Is ISIS Using Alibaba To Buy Mobile Refineries From Turkey?

It all started with a Pentagon tweet showing a before and after picture of a “modular oil refinery” used by ISIS:

By “modular” the Department of Defense meant “mobile.” CNN had more: 

U.S. and coalition warplanes pounded ISIS positions in eastern Syria on Wednesday, targeting what a Pentagon official described as mobile oil refineries being used by the so-called Islamic State terror group to help finance its operations.

 

The latest round of airstrikes were aimed at cutting off money flowing to ISIS, which makes up to $2 million a day from oil produced by the mobile refineries, Navy Rear Adm. John Kirby, the Pentagon spokesman, told CNN.

So the US is targeting ISIS’ mobile refineries as a way of “halting” the organization’s funding? Great. But where does ISIS buy these refineries: after all while the US provided all the weapons, arms and munitions ISIS has and is using against, well, the US, one assumes not even America was deploying mobile refineries in Iraq and Syria: after all Haliburton and Bechtel get paid much more when they make the “fixed”, CapEx-soaking versions.

Well, one place is, drumroll, everyone’s favorite biggest IPO of all time. That’s right, Alibaba:

 

Wait, is the US implicitly subsidizing Alibaba which is collecting massive commissions on sales of illegal arms to a terrorist group, which has to order even more such mobile refineries as the US blows them up one after another?

Stranger things have happened.

And, the punchline, is that the supplier is none other than a Turkish Company named NCER:

 

Turkey, of course, is the one (NATO) country that has so far refused to join the US grand “alliance” against the Islamic State, has refused to grant the US use of its airspace for counter-Islamic State strikes, and whose 49 hostages were released by ISIS a week ago in gratitude for Turkey’s unwillingness to fold to the US.

So are all of these events related?

We don’t know. One place to look for answers is Mr. Karem Ekrem Merter, the contact for NCER, who was kind enough to put up the following YouTube clip of a mobile refinery on YouTube in November 2012…

And has conveniently listed his contact info as follows:

contact: + 90 542 440 07 03
web: http://ift.tt/1vg6ECf
email: sales@mobile-refinery.com

As for whether Alibaba is the euphoria, just-IPOed “marketplace” used to illegally provide Islamic State terrorists with the tools they need to generate millions in profits each day, we are confident the regulators will answer that question shortly.

h/t Barry




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1043Z33 Tyler Durden

This Riot Is Not In Ferguson, It Is In Hong Kong

No, this is not Ferguson: it is, according to many, the world’s most capitalist city, Hong Kong, where over the past few hours, around 50,000 students are said to have massed on late Saturday, demanding more democracy, as tensions grew over Beijing’s decision to rule out free elections in the former British colony.

According to Reuters, the crowds swelled less than 24 hours after riot police used pepper spray to disperse protesters around government headquarters, arresting more than 60 people opposed to the Chinese government’s tightening grip on the city. The unrest underscores the obstacles China faces in Hong Kong as a restive younger generation challenges its influence over the densely-populated financial hub.

More:

Tempers flared and there were scenes of chaos before dawn on Saturday when protesters used umbrellas to shield themselves from the pepper spray. Those who got hit used water to rinse their eyes. “I paid my highest respect to every soldier who defends till the last moment… Civil disobedience – it continues to happen,” said student leader Lester Shum on his Facebook page.

 

Hong Kong’s Education Bureau appealed to parents and teachers on Saturday not to allow underage children and students to take part in unlawful activities to avoid risking their safety.

 

Leaders of the local Occupy movement arrived to show their support for the protests. They plan to blockade the financial district on Oct. 1, a holiday, hoping it will escalate into one of most disruptive protests in Hong Kong for decades.

 

The latest clashes were the most heated in a series of anti-Beijing protests. Police arrested six people overnight, including teenage student leader Joshua Wong, who was dragged away by police, kicking, screaming and bleeding from his arm, after he called on the protesters to charge the government premises.

 

“Hong Kong’s future belongs to you, you and you,” Wong, a thin 17-year-old with dark-rimmed glasses and bowl-cut hair, told cheering supporters before he was taken away.

One thing is certain: the youth protest movement can hardly be any more ineffectual than America’s own OccupyWallStreet farce.

One protester said she had joined the protests to secure a better future for her five-year-old son, who was by her side wearing swimming goggles to protect him if the police fired more pepper spray.

 

“If we don’t stand up, we will be worried about his future,” said the 33-year-old woman named Li. “He can’t choose his own future.”

 

The demonstrators broke through a cordon late on Friday and scaled perimeter fences to invade the city’s main government compound in the culmination of a week-long rally to demand free elections. The Hospital Authority said 34 people had been treated in hospital by Saturday evening as a result of the clashes.

 

The protesters were removed one by one on Saturday afternoon, some of them carried away.

 

“The police have used disproportionate force to stop the legitimate actions of the students and that should be condemned,” said Benny Tai, one of the three main organizers of the pro-democracy Occupy Central movement.

 

Hong Kong returned from British to Chinese rule in 1997 under a formula known as “one country, two systems”, with a high degree of autonomy and freedoms not enjoyed in mainland China. Universal suffrage was set as an eventual goal. But Beijing last month rejected demands for people to freely choose the city’s next leader in 2017, prompting threats from activists to shut down the Central financial district in a so-called Occupy Central campaign. China wants to limit elections to a handful of candidates loyal to Beijing.

Which, maybe just maybe, could explain our post from May showing “Stunning Images Of Chinese Riot Police Training For A “Working Class Insurrection.” Here is a sampling, via Ifeng.com, captions google translated:

May 11, heavy rain, the Shenzhen Municipal Public Security Bureau
carried out emergency disposal operations training activities.
Participating in the training team for a variety of different
emergencies riot synthesis disposal training.

“Demonstrators” prepare to impact SWAT.

“Demonstrators” armed with sticks toward the SWAT

“Demonstrators” conflict with the SWAT occur.

“Demonstrators” ignite gasoline SWAT throwing bottles.

Special police armed with riot shields are ready, surrounded by “demonstrators.”

SWAT are quick to reach “emergency scene.”

“Demonstrators” rushed SWAT.

SWAT are quick to reach “emergency scene.”

Shenzhen police using ground and air linkage way to quickly reach “emergency scene.”

More “thugs” armed with machetes out of the bus.

“Demonstrators” ignite gasoline bottles toward the bus.

SWAT team members quickly surrounded the bus.

Emergency mobile teams to participate in emergency disposal operations team training sudden rain rushed to the scene

Emergency mobile teams to participate in emergency disposal operations training team.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/Ys8C5v Tyler Durden

Not Even a Dead-Cat Bounce: Russia Sanctions, Whiff of Reality Sink ‘Economic Expectations’ in Germany

Wolf Richter   www.wolfstreet.com   http://ift.tt/Wz5XCn

Germany is expected to pull the Eurozone out of its funk by stimulating internal consumption. It is expected to allow the ECB to print money and stir up inflation so that other Eurozone countries like Spain or France can leverage that inflation to cut real wages, impoverish their people, devalue mountains of debt, make exports cheaper, and push imports beyond the reach of the poor.

The Eurozone is mired down, and it’s holding back the global economy. Germany would have to do its job. Not German exporters, for crying out loud – they’re causing all the problems, the official thinking goes. But German consumers, the same ones whose dour mood can last for years. They’d have to pull the Eurozone, and by extension the global economy, out of their funk.

But those consumers are getting cold feet, after businesses and investors have gotten cold feet months ago.

The Ifo Business Climate Index fell to its lowest level since April 2013. Business Expectations fell to their lowest level since December 2012. In manufacturing, expectations dropped into the negative for the first time since January 2013, dragged down by flagging exports. Construction hit the lowest level since December 2012, and wholesaling hit the lowest level since March 2010. The Ifo Employment Barometer backed off as well. The German economy is sputtering.

The sentiment of “financial experts” has been diving for nine months in a row. The ZEW Indicator, whose the long-run average is 24.6, now sits at 6.9, the worst level since December 2012, when markets were climbing out of the debt crisis debacle (ugly chart). The report blamed the “sanction spiral with Russia” and “disappointing” economic activity in the Eurozone.

For months, German consumers had been blissfully oblivious to the fretting by businesses and financial experts. “Extremely optimistic economic outlook,” is how GfK, which conducts the monthly consumer survey, described it at the time. But now, for the second month in a row, their mood soured. In the forward-looking GfK survey, the overall index fell to 8.3 for October, from 8.6 in September and from 8.9 in August – after a spectacular uninterrupted rise going back to January 2013. So on the surface, they’re still feeling pretty good.

But beneath the surface, oh my!

In late 2007, another one of those rare periods when Germans were feeling high, the index had hovered above 9. A year later, during the financial crisis, the index plunged below 2. And it took until early 2014, to get it back above 8.

Then last month, GfK reported that the sub-index for economic expectations, “in light of the intensified state of international affairs, completely collapses.” It had plunged over 35 points to 10.4, the worst plunge since the beginning of the survey in 1980. GfK cited the escalation of unrest around the world, particularly in Ukraine, and “the faster rotating sanctions spiral with Russia,” which have hit exports and could become “a real danger for the German economy.”

After that historic plunge last month, you’d expect some sort of bounce. Things don’t deteriorate that fast. It must have been an overreaction. Not even the financial crisis had come close. Or maybe it was a statistical fluke. At least, you’d expect a dead-cat bounce.

But heck no. Consumers’ economic outlook dropped again, this time by six points to 4.4, the lowest level since July 2013. GfK explained the phenomenon this way:

Consumers feel that the ongoing tense geopolitical situation and the economic weakness in a number of Eurozone countries will have a greater impact on the German economy. The economic development is showing the first signs of skid marks.

In Q2, GDP fell 0.2%. In Q3, the economy is expected to stagnate or, according to wishful thinkers, improve slightly. Consumers rode through the Q2 debacle without pause, but now they’re worried.

In the wake of swooning economic expectations, income expectations, after hitting an all-time record high in August, fell 4.6 points for September and 6.7 points for October to 43.3. The “continued high level,” as GfK called it, was a reflection of the “stable” labor market and the fact that “real income is rising as a result of very low inflation. These are decisive pillars for income expectations.”

The all-important phrase in Germany: “real income is rising as a result of very low inflation.” Very low inflation is keeping income expectations from heading south even faster! More on that in a moment.

The willingness-to-buy indicator dropped 6.8 points to 42.4, now below the level of a year ago, beaten down by plunging economic expectations and deteriorating income expectations. Last month, GfK called the level “relatively robust.” Now it’s less so, but it is still propped up by rising real wages, low inflation, and low interest rates. For the moment, consumers are still “more inclined to consumer rather than save their money.”

Someone should tell ECB President Mario Draghi and inflation mongers in the French government and elsewhere what German consumers, on whom the salvation of the Eurozone apparently depends, will do with their wallets when they see inflation eating into their wages and scarce savings. They’ll close that wallet! And they’ll go on one of their infamous buyer strikes that can last for  years.

GfK blames the international crises that are “slowing down the consumer climate.” Consumers are already showing “the signs of uncertainty.” And there is “a danger that private consumption could no longer play its role as an important pillar of the economy.”

And that would be the final nail. Investor sentiment has been tanking for nine months. The business climate has been deteriorating for six months. GDP in Q2 fell. Q3 doesn’t look promising. And this is the vaunted economy whose consumers are supposed to pull the Eurozone, and by extension the global economy, out of its funk. Prost!

And now a true debacle is unfolding, just when we thought the euro was finally safe. Read…. Standard & Poor’s Warns on Germany Triggering the Next Debt Crisis, Investors Would Lose their Shirts




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1nk645C testosteronepit

Goldman Sachs Moral Compass

 

Courtesy of the SlealthFlation Blog

 

There is no question that some of the most astute and ambitious individuals on the planet are attracted to the wealth generation which takes place on Wall Street.  On that score, those that stake their claim at the hub for global capital formation are no different than any of us in their thirst to make money.  After all, the craving to quench parched lips has always been precisely what drives the American success express.

The desire to better one’s lot in life is the fuel that advances the free market locomotive.  The primal quest for cash greases the skids which make the capitalist wheels go round and round, without that deep embedded human need to succeed the free market express would slow to a comatose crawl.

The unapologetic harnessing of man’s innate ambition and aspiration is fundamental to what makes America the most dynamic and prosperous nation to have ever lifted humankind.  So no, I have no problem with enterprise motivated by personal gain, I vigorously applaud it!

However, unlike Wall’s Street’s perennial poster board, Gordon Gekko, I do have a distinct problem with avarice and greed.  To privately succeed from one’s hard fought achievements in the private sector is to be commended and a great triumph to be proud of.  On the other hand, to be part of a firm which conspicuously and relentlessly siphons funds off of the public trust is a deplorable disgrace and decidedly un-American.

Friday’s revelation’s by the internal tape recordings of Carmen Segarra, a Goldman Sach’s embedded Fed regulator who was simply doing her job, once again demonstrates for all to see just how far we have fallen down the ravenous rabbit hole.  Ask yourselves. Why was her viable investigation thwarted by the Federal Reserve itself?  The institution who’s stated mission is to monitor Wall Street simply scuttled the very notion of legitimate inquiry.

The country requires change. We demand the enlightened capitalism that our forefathers manifested, not the crony capitalism that Goldman Sach’s espouses and deploys with ruthless duplicitous abandon.  And no, it certainly can not be characterized as doing God’s work.  The time for substantive change beckons………….haven’t you seen and had enough yet?




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1uQxnTs Bruno de Landevoisin

Russia Discovers Massive Arctic Oil Field Which May Be Larger Than Gulf Of Mexico

In a dramatic stroke of luck for the Kremlin, this morning there is hardly a person in the world who is happier than Russian president Vladimir Putin because overnight state-run run OAO Rosneft announced it has discovered what may be a treasure trove of black oil, one which could boost Russia’s coffers by hundreds of billions if not more, when a vast pool of crude was discovered in the Kara Sea region of the Arctic Ocean, showing the region has the potential to become one of the world’s most important crude-producing areas, arguably bigger than the Gulf Of Mexico. The announcement was made by Igor Sechin, Rosneft’s chief executive officer, who spent two days sailing on a Russian research ship to the drilling rig where the find was unveiled today.

The oil production platform at the Sakhalin-I field in Russia,
partly owned by ONGC Videsh Ltd., Rosneft Oil Co., Exxon Mobil
Corp. and Japan’s Sakhalin Oil and Gas Development Co. on June 9, 2009.

Well, one person who may have been as happy as Putin is the CEO of Exxon Mobil, since the well was discovered with the help of America’s biggest energy company (and second largest by market cap after AAPL). Then again, maybe not: as Bloomberg explains the well was drilled before the Oct. 10 deadline Exxon was granted by the U.S. government under sanctions barring American companies from working in Russia’s Arctic offshore. Rosneft and Exxon won’t be able to do more drilling, putting the exploration and development of the area on hold despite the find announced today.”

Which means instead of generating billions in E&P revenue, XOM could end up with, well, nothing. And that would be quite a shock to the US company because the unveiled Arctic field may hold about 1 billion barrels of oil and similar geology nearby means the surrounding area may hold more than the U.S. part of the Gulf or Mexico, he said.

For a sense of how big the spoils are we go to another piece by Bloomberg, which tells us that “Universitetskaya, the geological structure being drilled, is the size of the city of Moscow and large enough to contain more than 9 billion barrels, a trove worth more than $900 billion at today’s prices.

The only way to reach the prospect is a four-day voyage from Murmansk, the largest city north of the Arctic circle. Everything will have to shipped in — workers, supplies, equipment — for a few months of drilling, then evacuated before winter renders the sea icebound. Even in the short Arctic summer, a flotilla is needed to keep drifting ice from the rig.

Sadly, said bonanza may be non-recourse to Exxon after Obama made it quite clear that all western companies will have to wind down operations in Russia or else feel the wrath of the DOJ against sanctions breakers. Which leaves XOM two options: ignore Obama’s orders (something which many have been doing of late), or throw in the towel on what may be the largest oil discovery in years. 

And while the Exxon C-suite contemplates its choices, here is some more on today’s finding from Bloomberg:

“It exceeded our expectations,” Sechin said in an interview. This discovery is of “exceptional significance in showing the presence of hydrocarbons in the Arctic.”

 

The development of Arctic oil reserves, an undertaking that will cost hundreds of billions of dollars and take decades, is one of Putin’s grandest ambitions. As Russia’s existing fields in Siberia run dry, the country needs to develop new reserves as it vies with the U.S. to be the world’s largest oil and gas producer.

 

Output from the Kara Sea field could begin within five to seven years, Sechin said, adding the field discovered today would be named “Victory.”

Duh.

The Kara Sea well — the most expensive in Russian history — targeted a subsea structure named Universitetskaya and its success has been seen as pivotal to that strategy. The start of drilling, which reached a depth of more than 2,000 meters (6,500 feet), was marked with a ceremony involving Putin and Sechin.

 

The importance of Arctic drilling was one reason that offshore oil exploration was included in the most recent round of U.S. sanctions. Exxon and Rosneft have a venture to explore millions of acres of the Arctic Ocean.

But what’s worse for Exxon is that now that the hard work is done, Rosneft may not need its Western partner much longer:

“Once the well is plugged, there will be a lot of work to do in interpreting the results and this is probably something that Rosneft can do,” Julian Lee, an oil strategist at Bloomberg First Word in London, said before today’s announcement. “Both parties are probably hoping that by the time they are ready to start the next well the sanctions will have been lifted.”

And here is why there is nothing Exxon would like more than to put all the western sanctions against Moscow in the rearview mirror: “The stakes are high for Exxon, whose $408 billion market valuation makes it the world’s largest energy producer. Russia represents the second-biggest exploration prospect worldwide. The Irving, Texas-based company holds drilling rights across 11.4 million acres in Russia, only eclipsed by its 15.1 million U.S. acres.”

Proving just how major this finding is, and how it may have tipped the balance of power that much more in Russia’s favor is the emergence of paid experts, desperate to talk down the relevance of the Russian discovery:

More drilling and geological analysis will be needed before a reliable estimate can be tallied for the size of the oil resources in the Universitetskaya area and the Russian Arctic as a whole, said Frances Hudson, a global thematic strategist who helps manage $305 billion at Standard Life Investments Ltd. in Edinburgh. Sanctions forbidding U.S. and European cooperation with Russian entities mean that country’s nascent Arctic exploration will be stillborn because Rosneft and its state-controlled sister companies don’t know how to drill in cold offshore conditions alone, she said.

 

“Extrapolating from a small data sample is perhaps not going to give you the best information,” Hudson said in a telephone interview. “And because of sanctions, it looks like there’s going to be less exploration rather than more.” In addition, the expense and difficulty of operating in such a remote part of the world, where hazards include icebergs and sub-zero temperatures, mean that the developing discoveries may not be economic at today’s oil prices.

Maybe. Then again perhaps the experts’ time is better suited to estimating just how much longer the US shale miracle has left before the US is once again at the mercy of offshore sellers of crude.

In any event one country is sure to have a big smile on its face: China, since today’s finding simply means that as Russia has to ultimately sell the final product to someone, that someone will almost certainly be the Middle Kingdom, which if the “Holy Gas Grail” deal is any indication, will be done at whatever terms Beijing chooses.

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

Passion = Profits

By: Chris Tell at http://ift.tt/146186R

Most of the really big returns made by investors and entrepreneurs come from companies which seem to have one unmistakable element.

We look at a mountain of deals and consequently the filtering process is very rapid. In fact over 90% of the deals that hit our respective desks are pre-filtered deals coming from our colleagues and internal networks. We look for some specifics in a deal; I’ve spoken repeatedly before about management, ideas, and execution. What I’ve not spoken about before, and for this I realise I should be chastised, beaten, ridiculed, and forced to watch an episode of the Kardashians, is PASSION.

Passion is the single fastest way to spur yourself to massive success. This is what makes it is possible to get up early, stay up late, remain inspired and engaged and to forgo other pleasures. It’s what keeps you going when from the outside looking in, the decision appears foolish.

Founders who see a problem and then build a business to solve that problem are very different from founders who simply say to themselves, “Hey, I want to be an entrepreneur so I don’t have to work for someone else.” The former are likely entering an industry which they may know something about. The latter may do OK, they may even do well, but they will rarely build a legacy, a titan, a formidable company which changes the way things are done or the way people act.

In other words, typically the “Unicorns” come from passion. What are unicorns? They are the investments that run thousands or tens of thousands of percent… Companies like Uber, Facebook, LinkedIn, The Body Shop… They are investments where a $10,000 stake changes your life, and your kids, kids lives…

Most every entrepreneur finds out that creating something is hard. You’ll work harder and longer than you’ve ever worked in your life.

Years ago when still in the corporate world, working for the man, I used to hate “mission statements”. They were, or seemed like a complete bunch of baloney trumpeted by empty suits. I think for the most part that’s still true in many large corporate organizations.

In a start-up or small company however that “vision”, that “mission statement” can be much more powerful. The mission, not the mere statement of it, is what makes a company great. It may not be written on a wall or even on any corporate documents, websites or the like but it is known by the company and those running it.

This may all sound cliché but bear with me. Man’s search for meaning and purpose is answered by a “mission”. Passion is the accelerator to that mission.

Meaning is an incredibly powerful thing. Without it we die. Literally. Many people die at age 25 and simply inhabit their bodies until they’re 80 or more at which point they slide into a box. It’s no way to live. Persistence is the stepchild of passion. It requires persistence to become great at anything. Persistence in anything will make you good but persistence together with passion can make you great.

It’s easy to see the start-ups where the founders are really passionate about what they’re doing. The energy created inspires those around them to help them.

Passion

Have you ever been in a room where you felt inspired about someone or some idea and were willing to help?

This is it. This is where a “mission” is important. This is where passion is important. A mission is also important because it is the what keeps those involved, involved when they could easily be doing something else which will likely pay them more, cause less headaches and be more “comfortable”.

Passion however is not enough. The idea needs to be sound, the team needs to be capable and the execution needs to be great. Put all of these factors together and you have a crack at a Unicorn.

Like him or loathe him Steve Jobs clearly had massive passion. His success is legendary. He was put up for adoption at an early age, dropped out of college after 6 months (something I recommended in these pages a few times), slept on friends floors, returned Coke bottles to collect the 5 cent deposits to buy food, then went on to start Apple Computers and Pixar Animation Studios.

“Find your true passion and do what you love to do,” said Steve Jobs. “Sometimes life hits you in the head with a brick. Don’t lose faith. I’m convinced that the only thing that kept me going was that I loved what I did.”

Another rouge… Tiger Woods success in golf is unparalleled. He calls his love for the game and “obsession, an addiction”. Sounds like the words of passion to me.

In every successful business person, athlete or generally happy person you will find passion. What’s your passion?

– Chris

 

“If you love what you do, there are no difficult tasks, only interesting ones.” – Adim Kotelnikov




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1uQxkXV Capitalist Exploits

Brian Doherty on the IRS’s Creative Interpretations of Tax Law

Lois LernerIn “‘It’s So
Simple, It’s Ridiculous'” (May 2004), Brian Doherty explored the
exotic world of tax rebels-Americans who believe citizens have no
legal obligation to pay income tax. They describe themselves not as
mere “tax protestors” but as a “tax honesty” movement, since they
believe honesty about the income tax means admitting that none of
us legally owe it.

While tax protestors fare no better nowadays, reports Doherty,
it’s the tax collectors who are today making headlines by quibbling
about how to interpret various tax laws. Congress has been
investigating reports that the Internal Revenue Service may have
aimed unusually abusive information requests, denials of status,
and bureaucratic foot-dragging at nonprofit groups with a
conservative bent.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1njXGD2
via IFTTT

Brian Doherty on the IRS's Creative Interpretations of Tax Law

Lois LernerIn “‘It’s So
Simple, It’s Ridiculous'” (May 2004), Brian Doherty explored the
exotic world of tax rebels-Americans who believe citizens have no
legal obligation to pay income tax. They describe themselves not as
mere “tax protestors” but as a “tax honesty” movement, since they
believe honesty about the income tax means admitting that none of
us legally owe it.

While tax protestors fare no better nowadays, reports Doherty,
it’s the tax collectors who are today making headlines by quibbling
about how to interpret various tax laws. Congress has been
investigating reports that the Internal Revenue Service may have
aimed unusually abusive information requests, denials of status,
and bureaucratic foot-dragging at nonprofit groups with a
conservative bent.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1njXGD2
via IFTTT

Near-Term Dollar Outlook

The dollar is staging an advance of a duration and magnitude that has not been seen for several years. The pace has taken many unaware, even though dollar bulls have been repeatedly frustrated. For several quarters, investors, analysts and reporters struggled to explain why the euro in particular was seemingly inexplicably strong, and now that is has reversed, there is feigned surprised.

 

Fundamental, technical and psychological factors are in alignment, pointing to a stronger dollar. The divergence between the US (and UK) on one hand, and the euro area and Japan, has been long anticipated.

 

It was expected to be driven by the tightening of monetary policy by the Federal Reserve and the Bank of England. Instead, the precipitating factor has been driven by a falling nominal rates in the euro area.  

 

A rate hike by the Bank of England and the Federal Reserve are likely six and nine months away respectively (March and June 2015). The ECB has moved first. Although the ECB’s balance sheet has not expanded very much, it has signaled it will. 

 

Despite all the talk after the FOMC new forecasts about a shift toward an earlier hike, we note that the June 2015 Eurodollar futures contract is very little changed.  Consider the implied rate at last week’s close was 55.5 bp.  The 100-day average is 55.5 bp and the 200-day average is 58 bp.  

 

The implications of negative 20 bp deposit have not proven to be as disruptive as feared, but the longer they persist, the greater the risk of unintended consequences. We simply have not been down this particular rabbit hole before, and, to mix metaphors, policy makers and investors are in uncharted waters.

 

The BOJ is also engaged in an experiment. The pace at which is it expanding its balance sheet is unprecedented. It is one thing to issue debt (which is to say, borrow) at negative rates like Germany has done. It is quite another to buy bills from the market, as the BOJ has done, at negative yields.

It not just where the Fed and BOE are headed or the ECB and BOJ, but together both sides are moving in opposite directions. This divergence, coupled with technical breakouts, and follow through activity has emboldened many participants.

 

As the quarter winds down, many participant are revising upward their dollar forecasts. Therein lies the rub. Fundamentally, the dollar bull market has more room to run, but the short-term technical indicators are stretched. And as the position adjustment in the futures market has shown, currency shorts have turned more cautious in recent weeks.  Yet dollar pullbacks have been short and shallow.

 

We take the attitude of a dentist. She cannot tell you which tooth will develop decay. We do not fault her for that. She can help identify the proper oral hygiene necessary to reduce the chances of developing cavities or gingivitis. Similarly, we can add value at the moment by identifying an extended market and suggesting certain levels, and events, that could spur a technical correction that will provide a better opportunity to get with the underlying trend.

 

We recognize three events next week that could provide an opportunity for disappointment, or buy the rumor sell the fact type of activity. The first is the ECB meeting, where Draghi may hold out the possibility of more actions, but will likely focus on the TLTRO facility and asset-backed securities/covered bond purchase program. The second is the US monthly jobs report. The market expects that the August disappointment was a one-off fluke, but we are more concerned that the US economy lost some momentum as Q3 wound down. The third event is the month-end/quarter-end portfolio adjustments by public and private asset managers.

 

The euro has surpassed our $1.2750 target, and $1.2650, the next target, can been seen in the coming days.  There is interest in $1.2500 and $1.2000 puts for before the end of the year. On the upside, it is difficult to envision the euro resurfacing above $1.30.

 

Although ECB officials, and the occasional French politician will talk the euro down with impunity, Japanese officials, including Cabinet Secretary Suga and Prime Minister Abe, have pushed the other way. In recent weeks, only BOJ Governor Kuroda was unambiguous benefits. The market seems a bit reluctant to push the greenback above JPY110. On the downside, the dollar has found bids in the JPY108.25-40 area.

 

Sterling had been bid up on anticipation that Scotland would reject independence, and has still not recovered from the profit-taking, and technical reversal, on the fact. The technical tone remains weak.  For the second consecutive week, sterling finished on its lows.  We suspect the $1.6235 area does not offer strong support, and a break suggests a move to $1.6160 area, but a retest on the previous low near $1.6050 seems likely.  

 

The dollar-bloc has picked up the leadership from the euro and yen. Speculators in the futures market had amassed a large net short euro and yen position, but had remained long the Canadian and Australian dollars, even in the face of a sharp decline in commodity prices and they remain so now. Maybe the dollar-bloc had offered a high yielding alternative to the US dollar, while players were anticipating the greenback’s rally.    That the dollar-bloc were easily the weakest currencies over the past week suggests this strategy is being abandoned.  In the three sessions since the end of the Commitment of Traders report, discussed below, the Australian dollar has fallen a cent and the US dollar has risen a big figure against the Canadian dollar.  

 

Assuming the dollar holds above the CAD1.09 area now, technically, there is potential toward CAD1.1280 near-term, which corresponds to the multi-year high set in late Q1. Above there sights will be set on CAD1.14-CAD1.15.    The Australian dollar’s decline has accelerated and it has settled on the week’s lows for three consecutive weeks.  Our $08750 target has been reached.  The next target is the year’s low near $0.8660.

 

The Mexican peso has offered little resistance to the dollar’s bull charge. It has disappointed many, like ourselves, who had thought the various structural domestic reforms, and the better growth in the US, especially the auto sector, and manufacturing more broadly, to have underpinned the peso. Instead, the dollar is testing MXN13.50, on its way, it appears to the year’s highs set in January-February in the MXN13.55-MXN13.60 area,  

 

Previously, it seemed that volatility across the capital markets was low. The rally in US shares depressed the VIX. The decline in bond yields had subdued bond market volatility (measured by MOVE). The currencies had experienced record low volatility earlier in Q2. The conventional view was that QE offered the grand unified explanation of the low volatility.  

 

The new lows in the euro have not seen volatility (three-month implied) make new highs, as it was earlier in the move. It remains firm just below 7.3%, having put in the recent peak just above 7.5% on September 11.  Sterling volatility continues to fall from the pre-Scotland referendum peak, and is now back below euro vol (6.3% vs 7.3%). Yen vol remains elevated, but unless the dollar goes through JPY110, implied volatility may turn lower.  It peaked a little below 8.5% on September 10, and finished the week just above 8.0%. 

 

Lastly, we note that technically, the CRB index looks to be potentially carving out a near-term low. The sharp downside momentum has begun easing, and an outside up day was recorded in the middle of last week. The index gained three days last week, the most in September.  A 1%-2% technical bounce would lift the CRB toward 283-286, which
corresponds with short-term retracement targets.  The US 10-year Treasury yield ran out of steam near the 2.60% level and returned to 2.48% at the end of last week.  Additional support is seen n 2.45%.   If this level is convincingly breached, it could take pressure of credit spreads and emerging markets.  

 

 

Observations from the speculative positioning in the futures market:

 

1.  There were four significant (more than 10k contract) gross position adjustments in the Commitment of Traders report ending September 23.  The euro account for two.  The gross long position was cut by 18.9k contracts. This essentially unwinds the 20.2k contracts that were added to the gross long position the previous week.   At 60.7k contracts, it is still the largest gross long position among the currency futures.  The gross short position was reduced by 14.1k contracts and at 202.6k contracts, the gross short euro position is also the largest.  The gross short position stands at 133.8k contract, and increase of 13k.  The gross long Mexican peso position was cut by 11.2k contracts to 58.3k.  

 

2.  All of the currency futures tracked here so a decline in the gross long positions.  There were no exceptions.  Last week, all but the euro saw an increase in the gross short positions.  

 

3.  The Australian and Canadian dollar, and the Mexican peso still have a net long speculative position.   These could be reversed in next week’s report.  The positioning in the futures market suggests that in the dollar-bloc longs are being cut faster than short are built.  The decline in the peso appears to be a function of both in roughly similar portions.  

 

4.  The net speculative position in the 10-year US Treasury futures swung back to the longs. Speculators were net long Treasury futures at the end of August.  The small net long position of 8.8k contracts compares with last week’s net short position of 6.8k contracts.  The small net position should not be confused with small gross positions (and the financial pipes have to be able to handle gross not simply net flows).  The gross long position rose by 16.5k contracts to 460k.  These are bottom pickers who bought as yields rose.  The gross short position increased by less than a thousand contracts and stands at 451.2k.  




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Japan Declares Level 3 Emergency, At Least One Dead After Volcano Erupts In Central Japan

When one thinks of Japan and natural disaster, the things that usually come to mind are earthquakes, tsunamis, radioactive lizards, the occasional massive nuclear power plant explosion. Not volcanoes – those are usually delegated to the sole country that dared to give bankers the middle finger, Japan. And yet, overnight Japan declared a level 3 alert (on a scale of 1 to 5) when a volcano in central Japan erupted, sending ash clouds down the mountain’s slope for more than 3 kilometers. According to RT, at least one person has died and 70 were injured, while aircraft have been forced to divert to avoid the dangerous area. Medics confirmed the death of at least one person, while 70 more were reported to be injured, NHK reported. Thirty of the injured have been sent to hospital in critical condition, health officials added. One can only hope there were no nuclear power plants in the immediate vicinity of the volcano.

According to Japan’s NHK, the Ontake volcano on the border of Nagano and Gifu prefectures, 200 kilometers west of Tokyo, started erupting at about 11:53 local time (02:53 GMT). The Japanese TV outlet released the following video showing the volcano spewing thick, gray smoke into the air.

More from NBC:

The Meteorological Agency said the volcano 125 miles west of Tokyo erupted just before midday and sent ash pouring down the mountain’s south slope for more than two miles. The eruption forced aircraft to divert their routes, but officials at Tokyo’s Haneda airport and Japan Airlines said there were no disruptions to flights in and out of Tokyo. NHK quoted a Nagano prefectural official as telling a government meeting that seven people were unconscious and eight people were seriously wounded.

But while Tokyo may be safe for now, the immediate vicinity is in a air transit lockdown: “Airplanes are diverting their flying routes to avoid the ash cloud,”Makoto Hasegawa of the Nagano prefecture fire department told Reuters.

RT adds that a local eyewitness told NHK that small rocks were being hurled into the air along with the ash. “It was like thunder,” she said. “I heard boom, boom – then everything went dark.” Japan’s Meteorological Agency declared a level 3 volcano alert on a 1 to 5 scale, which means people are advised to stay away from the mountain. The agency warned that the debris from the volcano could fall as far as 4 kilometers away.

Stratovolcano Ontake (Ontake-san) is the second highest volcano in Japan at 3,067 meters. It is also a popular destination for religious pilgrimages.

It was inactive until 1979, but then it underwent a series of eruptions. The latest was in 2007.

Finally, some local reports “on the ground”




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