Andrew Napolitano Asks: Will We Learn From Ferguson?

The city of Ferguson, Missouri, is now burned
into our consciousness in a way that few other places are, and the
long and unhappy history of race relations in America has another
fiery chapter with more tragedy. The failure in Ferguson is across
the board, writes Andrew Napolitano: from a city government whose
police force makes its minority populace feel vulnerable and
defends an unnecessary public killing by one of its cops, to a
county prosecutor afraid to take responsibility for a proper public
prosecution, to a governor missing in action, to a president who
sounds like he wants to federalize police. We have an
out-of-control stew-pot boiling over into a wave of destruction.
Can we use the tragedy of Ferguson to help rein in police and
secure a government dedicated to preserving the personal liberty of
even the most vulnerable among us? 

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1yiFb5Y
via IFTTT

Corporate Bond Bubble Comes Unglued at the Bottom, Investors Begin to Bleed

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

Just about every aspect of the US credit bubble is setting new records these days. Now corporate bond sales did it: they punched through the $1.5-trillion mark, beating the full-year record of $1.49 trillion in 2013. It’s a feeding frenzy – corporations and Wall Street feeding on cheap investor money before rates go up.

On Tuesday, Amazon went back to the till to take $6 billion in new money from investors via another bond sale, after having sold $3 billion two years ago. Debt is piling up. Excluding what it owes its suppliers, Amazon ended 2011 with $2.6 billion in debt; by last quarter, the pile had grown to $8.4 billion. This quarter, an additional $6 billion will be piled on top. Profit-challenged Amazon needs the money: last quarter, it booked the largest operating loss in its history.

On Monday, it was Medtronic that went to the till for $17 billion in new money, the largest bond sale this year. It needs the money not to expand its research facilities or operations or anything else productive, but to buy surgical gear maker Covidien. The deal beat the other mega deals this year, such as Alibaba’s $8 billion bond offering two weeks ago or GE’s $13.2 billion offering and Verizon’s $14.8 billion offering earlier this year.

Like many of its corporate brethren, Verizon is already drowning in debt, after a borrowing binge that included the record-breaking $49 billion bond offering last year to help pay for its acquisition of Vodafone’s share of Verizon Wireless.

Amazon’s deal pushed investment-grade bond sales so far this year to $1.174 trillion. Junk bonds have been red-hot too. The current sales of $344 billion are just a notch from the 2013 record of $348 billion, according to Bloomberg. That record is likely to fall shortly. In total so far this year, corporations have collected $1.518 trillion in new money from investors via bond sales alone, the most ever.

Companies are taking advantage of enticingly low borrowing costs while they still can. And they don’t waste their energy investing the proceeds in productive activities, such as capital expenditures or expansion plans. Instead, they’re using the money to buy back their own shares, pay dividends, and acquire other companies.

Timing couldn’t be better. In this super-expensive market, they’re overpaying for their own shares; and they’re overpaying for other companies by adding huge premiums to already inflated stock prices. Wall Street, which gets fat from the fees, provides the requisite hoopla.

It’s a perfect use of debt. Instead of creating something that will generate an income stream with which to service and pay off the debt, corporations are blowing the proceeds. This works wonderfully as long as ever cheaper new debt is available to service and pay off old debt.

For investors, it has been a great deal too, thanks to the Fed’s interest rate repression and QE, and its jawboning that markets so love because it signals to everyone in which direction to run all at the same time, screaming, “Don’t fight the Fed.” The simultaneous buying inflates prices and represses yields. Bond investors have been rewarded at every twist and turn of the yield repression saga not with adequate yields, but with higher prices for their bonds.

New money has been pouring into corporate investment-grade bond funds for 24 weeks in a row, according to Lipper. But junk-bond funds have had a more mixed experience recently as investors are beginning to get cold feet.

Prices of junk bonds (rated BB or lower) have been falling from record levels in June, and the yield has zigzagged up nervously from 4.2% in June to 4.98% on Tuesday. Among junk bonds rated CCC or lower, the underbelly of over-indebted corporate America, outright ugliness is starting to spread: the yield jumped from 7.94% in June to 10.69% on Tuesday, the highest yield since December 2012, higher even than during the nerve-racking taper tantrum last year.

The swoon in junk bonds is in part due to the rout in the oil and gas sector. The fracking revolution was largely funded with debt, based on a scenario of ever increasing oil prices. But oil prices have plunged nearly 40% since June. And the bloodletting is spreading [read… Saudi Arabia Declares Oil War on US Fracking, hits Railroads, Tank-Car Makers, Canada, Russia; Sinks Venezuela].

Yield-desperate investors are beginning to bleed. They’d been pushed into this stuff by the Fed’s increased determination back in 2012 to create the biggest credit bubble in history by unleashing QE3. Wall Street touted it ingeniously as “QE infinity” to let investors know that this period of near-zero yield would last forever, and that they’d have to close their eyes and hold their noses and blindly trust Wall Street and pick up even the riskiest junk to earn any yield at all. And it worked wonderfully.

But now, “QE infinity” has been tapered out of existence, and the Fed is threatening to raise rates in 2015. The scheme is coming unglued. The money for junk bonds is drying up for individual companies, leaving bondholders to grapple with the sordid meaning of “junk.” Read…. Junk Bond Carnage, One Company at a Time  




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1yR82vL testosteronepit

Government’s Small Business Administration Exposed As Corporate Welfare For Big Business

Submitted by Mike Krieger via Liberty Blitzkrieg blog,

Many people have noted that the more insidious or corrupt a law or agency, the more positive sounding its name. The most egregious example during my lifetime, was naming legislation that stripped Americans of most of their civil liberties the “Patriot” Act.

In a similar vein, which red-blooded American could ever be opposed to something called the Small Business Administration (SBA). We all love small businesses and the entrepreneurial spirit, and even those who abhor big government have a hard time siding against an agency that supports the little guy. As such, the SBA is the perfect vehicle for cronyism, corruption and corporate welfare, which indeed appears to be its primary reason for existence.

My friends at Open the Books have published a key study on the SBA, and the results are ugly. The full report can be found here, but what follows is some analysis of the report by Stephen Moore at Investors Business Daily:

The Small Business Administration is under fire for lending billions of taxpayer dollars a year to exclusive country clubs, golf resorts, yacht clubs, pet resorts, upscale plastic surgeons, wineries and other businesses catering to the lifestyles of the very wealthy.

 

A new report by the federal spending watchdog OpentheBooks.com has uncovered these and other questionable loan activities by the SBA and its roughly $106 billion loan portfolio.

 

It’s the latest in a long history of hard-to-justify lending activities by a federal agency that proclaims its purpose is to “help Americans start, build and grow businesses.”

 

The SBA has come under attack for gross misallocation of funds and even potential fraud. A 2008 inspector general report found 1-in-4 SBA loans involved improper payments.

 

In 2011 the Cato Institute investigated the program and concluded: “Although lawmakers portray the SBA’s programs as a boost for small businesses, the programs are actually a form of corporate welfare for some of America’s largest banks. The banks reap profits from the program, but taxpayers are liable for the losses.”

 

The profits flow to some of the biggest banks that snatch up the loan guarantees — which are like licenses to make money on risky loans.

 

In 2009, the top 10 lending institutions swallowed up roughly one-quarter of all the SBA loan guarantees. Wells Fargo & Co., JPMorgan Chase, U.S. Bancorp and PNC Financial Services Group were the big beneficiaries, with taxpayers guaranteeing repayment of the loans and the banks collecting the profits.

 

The businesses that benefit from the low-cost lending often aren’t small at all.

 

According to a 2010 audit by the Government Accountability Office, 61 of the top 100 small business contractors were in reality large businesses. This same study found that the government awarded more than half of the $8 billion of the government’s $14 billion in “small” business contracts to large businesses.

 

Open the Books found that from 2007-13, $92 million went to beauty spas in upscale towns such as Lake Tahoe and Napa Valley.

 

More than $160 million was lent to at least 40 exclusive “members only” country clubs. An additional $1.5 million was lent to the Pequonnock Yacht Club in Connecticut. Several Rolex jewelers cashed in on $20 million in loans. A $3.5 million loan went to Lamborghini dealerships in Chicago and Orange County, Calif.

 

Another scandal at SBA is how private equity firms game the system to cash in on loan guarantees. In total, $9 billion of SBA funds flowed through “venture capital, capital partner firms, mezzanine finance firms and private investment funds,” the report discovered.

 

“It’s an amazing scam,” says Andrzejewski. “These billion dollar equity firms are making investments backed by taxpayers. It’s a federally insured license to make money.”

 

But not for taxpayers. “Charge offs” on loans and guarantees have totaled $11 billion since 2010 and $27 billion since 2005.

In Cronyism We Trust.

USA! USA! USA!




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

Name That Collapsing Nation

These 3 charts show 3 different nations. According to the mainstream media memes:

one of these is an oil-rich socialist utopia on the verge of bankruptcy;

 

one is a nation nearing an economic renaissance thanks to devaluing its currency, money-printing, and fiscal irresponsibility; and

 

one is a nation that is isolated, sanctioned, economically-ravaged, resource-rich, that has hoarded gold…

So which is which?

 

Click image for the answer… (but guess first)

 

*  *  *

Beauty is in the eye of the beholder… or narrative writer it would seem.

*  *  *

Bonus Chart: This 4th chart represents the industry that has been responsible for 93% of all jobs in this nation in the last 5 years

Click image for the answer… (but guess first)




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1ynw3eY Tyler Durden

The New Exodus: 700,000 Young Spaniards Have Left Home Looking For Work Abroad

Submitted by Simon Black via Sovereign Man blog,

When Francisco Pizarro returned to Spain from the New World in 1528, he told King Charles I of the vast material riches that were found in abundance on Peru’s shores.

 

He petitioned for permission to conquer the new lands in the name of the crown, and was granted governorship over a vast amount of territory as long as he succeeded in conquering it.

 

Hungry to get their hands on Incan gold, some 168 Spaniards joined him on the conquest.

 

In the first battle, the Incans lost 2,000 men while the Spanish lost only 5.

 

In subsequent battles against the Spaniards, Incan troops were massacred in horrific numbers due in large part to Spain’s technological superiority.

 

(It also didn’t hurt that the Incan empire was undergoing a civil war at the time.)

 

The Spaniards would go on to conquer the rest of Incan lands over the next 40 years, which included parts of modern day Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru.

 

And over the next few centuries the Spanish empire would grow to encompass a significant portion of the Americas, some parts of Africa and the East Indies.

 

Spain was, in fact, the greatest power in Europe during a significant chunk of the renaissance, and she had her overseas dominions to prove it.

How times have changed. Today Spain is in financial straits, and most of her former colonies are in far better economic shape.

And as the gloomy economic landscape in Europe has dried up opportunities for young Spaniards, many have started to look to South America to start new careers.

Between 2008 and 2012 an estimated 700,000 Spaniards have left home in search of greener pastures, choosing to go to places like Colombia, Peru, and Chile.

Unencumbered by a language barrier and without much culture shock, they’re finding that they’re able to rise up the career ladder much more quickly than they could back home.

The shortage of skilled labor and advanced training in these countries means that foreigners are able to obtain higher paying jobs than they could back home.

Some recent college grads find themselves occupying senior level positions after just a few years because there is no one else around qualified for the job.

Even folks who are not with a large corporation or hold an advanced technical degree still have valuable skills.

Just by virtue of being a consumer in the West, for example, you know much more about proper customer service than people in countries that aren’t constantly exposed to such high standards.

I see the same situation in dozens of countries all over the world as I travel. There are many places where local talent and skills simply aren’t catching up fast enough with economic growth.

They are hungry for skilled labor and the entrepreneurially-minded.

This bespeaks a greater trend of our times: some of the best opportunities are abroad. And in uncertain times, you have to carve an independent path to achieve success.

I was always told growing up that if I studied hard and worked my way up the corporate food chain that I’d become successful. Did they tell you that lie too?

That entire premise is fundamentally broken.

But the good news is that it’s never been easier to venture abroad in search of some of the most enticing opportunities out there.

And the transition is not nearly as treacherous as it might seem.

Our ancestors spent months on a boat with a good chance of never coming back. Today we can hop on an airplane and wake up on the other side of the planet.

We can communicate with friends and family with a mouse click. And we can even meet people and conduct research before we arrive.

All the tools and technology exist to make the transition abroad extremely smooth.

It just takes independence of mind to break out of the current mold and embrace the tremendous opportunity you can find overseas.




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

What We Saw at Tonight’s Eric Garner Protest

Protestors packed the streets of Midtown Manhattan tonight to
protest today’s announcement that a grand jury had declined to
indict the NYPD officer who killed an unarmed man named Eric Garner
last July by choking him with a nightstick after he resisted
arrest.

The protest began at 4:30pm with a “die-in” staged at Grand
Central Terminal, in which about 20 people lay down on the floor in
the middle of the commuter hub. After about an hour had passed, the
protestors rose to their feet changing, “I can’t breathe,” echoing
the words of Eric Garner as he was asphyxiated. The demonstration
moved to Times Square, and then towards Rockefeller Center. The
protesters blocked traffic and attempted to disrupt the annual
Christmas tree lighting ceremony, but the NYPD kept them at bay by
throwing up gates around the site.

Shot and edited by Jim Epstein.

Approximately 2 minutes.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1wuUcB7
via IFTTT

17 States Sue Obama Over “Unconstitutional” Executive Action On Immigration

A year ago, following the whole Supreme Court farce, a bevy of states proved there are more than just “idiot voters” left in the US, when they decided to sue Obamacare outright over one or more of its provisions. They were promptly shut down by a judicial system that is as corrupt as the government itself (needless to say, both working at the behest of their true financial puppetmaster: Wall Street). And yet, in the aftermath of the now epic fiasco that is Obamacare, and not to mention the violent reaction to the administration as demonstrated in the midterm elections, the president may have a tougher time to brush away the next round of adverse reactions against his latest hugely unpopular executive order, one involving the amnesty of over 5 million illegal immigrants.

According to AP, Texas is leading a 17-state coalition in suing over the Obama administration’s recently announced executive actions on immigration.

While many top Republicans have denounced Obama’s unilateral illegal immigration clemency move designed to spare as many as 5 million people living illegally in the United States from deportation, or, as some put it, win the democrats 5 million heretofore non-existing voters, earlier today Texas Gov.-elect Greg Abbott took it a step further Wednesday, filing a lawsuit in federal court in the Southern District of Texas. And once he did, the seal broke and everyone wanted in on the action, and Texas was quickly joined by 16 other, mostly southern and Midwestern states, including Alabama, Georgia, Idaho and Indiana.

Abbott argued Wednesday that Obama’s action “tramples” portions of the U.S. Constitution. Which, let’s be honest here, never stopped the “constitutional scholar” before.

The lawsuit raises three objections: that Obama violated the “Take Care Clause” of the U.S. Constitution that limits the scope of presidential power; that the federal government violated rulemaking procedures; and that the order will “exacerbate the humanitarian crisis along the southern border, which will affect increased state investment in law enforcement, health care and education.”

To be sure this won’t be the first time Texas and Obama don’t see eye to eye. Or last. Wednesday’s announcement marks the 31st time the attorney general in this fiercely conservative state has brought action against the federal government since Obama took office in 2009. The only other high-profile lawsuit against the immigration action has come on behalf of Arizona Sheriff Joe Arpaio.

House Majority Leader John Boehner told lawmakers this week that the GOP-led House may vote to undo Obama’s executive action, but the move would be mostly symbolic, as Obama would certainly veto such legislation and the Democratic-led Senate would go for it, either.

Abbott wasn’t alone: Potential 2016 presidential candidate and current Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who leaves office in January, also spoke out against the executive order earlier Wednesday, saying it could trigger a new flood of people pouring across the Texas-Mexico border. Perry and Abbott also have said the order will promote a culture of lawlessness.

Perry said at a news conference that Obama’s 2012 executive order delaying the deportation of children brought into the U.S. illegally by their parents triggered an unprecedented wave of unaccompanied minors and families, mostly from Central America, crossing into the U.S. this summer.

 

“In effect, his action placed a neon sign on our border, assuring people that they could ignore the law of the United States,” said Perry, who has deployed up to 1,000 National Guard troops to the border.

The federal lawsuit involves the following states: Alabama, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Maine, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, North Carolina, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, West Virginia and Wisconsin.

Then again, one may wonder about the theatricality of all of the above: if republicans were truly fed up with the authoritarian head of the republic, they would just impeach him and be done with it. The fact that despite the howls of displeasure they have yet to do anything substantive, once again merely shows that both democrats and republicans are merely two all too eager parties on the receiving end of kickbacks by what we earlier dubbed, the world’s biggest organized crime syndicate.

All those who want to get to the bottom of corruption in America, are urged to focus on Wall Street first, foremost, and only. Everything else is nickel and diming smoke and mirrors.




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

How JPMorgan Rushed To Hire Trader Because He Knew How To Rig The Electricity-Market

Submitted by Paul Martens via Wall Street on Parade blog,

On April 29, 2010 at 7:47 in the evening, Francis Dunleavy, the head of Principal Investing within the JPMorgan Commodities Group fired off a terse email to a colleague, Rob Cauthen. The email read: “Please get him in ASAP.”

The man that Dunleavy wanted to be interviewed “ASAP” was John Howard Bartholomew, a young man who had just obtained his law degree from George Washington University two years prior. But it wasn’t his law degree that Bartholomew decided to feature at the very top of the resume he sent to JPMorgan; it was the fact that while working at Southern California Edison in Power Procurement, he had “identified a flaw in the market mechanism Bid Cost Recovery that is causing the CAISO [the California grid operator] to misallocate millions of dollars.” Bartholomew goes on to brag in his resume that he had “showed how units in reliability areas can increase profits by 400%.”

The internal emails at JPMorgan and Bartholomew’s resume are now marked as Exhibit 76 in a two-year investigation conducted by the U.S. Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations into Wall Street’s vast ownership of physical commodities and rigging of commodity markets. Senator Carl Levin, the Chair of the Subcommittee, had this to say about the resume at a hearing conducted on November 21:

“There’s two things that I find incredible about this. First, that anyone would advertise in a resume that they know about a flaw in the system — signaling that they’re ready and willing to exploit that flaw. And, second, that somebody would hire the person sending that signal.”

JPMorgan not only hired Bartholomew, according to the Senate’s findings, but within three months from the date of the email to Dunleavy, “Bartholomew began to develop manipulative bidding strategies focused on CAISO’s make-whole mechanism, called Bid Cost Recovery or BCR payments.” By early September, the strategy to game the system was put into play. By October, the JPMorgan unit was estimating that the strategy “could produce profits of between $1.5 and $2 billion through 2018.”

The strategy of gaming the Bid Cost Recovery payments, or BCR, was producing such windfall profits that another JPMorgan employee sent an email on October 22, 2010 to his colleagues, joking about the success by featuring a photograph of Oliver Twist holding out an empty bowl with the subject line: “Please sir! mor BCR!!!!”

During the Senate hearing, Senator Levin commented on the email and the reference to Oliver Twist, stating:

“Now the BCR refers to the make-whole payments that JPMorgan was using to unfairly profit from the system. And I gotta tell you it’s mighty offensive to me that JPMorgan portrays its actions as a joke, comparing itself to a poor orphan needing charity when it was ripping off consumers.”

The legal entity that carried out the strategy on behalf of the Commodities Group was JPMorgan Ventures Energy Corporation or JPMVEC. The voluminous report that was released simultaneously with the Senate hearings, explains the method JPMorgan used to rig the market as follows:

“As part of the strategy, in the Day Ahead market, JPMVEC submitted the lowest bid allowed under CAISO rate schedules. The bid was generally at the rate of -$30 per megawatt hour, which meant that JPMVEC was offering a negative bid and was willing to pay the buyer to take the electricity, despite the costs involved in producing it. Its bids were reviewed by electronic software, which did not grasp the intent behind JPMVEC’s below-cost bids. JPMVEC’s -$30 bids were well below where the Day Ahead Market actually settled, which was typically in the positive range of $30 – $35 per megawatt hour, so the bids routinely secured Day Ahead awards from CAISO. JPMVEC was then given a Day Ahead award at the prevailing market price regardless of its initial low bid price. In addition, its traders knew that if JPMVEC won a Day Ahead award, JPMVEC could also qualify for a BCR payment on its minimum load equal to twice its costs, resulting in a total payment well in excess of market prices.

“In essence, JP Morgan sold high priced electricity to CAISO, received a BCR payment equal to twice its costs, and also received a payment at the prevailing marketplace price for the electricity provided – in effect, it was paid three times for the same electricity.”

After CAISO and MISO, the Midwest grid operator, began to file complaints with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC), an investigation commenced and was eventually settled on July 30, 2013 with JPMorgan agreeing to pay a total of $410 million in penalties and disgorgements, a small pittance for a Wall Street bank that had $18 billion in profits in 2013.

The FERC settlement document notes that: “During the relevant period, Dunleavy was one of eight direct reports to Blythe Masters, the head of JP Morgan’s Global Commodities Group.  Starting in 2010, Dunleavy supervised Andrew Kittell and John Bartholomew, including with respect to bids developed by Principal Investments into CAISO and MISO.” To this day, none of the JPMorgan employees who engaged in the strategy have been charged by regulators or prosecutors. Dunleavy retired in 2013; Masters no longer works for JPMorgan. The status of Kittell and Bartholomew is unknown.

Senator Levin also brought out during the hearing that while JPMorgan was being investigated, it continued to engage in other manipulative electricity schemes, a total of 11 in all. The Senate report noted that FERC officials told the Subcommittee “that  in the years since Congress gave FERC enhanced anti-manipulation authority in the Energy Policy Act of 2005, the CAISO and MISO regulators had never before witnessed the degree of blatant rule manipulation and gaming strategies that JPMorgan used to win electricity awards and elicit make-whole payments.”

The two-year Senate investigation was multi-faceted. It looked at the heretofore vast secret holdings of physical industrial commodities, power plants, pipelines, oil storage terminals and aluminum warehouses owned variously by JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs or Morgan Stanley; at how related commodity markets have been rigged or could potentially be rigged by owning these assets while making massive trades in financial instruments related to them; and why the Federal Reserve, charged with ensuring the safety and soundness of banks, had not seen the potential for catastrophic bank losses from pipeline ruptures or tanker oil spills or power plant explosions.

Daniel Tarullo, a member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve, testified at the second day of Senate hearings. Tarullo said the Federal Reserve has put the issue out for public comment. His written testimony said that the request for public comment has thus far elicited 16,900 form letters and 184 unique responses. Tarullo further indicated that the issue of the potential for catastrophic losses is being carefully looked at by the Federal Reserve.

According to the Senate report, at one point in 2010, JPMorgan “owned or had rights to the energy output of 31 power plants across the country.” The Senate report also found that when JPMorgan acquired its power plants, it did not have authority to own or operate them. The Federal Reserve eventually authorized JPMorgan “to enter into tolling agreements, energy management contracts, and long-term supply contracts with power plants,” but it did not authorize JPMorgan to outright own power plants. In response, JPMorgan asserted that it could retain direct ownership of three power plants under its merchant banking authority.

The Senate report quotes from a Federal Reserve examination document that criticizes JPMorgan’s position. It states: “JPM has pressed on the boundaries of permissible activities including integrating merchant banking investments into trading activities and pursuing activity that may appear ‘commercial in nature,’ as well as pushed regulatory limits and their interpretation.”

The Subcommittee also noted regarding the three power plants that JPMorgan continues to own that “U.S. federal law attaches liability for catastrophic environmental events to both owners and operators.  By choosing to become the direct owner of the three power plants, instead of holding tolling agreements with them as permitted under its complementary authority, JPMorgan has increased the financial holding company’s liability for damages, should disaster strike. Even well–run power plants carry catastrophic event risks.  If the worst case scenario should occur, JPMorgan should be prepared to cover the potential losses, without U.S. taxpayer assistance.




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

And If You Act Now, We’ll Throw In A Subprime Car Loan Bubble For Free

When at least 3 readers receive, at exactly the same time the following email…

From: Bank of America
Subject: Now is a good time to buy a car or refinance

… Then two things become abundantly clear:

i) what we wrote a week ago in “A Tale Of Two Credit Markets: New Auto Loans Highest In 9 Years As New Mortgages Slump Near Record Lows” is nothing but the truth, and

ii) the next subprime car loan bubble is now in play.




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