"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

Ending the Global Drug War: Voices from the Front Lines

As
noted by Reason Senior Editor Jacob Sullum
last week,
the Global Commission on Drug Policy (which includes several Latin
American ex-Presidents and former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan)
issued a report called “Taking
Control: Pathways to Drug Policies that Work
.” Included were
recommendations for forms of drug legalization, regulation and
decriminalization of personal use. Sullum’s takeaway from the
report: 

Citing “the horrific unintended consequences of punitive and
prohibitionist laws and policies,” Annan et al. argue that “harsh
measures grounded in repressive ideologies must be replaced by more
humane and effective policies shaped by scientific evidence, public
health principles and human rights standards.” In contrast with the
Obama administration’s idea
of drug policy reform
, the commission says force is not an
appropriate response to drug use: Governments not only should stop
arresting and jailing people who consume psychoactive substances
that politicians do not like; they should “stop imposing
‘compulsory treatment’ on people whose only offense is drug use or
possession.”

The commissioners also recommend alternatives to incarceration
for low-level, nonviolent drug offenders such as farmers, mules,
and street dealers, urging law enforcement agencies to “target the
most violent and disruptive criminal groups” instead. But they add
that “the most effective way to reduce the extensive harms of the
global drug prohibition regime
and advance the goals of public health and safety is to get drugs
under control through responsible legal regulation.”

In 2011, Reason TV spoke with a number of the statesmen who had
a hand in the report, as well as journalists such as Glenn
Greenwald and Mary Anastasia O’Grady:

“Ending the Global Drug War: Voices from the Front
Lines” About 6 minutes. Produced and Edited by Anthony L. Fisher.
Camera by Joshua Swain, with help from Seth McKelvey.

 Graphics by
Meredith Bragg.

Original release date was December 13, 2011 and the
original writeup is below.

“Ever since the War on Drugs, everything has hit the fan,” says
Romesh Bhattacharji, former Narcotics Commissioner of India. Rather
than continue the unnecessary and costly drug war, Bhattacharji
advises the United States to simply “Relax, take it easy, [and]
tolerate.”

Last month, at the Cato Institute’s “Ending the Global War on
Drugs” conference, Bhattacharji’s sentiments were echoed by ex-drug
czars, cops, politicians, intellectuals, liberal and conservative
journalists, and even the former President of Brazil. Reason.tv
attended the event and spoke with a number of the featured
speakers, including:

Glenn Greenwald, Salon.com

Mary Anastasia O’Grady, Wall Street Journal

Tucker Carlson, The Daily Caller

Luis Alberto Lacalle Pou, Speaker of the House of Deputies,
Uruguay

Leigh Maddox, Law Enforcement Against Prohibition; University of
Maryland School of Law

Enrique Gomez Hurtado, former Senator, Colombia

Larry Campbell, Senator, Canada

Romesh Bhattacharji, former Narcotics Commissioner, India

Eric Sterling, Criminal Justice Policy Foundation

Harry G. Levine, Queens College (N.Y.)

Juan Carlos Hidalgo, Cato Institute

About 6.15 minutes.

 Produced and Edited by Anthony L. Fisher.
Camera by Joshua Swain, with help from Seth McKelvey.

 Graphics by
Meredith Bragg.

For more Reason coverage on the Drug War, go here.

For Cato Institute Drug War coverage and research, go here.

View this article.

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Do you even hip thrust? Today’s quick cardio/ham/glute sesh before the #Saints game at noon: • 10 sets of jump squats for 15 • 10 sets of hip thrusts for 20 • 10 sets of SL deads for 15 • 10 sets of ham curls for 20 Glutes are toast.

@hooper_fit

Do you even hip thrust? Today’s quick cardio/ham/glute sesh before the #Saints game at noon: • 10 sets of jump squats for 15
• 10 sets of hip thrusts for 20 • 10 sets of SL deads for 15
• 10 sets of ham curls for 20

Glutes are toast.

LIKES: 13
 COMMENTS:2

tags
#fitmom,
#nfl,
#fitfam,
#gameday,
#nola,
#fitlife,
#chickswholift,
#saints,
#fitchicks,
#gymjunkie,
#fitness,
#glutes,
#cardio,
#girlswithmuscle,

»WEBSTA

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

Do you even hip thrust? Today's quick cardio/ham/glute sesh before the #Saints game at noon: • 10 sets of jump squats for 15 • 10 sets of hip thrusts for 20 • 10 sets of SL deads for 15 • 10 sets of ham curls for 20 Glutes are toast.

@hooper_fit

Do you even hip thrust? Today’s quick cardio/ham/glute sesh before the #Saints game at noon: • 10 sets of jump squats for 15
• 10 sets of hip thrusts for 20 • 10 sets of SL deads for 15
• 10 sets of ham curls for 20

Glutes are toast.

LIKES: 13
 COMMENTS:2

tags
#fitmom,
#nfl,
#fitfam,
#gameday,
#nola,
#fitlife,
#chickswholift,
#saints,
#fitchicks,
#gymjunkie,
#fitness,
#glutes,
#cardio,
#girlswithmuscle,

»WEBSTA

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Why The Rigging Of The Gold Market Matters

Submitted by Alasdair Macleod via The Cobden Centre,

In a radio interview recently I was asked a question to which I could not easily give a satisfactory reply: if the gold market is rigged, why does it matter?

I have no problem delivering a comprehensive answer based on a sound aprioristic analysis of how rigging markets distorts the basis of economic calculation and why a properly functioning gold market is central to all other financial prices. The difficulty is in answering the question in terms the listeners understand, bearing in mind I was told to assume they have very little comprehension of finance or economics.

I did not as they say, want to go there. But it behoves those of us who argue the economics of sound money to try to make the answer as intelligible as possible without sounding like a committed capitalist and a conspiracy theorist to boot, so here goes.

Manipulating the price of gold ultimately destabilises the financial system because it is the highest form of money. This is why nearly all central banks retain a holding. The fact we don’t use it as money in our daily business does not invalidate its status. Rather, gold is subject to Gresham’s Law, which famously states bad money drives out the good. We would rather pay for things in government-issue paper currency and hang on to gold for a rainy day.

As money, it is on the other side of all asset prices. In other words stocks, bonds and property prices can be expected to rise measured in gold when the gold price falls and vice-versa. This relationship is often muddled by other factors, the most obvious one being changing levels of confidence in paper currencies against which gold is normally priced. However, with bond yields today at record lows and equities at record highs this relationship is apparent today.

Another way to describe this relationship is in terms of risk. Banks which dominate asset markets become complacent about risk because they are greedy for profit. This leads to banks competing with one another until they end up ignoring risk entirely. It happened very obviously with the American banking crisis six years ago until house prices suddenly collapsed, threatening to take the whole financial system down. In common with all financial bubbles everyone ignored risk. History provides many other examples.

Therefore, gold is unlike other assets because a rising gold price reflects an increasing perception of general financial risk, ensuring downward pressure on other financial asset prices. So while the big banks are making easy money ignoring risks in equity and bond markets, they will not want their party spoiled by warning signs from a rising gold price.

This is a long way from proof that the gold market is manipulated. But the big banks, and we must include central banks which are obviously keen to maintain financial confidence, have the motive and the means. And if they have these they can be expected to take the opportunity.

So why does it matter if the gold price is rigged? A freely-determined gold price is central to ensuring that reality and not financial bubbles guides us in our financial and economic activities. Suppressing the gold price is rather like turning off a fire alarm because you can’t stand the noise.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1ANt6SF Tyler Durden

“Low Volatility Everywhere” – BIS Sounds Alarm Alert On Pervasive Complacency Masking Systemic Shocks

Here comes another BIS report, and another stark warning by the central banks’ central bank, the Bank of International Settlements, best known for selling gold at key inflection points, that not only are asset prices are at “elevated” levels but that market volatility remains “exceptionally subdued” thanks to ultra-loose central bank policies around the world. In other words: pervasive complacency boosting the asset bubble to unseen levels and masking the threat of systemic shocks.

First, a flashback: this is what the BIS warned back in June 2014.

“… it is hard to avoid the sense of a puzzling disconnect between the markets’ buoyancy and underlying economic developments globally….  Despite the euphoria in financial markets, investment remains weak. Instead of adding to productive capacity, large firms prefer to buy back shares or engage in mergers and acquisitions.

 

As history reminds us, there is little appetite for taking the long-term view. Few are ready to curb financial booms that make everyone feel illusively richer.  Or to hold back on quick fixes for output slowdowns, even if such measures threaten to add fuel to unsustainable financial booms. Or to address balance sheet problems head-on during a bust when seemingly easier policies are on offer. The temptation to go for shortcuts is simply too strong, even if these shortcuts lead nowhere in the end.

This follows a just as solemn warning back in June 2013, when it warned that the monetary Kool-aid party is coming to an end:

Can central banks now really do “whatever it takes”? As each day goes by, it seems less and less likely… Six years have passed since the eruption of the global financial crisis, yet robust, self-sustaining, well balanced growth still eludes the global economy. If there were an easy path to that goal, we would have found it by now.

 

Monetary stimulus alone cannot provide the answer because the roots of the problem are not monetary. Hence, central banks must manage a return to their stabilisation role, allowing others to do the hard but essential work of adjustment. 

 

Many large corporations are using cheap bond funding to lengthen the duration of their liabilities instead of investing in new production capacity. 

 

Continued low interest rates and unconventional policies have made it easy for the private sector to postpone deleveraging, easy for the government to finance deficits, and easy for the authorities to delay needed reforms in the real economy and in the financial system.

 

Overindebtedness is one of the major barriers on the path to growth after a financial crisis. Borrowing more year after year is not the cure…in some places it may be difficult to avoid an overall reduction in accommodation because some policies have clearly hit their limits.

Which brings us to today, and the just released latest quarterly reviews, whose topic is summarized by the title of the chart below:

In today’s release, instead of discussing leverage, or asset levels, this time the BIS’ take on the global asset bubble, the same one decried by Deutsche Bank last week, is by way of collapsing volatility: i.e., the #1 specialty of the VIX-selling team at Libery 33, where Kevin Henry is such an instrumental part. Some exceprts:

After the spell of volatility in early August, the search for yield – a dominant  theme in financial markets since mid-2012 – returned in full force. Volatility fell back to exceptional lows across virtually all asset classes, and risk premia remained  compressed. By fostering risk-taking and the search for yield, accommodative monetary policies thus continued to support elevated asset price valuations and  exceptionally subdued volatility.

Here, in addition to pointing out the obvious, the BIS highlights something that everyone else has been scratching their heads over: how with a world on the edge of war the global markets are just shy of all time highs:

Increased geopolitical stress had surprisingly little effect on energy markets. In  the spot market, oil prices actually fell by around 11% between end-June and early  September (Graph 1, right-hand panel). Market expectations for oil demand were revised down, largely on disappointing growth in the euro area and Japan. Incoming data from China were mixed, with that country’s manufacturing PMI registering an 18-month high in July, but falling back in August. All in all, demand factors seemingly offset concerns over potential short-run supply disruptions.

So how does the BS explain this paradox? Simple: hopes for even more easing, this time from the ECB:

The spell of market volatility proved to be short-lived and financial markets resumed their rally soon afterwards. By early September, global equity markets had recouped their losses and credit risk spreads once again consolidated at close to historical lows. While geopolitical worries kept weighing on financial market developments, these were ultimately superseded by the anticipation of further monetary policy accommodation in the euro area, providing support for asset prices.

In other words, central banks are now perceived to be more powerful even that the threat of regional or not so regional war.

Yet the core BIS’ warning this time is one about complacency, as Reuters notes: “There were several references in the report to the “extraordinarily” and “exceptionally” low levels of volatility, suggesting the BIS feels markets may be getting too complacent and therefore vulnerable – and therefore ill-equipped to a shock.”

To summarize: the bank that supervises all central banks has first warned about new and disturbing all time highs in leverage, then a global asset bubble driven largely by companies investing in stock buybacks instead of growth, and now about widespread unsustainable complacency. Surely this reiteration of everything that Zero Hedge has been warning about for years should be sufficient to send the e-mini comfortable above 2000 as soon as futures are open for trading.

Finally, here are the key BIS charts:

 

Finally, a quick annotation by us on one of today’s key BIS charts showing when and where things changed:




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

"Low Volatility Everywhere" – BIS Sounds Alarm Alert On Pervasive Complacency Masking Systemic Shocks

Here comes another BIS report, and another stark warning by the central banks’ central bank, the Bank of International Settlements, best known for selling gold at key inflection points, that not only are asset prices are at “elevated” levels but that market volatility remains “exceptionally subdued” thanks to ultra-loose central bank policies around the world. In other words: pervasive complacency boosting the asset bubble to unseen levels and masking the threat of systemic shocks.

First, a flashback: this is what the BIS warned back in June 2014.

“… it is hard to avoid the sense of a puzzling disconnect between the markets’ buoyancy and underlying economic developments globally….  Despite the euphoria in financial markets, investment remains weak. Instead of adding to productive capacity, large firms prefer to buy back shares or engage in mergers and acquisitions.

 

As history reminds us, there is little appetite for taking the long-term view. Few are ready to curb financial booms that make everyone feel illusively richer.  Or to hold back on quick fixes for output slowdowns, even if such measures threaten to add fuel to unsustainable financial booms. Or to address balance sheet problems head-on during a bust when seemingly easier policies are on offer. The temptation to go for shortcuts is simply too strong, even if these shortcuts lead nowhere in the end.

This follows a just as solemn warning back in June 2013, when it warned that the monetary Kool-aid party is coming to an end:

Can central banks now really do “whatever it takes”? As each day goes by, it seems less and less likely… Six years have passed since the eruption of the global financial crisis, yet robust, self-sustaining, well balanced growth still eludes the global economy. If there were an easy path to that goal, we would have found it by now.

 

Monetary stimulus alone cannot provide the answer because the roots of the problem are not monetary. Hence, central banks must manage a return to their stabilisation role, allowing others to do the hard but essential work of adjustment. 

 

Many large corporations are using cheap bond funding to lengthen the duration of their liabilities instead of investing in new production capacity. 

 

Continued low interest rates and unconventional policies have made it easy for the private sector to postpone deleveraging, easy for the government to finance deficits, and easy for the authorities to delay needed reforms in the real economy and in the financial system.

 

Overindebtedness is one of the major barriers on the path to growth after a financial crisis. Borrowing more year after year is not the cure…in some places it may be difficult to avoid an overall reduction in accommodation because some policies have clearly hit their limits.

Which brings us to today, and the just released latest quarterly reviews, whose topic is summarized by the title of the chart below:

In today’s release, instead of discussing leverage, or asset levels, this time the BIS’ take on the global asset bubble, the same one decried by Deutsche Bank last week, is by way of collapsing volatility: i.e., the #1 specialty of the VIX-selling team at Libery 33, where Kevin Henry is such an instrumental part. Some exceprts:

After the spell of volatility in early August, the search for yield – a dominant  theme in financial markets since mid-2012 – returned in full force. Volatility fell back to exceptional lows across virtually all asset classes, and risk premia remained  compressed. By fostering risk-taking and the search for yield, accommodative monetary policies thus continued to support elevated asset price valuations and  exceptionally subdued volatility.

Here, in addition to pointing out the obvious, the BIS highlights something that everyone else has been scratching their heads over: how with a world on the edge of war the global markets are just shy of all time highs:

Increased geopolitical stress had surprisingly little effect on energy markets. In  the spot market, oil prices actually fell by around 11% between end-June and early  September (Graph 1, right-hand panel). Market expectations for oil demand were revised down, largely on disappointing growth in the euro area and Japan. Incoming data from China were mixed, with that country’s manufacturing PMI registering an 18-month high in July, but falling back in August. All in all, demand factors seemingly offset concerns over potential short-run supply disruptions.

So how does the BS explain this paradox? Simple: hopes for even more easing, this time from the ECB:

The spell of market volatility proved to be short-lived and financial markets resumed their rally soon afterwards. By early September, global equity markets had recouped their losses and credit risk spreads once again consolidated at close to historical lows. While geopolitical worries kept weighing on financial market developments, these were ultimately superseded by the anticipation of further monetary policy accommodation in the euro area, providing support for asset prices.

In other words, central banks are now perceived to be more powerful even that the threat of regional or not so regional war.

Yet the core BIS’ warning this time is one about complacency, as Reuters notes: “There were several references in the report to the “extraordinarily” and “exceptionally” low levels of volatility, suggesting the BIS feels markets may be getting too complacent and therefore vulnerable – and therefore ill-equipped to a shock.”

To summarize: the bank that supervises all central banks has first warned about new and disturbing all time highs in leverage, then a global asset bubble driven largely by companies investing in stock buybacks instead of growth, and now about widespread unsustainable complacency. Surely this reiteration of everything that Zero Hedge has been warning about for years should be sufficient to send the e-mini comfortable above 2000 as soon as futures are open for trading.

Finally, here are the key BIS charts:

 

Finally, a quick annotation by us on one of today’s key BIS charts showing when and where things changed:




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

Greg Beato on Soylent Cuisine

SoylentRemember
when the planet’s young people—or at least its youth-oriented
jingle writers—almost convinced us that a bottle of Coca-Cola could
play a pivotal role in achieving global harmony? While the “real
thing” may have been a balm against the stings of Vietnam and other
afflictions of the era, today’s youthful idealists understand it
will take a lot more than proprietary sugar-water and some
attractive teenagers singing on a hilltop to combat melting polar
ice caps, rising income inequality, and everything else that ails
us. We need a genuine miracle elixir, not just a pause that
refreshes.

Enter Soylent, the gulp that sustains. Its primary components
are a powder made from maltodextrin, rice protein, oat flour, and
more vitamins and minerals than mid-century food scientists ever
managed to pack into a loaf of Wonder Bread, plus a liquid blend of
canola oil and fish oil. Mix the powder with the oil, add water,
and that’s it. As Greg Beato explains, Soylent is almost as easy to
prepare as a glass of Coca-Cola, and yet it is designed to function
as a “staple meal” that offers “maximum nutrition with minimal
effort.”

View this article.

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The American Public: A Tough Soldier Or A Chicken Hawk Cowering In A Cubicle?

Submitted by Mike Krieger of Liberty Blitzkrieg blog,

You gotta love the American public sometimes. For a mass of people so easily terrified by guys in caves funded and armed by our intelligence services and “allies” in the Persian Gulf, the same public talks with such armchair bravado when it comes to launching bombs from drones and sending other people’s children to die.

Makes you wonder though, which one is it? Is the American public actually the tough guy soldier it pretends to be when cheering overseas military interventions, or is it really a scared, propagandized, coward hiding in one of our nation’s endless cubicle rows? Unfortunately, based on recent opinion polls demonstrating approval for military action against ISIS, it appears to be the latter. The former is merely a front put on by that terrified, economically insecure, silently suffering automaton. I really wish this weren’t the case.

“ISIS as the new enemy” is a meme that has made me very uncomfortable from the start for several reasons, not the least being the fact that this group seemingly emerged out of nowhere just when it seemed corrupt politicians from both parties in Washington D.C. were becoming increasingly frustrated by their inability to launch missiles into Syria back in 2012, following well documented disastrous campaigns in Iraq and Libya. Not only that, it is quite clear that many of our so called “allies” such as Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Kuwait have been the major funders behind ISIS. Moreover, for a public so squeamish and outraged by beheadings, we hear barely a peep about the fact that beheadings hit a record level in Saudi Arabia during August, with nearly one unfortunate soul decapitated per day during the month. Nope, haven’t heard much about that at all.

But of all the inconsistency and irrationality that comes with increased support by the American public for military action against “ISIS,” nothing is more concerning than the fact that this recent approval appears to be based entirely on propagandized falsehoods. As usual, you can thank politicians and mainstream media for the latest assault on the public’s logic.

Trevor Timm encapsulates this perfectly in today’s Guardian op-ed. He writes:

Did you know that the US government’s counterterrorism chief Matthew Olson said last week that there’s no “there’s no credible information” that the Islamic State (Isis) is planning an attack on America and that there’s “no indication at this point of a cell of foreign fighters operating in the United States”? Or that, as the Associated Press reported, “The FBI and Homeland Security Department say there are no specific or credible terror threats to the US homeland from the Islamic State militant group”?

 

Probably not, because as the nation barrels towards yet another war in the Middle East and President Obama prepares to address that nation on the “offensive phase” of his military plan Wednesday night, mainstream media pundits and the usual uber-hawk politicians are busy trying to out-hyperbole each other over the threat Isis poses to Americans. In the process, they’re all but ignoring any evidence to the contrary and the potential hole of blood and treasure into which they’re ready to drive this country all over again.

 

The White House declared on Tuesday night that it needn’t bother to ask Congress for war powers, and Congress is more than happy to relieve itself of the responsibility of asking for them – or, you know, voting. Members of both parties have actually been telling the president to ignore the legislative branch entirely – as well as his constitutional and legal requirements. It seems so long ago now that presidential candidate Obama said, “The President does not have power under the Constitution to unilaterally authorize a military attack in a situation that does not involve stopping an actual or imminent threat to the nation.”

 

“What if it comes over and you can’t pass it?” asked Sen Lindsay Graham, as though he wouldn’t want democracy getting in the way of a nice war. The aforementioned Sen Nelson said he thinks the president should go aheadand strike Isis all he wants, but added that “there are some legal scholars who think otherwise, so let’s just put it to rest”. Those pesky legal scholars with their “laws” and that “Constitution” of theirs, always slowing things down.

 

Thanks to this wall-to-wall fear mongering, a once war-weary public is now terrified. More than 60% of the public in a recent CNN poll now supports airstrikes against Isis. Two more polls came out on Tuesday, one from the Washington Post and the other from NBC New and the Wall Street Journal, essentially concluding the same thing. Most shocking, 71% think that Isis has terrorist sleeper cells in the United States, against all evidence to the contrary.

 

So where to from here? Well, those airstrikes the public have been scared into supporting, which already numbering the hundreds, will reportedly expand fast – not only in Iraq but into Syria. The White House even has shiny new euphemism for such military attacks, as the Wall Street Journal reported: “Mr. Obama could green-light the new ‘sovereignty strikes’ in his address on Wednesday.” George Orwell would be proud.

 

It’s also strange that we are unquestionably calling the Free Syrian Army (FSA) the “moderate” opposition and putting our faith in their abilities, despite manyactual experts claiming they’re far from moderate and far from a cohesive army.As George Washington University’s Marc Lynch wrote in the Washington Post recently, “The FSA was always more fiction than reality, with a structure on paper masking the reality of highly localized and fragmented fighting groups on the ground.” The New York Times reported two weeks ago that FSA has a penchant for beheading its enemy captives as well, and now the family of Steven Sotloff, the courageous journalist who was barbarically beheaded by Isis, says that someone from the “moderate” opposition sold their son to Isis before he was killed.

 

So how, exactly, will the administration accomplish “destroying” Isis, when no amount of bombs and soldiers have been able to destro
y al-Qaida or the Taliban in nearly 13 years of fighting? The administration openly admits it has no idea how long it will take, only that it won’t be quick. “It may take a year, it may take two years, it may take three years,” John Kerry said.

 

He didn’t add, “it might take another 13”, but he might as well have.

Or it might take forever. Just say it Kerry, you know you want to.

Even more disturbing, if the American public knew the truth would it even matter? With a middle class lifestyle increasingly a pipe dream, it’s far easier for the public to support dropping bombs from drones halfway across the world than it is to deal with the real economic issues affecting their daily lives.

Meanwhile what ever happened to al-Qaeda? Seems to me their brand as a fear mongering tool has simply lost its effectiveness. So enter ISIS. Never forget the following passage from George Orwell’s 1984:

On the sixth day of Hate Week, after the processions, the speeches, the shouting, the singing, the banners, the posters, the films, the waxworks, the rolling of drums and squealing of trumpets, the tramp of marching feet, the grinding of the caterpillars of tanks, the roar of massed planes, the booming of guns — after six days of this, when the great orgasm was quivering to its climax and the general hatred of Eurasia had boiled up into such delirium that if the crowd could have got their hands on the 2,000 Eurasian war-criminals who were to be publicly hanged on the last day of the proceedings, they would unquestionably have torn them to pieces — at just this moment it had been announced that Oceania was not after all at war with Eurasia. Oceania was at war with Eastasia. Eurasia was an ally.

 

There was, of course, no admission that any change had taken place. Merely it became known, with extreme suddenness and everywhere at once, that Eastasia and not Eurasia was the enemy.

 

Oceania was at war with Eastasia: Oceania had always been at war with Eastasia.

For some of my previous thoughts on ISIS and related topics, see:

How The Washington Post and The New Yorker Refused to Publish an Article on Obama Admin Syria Lies

Before We Bomb Syria, What’s Happening in Libya?

 Why is the U.S. Allied with Al Qaeda in Syria?

America’s Disastrous Foreign Policy – My Thoughts on Iraq

Blockbuster Report from WND – Jordanian Official Claims Americans Trained ISIS

My Latest Interview with Financial Survival Network – Is ISIS a False Flag?

James Foley Worked Under USAID, a Known U.S. Intelligence Front. Was He More Than Just a Journalist?

Here come the sovereignty strikes.




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

What You Need to Know about Next Week’s 3 Key Events

After a relative slow week following the announcement of the ECB’s new initiatives and the US jobs data, the week ahead is chock full of key events. There are three in particular that can shape the larger investment climate.  They are the FOMC meeting, the launch of the ECB’s Targeted Long-Term Repo Operation (TLTRO), and the referendum on Scottish Independence.

 

I

 

The key issue around the FOMC meeting is the susceptibility of the forward guidance to change now that QE is drawing to a close.  In particular, there are two elements that are being debated.  First, in July, the FOMC statement cited the “significant under-utilization of the labor resources.”  Is this still a fair characteristic of the labor market?  The statement was issued on July 30.  There have been two monthly cycles of employment data.  Taken as a whole, the data show continued improvement, though not acceleration.  The labor market is healing, but it still does not appear to be in robust health.  

 

Indeed, there is some risk that the pace of improvement slows.  Non-farm payrolls peaked in April (304k) and have been down two consecutive months in July and August. While it is well-appreciated that August’s initial estimate is often revised higher, what is less well recognized is that in six of the past nine years, jobs growth in September is lower than in August.

 

Weekly initial jobless claims put in their cyclical low (thus far) in mid-July.  They have been gradually trending higher, and last week moved above the 26-week moving average for the first time since early May.

 

Since Yellen’s discussion at Jackson Hole, more economists are talking about pent-up wage deflation. It is the idea that during the contraction, nominal wages did not fall as much as they “should” have to clear the market.  The implication is that the lack of wage pressure now reflects that wages were too high previously.  In turn, this means that the present lack of wage pressure should not be confused with the degree of tightness in the labor market.

 

At the same time, the fact that wages are sticky in both directions is consistent with a non-economic hypothesis about wages.  Simply, even if crudely, put, wages reflect the relative power of the employee and employer.  Despite the concern apparent heightened concern about the concentration of wealth and income and the framing of the of issue and debate by Picketty, it appears to have intensified in recent years.  The social product (GDP) is growing slower, but the elites share has grown.   This is clear from the continued divergence of wages and profits, and the increased wealth in absolute and relative terms since the end of the Great Financial Crisis.  

 

The second part of the Fed’s statement that will be closely watched is the reference that rates can remain low for a “considerable time” after QE ends.  This has been a contentious issue for a number of regional Fed presidents.  Many economists look for this to be dropped in the statement that will be released at the conclusion of the FOMC meeting on September 17.  If it is dropped, the market will quickly conclude that a rate hike has indeed been brought forward.  The idea would be a Q1 15 hike instead of mid-year.   This would likely see an increase in short-term yields and a bearish flattening of the yield curve.  It would likely spur a dollar  advance.  

 

Dropping or modifying this forward guidance is necessary for the gradual evolution of the economy and Fed policy.   This is to suggest that there are a number of reasons why the FOMC would want to alter its language, and signaling a Q1 15 rate hike is not likely to be one of them.  If “considerable period” is dropped, Yellen is likely to use her press conference to drive home this point.  

 

A client survey conducted by a larger investment bank, and reported in the media, found that 30% expect “significant under-utilization” phrase to be dropping with the September statement.  Another 26% expected it to be dropped in October.  The “considerable time” phrase is expected to be dropped by 19% in September and 26% in October.  The December meeting was picked by 44% of the respondents.  This expectation seems to be more relaxed than market participants.  

 

II

 

The ECB launches the TLTRO facility, and they key issue is the extent of the participation.  The latest ECB rate cut that pushed the repo rate to 5 bp lowered the cost of borrowing from the TLTRO to 15 bp.  The aggregate amount that can be borrowed is a function of the banks’ loan book.  Such calculations project a maximum borrowing of the first phase of the TLTRO (September and December) of about 400 bln euros.  

 

The naive assumption is that banks will borrow 200 bln at each of the two opportunities.  We suspect that the takedown on September 18 will likely be considerably less.  Unlike the LTROs, we suspect that there may be a stigma attached to the TLTRO borrowings.  The larger and healthier banks may see a beneficial result to not being seen eating again from the public trough.  In addition, prudence suggests that even if one wanted/needed to participate, December might be a better opportunity.  There is a small chance, though above zero that if the take down is small next week, the rules may be more favorably tweaked.  

 

Some banks, especially it appears French and Italian banks, have been slower to pay back the LTRO funds.  They may choose to replace the 1% older funding with the 15 bp of the TLTRO.  We also note that there is no penalty for not using the TLTRO funds to boost lending to businesses and households, which is the facilities intent.  Banks would have to repay the new funds after two years rather than four.  

 

There appears to be many considerations going into the ECB’s ABS program, which Draghi committed to without providing any substantive details.  The stronger the participation in the TLTRO, it would favor more restrictive ABS/covered bond “modalities.”   Draghi seemed to suggest that ECB wanted its balance sheet to return to it high water mark, which requires about more than one trillion euros, to allow for the continued repayment of the LTRO.    

 

Strong participation in the TLTRO could see the euro trade higher and could underpin European peripheral bonds.  Anticipation that banks will seek to minimize maturity mismatches may be a factor behind that rally in 2-year bond prices that have driven the yield of many eurozone members below zero.   Weak participation will likely see yields bounce back.  

 

Separately, the Swiss National Bank also meets on September 18.  The euro was threatening the CHF1.20 floor the SNB had set when official comments indicated that it would not rule of the adoption of negative interest rates.  The euro moved further away from the floor, which seems to reduce the risk of negative rates this week.   The SNB successfully got the market to do the heavy lifting with inexpensive verbal intervention.   Nevertheless, given that deflation forces continue to grip the Swiss economy, and the pressure on the euro has strengthened, the risk of negative Swiss rates still seems like a potent and credible threat.  We note that the EuroSwiss futures contracts (3-month CHF interest rates) imply negative rates for the next two years.  

 

 

III

 

The Scottish Referendum was hardly more than a minor risk event on most investors’ radar screens until a single poll showed the independents with a slight lead.  Sterling fell sharply.  Indeed, it gapped lower, and although sterling finished the week near its highs, the gap was not closed.  The economic shock that a “yes” vote would have is thought to hurt cut UK growth and postpone the first BOE rate hike. 

 

To be sure, if Scotland votes for independence, it will not take place immediately.  To the contrary, the next eighteen months will featured intense negotiations over various economic issues such as debt, currency regime, oil ownership, as well as political issues like the placement of the UK Trident nuclear submarines based on Scotland’s west coast.  The UK is scheduled to hold national elections next May.  Should a Scotland that will be independent in a year later vote in the UK elections? 

 

We suspect the negative immediate impact on the UK economy is exaggerated, and the 12-cent decline in sterling since mid-July provides some stimulus.  A “yes” vote would send sterling down further.   We do not see why this would delay a BOE rate hike that we have been consistently expecting in Q1 2015.  If anything sterling depreciation boosts the risks of inflation that two MPC members already anticipate (hence their dissents in July favoring an immediate rate hike), and makes it more likely others would join them. 

 

Much ink has been spilled on the impact of independence on Scotland.  The kind of currency regime would it have has been particularly heated.  This hardly matters for international investors.  And independent Scotland, even if it preserves its territorial integrity (Shetland and Orkney, which would ostensibly have claims on much of the North Sea oil, could chose not to be part of an independent Scotland by either staying with the UK or forming their own country.  The voting results from this region will also be important to monitor) would not have many attractive investment opportunities.  It would be another small, likely indebted, weak country who will have to go through an ascension process to join the EU. 

 

Some observers argue that a Scotland that uses sterling or adopts the euro, would not be truly independent.  While we recognize that having its own currency would be one expression of (monetary) sovereignty, we think there is a  romantic notion of sovereignty in much of the discussions, and that many do not appreciate that extent the extent to which a small country next to a large country, or bloc, have real limits on their sovereignty whether or not they have their own currency.

 

Is not Germany and France sovereign, even though they do not have the euro printing press?  Sovereign Denmark chose not to join EMU, but it kept its currency in a tight band against the euro.  Its monetary policy has one goal:  maintain the tight currency link.  Switzerland jealously guards its sovereignty, refusing to join the EU, EMU and NATO.  Yet, it has put a cap in place on the Swiss franc against the euro.  Cannot a sovereign voluntarily limit its own degrees of freedom and still be sovereign? 

 

Mexico and Canada are sovereign.  They have their own currencies and both have explored some degrees of freedom from US monetary policy.  However, these are very limited, and the fact of the matter is that when the US, which absorbs the bulk of their exports,  sneezes they still catch cold.  The vast majority of Mexico’s banking assets are at foreign banks.  

 

A small “no” victory, which seems like the most likely outcome, will prevent the sentiment to return fully to status quo ante.  Many will play up parallels to Quebec,which for a period independence was a recurring threat.  However, the terms of this referendum, allowing a simple majority to carry the day, with sixteen-year-olds eligible to vote, while Scots living outside of Scotland cannot, is unlikely to be repeated.  The additional devolution promised by the major parties in London may also absorb some of the angst. 

 

 

On a victory for the unionist “no” vote, we expect sterling to bounce toward $1.65-$1.66.  This is likely to be supported by a rise short-term UK rates, as the market belatedly gives greater heed to BOE Governor Carney’s comments from last week, suggesting Q1 rate hike expectations were appropriate.   The sharp rise in sterling’s implied volatility would also likely ease.  




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