortages in the years ahead.




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SATAN! SATAN! SATAN!, or the Brief, Terrible Existence of ReaganBook

Janet
Porter, president of the “pro-life, pro-family” advocacy group
Faith2Action, launched a social media site “for patriots” on
Tuesday. It is
was called ReaganBook. It’s down as of yesterday, and hopefully it
won’t be back.

The Gipper’s red, white, blue, and cowboy-hat wearing mug adorns
the now-inactive front page, which has a notice promising to rid the site “obscenity,
pornography, and those intent on the destruction of life, liberty,
and the family.”

Wait, what’s this about porn?

Yes, it seems like it was launched with little consideration of
… anything. It ran slowly and messaging was near-impossible.
Significantly, for a site that wanted to be a sanction for
conservatives, no effort was made to keep out the riffraff. Users
adopted names like “Zombie Reagan,” “Ayn Randy,” “SATAN! SATAN!
SATAN!,” and “Dick Cheney.” Fan pages emerged for
“Cut Dicks for Christ”
as did events like “Iran-Contra Block
Party and Weapons Trade-Off.” The Verge‘s Colin
Lecher, who was poked by Satan,
documented
the chaos:

Someone with a Captain America avatar invites people to talk
about guns; Margaret Thatcher leaves more than 700 comments on an
innocuous status. There is an eagle crying, several photos of
Jesus. … A photo of a monkey in a bubble bath is posted, and no one
seems sure what side this person is on. Everyone is confused and
angry with everyone else.


He notes perhaps the biggest
oversight, that unlike “Facebook — where you’re limited to seeing
the status of your friends — ReaganBook allows you to see every
status update worldwide in a single homepage stream.”

The fragmentation of media is a good thing,
but this was a foolhardy endeavor. Half-baked, it really has
nothing to offer that conservative Facebook fan pages and Twitter
accounts don’t already offer. And, anyway, serious political
dialogue (insofar as that exists on the Internet) seems better
suited to easily-moderated forums (i.e. Reddit) than social media
sites (when was the last time a Facebook political debate on your
wall didnt turn into a shitshow?).

Porter issued a frantic statement, “MY SINCERE APOLOGIES FOR THE
VILE CONTENT. THIS WILL BE REMEDIED IN A MATTER OF MINUTES,” but
has since calmed and requests that ReaganBook users “please be
patient” while she makes changes to the site. I’d say that for the
sake of her own sanity, she just abandon the experiment. But that
doesn’t seem likely. One of her last
posts
before anaesthetizing the beast was that “the fact that
so many leftists have invested so much time in the site, it
provides confirmation that we’re on the right track.”

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Brookings Gives Colorado's Marijuana Regulators High Marks

A new Brookings Institution
report
gives Colorado high marks for its regulation of the
state’s newly legal marijuana market. “The rollout…of legal
retail marijuana has been largely successful,” writes Brookings
fellow John Hudak. “The state has met challenging statutory and
constitutional deadlines for the construction and launch of a
legal, regulatory, and tax apparatus for its new policy. In
doing so, it has made intelligent decisions about regulatory needs,
the structure of distribution, prevention of illegal
diversion, and other vital aspects of its new market.”

There is no question that Colorado’s rollout has been a lot
smoother than
Washington’s
. But some of the things Hudak admires about
Colorado’s approach seem like mistakes to me. He views mandatory
vertical integration (which expires in October) and the exclusion
of new retailers (which does not end until 2016 in Denver, the
center of the industry) as ways of limiting diversion and
reducing the state’s regulatory challenge. To me these rules look
more like blatantly protectionist measures that exemplify
regulatory capture.

Hudak does acknowledge other shortcomings of Colorado’s system.
He notes that the new marijuana taxes encourage recreational users
to pose as patients, for example, and that
restrictions on consumption
encourage tourists to buy edibles,
which can result in
unpleasant overdoses
if they are not accustomed to this route
of administration. “When it comes to edibles,” he observes,
“tourists tend to be naïve users—the highest-risk group.”

Hudak counts regulation of edibles as one of Colorado’s
remaining challenges, arguing that consumers do not currently
receive adequate guidance regarding appropriate doses:

In my own trip to a retail marijuana dispensary, I observed a
couple interested in purchasing a marijuana brownie. The
“budtender” explained in detail to the buyer that the
brownie contained six servings and that proper consumption
involved dividing the brownie or biting off a small chunk. The
information was correct and clear, but who eats a sixth of a
brownie or a quarter of a candy bar? Moreover, people who
smoke, dab, or vape marijuana experience the effects quickly.
However, edibles can take 30 to 60 minutes before the consumer
feels a “high.” As a result, an individual—particularly one
unfamiliar with marijuana edibles—may overconsume, believing the
product is ineffective.

In my experience, the lag can be even longer than Hudak
suggests, and he is right that the idea of eating just a piece or
two of a brownie, cookie, or candy bar is counterintuitive,
although all products have labels that indicate the total amount of
THC and the number of 10-milligram servings the package contains.
Yesterday the Department of Revenue’s Marijuana Enforcement
Division (MED) unveiled
new regulations aimed at addressing this issue. Instead of reducing
the limit on total THC per package (currently 100 milligrams for
the recreational market), the MED wants to require that all
products be readily divisible into 10-milligram doses, an approach
that makes more sense in light of consumer diversity.

While 10 milligrams may be plenty for new or occasional
consumers, regular consumers typically will want a lot more. Edible
makers were already responding to this diversity—for example, by
offering
single-serving, low-dose products
for newbies and packages
containing
10 single-dose candies
that might appeal to both occasional and
regular consumers. Given options like those, the new rule, which
amounts to a ban on products like 100-milligram truffles (since
they are not easily divided into 10 servings) seems unncessary. But
at least it will not interfere with consumer choice as much as
arbitrarily limiting all packages to 10 milligrams of THC, as Gov.
John Hickenlooper suggested, would have.

The new regulations—which are scheduled to take effect in
November, following a public comment period—also require that all
single-serving edibles come in child-resistant packaging. Currently
retailers are allowed to put them in child-resistant “exit bags”
(above right) instead. The change does not make much sense to me.
If anything, a multi-serving package poses more of a potential
hazard to children once it’s removed from an exit bag than a
single-serving package does. More generally, the MED’s persnickety
packaging prescriptions are hard to justify given that there are no
such requirements for alcohol, a drug that is much more dangerous
in the hands of children. Instead we rely on parents to keep
alcoholic beverages (along with lots of other potentially dangerous
products) away from their kids. Such disparate treatment seems to
contradict
Amendment 64
, Colorado’s legalization initiative, which
promised to “regulate marijuana in a manner similar to
alcohol.”

Hudak does not delve into that issue, but the report is full of
details that will fascinate anyone with an interest in topics such
as policy implementation, stakeholder inclusion, internal
coordination, and inventory tracking. To me, the really exciting
aspect of all this regulatory information is that Colorado has
succeeded in making marijuana boring by making it legal.

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Brookings Gives Colorado’s Marijuana Regulators High Marks

A new Brookings Institution
report
gives Colorado high marks for its regulation of the
state’s newly legal marijuana market. “The rollout…of legal
retail marijuana has been largely successful,” writes Brookings
fellow John Hudak. “The state has met challenging statutory and
constitutional deadlines for the construction and launch of a
legal, regulatory, and tax apparatus for its new policy. In
doing so, it has made intelligent decisions about regulatory needs,
the structure of distribution, prevention of illegal
diversion, and other vital aspects of its new market.”

There is no question that Colorado’s rollout has been a lot
smoother than
Washington’s
. But some of the things Hudak admires about
Colorado’s approach seem like mistakes to me. He views mandatory
vertical integration (which expires in October) and the exclusion
of new retailers (which does not end until 2016 in Denver, the
center of the industry) as ways of limiting diversion and
reducing the state’s regulatory challenge. To me these rules look
more like blatantly protectionist measures that exemplify
regulatory capture.

Hudak does acknowledge other shortcomings of Colorado’s system.
He notes that the new marijuana taxes encourage recreational users
to pose as patients, for example, and that
restrictions on consumption
encourage tourists to buy edibles,
which can result in
unpleasant overdoses
if they are not accustomed to this route
of administration. “When it comes to edibles,” he observes,
“tourists tend to be naïve users—the highest-risk group.”

Hudak counts regulation of edibles as one of Colorado’s
remaining challenges, arguing that consumers do not currently
receive adequate guidance regarding appropriate doses:

In my own trip to a retail marijuana dispensary, I observed a
couple interested in purchasing a marijuana brownie. The
“budtender” explained in detail to the buyer that the
brownie contained six servings and that proper consumption
involved dividing the brownie or biting off a small chunk. The
information was correct and clear, but who eats a sixth of a
brownie or a quarter of a candy bar? Moreover, people who
smoke, dab, or vape marijuana experience the effects quickly.
However, edibles can take 30 to 60 minutes before the consumer
feels a “high.” As a result, an individual—particularly one
unfamiliar with marijuana edibles—may overconsume, believing the
product is ineffective.

In my experience, the lag can be even longer than Hudak
suggests, and he is right that the idea of eating just a piece or
two of a brownie, cookie, or candy bar is counterintuitive,
although all products have labels that indicate the total amount of
THC and the number of 10-milligram servings the package contains.
Yesterday the Department of Revenue’s Marijuana Enforcement
Division (MED) unveiled
new regulations aimed at addressing this issue. Instead of reducing
the limit on total THC per package (currently 100 milligrams for
the recreational market), the MED wants to require that all
products be readily divisible into 10-milligram doses, an approach
that makes more sense in light of consumer diversity.

While 10 milligrams may be plenty for new or occasional
consumers, regular consumers typically will want a lot more. Edible
makers were already responding to this diversity—for example, by
offering
single-serving, low-dose products
for newbies and packages
containing
10 single-dose candies
that might appeal to both occasional and
regular consumers. Given options like those, the new rule, which
amounts to a ban on products like 100-milligram truffles (since
they are not easily divided into 10 servings) seems unncessary. But
at least it will not interfere with consumer choice as much as
arbitrarily limiting all packages to 10 milligrams of THC, as Gov.
John Hickenlooper suggested, would have.

The new regulations—which are scheduled to take effect in
November, following a public comment period—also require that all
single-serving edibles come in child-resistant packaging. Currently
retailers are allowed to put them in child-resistant “exit bags”
(above right) instead. The change does not make much sense to me.
If anything, a multi-serving package poses more of a potential
hazard to children once it’s removed from an exit bag than a
single-serving package does. More generally, the MED’s persnickety
packaging prescriptions are hard to justify given that there are no
such requirements for alcohol, a drug that is much more dangerous
in the hands of children. Instead we rely on parents to keep
alcoholic beverages (along with lots of other potentially dangerous
products) away from their kids. Such disparate treatment seems to
contradict
Amendment 64
, Colorado’s legalization initiative, which
promised to “regulate marijuana in a manner similar to
alcohol.”

Hudak does not delve into that issue, but the report is full of
details that will fascinate anyone with an interest in topics such
as policy implementation, stakeholder inclusion, internal
coordination, and inventory tracking. To me, the really exciting
aspect of all this regulatory information is that Colorado has
succeeded in making marijuana boring by making it legal.

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Americans Rejoice as Congress Goes into Hibernation, White House Wants Halbig Reversed, Dick Morris Says Obama Resignation Wouldn't Surprise Him: P.M. Links

  • Into the WoodsThe U.S. Congress has
    begun its August recess
    , having accomplished little.
  • The White House has asked the full D.C. Court of Appeals to

    reverse the Halbig decision
    .
  • Political pundit Dick Morris—known for making hilariously wrong
    predictions—said that he “wouldn’t
    be surprised
    ,” if President Obama resigned from office. (Most
    rational people would indeed be surprised.)
  • Forensic examiners have
    ruled Eric Garner’s death a homicide
    . Garner was allegedly
    choked to death by police for selling cigarettes on the
    street.
  • The first trailer for Disney’s “Into the Woods”
    was released
    . The highly anticipated film is based on the
    famous Stephen Sondheim musical of the same name. It comes out on
    Christmas.

Follow us on Facebook and Twitter,
and don’t forget to
 sign
up
 for Reason’s daily updates for more
content.

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Americans Rejoice as Congress Goes into Hibernation, White House Wants Halbig Reversed, Dick Morris Says Obama Resignation Wouldn’t Surprise Him: P.M. Links

  • Into the WoodsThe U.S. Congress has
    begun its August recess
    , having accomplished little.
  • The White House has asked the full D.C. Court of Appeals to

    reverse the Halbig decision
    .
  • Political pundit Dick Morris—known for making hilariously wrong
    predictions—said that he “wouldn’t
    be surprised
    ,” if President Obama resigned from office. (Most
    rational people would indeed be surprised.)
  • Forensic examiners have
    ruled Eric Garner’s death a homicide
    . Garner was allegedly
    choked to death by police for selling cigarettes on the
    street.
  • The first trailer for Disney’s “Into the Woods”
    was released
    . The highly anticipated film is based on the
    famous Stephen Sondheim musical of the same name. It comes out on
    Christmas.

Follow us on Facebook and Twitter,
and don’t forget to
 sign
up
 for Reason’s daily updates for more
content.

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David Harsanyi: Seriously, What Is John Kerry Doing?

Egypt, Israel, Fatah, Jordan, and Saudi
Arabia—ostensibly all allies of ours—agree that Hamas’ power should
be neutralized and the influence of the Palestinian Authority
expanded. This development, writes David Harsanyi, might be
something the United States would be interested in heeding. But
during Secretary of State John Kerry’s recent misadventure in the
Middle East, he ignored an Egyptian-led cease-fire effort. Instead,
Kerry offered a proposal driven by Qatar and Turkey, two of Hamas’
allies and Israel’s antagonists.

Kerry, a longtime ally of Israel, has changed his tone
considerably since joining the administration, Harsanyi points out.
Maybe the United States doesn’t want to take sides anymore. Maybe
the Obama administration’s recent dealings in the Middle East
reflect this attitude. Because we have either an incompetent
secretary of state or a momentous shift in Middle East policy.

View this article.

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5 Things To Ponder: The Interest Rate Conundrum

Submitted by Lance Roberts via STA Wealth Management,

After several months of quite complacency, investors were woken up Thursday by a sharp sell off driven by concerns over potential rising inflationary pressures, rising credit default risk and weak undertones to the economic data flows. One of the primary threats that has been readily dismissed by most analysts is the impact from rising interest rates. Last week, the following chart was circulated again which shows that stocks perform well during rising interest rate environments:

interest-rates-stocks.jpg

Now, this is surely clear evidence that one would want to be long stocks during a rising interest rate environment, right? Not so fast. There are a couple of important points you may want to consider before jumping on the bandwagon.  First, let's look at the specific periods analyzed. 1993-2000 was the massive "technology" driven boom which covers the entire first half of the chart.  2003-2006 was the majority of the real estate/liquidity bubble while the last two periods were during a Fed induced liquidity push. In otherwords, there is little "normalcy" during this entire period.

However, more importantly, is not what happened DURING the periods of rising rates, but rather what happened following those periods. Those mysterious dashed vertical lines on the chart above represent what is NOT being shown to you.  For clarity purposes, we need to look at the entire data series to see what the actual impact of rising rates on the financial markets has been.  I have highlighted peaks in interest rate increases and corresponding events.

Interest-Rates-10Yr-Crisis-080114

The issue with rising interest rates is that higher borrowing costs lead to slower economic activity and a quelling of inflationary pressures. The Federal Reserve believes they can control the economic engine by using monetary policy as a governor. This is kind of like playing "Jango" where the object is to weaken the structure by removing supports without toppling it entirely.  Of course, like the actual game, the Federal Reserve's track record of successfully managing the economy is "poor" at best.

This weekend's reading list is a set of viewpoints on the Federal Reserve and the potential impacts from an increase in interest rates.

1) Rising Rates: The Good, The Bad…No Ugly by Doug Peebles and Ivan Rudolph-Shabinsky via Pragmatic Capitalist

[Note: This piece is really specifically talking about individual bonds versus bond funds.  Bond funds do not mature and are strictly a play on the direction and trend of interest rates. This is an important distinction and a primary reason why I continue to suggest owning bonds in portfolios, rather than bond funds, which reduce portfolio risk and volatility, provide principal conservation and an income stream.]

"By their nature, bonds are generally sensitive to interest-rate movements—when rates rise, prices typically fall. With short-term rates on the way up, other interest rates won’t stay low forever, either. But across all bond sectors, from high grade to high yield, rising rates can have positive effects. We believe investors should see a rise in rates as, ultimately, a good thing for bond portfolios. (And by ultimately, we mean just a few years.)"

Distenfeld Rising-Rates-Improve d8-1

"What’s the source of this higher growth? First, as you reinvest the coupon income that your portfolio pays, you’ll be able to reinvest it at higher yields. Income matters: for investors who use bonds to generate income, rising rates change from a threat to an opportunity. Second, as the bonds in your portfolio mature, their price pulls back to par, and you can reinvest their principal value in newer, higher-yielding bonds."

2) Rate Expectations by Buttonwood via The Economist

"This is a crucial question. The Federal Reserve’s benchmark rate averaged 2.96% in the first decade of the 21st century but 5.15% in the 1990s. Imagine the effect on the borrowing costs of mortgage-holders or small businesses if rates moved back to the latter level.

 

Before homeowners and small business breathe too big a sigh of relief, remember that this discussion has concerned the neutral level of rates. Rates could go higher if central banks decide they need to rein back the economy, perhaps because inflation returns. Richard Barwell of Royal Bank of Scotland says there may be too great a belief in 'the miracle of immaculate monetary exit'. This would require monetary stimulus to be withdrawn before the economy recovers, not after, and for central banks’ economic forecasts to be unerringly accurate.

 

Since central banks failed to anticipate the debt crisis of 2007-08, this is an attitude of the purest optimism. Given the debt burden still facing the rich world, the risks of policy failure are enormous."

3) Yields Likely To Keep Falling by Erik Swarts via Market Anthropology

"Despite the strong GDP print yesterday that reinvigorated the raise-rates camp and sparked an almost 4 percent rally in 10-year yields, we continue to feel these participants are once again placing the cart before the horse, when it comes to what Chairwoman Yellen has repeatedly articulated will be a "considerable time" after the QE programs are wound down this October – and when they consider their next policy response.

 

From our perspective, where the rubber meets the road with the specifics of actually raising rates is much further off in the future and only after the markets normalize to this rather significant shift in support – from both a structural and psychological point-of-view. (For more of our thoughts on the effects of this normalization and why we don't find parallels with recent history, see Here)

 

With respect to 10-year yields, the frictions from the end of QE should continue to support the Treasury market and we expect the next step lower in yields to be taken as the markets stroll into August."

Market-Anthropology-080114

4) Investors Underestimating The Path Of Policy by Rain Capital Management

"Interest rates may be the single most powerful force in capital markets.  They are quite literally the cost of money and determine everything from the value of bonds to the price people are willing to pay for equities.  We don’t think for a second that the process of rate normalization will be as uneventful as the market seems to be pricing in.  No bell will ring or date certain set for unwinding what is now an extremely outdated policy stance.  The idea that investors can simply get out of the way when the time comes is unlikely when considering how flatfooted they have been in the midst of interest rate volatility in 2013, rate hikes in 2004, 1994, and so on.

 

Investors aren’t getting paid much to take risk, so they’re taking more risk in an attempt to make up for it.  We’d much rather use this opportunity as a pit stop; a time to fortify portfolios during which the cost of not being fully exposed is minimal but the cost of making a mistake could be large. To paraphrase Warren Buffet, reducing risk may be uncomfortable, but not as uncomfortable as doing something stupid."

5) Fed Creating Bubbles By Inflating Equity Risk Premium byAswath Damodaran via Musings On The Markets

"If you accept the notion that the Fed controls interest rates (that many investors believe and Fed policy makers promote) or even my lesser argument that the Fed has used its powers to keep rates below where they should be for the last few years, the consequences for valuation are immediate. Those lower rates will push up the valuations of all assets, but the lower rates will have a higher value impact on cash flows way into the future than they do on near-term cash flows, making the over valuation larger at higher growth companies.

 

Consequently, a reasonable argument can be made that the Fed has been an active participant in, and perhaps even the generator of, any bubbles, real or perceived, in the market. In my post on market bubbles, I did agree with Ms. Yellen on her overall market judgment (that traditional metrics are sending mixed messages on overall market valuation) and used the ERP for the market, as she did, to back my point. In particular, I noted that the implied equity risk premium for the market at about 5% was high by historical standards (rather than low, which would be a indicator of overvalued stocks). However, breaking the ERP down into an expected stock market return and a risk free rate does point to an overall disquieting trend:"

ERP-and-Risk-free-080114

"Note that all of the expansion in ERP in the last five years has come from the risk free rate coming down and not the return on stocks going up. In fact, the expected return on stocks of 8% at the end of 2013 is a little lower than it was pre-crash in 2007 and if the risk free rate reverts to pre-2008 levels (say 4%), the ERP would be in the danger zone. Put differently, if there is a market bubble, this one is not because stock market investors are behaving with abandon but because the Fed has kept rates too low and the over valuation will be greatest in those sectors with the highest growth."


The last article is most interesting as two of the primary "bullish arguments" has been the spread between earnings yield (the inverse of the P/E ratio) and the interest yield on bonds, and the non-inversion of the yield curve.  I have argued in the past that the so-called "Fed Model" is flawed for many reasons. However, an increase in interest rates will very quickly nullify both of those bullish arguments because the denominator in both cases can rise MUCH faster than the numerator.




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Stocks Suffer Worst Losing Streak Since 2011

The year's best performing major index was its biggest loser this week. Trannies tumbled almost 4% – the worst week in 22 months. The rest of the indices fell 2-3% with the Russell 2000 down 4 weeks in a row for the first time since November 2011. Dow ends -0.5% and Russell -4% for 2014. Away from stocks, Treasury yields collapsed today erasing most of the post-GDP losses and ending the week only 3-5bps wider at the long-end and 1.5bps lower at the front-end. 10Y closed under 2.5%. The USD Index mirrored bonds, surging on GDP and then plunging today to end the week up 0.35%. Gold and silver oddly decoupled today (silver lower) ending week down 1% and 2% respectively on the week. Ugly week for WTI crude, ending under $98 (Feb lows) down 4.4%.  High-yield credit spreads rose 9.7% (to over 350bps – worst since Nov 2013) for the worst non-roll week since May 2012.

 

Equities actually held gains post payrolls…

 

But end the week notably lower… Worst Dow Friday in 12 weeks…

 

Builders have tumbled to 9 month lows…

 

Equities caught down to credit's post MH17 warnings this week…

 

Big roundtrip for Treasury yields this week…

 

FX roundtripped too as GDP gains gave way to Jobs losses… still up 0.35% on the week…

 

Gold and Silver oddly decoupled today…

 

But oil prices tumbled the most – down 4.3% – the biggest drop in 7 months…

 

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart: High-Yield is flashing bright red…

 

Bonus Bonus Chart: Camera-on-a-stick down 15%…




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Death of Eric Garner Ruled "Homicide by Chokehold"

killed by copsThe medical examiner for New York City

ruled
the death of Eric Garner, who died in police custody
after a violent arrest over allegedly selling loose untaxed
cigarettes, a “homicide by chokehold.”

Police apologists often advocate the use of chokeholds neck
restraints, which are banned by the New York Police Department. NPR
explained
last week
:

Many police trainers say chokeholds are relatively safe — and
should be used more. These proponents of the method,
it should be noted, hate the word “chokehold.” They say it confuses
two very different kinds of maneuvers: actual chokeholds, which cut
off a person’s air supply, and “lateral vascular neck restraints,”
which don’t.

Missy O’Linn, a former cop and self-defense trainer who is now a
lawyer who defends cops in court, says in a neck restraint, the
officer puts his or her arm around a person’s neck in a “V” —
putting pressure not on the windpipe, but on the sides of the neck,
and on the arteries to the brain.

In the aftermath of Garner’s death, police apologists also went
to the Internet to complain that Garner,  a 400 pound
asthmatic accused, he insisted falsely, of
selling loose, untaxed cigarettes
, should have complied with
officers who were attempting to arrest him,
for selling loose, untaxed cigarettes
.

In a press conference earlier this week Bill Bratton, speaking
with New York City’s mayor Bill de Blasio, said that correcting
your behavior for police was “what democracy’s all about.” Though
his comments were largely wrong-headed, Bratton is correct that the
law against
selling loose, untaxed cigarettes
is not a concoction of the
police, but the city that voted for elected officials who have run
the taxes on cigarettes so high as to create a black market in
loose, untaxed cigarettes. And that’s what democracy’s all about,
imposing rules supported by a nominal majority over the every-day
minority, the individual.

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