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 a
lthough 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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UK’s Cameron Warns Scots “No Way Back” As Independence Vote Remains Too Close To Call

With polls and surveys showing a slight bias to a “No” vote for Scottish Independence – but realistically too close to call – it appears UK Prime Minister Cameron has once again flip-flopped his strategy to deal with the northern menace. Initially it was one of scaremongery, warning of Scottish safety in light of global terrorism; then Cameron softened his stance proclaiming how “heartbroken” he will be if “our family was ripped apart.” Now, just a day later, according to The Sunday Times, Cameron will unveil his latest push tomorrow that “there will be no way back” if they vote for independence, warning that a split from the U.K. will see the two countries go their separate ways forever, with the vote result a “once-and-for-all decision.” Media bias is increasingly evident as the establishment unleashes its last minute full court press promising Scots “can have the best of both worlds.” if they back the union…

With polls too close to call (though obviously plenty to chery pick for both sides). Excluding don’t knows, the Yes shares in the 8 different companies/methods are:

  • ICM (online) 54%
  • Panelbase (online) 49%
  • ICM (phone) 49%
  • TNS (face to face) 49%
  • YouGov (online) 48%
  • Opinium (online) 47%
  • Survation (online) 47%
  • Survation (phone) 46%

Source: UKPollingReport

As The Sunday Times reports,

In a speech in Scotland tonight Mr Cameron will warn voters that there will be “no way back” if they vote to leave Britain.

 

Going on the attack, he will abandon his “love-bombing” strategy of the past week and will warn: “If Scotland votes ‘yes’, the UK will split and we will go our separate ways for ever.”

 

On a trip to Aberdeen — his 10th and last visit to Scotland during the campaign — he will say: “We must be very clear that there’s no going back from this. No rerun. This is a once-and-for-all decision.”

 

 

In the event of a “no” vote, Mr Cameron has promised Scotland complete control of income tax in a new “devo max” deal.

 

 

Mr Cameron’s speech in Aberdeen is designed to target those in the northeast of Scotland who once voted Tory and then turned to the SNP but who are now wavering over independence.

 

A senior Downing Street source said: “There are rock-solid people on both sides who a ­nuclear bomb would not shift. The people who are undecided seem to think that maybe they could go back. The message will be this is a complete divorce. There will be no rerun. When it’s over, it’s over.”

* *  *

But media bias continues to rise…




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UK's Cameron Warns Scots "No Way Back" As Independence Vote Remains Too Close To Call

With polls and surveys showing a slight bias to a “No” vote for Scottish Independence – but realistically too close to call – it appears UK Prime Minister Cameron has once again flip-flopped his strategy to deal with the northern menace. Initially it was one of scaremongery, warning of Scottish safety in light of global terrorism; then Cameron softened his stance proclaiming how “heartbroken” he will be if “our family was ripped apart.” Now, just a day later, according to The Sunday Times, Cameron will unveil his latest push tomorrow that “there will be no way back” if they vote for independence, warning that a split from the U.K. will see the two countries go their separate ways forever, with the vote result a “once-and-for-all decision.” Media bias is increasingly evident as the establishment unleashes its last minute full court press promising Scots “can have the best of both worlds.” if they back the union…

With polls too close to call (though obviously plenty to chery pick for both sides). Excluding don’t knows, the Yes shares in the 8 different companies/methods are:

  • ICM (online) 54%
  • Panelbase (online) 49%
  • ICM (phone) 49%
  • TNS (face to face) 49%
  • YouGov (online) 48%
  • Opinium (online) 47%
  • Survation (online) 47%
  • Survation (phone) 46%

Source: UKPollingReport

As The Sunday Times reports,

In a speech in Scotland tonight Mr Cameron will warn voters that there will be “no way back” if they vote to leave Britain.

 

Going on the attack, he will abandon his “love-bombing” strategy of the past week and will warn: “If Scotland votes ‘yes’, the UK will split and we will go our separate ways for ever.”

 

On a trip to Aberdeen — his 10th and last visit to Scotland during the campaign — he will say: “We must be very clear that there’s no going back from this. No rerun. This is a once-and-for-all decision.”

 

 

In the event of a “no” vote, Mr Cameron has promised Scotland complete control of income tax in a new “devo max” deal.

 

 

Mr Cameron’s speech in Aberdeen is designed to target those in the northeast of Scotland who once voted Tory and then turned to the SNP but who are now wavering over independence.

 

A senior Downing Street source said: “There are rock-solid people on both sides who a ­nuclear bomb would not shift. The people who are undecided seem to think that maybe they could go back. The message will be this is a complete divorce. There will be no rerun. When it’s over, it’s over.”

* *  *

But media bias continues to rise…




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September Is (Still) The Best Month For Buying Gold!

At Sprout Money we have been advocates of gold for as long as we can remember. In our opinion, every portfolio should have some exposure to the yellow precious metal regardless of the profile of the investor.

It is one of our favorite investment themes and it will remain to be so for a long time…

The reason for that is simple: the gold price has been in a secular bull market since the year 2000. We stick to that view despite the fact that in 2011 gold fell into a cyclical bear market and started crumbling just short of 2,000 dollar per ounce.

Different elements were at the source of gold’s decline:

  • First and foremost competition came from the stock market, which has been in a cyclical bull market since 2009 on the back of the financial crisis.
  • Secondly, the dollar has been gaining momentum again and makes gold look like a less attractive investment.
  • The overall sentiment is a third element that cannot be underestimated, however, and is related to psychological factors and the media.

A majority of participants of the weekly Kitco News Gold Survey indicated that they expect the gold price to decrease, for example. In their opinion, gold will have a tough time dealing with the improving macroeconomic landscape in the US and the looming interest rate increase.

As Kitco states: “Out of 37 participants, 24 responded this week. Of those, five see higher prices, 18 see lower prices and one sees prices trading sideways. Market participants include bullion dealers, investment banks, futures traders and technical-chart analysts.

That is all nicely visualized on the infographic below.

Kitco-bullish-bearish-survey

It is important to know that most of the participants in these kinds of polls are gold bugs, which makes the result even more clear as a reference to the sentiment surrounding gold.

And then there are the classic ‘short sellers’ in gold, of which one can wonder what their hidden agenda is. Goldman Sachs, for example, stated on CNBC just last week that they are sticking to their original 1,050 USD per ounce price target for the end of the year.

Their commodity specialist gave his usual speech about the fact that safe haven buying because of the crisis in Iraq and Ukraine and the recent quantitative easing in Europe and Japan have supported the gold price a little bit.

According to this analyst the Fed is playing the part of the bad guy here, which is why he advises to short gold. The appetite for short selling is quite noticeable actually, judging by the open interest on the gold markets.

From a contrarian standpoint, that is more a symptom of a market that appears to be bottoming out than of an imminent crash, however. Meanwhile demand from retail investors seems to be stabilizing as well, as demand for gold coins like the Krugerrand or the American Eagle is slowly picking up.

And without anyone taking the time to write about it, physical gold deliveries in Shanghai doubled over the last two months. As with many things: if no one writes about it, you will find the truth at Sprout Money ;-).

The stronger demand for physical gold has the effect, moreover, of increasing the gearing of the shorts on the paper gold market.

Nevertheless, it seems like short sellers have tightened their grip on this market; open interest in gold increased which, in combination with a lower price, confirms that futures are being driven by an increase in short positions. The chart below makes that clear, especially from the 27th of August when the decline started.

NB2

This is another indication of the fact that the gold market is bottoming out.

The last thing you want to do now is state that a stronger dollar automatically leads to lower gold prices, because the recent momentum in the dollar has mostly been the consequence of weakness in other currencies; think of the strong decline in the yen as a result of the weaker Japanese economy. The ECB lowered interest rates to practically zero, and the British pound is sweating because of Scotland’s independence campaign.

A more plausible analysis is that the investment community is still not worried about systemic risks in the financial system. The stock and bond markets are still doing very well, although volatility has picked up a bit. The perceived risk has declined.

But in the longer term there are plenty of risks left in the system and demand from growth markets will remain strong as well. Many countries in the Middle East and the Far East are still net buyers of gold; the demand from the central banks of China, Russia, etc. remains strong.

The chart below makes that quite clear!

NB3

Russian gold reserves 2011 – 2014 (per ton)

Decreasing exposure to gold in your portfolio therefore does not seem like a smart move at the moment. It would be like cancelling your Florida hurricane insurance in June. Keep gold in your portfolio and profit from this temporary weakness in the yellow precious metal’s price and the sentiment on the market.

Those investors who like to time their purchases probably know already that September is the best month to buy gold as well, as evidenced by the following chart.

NB4

Gold has gained 3% on average in the month of September over the last 20 years, far ahead of November (1.8%) in second place.

The interesting part is that this usually is the result of a comeback from weaker circumstances, which is exactly the situation where in right now. Especially the weakness in the price is remarkable.

The coming months are definitely looking up for gold based on seasonal factors in countries like India and China, moreover, and it is most probable that the gold mining sector will capitalize on the revival.

In short, the current weakness in the gold price will once again be considered as a unique buying opportunity in hindsight. Unfortunately not many investors make use of these kinds of opportunities.

>>> Want to Know Where the Gold Price is Headed Long Term?

Sprout Money offers a fresh look at investing. We analyze long lastingcycles, coupled with a collection of strategic investments and concrete tips for different types of assets. The methods and strategies from Sprout Money are transformed into the Gold & Silver Report and the Technology Report.

Follow us on Twitter @SproutMoney




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Stop Criminalizing Parenting: Free Range Kids’ Lenore Skenazy on Our Irrational Fears over Child Safety

The kids are back in school, which means it’s time to
meticulously plan every moment of their lives and overreact about
every real and imagined danger they face as soon as they leave the
house…or so the conventional wisdom goes. 

Free Range Kids’ doyenne, Lenore Skenazy, explains to Reason TV
how to resist the forces of fear and authoritarianism that would
turn many parents into criminals simply for occasionally trusting
their kids to be safe out of their sight. 

“Stop Criminalizing Parenting: Free Range Kids’ Lenore Skenazy
on Our Irrational Fears over Child Safety.” About 12
minutes. Produced by Anthony L. Fisher. Camera by Jim Epstein
and Fisher, with help from Brett Crudgington.

Original release date was September 10, 2014 and the original
writeup is below.

“People say, ‘Now that I can get arrested any time I let my
child play outside or walk to school, I won’t do it. And that’s the
opposite of what Free Range Kids is about,” says Lenore Skenazy, proprietor
of the blog FreeRangeKids.com. She adds,
“Free Range Kids is about getting so many kids outside, that it
doesn’t seem strange to see a child playing in the park.” 

In a conversation with Reason TV’s Nick Gillespie, Skenazy
debunks the myth that children left unattended in a car for a few
minutes are in mortal danger, decries “busybodies” who feel a civic
duty to call the police when they see an unaccompanied child, and
offers helpful tools for terrified parents on how to let their kids
enjoy more freedom to explore the world.

About 12 minutes. 

Produced by Anthony L. Fisher. Camera by Jim Epstein and Fisher,
with help from Brett Crudgington.

Music: “Applicant” by The Matt Kurz One (http://ift.tt/1iLpoBy)

Scroll down for downloable versions and subscribe
to Reason
TV’s YouTube Channel
 for notifications when new material
goes live.

View this article.

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via IFTTT

Stop Criminalizing Parenting: Free Range Kids' Lenore Skenazy on Our Irrational Fears over Child Safety

The kids are back in school, which means it’s time to
meticulously plan every moment of their lives and overreact about
every real and imagined danger they face as soon as they leave the
house…or so the conventional wisdom goes. 

Free Range Kids’ doyenne, Lenore Skenazy, explains to Reason TV
how to resist the forces of fear and authoritarianism that would
turn many parents into criminals simply for occasionally trusting
their kids to be safe out of their sight. 

“Stop Criminalizing Parenting: Free Range Kids’ Lenore Skenazy
on Our Irrational Fears over Child Safety.” About 12
minutes. Produced by Anthony L. Fisher. Camera by Jim Epstein
and Fisher, with help from Brett Crudgington.

Original release date was September 10, 2014 and the original
writeup is below.

“People say, ‘Now that I can get arrested any time I let my
child play outside or walk to school, I won’t do it. And that’s the
opposite of what Free Range Kids is about,” says Lenore Skenazy, proprietor
of the blog FreeRangeKids.com. She adds,
“Free Range Kids is about getting so many kids outside, that it
doesn’t seem strange to see a child playing in the park.” 

In a conversation with Reason TV’s Nick Gillespie, Skenazy
debunks the myth that children left unattended in a car for a few
minutes are in mortal danger, decries “busybodies” who feel a civic
duty to call the police when they see an unaccompanied child, and
offers helpful tools for terrified parents on how to let their kids
enjoy more freedom to explore the world.

About 12 minutes. 

Produced by Anthony L. Fisher. Camera by Jim Epstein and Fisher,
with help from Brett Crudgington.

Music: “Applicant” by The Matt Kurz One (http://ift.tt/1iLpoBy)

Scroll down for downloable versions and subscribe
to Reason
TV’s YouTube Channel
 for notifications when new material
goes live.

View this article.

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via IFTTT

Kohl’s And The Rest Of The Retailers Are In Deep Trouble

Submitted by Jim Quinn of The Burning Platform

Kohl’s And The Rest Of The Retailers Are In Deep Doo Doo

“Facts are stubborn things, but statistics are pliable.” ? Mark Twain

I never believe government manufactured numbers. They will always be adjusted, massaged, and manipulated to achieve a happy ending for the propagandists attempting to control and fleece the sheep. Yesterday, the government produced retail sales numbers for August that were weak and the corporate MSM propaganda machine immediately threw up bold headlines declaring how strong these numbers were. Positive stories were published on the interwebs and Wall Street hack economists were rolled out on CNBC, where the bubble headed bimbos and prostitutes for the status quo like Jim Cramer and Steve Liesman declared the recovery gaining strength. Woo Hoo.

If everyone else is whipping out that credit card, why aren’t you? Credit card debt has reached a new post recession high. They tell me consumer confidence is soaring. Forget about the 92 million working age Americans supposedly not in the labor force. Forget about real household income hovering at 1999 levels. Forget about median household net worth still 30% lower than 2007. Forget about what you see with your own two eyes in malls, strip centers and office parks as you motor around our suburban sprawl empire of debt. Those Store Closing, Space Available, and For Lease signs mean nothing.

I didn’t get a chance to peruse the commerce department drivel until this morning. They put out unadjusted data and adjusted data. Shockingly, the adjusted data is always rosier than the unadjusted data. I wonder why? I can understand the rationale for adjusting month to month data due to holidays and calendar events. But I still don’t trust the adjustments. There should not be a major difference when comparing year over year data. The adjusted data should reflect the same relationship to the unadjusted data on a year over year basis. Well guess what? It appears our friendly government drones may be pumping the current data to give the appearance of recovery. Here are my observations after taking a look at the government propaganda report:

  • The unadjusted retail sales were only 3.2% higher than last August. Considering government reported inflation of 2%, that is a pretty shitty result. But have no fear. The “ADJUSTED” retail sales for August were 5.0% higher than last August. WTF? Guess which number gets reported to the sheep?
  • Hysterically, your government drones consider lending deadbeats $40,000 for seven years with no money down to drive away with a GM deathtrap SUV as a retail sale. The billions in subprime auto loans led to an 8.8% YoY surge in “ADJUSTED” auto sales. It seems the unadjusted number only went up 5.3%.
  • When you back out the Federal Reserve/Wall Street pumped auto sales, which will ultimately result in billions of written off bad debt (you’ll pick up the tab), unadjusted retail sales were only 2.7% higher than last August. With real inflation of 5% or more, real retail sales are negative on a year over year basis.
  • Despite financing deals of 4 years with no interest, furniture and electronics retail sales were flat versus last August. If there really is a housing recovery and 2.1 million more Americans are employed versus last August how could these discretionary sales be flat, and negative on an inflation adjusted basis?
  • Grocery store sales were up only 2.1% over last year. Even the government is reporting 2.7% food inflation in the last year. We all know it is closer to 10%, so people are actually reducing the amount of food they are buying. That is a sure sign of an economic recovery.
  • Clothing store sales were flat and department store sales were negative versus last August. So much for the back to school storyline. I do believe August is back to school time. The Sears and JC Penney Bataan Death March trudges toward bankruptcy.
  • What did surge was sales at restaurants and bars. They soared by 6.8% versus last August. We already know Darden, Yum Brands and McDonalds have reported dreadful results, so either the government is lying, soaring food prices are being passed on to customers, or people are so depressed by this awesome economic recovery they are drinking themselves into a stupor.

As a side note on the accuracy of this government data, in a previous role at IKEA, when I was a much younger man, I was responsible for filling out the monthly government retail surveys for the Census Bureau. The government drones collecting this data do not check it. They do not require proof that it is right. It is self reported by retailers across the country. Filling out this crap for the government was about as low on my priority list as whale shit. If I was really busy, I’d make the numbers up, scribble them on the form and put it in the mail. The numbers the government are accumulating are crap. And then they massage the crap. And then they publish the crap as if it means something. It’s nothing but crap.

When you see the headlines touting strong retail sales, you need to consider what you are actually seeing in the real world. RadioShack will be filing for bankruptcy within months. Wet Seal will follow. Sears is about two years from a bankruptcy filing. JC Penney’s turnaround is a sham. They continue to lose hundreds of millions every quarter and will be filing for bankruptcy within the next couple years. Target and Wal-Mart continue to post awful sales results and have stopped expanding. And as you drive around in your leased BMW, you see more Space Available signs than operating outlets in every strip center in America.

My anecdotal proof of this relentless slow motion retail trainwreck is twofold. We received our second 30% off discount coupon from Kohl’s in the last three weeks. We are so indifferent to these constant offers that we didn’t even use the first one. I have to wear dress clothes to work every day, so I went over to Kohl’s this morning when they opened at 8:00 am to get some dress shirts and pants.

The parking lot was an oasis of empty spots and there were maybe 5 customers in the entire store. I went to the mens’ section and was shocked to see about two dozen 60% to 80% off racks. There are usually two or three racks. The store was overflowing with summer merchandise. Summer is over. The store should have been overflowing with Fall merchandise. They are clearly in the midst of an inventory disaster. I found excellent dress shirts on the 70% off rack. Everything I bought was at least 50% off, even before my 30% coupon and another $10 menswear coupon.

I live in a relatively upscale suburban area and still this Kohl’s is an absolute disaster. Their gross margin is going to be hammered. Profits are going to implode. Kohl’s has always been a favorite retailer of the middle class. Decent quality at reasonable prices. Their comp store sales were between positive 5% and 15% for years, until the 2008 financial collapse. Their struggles since then coincide with the decline of middle class incomes and the fake jobs recovery. The fact that they are spiraling downward flies in the face of the propaganda being spewed by the government and media.There is no recovery for the average American.

My second data point happened on Thursday. An accident on the Turnpike forced me to take Lincoln Drive and Germantown Pike home from work (1 hour and 55 minutes of agony). I hadn’t taken this route in about six months. Germantown Pike winds through the Chestnut Hill section of Philly. This is an artsy fartsy area with boutique retail, chic outlets, and fancy restaurants. The upper middle class frequents the area. The retail stores were always open, occupied and busy.

Not anymore. I saw dozens of empty storefronts, Space Available, and For Lease signs. The open stores had no customers. The trendy eating establishments had few patrons. Even the yuppie latte drinking areas are beginning to crumble. Every office park I passed had Space Available signs in front. The amount of vacant retail and office space in this country is too vast to comprehend and is being under-reported by the real estate whores whose job it is to rent space. Ignoring the facts and the truth doesn’t change the facts and the truth.

Do you believe the government and the corporate media, or do you believe your own two eyes?

You can ignore the government reported happy talk. When retailers and restaurants report their actual sales and profits, the truth shall be revealed. It will set you free.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/XhxNr7 Tyler Durden

Kohl's And The Rest Of The Retailers Are In Deep Trouble

Submitted by Jim Quinn of The Burning Platform

Kohl’s And The Rest Of The Retailers Are In Deep Doo Doo

“Facts are stubborn things, but statistics are pliable.” ? Mark Twain

I never believe government manufactured numbers. They will always be adjusted, massaged, and manipulated to achieve a happy ending for the propagandists attempting to control and fleece the sheep. Yesterday, the government produced retail sales numbers for August that were weak and the corporate MSM propaganda machine immediately threw up bold headlines declaring how strong these numbers were. Positive stories were published on the interwebs and Wall Street hack economists were rolled out on CNBC, where the bubble headed bimbos and prostitutes for the status quo like Jim Cramer and Steve Liesman declared the recovery gaining strength. Woo Hoo.

If everyone else is whipping out that credit card, why aren’t you? Credit card debt has reached a new post recession high. They tell me consumer confidence is soaring. Forget about the 92 million working age Americans supposedly not in the labor force. Forget about real household income hovering at 1999 levels. Forget about median household net worth still 30% lower than 2007. Forget about what you see with your own two eyes in malls, strip centers and office parks as you motor around our suburban sprawl empire of debt. Those Store Closing, Space Available, and For Lease signs mean nothing.

I didn’t get a chance to peruse the commerce department drivel until this morning. They put out unadjusted data and adjusted data. Shockingly, the adjusted data is always rosier than the unadjusted data. I wonder why? I can understand the rationale for adjusting month to month data due to holidays and calendar events. But I still don’t trust the adjustments. There should not be a major difference when comparing year over year data. The adjusted data should reflect the same relationship to the unadjusted data on a year over year basis. Well guess what? It appears our friendly government drones may be pumping the current data to give the appearance of recovery. Here are my observations after taking a look at the government propaganda report:

  • The unadjusted retail sales were only 3.2% higher than last August. Considering government reported inflation of 2%, that is a pretty shitty result. But have no fear. The “ADJUSTED” retail sales for August were 5.0% higher than last August. WTF? Guess which number gets reported to the sheep?
  • Hysterically, your government drones consider lending deadbeats $40,000 for seven years with no money down to drive away with a GM deathtrap SUV as a retail sale. The billions in subprime auto loans led to an 8.8% YoY surge in “ADJUSTED” auto sales. It seems the unadjusted number only went up 5.3%.
  • When you back out the Federal Reserve/Wall Street pumped auto sales, which will ultimately result in billions of written off bad debt (you’ll pick up the tab), unadjusted retail sales were only 2.7% higher than last August. With real inflation of 5% or more, real retail sales are negative on a year over year basis.
  • Despite financing deals of 4 years with no interest, furniture and electronics retail sales were flat versus last August. If there really is a housing recovery and 2.1 million more Americans are employed versus last August how could these discretionary sales be flat, and negative on an inflation adjusted basis?
  • Grocery store sales were up only 2.1% over last year. Even the government is reporting 2.7% food inflation in the last year. We all know it is closer to 10%, so people are actually reducing the amount of food they are buying. That is a sure sign of an economic recovery.
  • Clothing store sales were flat and department store sales were negative versus last August. So much for the back to school storyline. I do believe August is back to school time. The Sears and JC Penney Bataan Death March trudges toward bankruptcy.
  • What did surge was sales at restaurants and bars. They soared by 6.8% versus last August. We already know Darden, Yum Brands and McDonalds have reported dreadful results, so either the government is lying, soaring food prices are being passed on to customers, or people are so depressed by this awesome economic recovery they are drinking themselves into a stupor.

As a side note on the accuracy of this government data, in a previous role at IKEA, when I was a much younger man, I was responsible for filling out the monthly government retail surveys for the Census Bureau. The government drones collecting this data do not check it. They do not require proof that it is right. It is self reported by retailers across the country. Filling out this crap for the government was about as low on my priority list as whale shit. If I was really busy, I’d make the numbers up, scribble them on the form and put it in the mail. The numbers the government are accumulating are crap. And then they massage the crap. And then they publish the crap as if it means something. It’s nothing but crap.

When you see the headlines touting strong retail sales, you need to consider what you are actually seeing in the real world. RadioShack will be filing for bankruptcy within months. Wet Seal will follow. Sears is about two years from a bankruptcy filing. JC Penney’s turnaround is a sham. They continue to lose hundreds of millions every quarter and will be filing for bankruptcy within the next couple years. Target and Wal-Mart continue to post awful sales results and have stopped expanding. And as you drive around in your leased BMW, you see more Space Available signs than operating outlets in every strip center in America.

My anecdotal proof of this relentless slow motion retail trainwreck is twofold. We received our second 30% off discount coupon from Kohl’s in the last three weeks. We are so indifferent to these constant offers that we didn’t even use the first one. I have to wear dress clothes to work every day, so I went over to Kohl’s this morning when they opened at 8:00 am to get some dress shirts and pants.

The parking lot was an oasis of empty spots and there were maybe 5 customers in the entire store. I went to the mens’ section and was shocked to see about two dozen 60% to 80% off racks. There are usually two or three racks. The store was overflowing with summer merchandise. Summer is over. The store should have been overflowing with Fall merchandise. They are clearly in the midst of an inventory disaster. I found excellent dress shirts on the 70% off rack. Everything I bought was at least 50% off, even before my 30% coupon and another $10 menswear coupon.

I live in a relatively upscale suburban area and still this Kohl’s is an absolute disaster. Their gross margin is going to be hammered. Profits are going to implode. Kohl’s has always been a favorite retailer of the middle class. Decent quality at reasonable prices. Their comp store sales were between positive 5% and 15% for years, until the 2008 financial collapse. Their struggles since then coincide with the decline of middle class incomes and the fake jobs recovery. The fact that they are spiraling downward flies in the face of the propaganda being spewed by the government and media.There is no recovery for the average American.

My second data point happened on Thursday. An accident on the Turnpike forced me to take Lincoln Drive and Germantown Pike home from work (1 hour and 55 minutes of agony). I hadn’t taken this route in about six months. Germantown Pike winds through the Chestnut Hill section of Philly. This is an artsy fartsy area with boutique retail, chic outlets, and fancy restaurants. The upper middle class frequents the area. The retail stores were always open, occupied and busy.

Not anymore. I saw
dozens of empty storefronts, Space Available, and For Lease signs. The open stores had no customers. The trendy eating establishments had few patrons. Even the yuppie latte drinking areas are beginning to crumble. Every office park I passed had Space Available signs in front. The amount of vacant retail and office space in this country is too vast to comprehend and is being under-reported by the real estate whores whose job it is to rent space. Ignoring the facts and the truth doesn’t change the facts and the truth.

Do you believe the government and the corporate media, or do you believe your own two eyes?

You can ignore the government reported happy talk. When retailers and restaurants report their actual sales and profits, the truth shall be revealed. It will set you free.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/XhxNr7 Tyler Durden

Sheldon Richman on Ownership and Ideas

Like many libertarians, Sheldon Richman says he’s
learned a lot from Murray Rothbard on a wide variety of subjects.
Of course, no one gets everything right, especially someone as
intellectually ambitious, multidisciplinary, and prolific as
Rothbard. Nevertheless, reading the work of the man who left such a
mark on the modern libertarian movement is, for Richman, as
profitable as it is pleasurable. While rereading For a New
Liberty (first published in 1973) recently, though he was
puzzled, which is not the frame of mind Rothbard normally leaves
him in. In it Rothbard seems to derive ownership of a final product
from “the creator’s mind.”

View this article.

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New York Times Acknowledges “Assault Weapon” Bans Are Bogus Nonsense

The New York Times on Sunday
gets around to admitting at length
what readers
of
Reason
(or anyone who actually knew much about the topic) have known for
years: so-called “assault weapon” bans are a load of useless
nonsense.

As the op-ed’s author Lois Beckett of
ProPublica explains:

OVER the past two decades, the majority of Americans in a
country deeply divided over gun control have coalesced behind a
single proposition: The sale of assault weapons should be
banned.

That idea was one of the pillars of the Obama administration’s
plan to curb gun violence, and it remains popular with the public.
In a
poll
 last December, 59 percent of likely voters said they
favor a ban.

But in the 10 years since the previous ban lapsed, even gun
control advocates acknowledge a larger truth: The law that barred
the sale of assault weapons from 1994 to 2004 made little
difference.

It turns out that big, scary military rifles don’t kill the vast
majority of the 11,000 Americans murdered with guns each year.
Little handguns do….

The continuing focus on assault weapons stems from the media’s
obsessive focus on mass shootings, which disproportionately involve
weapons like the AR-15, a civilian version of the military M16
rifle. This, in turn, obscures some grim truths about who is really
dying from gunshots.

Annually, 5,000 to 6,000 black men are murdered with guns. Black
men amount to only 6 percent of the population. Yet of the 30
Americans on average shot to death each day, half are black
males.

So in 1994 the Democratic Party decided to wage war on the
non-existent “assault weapon” and managed to pass a ban on a set of
rifles based almost entirely on cosmetic features that had nothing
to do with whatever inherent danger to the public they were
supposed to present.

This politically defined category of guns — a selection of
rifles, shotguns and handguns with “military-style” features — only
figured in about 2 percent of gun crimes nationwide before the
ban……

Crime fell, but when the ban expired, a detailed study
found no proof that it had contributed to the
decline…..

Most Americans do not know that gun homicides have
decreased by 49 percent since 1993 as violent crime also fell….A
Pew survey conducted after the mass shooting at Sandy Hook
Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., found that 56 percent of
Americans believed wrongly that the rate of gun crime was higher
than it was 20 years ago.

Maybe now that they read it in the Times, legislators
will start believing it? Or continue to harp on this “assault
weapon” canard every time they have to pretend they can or ought to
“do something” about gun violence?

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