GOP Election Win Could Be Historic, UN Warns on Ebola Quarantines, ISIS Outfights U.S. Allies: P.M. Links

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Reversing Authoritarian Marijuana Laws: By Bill or by Ballot

The Controlled Substance Act, passed in 1970 and signed by
President Nixon as a part of a “comprehensive” plan on drug abuse
prevention, made marijuana an illegal substance in the United
States, the culmination of decades of increased regulation and
prohibition of marijuana and other narcotics around the country.
Some states followed up federal efforts with draconian laws of
their own, like New York, whose governor, Nelson Rockefeller, gave
his name to some of the harshest anti-drug laws in the country. By
1978,
New York
and nine other states had set up some kind of
decriminalization of marijuana—in Alaska via a state supreme court
decision
that found Alaskans had a right to privacy that
protected using marijuana in the home but in other states via
legislation.

But then nothing happened until a few states passed medical
marijuana laws beginning in the late 1990s. Over the last decade,
buoyed by a steady and significant shift in
public opinion
toward marijuana, several states have moved
toward more decriminalization and, where pushed hardest by voters,
to legalization. In 2012, voters in Washington and Colorado
approved initiatives to legalize marijuana in the state. Tomorrow,
voters in Oregon, Alaska and D.C. do, while voters in Florida and
Guam vote on medical marijuana.

Check out the graphic below:

Map of marijuana laws in the United States

For larger still images, check out:

1970-1989 | 1990-1999 | 2000-2009 | 2010-2014 

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Ira Stoll on Why Government-Funded Infrastructure Is a Terrible Idea

The new Congress hasn’t even been elected
yet, but it’s already under pressure to add billions of dollars in
new government spending to pay for “infrastructure.” According to
New York Times columnist Paul Krugman, for example, “We
have huge infrastructure needs, especially in water and
transportation, and the federal government can borrow incredibly
cheaply…. So borrowing to build roads, repair sewers and more
seems like a no-brainer.” In response, Ira Stoll offers nine
reasons why a burst of federal borrowing or taxing to pay for
roads, bridges, sewers, and airport terminals would be a disastrous
idea.

View this article.

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Stocks Pump (On ‘Bad’ Data) And Dump (On ‘Good’ Oil Price Cuts)

As we noted earlier, something is seriously broken in these 'markets' and when the head of Blackrock appears on CNBC and uses the "cash on the sidelines" meme to justify stocks going higher (which is unbridled idiocy remember), we suspect even the big boys are getting nervous about the decouplings, illiquidity, and BoJ-driven exuberance. The early pre-open ramp in stocks was quickly eviscerated as data missed (PMI & Construction Spending) and stocks retraced back to bond reality… but 'they' needed all-time highs to run some more stops as USDJPY burst to 114. Once those highs in US equyities were tagged and traders realized what the Saudi actions regarding oil prices meant, WTI plunged and dragged stocks with it. Bonds, oil, HY credit, and VIX all decoupled from stocks.

 

Disappointing day – but we are sure a victory for the bulls…

 

Quite a day for homebuilders (dump-and-pump on piss-poor housing data) and Enertgy pump-and-dump on Saudi news)

 

Post-Saudi price cuts, stocks pumped (yay lower prices) then dumped (wait the Saudis are screwing us?!)

 

As stocks played catch down to bonds 3 times…

 

Driven by oil prices – today higher oil was a good thing, lower a bad thing again…

 

VIX decoupled notably from stocks today…

 

Treasuries close the day mixed (30Y -1bps, 2Y +2bps) as traders sold bonds in Europe and boiught them in the US session

 

The USDollar closes the day up 0.4%

 

And commodities were generally mixed (gold down,silver unch, coppe rup) but crude was monkey-hammered

 

Oil pumped (yay they raised prices on Asia, Europe), then dumped (waity they cut US prices!)

 

Of course, Japanese stocks didn't give a shit – all they want is a JPY that is crushed Venezuela-style…

 

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart: Asness on the unbrdidled idiocy of 'cash on the sidelines'




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Keep an Eye on Phoenix’s Pension Reform Initiative

Consider this a "Create Your Own Alt-Text" challenge.Phoenix voters tomorrow will
get a chance to
push through some more reforms
for its public employee pension
program, which is currently underfunded to the tune of $1.5
billion.
Proposition 487
(pdf) aims to shift new city employees to a
defined contribution (401k-style) plan rather than a defined
benefit (pension) plan in order to get rid of these liabilities.
Slowly. Eventually. Current employees won’t be affected by the
changes, so the city will still be obligated to pay these pension
debts.

The debate in Phoenix has centered on whether it affects police
and firefighter pensions (it’s not supposed to because they have
their own pension funds) and whether it would save money or cost
more money. That second battle seems the odd one. Anybody who
grasps how pensions work would understand that this will save money
in the long run by essentially eliminating future debt for
retirements. The fiscal argument against the change appears to be
something along the line that making this change would require the
city to actually pay its debts more quickly instead of dragging it
out, and more importantly, they wouldn’t be able to take from Peter
(new employees) to pay Paul (current and retired employees), which
seems kind of like admitting that public pensions as they stand
right now are a big pyramid scheme.

Our co-workers at the Reason Foundation (the non-profit that
publishes this web site and Reason magazine) have been
heavily involved in analyzing the finances of the reform
initiative, and they’re actually quoted on the page for Proposition
487 at the ever-useful Ballotpedia site. In August, Reason
Foundation’s Adrian Moore and Anthony Randazzo attempted to

dispel some of the arguments
that this particular pension
reform would cost more than it saved:

Our actuarial analysis of the reform accounts for all elements
of the November ballot initiative and finds taxpayers are likely to
save as much as $1.6 billion over the next 25 years. In fact, the
raw savings could be used to pay down the current pension debt
faster and save Phoenix money in the long run, a move the city’s
actuaries actually recommended in their analysis.

Similar reforms in other states have been successful, but
opponents of the initiative are telling half-truths to make you
believe otherwise.

They say that Michigan had its unfunded liabilities increase
after making a similar switch in 1997. It is true that Michigan saw
its pension debt increase dramatically, but it is purposefully
misleading to claim that it had anything to do with the adoption of
a 401(k)-style pension plan.

The increase in Michigan’s pension debt occurred in the 2000s,
well after the reforms, and is entirely attributable to the legacy
defined benefit system. Michigan officials chose to underfund their
old-style system and to assume massive returns from Wall Street
would cover the underpayment. As was the case in many states, this
big gamble did not pay off and Michigan wound up with a much larger
pension debt. Meanwhile, the reformed pension system has been
financially stable and debt free since 1997, and there has even
been talk of moving teachers into a similar system. The story is
almost identical for the pension reform efforts in Alaska and West
Virginia.

Read more from the Reason Foundation about Phoenix’s pension
situation
here
.

If Phoenix’s initiative passes tomorrow, don’t rush to celebrate
too quickly. Just as with nearly every effort by cities and states
to reduce the dangers of pension debts by shifting out of these
easily abused (by all sides) system, lawsuits are sure to
follow.

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Abortion Amendments on 2014 Ballot in Colorado, North Dakota, and Tennessee

This Tuesday, voters in Colorado and North
Dakota will decide whether to grant rights to “unborn human beings”
while Tennessee residents consider a constitutional amendment
allowing the state legislature more power to regulate abortion.
Here’s a quick look at the three abortion-related measures on
Election 2014 ballots:

COLORADO – Amendment 67

In both 2008 and 2010, more than 70 percent of Colorado voters
rejected Personhood USA’s attempt to give fertilized eggs, embryos,
and fetuses full rights under the Colorado constitution. This year
the anti-abortion group is back at it with an updated, less-broad
ballot measure. If
Amendment 67
passes, it will amend the state’s constitution to
include “unborn human beings” under the definition of “person” with
regard to Colorado criminal code and the Colorado Wrongful Death
Act. The previous personhood measures would have amended the
definition of person unilaterally. 

Supporters of Amendment 67, also known as the Brady Amendment,
have been trying to keep focus on Heather Surovik, a woman whose
car was hit by a drunk driver when she was eight months pregnant.
Surovik lived, but her unborn baby “Brady” didn’t. The driver
responsible was charged with vehicular assault and driving under
the influence, but not for Brady’s death.

“In honor of her son, Heather Surovik has initiated the Brady
Amendment to recognize unborn babies as persons in law,” sates
Personhood Colorado.

Opponents say the measure is an attempt to criminalize abortion.
 

NORTH DAKOTA – Measure 1

North Dakota residents will also vote this Tuesday on a
constitutional amendment concerning personhood.
Measure 1
, also known as the “Life Begins at Conception” or
“Human Life” Amendment, would change the state constitution to
provide for the “inalienable right to life of every human being at
any stage of development.”

Some supporters of Measure 1, led by a group called North Dakota
Choose Life, insist that it’s not meant to address abortion per
se
and would merely change the state constitution to
“recognize that human life is a gift”. This is necessary, according
to North Dakota Choose Life, because “wealthy out-of-state special
interest groups” are trying to overturn restrictions on abortion
that the state has already passed, such as a parental notification
requirement for abortion-seeking teens.

State Sen. Margaret Sitte (R-35), however, claims “this
amendment is intended to present a direct challenge to Roe v.
Wade
. By passage of this amendment, the people of North Dakota
are asking government to recognize what science already
defined.”

Opponents of the measure say it’s so vague it could be used in
any manner of ways, including to criminalize in-vitro
fertilization or taking terminally-ill patients off life support.

TENNESSEE – Amendment 1

Amendment 1, also known as the “Tennessee Legislative Powers
Regarding Abortion” amendment, would add the following to the state
constitution: 

Nothing in this Constitution secures or protects a right to
abortion or requires the funding of an abortion. The people retain
the right through their elected state representatives and state
senators to enact, amend, or repeal statutes regarding abortion,
including, but not limited to, circumstances of pregnancy resulting
from rape or incest or when necessary to save the life of the
mother.

The amendment would have no immediate effect, but supporters say
it would allow the legislature to more intensely regulate abortion
in the future. Specifically, they believe it would neutralize a
2000 Tennessee Supreme Court ruling which struck down several laws
restricting abortion access—including a 48-hour waiting period for
women seeking abortions and a requirement that second-trimester
abortions be performed in hospitals—as unconstitutional.

“For those thinking that a state constitutional amendment may be
overkill, in fact its need comes from the state court itself,” said
Dan McConchie, vice president of government affairs at Americans
United for Life. 

Opponents of Amendment 1 point out that the goal of its backers
is to make all abortion illegal. “Their pitch is that this would
make the constitution neutral on abortion,” said former Tennessee
Sen. Roy Herron. “How would they like the Constitution neutral on
the Second Amendment so legislators could outlaw the right to bear
arms? How about making the First Amendment neutral?”


Amendment 1
 was placed on the ballot by the state
legislature, under the guidance of State Sen. Mae Beavers (R-17)
and U.S. Rep. Diane Black (R-Tenn.), who was a state senator at the
time. As a legislatively-referred constitutional amendment, it must
earn a majority vote from those voting on the
amendment and those voting for Tennessee
governor. For this reason, Amendment 1 supporters have been urging
residents not
 to cast a vote in the gubernatorial
race.

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ACLU and EFF Call Out Tennessee School District for Violating Students’ Constitutional Rights

Some schools
secretly spy
on their students. Others make it official
policy.

Last week the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) joined together to
send a
letter
 to a Tennessee school board accusing the district’s
technology
policy
of grossly violating its students’ First and Fourth
Amendment rights.

The Williamson County Board of Education’s “Acceptable Use,
Media Release, and Internet Safety Procedures” grant school
administrators broad, vaguely defined discretionary powers over the
electronic devices and communications of some 35,000 students.
These powers include the authority to restrict off-campus speech on
social media sites, to search any electronic devices on school
grounds without reasonable suspicion, and to access any
communications sent or stored on the school’s network.

The policy ominously states that “students are subject to
consequences for inappropriate, unauthorized, and illegal use of
social media,” even when off-campus. The consequences include “loss
of network privileges, confiscation of computer equipment,
suspension…and/or criminal prosecution.”

The policy also gives the district the ill-defined power to
“collect and examine any device at any time for the purpose of
enforcing the terms of this agreement, investigating student
discipline issues, or for any other school-related purpose.” Which
roughly translates to “for any reason whatsoever.”

More worrisome yet, administrators have the authority to
search and read student communications on the district
network, 
also without a modicum of reasonable
suspicion: “All network users may be monitored at any time by
authorized personnel.”

All of this is done in the name of (surprise!) protecting The
Children: “The district has taken measures designed to protect
students and adults from obscene information and restrict access to
materials that are harmful to minors.”

In their letter, the ACLU and the EFF argue that the authority
claimed by the district “infringes on students’ fundamental
constitutional rights” of free speech and freedom from unreasonable
searches and seizures—rights that more than one judge has ruled
don’t stop at the school door.

The two civil liberties organizations picked up the case from
parent Daniel Pomerantz, who says he was effectively coerced into
signing a waiver subjecting his daughter to the district’s
policies, Wired
reports
:

He initially refused to sign the policy at the start of the
school semester, but relented after the school prohibited his
5-year-old daughter from using the computers at Nolensville
Elementary School without the agreement.

“The first time they were using the computers [in her
classroom], they told her she had to go sit aside and do something
else and she started to cry and complain…It was not a pleasant
experience as a family. They told her it was all because of me,
that [because] I wouldn’t do this was why she couldn’t learn on
computers with all the other students.”

The letter notes that “requiring students to sign an agreement
waiving constitutional protections in order to participate in
fundamental school activities is not permissible.”

But perhaps the administrators are just preparing their charges
for the world after school, where free speech
isn’t always free
, unreasonable searches and seizures are
considered
reasonable
, and all your communications belong to the government.

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Meet Your Texas Third Party Choices for Governor: Undauntable, Unfindable, and Pot-Smoking

Former Reason intern Jeff Winkler takes a close,
though in the usual course of these sort of articles a bit comedic,
look for the Texas Monthly at the
people running for governor in Texas
who are not Democrat Wendy
Davis or Republican Greg Abbott.

There’s Libertarian Kathie Glass, whose exclusion from the
debates because she isn’t polling well in polls from which she’s
excluded is discussed at length. She’s only raised about $141,000,
and only about $40,000 of that was from people other than herself.
But this return candidate is still fighting, campaigning harder
than most L.P. candidates:

Glass ran in the 2010 gubernatorial race and placed third, with
2.18 percent of the vote. This time, she’s upped her game and
turned it into a real professional outfit. Her campaign manager
husband, Tom, does logistics. She has a full-time staffer with more
than a dozen steady volunteers statewide. They’ve conducted
“internal polling.” She even produced an ad in Spanish. And then
there’s her ambitious tour through all 254 counties in Texas in
Straight-Talk-Express-sized
campaign bus 
.

“We go to places and events and things and go visit the TV
stations and newspapers. And that’s what we do [in every county].
We try to get coverage and get connected to an event,” Glass said.
“In smaller counties there’s just nothing that we can really make
happen there. But every county has a county courthouse.”

The campaign also stops at nearly every single radio station
they come by. “I’m not talking about the talk radio shows. I’m
talking the tiny rock shop, country-western, Christian music,
whatever they’ve got there.”…..

Some libertarian-minded folks task themselves with the Sisyphean
effort of dismantling governmental overreach brick-by-brick; Glass
wants to bulldoze, presumably with private contracts, the whole
structure to the ground. As someone who is a libertarian
sympathizer, even I cringed during an exchange in which she said
that if the Supreme Court issued a decision she didn’t like, she
would simply ignore it. “I’m going to be guided by my own
conscience,” she explained.

Smith followed up with what seemed an appropriate query: ”Are
you running for governor or to be queen? Because this sounds like a
monarchical view of government.”

“I’m sorry it sounds that way,” Glass replied. “It only sounds
like that because we haven’t followed [the Constitution] for so
long that it can seem extreme.”

Smith said he was “trying to take this serious.” But this was
particularly hard since Glass would politely say, “I don’t know”
when asked a question for which she didn’t have an answer. Real
politicians never do that.

Then there’s the Green Party’s Brandon Parmer, who, as Winkler
relates at length, is impossible to contact or find, for either
media or his own party.

Then there is officially registered write-in candidate Sara
Pavitt:

Becoming a write-in candidate for Texas governor requires 5,000
signatures or $3,750. Since Pavitt’s basic campaign strategy is
“sitting back and [getting] into it in the fourth quarter, like a
football game,” she paid the fee. “My friends think I’m crazy to
run,” said Pavitt, “but I’m bipolar.”

….She’s pushing for legalization of marijuana because, yes,
like millions of Americans she enjoys getting high, but also
because it provides medical relief. The VA doctors had her on
medications, the antipsychotic Risperdal, which has a whole
smorgasbord of side-effects (Parkinson-like symptoms, drooling,
constipation, vomiting, etc.). “Risperdal is the one making men
grow tits. And I said, ‘if it’s doing that to guys what do you
think it’s going to do to me?’” (The answer, I discovered, is
amenorrhea, which in English means no menstruation.)…..

Pavitt is practiced in hand-to-hand politics, too. She worked
for Representative Lloyd Doggett three years ago and volunteered
for Wendy Davis before “she pissed me off.” Apparently, Davis
“bolted” when Pavitt once tried to talk to her about marijuana.
Then came the limelight and greed.

“You can’t even email her, she’ll go gimme money, gimme
money, gimme money
,” said Pavitt. “And I thought, ‘you’re
supposed to be representing the people. Some of us don’t have
money.’ Like I say, she got off the mark. I don’t even know what
she represents because all she does is bitch about Greg Abbott and
that’s not helping.”

…..“I’m not planning on probably being governor. I just
wanted to screw with them.” But even Pavitt follows the rules. Her
campaign flyers, which she’ll pass out soon, are all stamped with
“Political Ad Paid for by: Sarah M. Pavitt,” as is required by law.
“If you don’t take care of it, they fine you $5,000. I’m trying to
do everything legal.”

If she does get elected, Pavitt said she will “light that bong
up and tell everybody they can smoke marijuana.” And if she
doesn’t? “I’m going to lay up [on my new deck] naked and smoke
marijuana.”

Winkler ends with a stirring quote from Libertarian Glass,
presenting the best spirit of the ideologically committed third
party candidate: “That’s another thing in our Texas history. We
just don’t accept long odds as a reason not to try.”

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Into the Unknown

Dollar Debt Pit Into the Unknown

November 3, 2014
London, England

[Editor’s note: This essay was penned by Tim Price, a London-based wealth manager and editor of Price Value International.]

Strange things are happening in the bond market.

Few of them are stranger than the reports Jeremie Banet, a French fund management colleague of former Pimco executive Bill Gross, quit the bond business altogether to sell croques-monsieur from a food truck.

Bill Gross, whose management style has been described as “bullying”, had reportedly told in front of Pimco’s entire investment committee that, “I never understand what you’re saying. Ever.”

With those credentials, Monsieur Banet is supremely qualified to become the next chairmen of the Federal Reserve. And if so, he has his work cut out for him.

Consider the sort of volatility that the 10-year US Treasury experienced on 15th October.

Intra day yield Into the Unknown

Having begun the day sporting a 2.2% yield, the 10-year note experienced an extraordinary surge in price that took its yield down briefly towards 1.85%.

Later in the same session the buying abated, and the bond closed with a yield of roughly 2.14%.

During the same trading session, equity markets sold off aggressively (the UK’s FTSE 100 index, for example, closed down almost 3% on the day).

What accounts for such melodrama? Analyst Russell Napier takes up the story:

“On October 15th 2014, if only for a few short minutes, market forces broke out and the failure of central bankers was briefly evident.”

“There is a very simple lesson that when the markets finally break through the manipulation they move to price in deflation and not inflation. This is key because it means financial repression has failed.”

These days, you don’t tend to hear the words ‘failure’ and ‘central bankers’ in the same sentence (unless the topic happens to be Zimbabwe). But perhaps the omniscience and omnipotence of central bankers is somewhat overstated.

On October 29th, the US Federal Reserve followed a long-rehearsed script and announced that it had “decided to conclude its asset purchase program [also known as QE] this month.”

The Economist’s Buttonwood column described it as “Letting go of Daddy’s hand,” and cautioned, “[W]e may indeed get to see QE4 rolled out. Daddy might have let go of the market’s hand for the moment but he’s still close by.”

That coinage nicely speaks to the juvenilisation to which markets have been reduced during six long years of financial repression, interest rate manipulation, and the unprecedented expansion of central bank balance sheets.

Only the asset purchases have abated (for now): the financial repression, one way or another, will go on.

Whether the asset purchases have really disappeared or merely been suspended will be a function of how risk markets behave over the coming months and years.

And although our crystal ball is no more polished than anyone else’s, we would not be surprised to see petulant markets rewarded with yet more infusions of sweets.

Our fundamental views are clear: bonds are already grotesquely expensive, yet may become even more (we’re not investing in “the usual suspects” so we don’t much care).

Most stock markets are pricey – but in a world beset by QE (and prospects for more, in Europe and Asia) which prices can we really trust ?

By a process of logic, elimination and deduction, out of major, conventional asset classes, only quality listed businesses trading at (or ideally well below) a fair assessment of their intrinsic worth offer any semblance of value or attractiveness.

Pretty much everything else amounts to nothing more than paper, prone to arbitrary gusts from some very powerful, and very windy, bureaucrats.

We note also that former Fed chairman Alan Greenspan, no doubt looking to polish his legacy, managed to front-run the Fed’s QE announcement by pointing to the merits of gold within a government-controlled, fiat currency system.

Strange days indeed.

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How The Petrodollar Quietly Died, And Nobody Noticed

Two years ago, in hushed tones at first, then ever louder, the financial world began discussing that which shall never be discussed in polite company – the end of the system that according to many has framed and facilitated the US Dollar’s reserve currency status: the Petrodollar, or the world in which oil export countries would recycle the dollars they received in exchange for their oil exports, by purchasing more USD-denominated assets, boosting the financial strength of the reserve currency, leading to even higher asset prices and even more USD-denominated purchases, and so forth, in a virtuous (especially if one held US-denominated assets and printed US currency) loop.

The main thrust for this shift away from the USD, if primarily in the non-mainstream media, was that with Russia and China, as well as the rest of the BRIC nations, increasingly seeking to distance themselves from the US-led, “developed world” status quo spearheaded by the IMF, global trade would increasingly take place through bilateral arrangements which bypass the (Petro)dollar entirely. And sure enough, this has certainly been taking place, as first Russia and China, together with Iran, and ever more developing nations, have transacted among each other, bypassing the USD entirely, instead engaging in bilateral trade arrangements, leading to, among other thing, such discussions as, in today’s FT, why China’s Renminbi offshore market has gone from nothing to billions in a short space of time.

And yet, few would have believed that the Petrodollar did indeed quietly die, although ironically, without much input from either Russia or China, and paradoxically, mostly as a result of the actions of none other than the Fed itself, with its strong dollar policy, and to a lesser extent Saudi Arabia too, which by glutting the world with crude, first intended to crush Putin, and subsequently, to take out the US crude cost-curve, may have Plaxico’ed both itself, and its closest Petrodollar trading partner, the US of A.

As Reuters reports, for the first time in almost two decades, energy-exporting countries are set to pull their “petrodollars” out of world markets this year, citing a study by BNP Paribas (more details below). Basically, the Petrodollar, long serving as the US leverage to encourage and facilitate USD recycling, and a steady reinvestment in US-denominated assets by the Oil exporting nations, and thus a means to steadily increase the nominal price of all USD-priced assets, just drove itself into irrelevance.

A consequence of this year’s dramatic drop in oil prices, the shift is likely to cause global market liquidity to fall, the study showed.

This decline follows years of windfalls for oil exporters such as Russia, Angola, Saudi Arabia and Nigeria. Much of that money found its way into financial markets, helping to boost asset prices and keep the cost of borrowing down, through so-called petrodollar recycling.

But no more: “this year the oil producers will effectively import capital amounting to $7.6 billion. By comparison, they exported $60 billion in 2013 and $248 billion in 2012, according to the following graphic based on BNP Paribas calculations.”

In short, the Petrodollar may not have died per se, at least not yet since the USD is still holding on to the reserve currency title if only for just a little longer, but it has managed to price itself into irrelevance, which from a USD-recycling standpoint, is essentially the same thing.

According to BNP, Petrodollar recycling peaked at $511 billion in 2006, or just about the time crude prices were preparing to go to $200, per Goldman Sachs. It is also the time when capital markets hit all time highs, only without the artificial crutches of every single central bank propping up the S&P ponzi house of cards on a daily basis. What happened after is known to all…

At its peak, about $500 billion a year was being recycled back into financial markets. This will be the first year in a long time that energy exporters will be sucking capital out,” said David Spegel, global head of emerging market sovereign and corporate Research at BNP.

 

Spegel acknowledged that the net withdrawal was small. But he added: “What is interesting is they are draining rather than providing capital that is moving global liquidity. If oil prices fall further in coming years, energy producers will need more capital even if just to repay bonds.”

In other words, oil exporters are now pulling liquidity out of financial markets rather than putting money in. That could result in higher borrowing costs for governments, companies, and ultimately, consumers as money becomes scarcer.

Which is hardly great news: because in a world in which central banks are actively soaking up high-quality collateral, at a pace that is unprecedented in history, and led to the world’s allegedly most liquid bond market to suffer a 10-sigma move on October 15, the last thing the market needs is even less liquidity, and even sharper moves on ever less volume, until finally the next big sell order crushes the entire market or at least force the [NYSE|Nasdaq|BATS|Sigma X] to shut down indefinitely until further notice. 

So what happens next, now that the primary USD-recycling mechanism of the past 2 decades is no longer applicable? Well, nothing good.

Here are the highlights of David Spegel’s note Energy price shock scenarios: Impact on EM ratings, funding gaps, debt, inflation and fiscal risks.

Whatever the reason, whether a function of supply, demand or political risks, oil prices plummeted in Q3 2014 and remain volatile. Theories related to the price plunge vary widely: some argue it is an additional means for Western allies in the Middle East to punish Russia. Others state it is the result of a price war between Opec and new shale oil producers. In the end, it may just reflect the traditional inverted relationship between the international value of the dollar and the price of hard-currency-based commodities (Figure 6). In any event, the impact of the energy price drop will be wide-ranging (if sustained) and will have implications for debt service costs, inflation, fiscal accounts and GDP growth.

Have you noticed a reduction of financial markets liquidity?

Outside from the domestic economic impact within EMs due to the downward oil price shock, we believe that the implications for financial market liquidity via the reduced recycling of petrodollars should not be underestimated. Because energy exporters do not fully invest their export receipts and effectively ‘save’ a considerable portion of their income, these surplus funds find their way back into bank deposits (fuelling the loan market) as well as into financial markets and other assets. This capital has helped fund debt among importers, helping to boost overall growth as well as other financial markets liquidity conditions.

Last year, capital flows from energy exporting countries (see list in Figure 12) amounted to USD812bn (Figure 3), with USD109bn taking the form of financial portfolio capital and USD177bn in the form of direct equity investment and USD527bn of other capital over half of which we estimate made its way into bank deposits (ie and therefore mostly into loan markets).

The recycling of petro-dollars has benefited financial markets liquidity conditions. However, this year, we expect that incremental liquidity typically provided by such recycled flows will be markedly reduced, estimating that direct and other capital outflows from energy exporters will have declined by USD253bn YoY. Of course, these economies also receive inward capital, so on a net basis, the additional capital provided externally is much lower. This year, we expect that net capital flows will be negative for EM, representing the first net inflow of capital (USD8bn) for the first time in eighteen years. This compares with USD60bn last year, which itself was down from USD248bn in 2012. At its peak, recycled EM petro dollars amounted to USD511bn back in 2006. The declines seen since 2006 not only reflect the changed  global environment, but also the propensity of underlying exporters to begin investing the money domestically rather than save. The implications for financial markets liquidity – not to mention related downward pressure on US Treasury yields – is negative.

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Even scarcer liquidity in US Capital markets aside, this is how BNP sees the inflation and growth for energy exporters:

Household consumption benefits: While we recognise that the relationship is not entirely linear, we use inflation basket weights for ‘transportation’ and ‘household & utilities’ (shown in the ‘Economic components’ section of Figure 27) as a means to address the differing demand elasticities prevalent across countries. These act as our proxy for consumption the consumption basket in order to determine the economic benefit that would result as lower energy prices improve household disposable income. This is weighted by the level of domestic consumption relative to the economy, which we also show in the ‘Economic components’ section of Figure 27.

Reduced industrial production costs: Outside the energy industry, manufacturers will benefit from falling operating costs. Agriculture will not benefit as much and services will benefit even less.

Trade gains and losses: Lost trade as a result of lower demand from oil-producing trade partners will impact both growth and the current account balance. On the other hand, better consumption from many energy-importing trade partners will provide some offset. The percentage of each country’s exports to energy producing partners represents relative to its total exports is used to determine potential lost growth and CAR due to lower demand from trade partners.

Domestic FX moves are beyond the scope of our analysis. These will be tied to the level of openness of the economy and the impact of changed demand conditions among trade partners as well as dollar effects. Neither do we address non-oil related political risks (eg sanctions) or any fiscal or monetary policy responses to oil shocks.

GDP growth

The least impacted oil producing country, from a GDP perspective, is Brazil followed by Mexico, Argentina, Tunisia and Trinidad & Tobago. The impact on fiscal accounts also appears lower for these than most other EMs.

Remarkably, the impact of lower oil for Russia’s economic growth is not as severe as might be expected. Sustained oil at USD80/bbl would see growth slow by 1.8pp to 0.6%. This compares with the worst hit economies of Angola (where growth is nearly 8pp lower at -2%), Iraq (GDP slows to -1.6% from 4.5% growth), Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan (growth falls to -0.9% from 5.8%).

For a drop to USD 80/bbl, it can be seen (in Figure 27) that, in some cases, such as the UAE, Qatar and Kuwait, the negative impact on GDP can be comfortably offset by fiscal stimulus. These economies will probably benefit from such a policy in which case our ‘model-based’ GDP growth estimate would represent the low end of the likely outcome (unless a fiscal policy response is not forthcoming).

 

Global growth in 2015? More like how great will the hit to GDP be if oil prices don’t rebound immediately?

On the whole, we can say that the fall in oil prices will prove negative, shaving 0.4pp from 2015 EM GDP growth. The collective current account balance will fall 0.58pp to 0.6% of GDP, while the budget deficit will deteriorate by 0.61pp to -2.9%. This probably has the worst implications for EM as an asset class in the credit world.

Energy exporters will fare worst, with growth falling by 1.9pp and their current account balances suffering negative pressure to the tune of 2.69pp of GDP. Budget balances will suffer a 1.67pp of GDP fall, despite benefits from lower subsidy costs. The impact of oil falling USD 25/bbl will be likely to put push the current account balance into deficit, with our analysis indicating a 0.3% of GDP deficit from a 2.4% surplus before. Fortunately, the benefit to inflation will be the best in EM and could help offset some of the political risks from reduced growth.

As might be expected, energy importers will benefit by 0.4pp better growth in this scenario. Their collective current account will improve by 0.6pp to 1.1% of GDP.

The regions worst hit are the Middle East, with GDP growth slowing to 0.3%, which is 3.8pp lower than when oil was averaging USD105/bbl. The regions’ fiscal accounts will also suffer most in EM, moving from a 1.7% of GDP surplus to a 1.8% deficit. Meanwhile, the CAB will drop 5.3pp, although remain in surplus at 3.9%. The CIS is the next-worst hit, from a GDP perspective, with regional growth flat-lined versus 1.91% previously. The region’s fiscal deficit will worsen from 0.7% of GDP to -1.8% and CAB shrink to 0.7% from 3% of GDP. Africa’s growth will come in 1.4pp slower at 2.8% while Latam growth will be 0.4pp slower at 2.2%. For Africa, the CAB/GDP ratio will fall by 2.4pp pushing it deep into deficit (-2.9% of GDP).

Some regions benefit, however, with Asia ex-China growing 0.45bpp faster at 5.5% and EM Europe (ex-CIS) growing 0.55pp faster at 3.9%, with the region’s CAB/GDP improving 0.69pp, although remain in deficit to the tune of -2.4% of GDP.

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And so on, but to summarize, here are the key points once more:

  • The stronger US dollar is having an inverse impact on dollar-denominated commodity prices, including oil. This will affect emerging market (EM) credit quality in various ways.
  • The implications of reduced recycled petrodollars has significant ramifications for financial markets, loan markets and Treasury yields. In fact, EM energy exporters will post their first net drain on global capital (USD8bn) in eighteen years.
  • Oil and gas exporting EMs account for 26% of total EM GDP and 21% of external bonds. For these economies, the impact will be on lost fiscal revenue, lost GDP growth and the contribution to reserves of oil and gas-related export receipts. Together, these will have a significant effect on sustainability and liquidity ratios and as a consequence are negative for dollar debt-servicing risks and credit ratings.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/13ACDTR Tyler Durden