What We Saw at NYC’s Fast Food Strike

Thousands of fast food workers in dozens of cities
went on strike last week
, with the announced goal of raising
the minimum wage for employees of burger chains such as McDonald’s,
Burger King and Wendy’s. 

In late 2013, Reason TV covered the sparsely-attended New York
City edition of one of these fast food strikes:

“What We Saw at NYC’s Fast Food Strike.” About 2.30
minutes. Produced by Jim Epstein and hosted by Naomi
Brockwell.

Original release date was December 6, 2013 and the
original writeup is below.

Yesterday, Naomi Brockwell and I attended a demonstration
demanding that fast-food restaurants boost their minimum wage to
$15 per hour, or a little more than double the current federal
minimum wage. The strike, which was led by a group
called Fast Food
Forward
 that’s affiliated with the Service Employees International
Union
 (SEIU), was one of more than a 100 similar
demonstrations held in cities across the country.

The New York demonstration had about 150 people, but the number
of actual fast food employees participating in the strike was
small. It was business as usual at every restaurant we dropped
by yesterday morning and, at a McDonald’s restaurant on 23rd
Street and Madison Avenue in Manhattan, employees behind the
counter said they had heard nothing about a strike.

We caught up with the protesters in front of a Wendy’s in
downtown Brooklyn, where the crowd consisted of union organizers,
fast-food workers, and their sympathizers. An estimated one-third
of the demonstrators were fast-food employees, meaning that less
than one-tenth of 1 percent of New York City’s 57,000 fast-food
workforce participated in the strike.

The group was traveling from one fast-food restaurant to
another, before winding up at Foley Square in Manhattan around
1pm.

Multiple strikers told us they had received compensation through
a union strike fund to appear, but declined to say the amount they
were paid.

Artificially doubling wages to $15 an hour would change many
things in the fast food industry, including the easy path it
provides for low-skilled employees to break into the labor market.
Substantially higher wages would mean that existing employees would
be less apt to look for other positions, and senior staffers would
be more inclined to hog shift hours. Franchisees would likely move
more aggressively to replace human service workers with automated
cash registers, which is already
happening
 in European McDonald’s. Evidence of how
artificially boosting wages destroys opportunities for entry level
workers was best documented in a 2006 study by
economists David Neumark and William Wascher, which
was updated in
2013

In interviews, several striking workers described how it had
been relatively easy for them to get a job in fast-food service.
Shenita Simon, who works as a shift supervisor at KFC, told us that
she doesn’t know where else she would have been able to find a
position, because fast food is the only industry that “will allow
you to have minimum education.” Isaac Wallace, a Burger King
employee, described how he was able to get his job immediately
after moving to New York from Jamaica by simply walking into a
Burger King in Brooklyn and approaching the manager. 

Once the strike moved to Foley Square, organizers from Fast Food
Forward began obstructing our efforts to talk with protesters.

For more on why doubling wages for fast food workers would hurt
entry-level workers, read Nick Gillespie’s “Big
Labor’s Big Mac Attack”
 at The Daily
Beast
.

Produced by Jim Epstein and hosted by Naomi Brockwell.

About 2.30 minutes.


View this article.

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What We Saw at NYC's Fast Food Strike

Thousands of fast food workers in dozens of cities
went on strike last week
, with the announced goal of raising
the minimum wage for employees of burger chains such as McDonald’s,
Burger King and Wendy’s. 

In late 2013, Reason TV covered the sparsely-attended New York
City edition of one of these fast food strikes:

“What We Saw at NYC’s Fast Food Strike.” About 2.30
minutes. Produced by Jim Epstein and hosted by Naomi
Brockwell.

Original release date was December 6, 2013 and the
original writeup is below.

Yesterday, Naomi Brockwell and I attended a demonstration
demanding that fast-food restaurants boost their minimum wage to
$15 per hour, or a little more than double the current federal
minimum wage. The strike, which was led by a group
called Fast Food
Forward
 that’s affiliated with the Service Employees International
Union
 (SEIU), was one of more than a 100 similar
demonstrations held in cities across the country.

The New York demonstration had about 150 people, but the number
of actual fast food employees participating in the strike was
small. It was business as usual at every restaurant we dropped
by yesterday morning and, at a McDonald’s restaurant on 23rd
Street and Madison Avenue in Manhattan, employees behind the
counter said they had heard nothing about a strike.

We caught up with the protesters in front of a Wendy’s in
downtown Brooklyn, where the crowd consisted of union organizers,
fast-food workers, and their sympathizers. An estimated one-third
of the demonstrators were fast-food employees, meaning that less
than one-tenth of 1 percent of New York City’s 57,000 fast-food
workforce participated in the strike.

The group was traveling from one fast-food restaurant to
another, before winding up at Foley Square in Manhattan around
1pm.

Multiple strikers told us they had received compensation through
a union strike fund to appear, but declined to say the amount they
were paid.

Artificially doubling wages to $15 an hour would change many
things in the fast food industry, including the easy path it
provides for low-skilled employees to break into the labor market.
Substantially higher wages would mean that existing employees would
be less apt to look for other positions, and senior staffers would
be more inclined to hog shift hours. Franchisees would likely move
more aggressively to replace human service workers with automated
cash registers, which is already
happening
 in European McDonald’s. Evidence of how
artificially boosting wages destroys opportunities for entry level
workers was best documented in a 2006 study by
economists David Neumark and William Wascher, which
was updated in
2013

In interviews, several striking workers described how it had
been relatively easy for them to get a job in fast-food service.
Shenita Simon, who works as a shift supervisor at KFC, told us that
she doesn’t know where else she would have been able to find a
position, because fast food is the only industry that “will allow
you to have minimum education.” Isaac Wallace, a Burger King
employee, described how he was able to get his job immediately
after moving to New York from Jamaica by simply walking into a
Burger King in Brooklyn and approaching the manager. 

Once the strike moved to Foley Square, organizers from Fast Food
Forward began obstructing our efforts to talk with protesters.

For more on why doubling wages for fast food workers would hurt
entry-level workers, read Nick Gillespie’s “Big
Labor’s Big Mac Attack”
 at The Daily
Beast
.

Produced by Jim Epstein and hosted by Naomi Brockwell.

About 2.30 minutes.


View this article.

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If it isn’t obvious, I’ve recently been cleaning out my phone and comparing progress pics in the process. This photos show why it’s so important to take routine progress pics. It’s pretty widely known that women in particular carry more fat in their lower body, so they have a hell of a time leaning the legs down, and I’m no different. Pictured is me at my fattest (after a year of being out of the game due to injury) until now, so about two years of building muscle and slowly decreasing bodyfat. Nothing fancy; just consistency in nutrition and training to support the goal. And I think I actually weigh about the same in both pics. I’m nowhere near I want to be, but these pics let me know I’m on the right track.

@hooper_fit

If it isn’t obvious, I’ve recently been cleaning out my phone and comparing progress pics in the process. This photos show why it’s so important to take routine progress pics. It’s pretty widely known that women in particular carry more fat in their lower body, so they have a hell of a time leaning the legs down, and I’m no different. Pictured is me at my fattest (after a year of being out of the game due to injury) until now, so about two years of building muscle and slowly decreasing bodyfat. Nothing fancy; just consistency in nutrition and training to support the goal. And I think I actually weigh about the same in both pics.
I’m nowhere near I want to be, but these pics let me know I’m on the right track.

LIKES: 9
 COMMENTS:2

tags
#fitfam,
#quads,
#selfie,
#chickswholift,
#fitmom,
#transformation,
#girlswithmuscle,
#transformationtuesday,
#throwbackthursday,
#nola,
#fitchick,
#fitlife,
#quadzilla,
#fitness,
#progress,
#workout,

»WEBSTA

from @hooper_fit – WEBSTA http://ift.tt/1qUTA2n
via IFTTT

If it isn't obvious, I've recently been cleaning out my phone and comparing progress pics in the process. This photos show why it's so important to take routine progress pics. It's pretty widely known that women in particular carry more fat in their lower body, so they have a hell of a time leaning the legs down, and I'm no different. Pictured is me at my fattest (after a year of being out of the game due to injury) until now, so about two years of building muscle and slowly decreasing bodyfat. Nothing fancy; just consistency in nutrition and training to support the goal. And I think I actually weigh about the same in both pics. I'm nowhere near I want to be, but these pics let me know I'm on the right track.

@hooper_fit

If it isn’t obvious, I’ve recently been cleaning out my phone and comparing progress pics in the process. This photos show why it’s so important to take routine progress pics. It’s pretty widely known that women in particular carry more fat in their lower body, so they have a hell of a time leaning the legs down, and I’m no different. Pictured is me at my fattest (after a year of being out of the game due to injury) until now, so about two years of building muscle and slowly decreasing bodyfat. Nothing fancy; just consistency in nutrition and training to support the goal. And I think I actually weigh about the same in both pics.
I’m nowhere near I want to be, but these pics let me know I’m on the right track.

LIKES: 9
 COMMENTS:2

tags
#fitfam,
#quads,
#selfie,
#chickswholift,
#fitmom,
#transformation,
#girlswithmuscle,
#transformationtuesday,
#throwbackthursday,
#nola,
#fitchick,
#fitlife,
#quadzilla,
#fitness,
#progress,
#workout,

»WEBSTA

from @hooper_fit – WEBSTA http://ift.tt/1qUTA2n
via IFTTT

Former BP CEO Warns “Sanctions Will Bite West” As US Gives Majors 14 Days To Wind Down Russian Activities

For the past six months, even as Obama and the EU were laying harsher sanctions on the Kremlin, one group of companies had managed to sneak by unscathed and largely avoided being impacted by Russia’s isolation by the West: the world’s biggest E&P companies, as explained in detail over a month ago in “Exxon Drilling Russian Arctic Shows Sanction Lack Bite.”

All that is about to change, because while sanctions until this moment had been largely intended to specifically allow energy companies to continue their status quo in Russia, as of this Friday, it is precisely the E&Ps that are being targeted, as we noted on Friday, and as Reuters follows up today, reporting that some of the world’s largest companies, namely Exxon, Anglo-Dutch Royal Dutch Shell, Norway’s Statoil and Italian ENI, will have to be put their Russian projects on hold:  to wit, the companies will have 14 days to wind-down activities.

From Reuters:

Projects now in jeopardy include a landmark drilling program by U.S. giant Exxon Mobil in the Russian Arctic that started in August as part of a joint venture with the Kremlin’s oil champion Rosneft.

 

Now this and dozens of other projects that Rosneft and Gazprom Neft agreed with Exxon, Anglo-Dutch Royal Dutch Shell, Norway’s Statoil and Italian ENI will have to be put on hold.

 

“Cutting off U.S. and E.U. sources of technology and services and goods for those projects makes it impossible, or at least extraordinarily difficult for these projects to continue…There are not ready substitutes elsewhere,” a senior U.S. administration official told a briefing on Friday.

 

The companies will have 14 days to wind-down activities.

And just to make sure that there is once again major Obama administration-induced chaos, and thus yet another collapse in global trade, when it comes to the core covenant of capitalism, namely the sanctity of contracts from government intervention, Reuters cites a US official who said that “there is no contract sanctity.

Valery Nesterov from Russian state bank Sberbank, which was also sanctioned by the EU and the United States, foresaw serious complications. “What is really worrying are sanctions on tight oil. Russian companies haven’t invested enough in research and technology. They were heavily relying on Western technologies and now it is simply too late,” he said.

That may well be, but at the end of the day, Russia still has all the leverage in the long-run: “key among Russian tight oil reserves are the Bazhenov formations, which are located beneath existing mature west Siberian fields. They are estimated to contain as much as a trillion barrels of oil – four times the reserves of Saudi Arabia. Rosneft and Gazprom Neft are working on Bazhenov with Exxon and Shell.

“When we learnt about the first sanctions we decided to speed up work on all fronts to minimize the damage to the company,” said a Rosneft source. Rosneft’s chief Igor Sechin, a close ally of Putin, said earlier this month the company had approved a program to replace all Western technology in the medium-term.

But while expansion may or may not be hindered, and China certainly will have something to say about the expansion of Russian oil fields in the coming months – and bring its checkbook and smartest heads when it does – one thing that will certainly happen is that once again the West will prove too smart for its own good. 

Enter Tony Hayward, the infamous former CEO of BP (and current Chairman of Glencore) who may have been disgraced by his handling of the Macondo spill but his comments on how the Russian sanctions will play out, are spot on.

As the FT reported moments ago, “US and EU sanctions against Moscow are in danger of turning round and biting the west by constraining global oil supply and pushing up prices in coming years, the former chief executive of BP has warned.”

Tony Hayward said that cutting off capital markets from Russia’s energy groups, which would eventually lead to less investment in Russian oil production, was likely to damage long-term supply. He said the US shale boom had obscured the growing risks to the world’s supply picture, but its effect would wear off, leaving the global economy dangerously exposed to potential disruptions in the flow of oil.

 

“The world has been lulled into a false sense of security because of what’s going on in the US,” Mr Hayward said in an interview with the Financial Times, referring to the shale boom that has driven a 60 per cent increase in US crude output since 2008. But he asked: “When US supply peaks, where will the new supply come from?”

But why worry: after all surely nobody in the Obama administration can possibly conceive that the 8000+ producing wells in the Bakken shale alone, up from 1000 in 2008, could possibly go dry at some/any point in the future…




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

Former BP CEO Warns "Sanctions Will Bite West" As US Gives Majors 14 Days To Wind Down Russian Activities

For the past six months, even as Obama and the EU were laying harsher sanctions on the Kremlin, one group of companies had managed to sneak by unscathed and largely avoided being impacted by Russia’s isolation by the West: the world’s biggest E&P companies, as explained in detail over a month ago in “Exxon Drilling Russian Arctic Shows Sanction Lack Bite.”

All that is about to change, because while sanctions until this moment had been largely intended to specifically allow energy companies to continue their status quo in Russia, as of this Friday, it is precisely the E&Ps that are being targeted, as we noted on Friday, and as Reuters follows up today, reporting that some of the world’s largest companies, namely Exxon, Anglo-Dutch Royal Dutch Shell, Norway’s Statoil and Italian ENI, will have to be put their Russian projects on hold:  to wit, the companies will have 14 days to wind-down activities.

From Reuters:

Projects now in jeopardy include a landmark drilling program by U.S. giant Exxon Mobil in the Russian Arctic that started in August as part of a joint venture with the Kremlin’s oil champion Rosneft.

 

Now this and dozens of other projects that Rosneft and Gazprom Neft agreed with Exxon, Anglo-Dutch Royal Dutch Shell, Norway’s Statoil and Italian ENI will have to be put on hold.

 

“Cutting off U.S. and E.U. sources of technology and services and goods for those projects makes it impossible, or at least extraordinarily difficult for these projects to continue…There are not ready substitutes elsewhere,” a senior U.S. administration official told a briefing on Friday.

 

The companies will have 14 days to wind-down activities.

And just to make sure that there is once again major Obama administration-induced chaos, and thus yet another collapse in global trade, when it comes to the core covenant of capitalism, namely the sanctity of contracts from government intervention, Reuters cites a US official who said that “there is no contract sanctity.

Valery Nesterov from Russian state bank Sberbank, which was also sanctioned by the EU and the United States, foresaw serious complications. “What is really worrying are sanctions on tight oil. Russian companies haven’t invested enough in research and technology. They were heavily relying on Western technologies and now it is simply too late,” he said.

That may well be, but at the end of the day, Russia still has all the leverage in the long-run: “key among Russian tight oil reserves are the Bazhenov formations, which are located beneath existing mature west Siberian fields. They are estimated to contain as much as a trillion barrels of oil – four times the reserves of Saudi Arabia. Rosneft and Gazprom Neft are working on Bazhenov with Exxon and Shell.

“When we learnt about the first sanctions we decided to speed up work on all fronts to minimize the damage to the company,” said a Rosneft source. Rosneft’s chief Igor Sechin, a close ally of Putin, said earlier this month the company had approved a program to replace all Western technology in the medium-term.

But while expansion may or may not be hindered, and China certainly will have something to say about the expansion of Russian oil fields in the coming months – and bring its checkbook and smartest heads when it does – one thing that will certainly happen is that once again the West will prove too smart for its own good. 

Enter Tony Hayward, the infamous former CEO of BP (and current Chairman of Glencore) who may have been disgraced by his handling of the Macondo spill but his comments on how the Russian sanctions will play out, are spot on.

As the FT reported moments ago, “US and EU sanctions against Moscow are in danger of turning round and biting the west by constraining global oil supply and pushing up prices in coming years, the former chief executive of BP has warned.”

Tony Hayward said that cutting off capital markets from Russia’s energy groups, which would eventually lead to less investment in Russian oil production, was likely to damage long-term supply. He said the US shale boom had obscured the growing risks to the world’s supply picture, but its effect would wear off, leaving the global economy dangerously exposed to potential disruptions in the flow of oil.

 

“The world has been lulled into a false sense of security because of what’s going on in the US,” Mr Hayward said in an interview with the Financial Times, referring to the shale boom that has driven a 60 per cent increase in US crude output since 2008. But he asked: “When US supply peaks, where will the new supply come from?”

But why worry: after all surely nobody in the Obama administration can possibly conceive that the 8000+ producing wells in the Bakken shale alone, up from 1000 in 2008, could possibly go dry at some/any point in the future…




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

Daniele Watts and a Tale of Two Acts of Non-Prostitution

In a fit of masochism and guilt, I agreed to spend yesterday
evening in Northern Virginia. We’re not talking
right-across-the-river-from-D.C. (where I live) NoVa, but the
end-of-the-train-line, need-a-car-to-get-around part. My friend was
picking me up from the Metro station, where I walked out past the
bus stops and waited by what turned out to be a semi-busy
street. 

Pacing near this entrance to the Metro complex, I was
daydreaming as usual, so I didn’t see my friend pull up to the
stoplight. He wound down his window and waved out his hand to get
my attention. I nodded and made some hand gesture of
acknowledgement as the light changed and he turned into the lot,
circling around and pulling up beside me. I got in. And that is
all. But it struck me getting in that this was exactly the kind of
circumstance that could get some women in some parts of the country

arrested for “manifesting an intent to commit prostitution”.

Like, exactly. I’ve never had to worry about this sort of thing,
though, because I look like who a lot of cops think they’re here to
protect.

The only correlate I have to stories of routine street
harassment and cruelty by cops is how often I haven’t been
bothered, arrested, or abused. And let’s just say I’m no angel. I
have absolutely walked the streets of so many cities drinking
alcohol from travel mugs, ducking into dark parks and alleys to
sneak a joint or a kiss; purchased drugs and even
untaxed cigarettes
 in the relative open;
and generally engaged in the kind of semi-suspicious and
minimally-criminal public behavior that I’m certain would get
someone with darker skin or more testosterone at least harassed (if
not arrested or assaulted) many times over. 

I wouldn’t be writing about any of this right now
except that I woke up this morning and read Brian Doherty’s

post here about actress Danièle Watts
. Watts—who appeared on
Weeds (where she played a cop) and in the film
Django Unchained and now on the new TV show
Partners—was handcuffed and detained by police officers in
Studio City, California, after being affectionate with her husband
in public in the middle of the day. 

“Today, Daniele
Watts
 & I were accosted by police officers after
showing our affection publicly,” wrote
her husband
, raw foods chef Brian James Lucas, on Facebook.
From the questions the officer were asking, he said it was clear
that whoever had called them in thought that Watts, a black woman,
was a prostitute and he, a white man, was her client (something
“that happened to her and her father when she was 16” as well).

Because of my past experience with the law, I gave him my ID
knowing we did nothing wrong and when they asked D for hers, she
refused to give it because they had no right to do so. So they
handcuffed her and threw her roughly into the back of the cop car
until they could figure out who she was. In the process of
handcuffing her, they cut her wrist, which was truly NOT
COOL!!!

You can read Watts’
update in full here
and his in
full here

I wish everyone had the privilege I’ve had to not just break
dumb laws without really fearing repercussion but even simply to go
about regular life without being treated like a criminal. Incidents
like this one with Watts, however, show how it’s not merely about
the attitudes of cops. Excluding everything the officers did or
didn’t do once they showed up, there’s still the fact that someone
seems to have called them on an assumption that this young black
woman cozying up to a white man must be a prostitute. Absent
anything the cops did
in Chris Lollie’s case
, there’s still the fact that someone
called them in to investigate a black man suspiciously sitting
idly. There’s the fact that in my decade of living, working,
walking, loitering, and sometimes breaking the law in cities, no
one has ever called the cops on me. 

If there’s any non-bleak takeaway here, it’s perhaps that
decriminalizing the bodily autonomy of adults in terms of things
like drug use and prostitution would give cops and busybodies a lot
less cause or pretense to investigate and harass. I’m beginning to
believe anything that lessens the amount of contact that cops can
have with the public is pretty much a net gain for public safety
and well-being. 

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On The Cliff At The Edge Of The “Permanently High Plateau”

Excerpted from John Hussman’s Weekly Market Comment,

The uncorrected half-cycle advance since 2009 has been accompanied by a resurgence of proponents advocating that stocks should simply be bought and held indefinitely, regardless of price. Some of these proponents have also used this mid-cycle victory-at-halftime as an opportunity to be rather impolite about it. On this subject, Graham and Dodd offer a useful warning in their 80-year old masterpiece, Security Analysis, speaking about the advance to the 1929 peak (whose valuations the present speculative episode has already matched or surpassed):

Irrationality could not go further; yet it is important to note that mass speculation can flourish only in such an atmosphere of illogic and unreality. The self-deception of the mass speculator must, however, have its element of justification. This is usually some generalized statement, sound enough within its proper field, but twisted to fit the speculative mania… In the new-era bull market, the ‘rational’ basis was the record of long-term improvement shown by diversified stock holdings. There was, however, a radical fallacy involved in the new-era application of this historical fact. This should be apparent from even a superficial examination of the data contained in the small and rather sketchy volume from which the new-era theory may be said to have sprung. The book is entitled Common Stocks as Long Term Investments, by Edgar Lawrence Smith, published in 1924.

 

“In fact their rush to take advantage of the inherent attractiveness of common stocks itself produced conditions entirely different from those which had given rise to this attractiveness and upon which it basically depended [viz. much lower starting valuations in previous years]… But as soon as the price was advanced to a much higher price in relation to earnings, this advantage disappeared, and with it disappeared the entire theoretical basis for investment purchases of common stocks.”

I have no inclination to throw stones at buy-and-hold advocates. We’ve certainly had our own stumbles in the half-cycle since the 2009 low, partly because of my 2009-2010 insistence on stress-testing our approach against Depression-era outcomes, and partly because overvalued, overbullish, overbought syndromes that have been a crucial warning in prior market cycles have persisted much longer without consequence in this cycle, as a result of Fed-induced yield-seeking speculation.

Still, we do encourage buy-and-hold investors to understand and mentally prepare for the potential depth of interim losses inherent in that strategy (we would presently allow 40-55%). We also urge investors to align the proportion of assets in equities with the date that they’ll actually need the money. For funds that will be spent an average of 15 years into the future, with no new investment contributions, we believe that equity holdings should be limited to about 30% of assets strictly on the basis of duration (the S&P 500 presently has an estimated duration of about 50 years). This doesn’t even consider the fact that we expect only very low single-digit total returns for the S&P 500 over that horizon.

Following Graham, we go back to the importance of arithemetic in understanding why buy-and-hold strategies regularly reach their height of popularity at moments like the present. The returns that major stock market indices achieve over time can be reliably understood from the standpoint of where valuations stand at the start of a given window, and where they are at the end. At extremely elevated valuations, as we presently observe (on measures that are actually historically reliable), the past total returns of a buy-and-hold approach will always look quite favorable, because the backward-looking performance window ends at a quite favorable point. But this also generally means that the forward-looking performance window starts at the worst possible point, and unless valuations also happen to be elevated at the end of that window, future total returns are likely to be quite disappointing.

From this perspective, it is only because present valuations are so extreme that the total returns of the S&P 500 since the similarly extreme 2000 peak have worked out to be even modestly positive, at about 3.9% annually. We would suggest that this is a temporary artifact of severely elevated valuations at both the start and end of the 2000-2014 window. Whatever benefits investors perceive from the extreme elevation of mid-cycle valuations today are likely to be transitory. Following a largely uncorrected multi-year diagonal advance, it’s exactly the illusion that risk is riskless and elevated valuations have reached a “permanently high plateau” that does so much violence to investors over the completion of the market cycle. It’s a regularity that prompted me to quote from the Wallace Stevens poem Sunday Morning as the market approached the 2007 peak:

Does ripe fruit never fall? Or do the boughs hang always heavy in that perfect sky?

As in every cycle, we expect there will be very good opportunities to establish constructive or even aggressive exposure to market fluctuations, typically at the point that a material retreat in valuations is coupled with an early improvement in market internals. In the half-cycle since 2009, we admittedly missed those opportunities in the interim of our stress-testing response to the financial crisis. The absence of any material consequence of increasingly extreme overvalued, overbought, overbullish conditions – largely driven by speculative yield-seeking in response to quantitative easing – has been equally humbling. Those stress-testing considerations are behind us, and we’ve adapted to the potential for recurrent Fed-induced speculation in ways that we certainly expect to be evident as the present cycle is completed and future ones unfold. But what can actually be expected to be a predominantly bullish bias to our investment discipline is simply not going to be evident at an overvalued, overbought, overbullish extreme like we observe at present. I can only say that investors who view me as a permabear understand nothing about our discipline if they fail to understand the context behind our experience in the half-cycle since 2009.

Now, if one wishes to cite our experience during the half-cycle since 2009 as a justification to ignore overvalued, overbought, overbullish extremes indefinitely, that’s actually both welcome and useful, as someone will have to hold stocks through the completion of the present cycle. It’s best for those bag-holders to be people who have at least evaluated and voluntarily dismissed our concerns. Persistent and unconditional bullishness allows other investors – particularly those with short investment horizons – some window of opportunity to defend capital and reduce their portfolio risk to appropriate levels. Frankly, we’re not looking for investors to agree with us, or even to convert to our investment discipline. Our approach has always been to speak our truth plainly, and to do our utmost to maintain and encourage discipline for those who trust our efforts. Despite fiduciary stress-testing inclinations that, in hindsight, were not helpful during this half-cycle, we’ll let time sort out the misperceptions that investors have adopted in recent years about valuations, speculation without consequence, and even the inherent bullishness or bearishness of our own approach.

Meanwhile, we don’t require an epic market loss in order to justify a shift to greater market exposure, and we expect that a significant portion of future opportunities will be on the constructive side (particularly once a material retreat in valuations is coupled with an early improvement in market internals). Here and now, however, we do remain concerned that there is a cliff at the edge of what appears to be a permanently high plateau.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1y3awKl Tyler Durden

On The Cliff At The Edge Of The "Permanently High Plateau"

Excerpted from John Hussman’s Weekly Market Comment,

The uncorrected half-cycle advance since 2009 has been accompanied by a resurgence of proponents advocating that stocks should simply be bought and held indefinitely, regardless of price. Some of these proponents have also used this mid-cycle victory-at-halftime as an opportunity to be rather impolite about it. On this subject, Graham and Dodd offer a useful warning in their 80-year old masterpiece, Security Analysis, speaking about the advance to the 1929 peak (whose valuations the present speculative episode has already matched or surpassed):

Irrationality could not go further; yet it is important to note that mass speculation can flourish only in such an atmosphere of illogic and unreality. The self-deception of the mass speculator must, however, have its element of justification. This is usually some generalized statement, sound enough within its proper field, but twisted to fit the speculative mania… In the new-era bull market, the ‘rational’ basis was the record of long-term improvement shown by diversified stock holdings. There was, however, a radical fallacy involved in the new-era application of this historical fact. This should be apparent from even a superficial examination of the data contained in the small and rather sketchy volume from which the new-era theory may be said to have sprung. The book is entitled Common Stocks as Long Term Investments, by Edgar Lawrence Smith, published in 1924.

 

“In fact their rush to take advantage of the inherent attractiveness of common stocks itself produced conditions entirely different from those which had given rise to this attractiveness and upon which it basically depended [viz. much lower starting valuations in previous years]… But as soon as the price was advanced to a much higher price in relation to earnings, this advantage disappeared, and with it disappeared the entire theoretical basis for investment purchases of common stocks.”

I have no inclination to throw stones at buy-and-hold advocates. We’ve certainly had our own stumbles in the half-cycle since the 2009 low, partly because of my 2009-2010 insistence on stress-testing our approach against Depression-era outcomes, and partly because overvalued, overbullish, overbought syndromes that have been a crucial warning in prior market cycles have persisted much longer without consequence in this cycle, as a result of Fed-induced yield-seeking speculation.

Still, we do encourage buy-and-hold investors to understand and mentally prepare for the potential depth of interim losses inherent in that strategy (we would presently allow 40-55%). We also urge investors to align the proportion of assets in equities with the date that they’ll actually need the money. For funds that will be spent an average of 15 years into the future, with no new investment contributions, we believe that equity holdings should be limited to about 30% of assets strictly on the basis of duration (the S&P 500 presently has an estimated duration of about 50 years). This doesn’t even consider the fact that we expect only very low single-digit total returns for the S&P 500 over that horizon.

Following Graham, we go back to the importance of arithemetic in understanding why buy-and-hold strategies regularly reach their height of popularity at moments like the present. The returns that major stock market indices achieve over time can be reliably understood from the standpoint of where valuations stand at the start of a given window, and where they are at the end. At extremely elevated valuations, as we presently observe (on measures that are actually historically reliable), the past total returns of a buy-and-hold approach will always look quite favorable, because the backward-looking performance window ends at a quite favorable point. But this also generally means that the forward-looking performance window starts at the worst possible point, and unless valuations also happen to be elevated at the end of that window, future total returns are likely to be quite disappointing.

From this perspective, it is only because present valuations are so extreme that the total returns of the S&P 500 since the similarly extreme 2000 peak have worked out to be even modestly positive, at about 3.9% annually. We would suggest that this is a temporary artifact of severely elevated valuations at both the start and end of the 2000-2014 window. Whatever benefits investors perceive from the extreme elevation of mid-cycle valuations today are likely to be transitory. Following a largely uncorrected multi-year diagonal advance, it’s exactly the illusion that risk is riskless and elevated valuations have reached a “permanently high plateau” that does so much violence to investors over the completion of the market cycle. It’s a regularity that prompted me to quote from the Wallace Stevens poem Sunday Morning as the market approached the 2007 peak:

Does ripe fruit never fall? Or do the boughs hang always heavy in that perfect sky?

As in every cycle, we expect there will be very good opportunities to establish constructive or even aggressive exposure to market fluctuations, typically at the point that a material retreat in valuations is coupled with an early improvement in market internals. In the half-cycle since 2009, we admittedly missed those opportunities in the interim of our stress-testing response to the financial crisis. The absence of any material consequence of increasingly extreme overvalued, overbought, overbullish conditions – largely driven by speculative yield-seeking in response to quantitative easing – has been equally humbling. Those stress-testing considerations are behind us, and we’ve adapted to the potential for recurrent Fed-induced speculation in ways that we certainly expect to be evident as the present cycle is completed and future ones unfold. But what can actually be expected to be a predominantly bullish bias to our investment discipline is simply not going to be evident at an overvalued, overbought, overbullish extreme like we observe at present. I can only say that investors who view me as a permabear understand nothing about our discipline if they fail to understand the context behind our experience in the half-cycle since 2009.

Now, if one wishes to cite our experience during the half-cycle since 2009 as a justification to ignore overvalued, overbought, overbullish extremes indefinitely, that’s actually both welcome and useful, as someone will have to hold stocks through the completion of the present cycle. It’s best for those bag-holders to be people who have at least evaluated and voluntarily dismissed our concerns. Persistent and unconditional bullishness allows other investors – particularly those with short investment horizons – some window of opportunity to defend capital and reduce their portfolio risk to appropriate levels. Frankly, we’re not looking for investors to agree with us, or even to convert to our investment discipline. Our approach has always been to speak our truth plainly, and to do our utmost to maintain and encourage discipline for those who trust our efforts. Despite fiduciary stress-testing inclinations that, in hindsight, were not helpful during this half-cycle, we’ll let time sort out the misperceptions that investors have adopted in recent years about valuations, speculation without consequence, and even the inherent bullishness or bearishness of our own approach.

Meanwhile, we don’t require an epic market loss in order to justify a shift to grea
ter market exposure, and we expect that a significant portion of future opportunities will be on the constructive side (particularly once a material retreat in valuations is coupled with an early improvement in market internals). Here and now, however, we do remain concerned that there is a cliff at the edge of what appears to be a permanently high plateau.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1y3awKl Tyler Durden

“World War III May Have Already Begun”, Pope Francis Warns

While we doubt the pope is much of a trader, based on his latest comments, speaking during a visit to Italy’s largest military cemetery, where he was commemorating the centenary of World War I and where he said that a “piecemeal” World War III may have already begun, we assume he too would join the confusion of the BIS and every other carbon-based life form, wondering how it is possible that risk assets are at all time highs which the world is not only teetering on the edge of a new global conflict but may have already in fact entered it. Oh wait, the central banks, never mind.

But back to the pope. From BBC:

A “piecemeal” World War III may have already begun with the current spate of crimes, massacres and destruction, Pope Francis has warned.

 

“War is madness,” the Pope said at a memorial to 100,000 Italian soldiers at Redipuglia cemetery near Slovenia. The Argentine Pope has often condemned the idea of war in God’s name.

 

Only last month, Pope Francis said the international community would be justified in using force to stop what he called “unjust aggression” by Islamic State militants, who have killed or displaced thousands of people in Iraq and Syria, including many Christians, the BBC’s David Willey reports.

 

In Saturday’s homily, standing at the altar beneath Italy’s fascist-era Redipuglia memorial – where 100,000 Italian soldiers killed during WWI are buried, 60,000 of them unnamed, the Pope paid tribute to the victims of all wars.

 

“Humanity needs to weep, and this is the time to weep,” he said. “Even today, after the second failure of another world war, perhaps one can speak of a third war, one fought piecemeal, with crimes, massacres, destruction,” he said.

And don’t forget S&P500 at all time highs. Because the New Normal, where apparently world war news is the best imaginable news for risk assets.

But while the Pope may be pacifism personified, his grandfather is quote familiar with the concept of world war: he fought in – and survived – Italy’s offensive against the Austro-Hungarian empire, in north-east Italy in 1917 and 1918.

That said, we now fully expect futures to open limit up because there is nothing more bullsh for central bank intervention that the world waking up one morning with mushroom clouds all over the place. Just think of all the printing…




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1y2XI6I Tyler Durden