German DAX Plunges To 1 Year Lows As Deutsche Bank CoCos Crash

The collapse of Deutsche Bank continues to not just accelerate but to contagiously spread

 

Deutsche Bank's CDS continues to push higher…smashing European bank risk to its highest sicne 2013…

 

And now Deutsche Bank's Contigent Capital securities are crashing – these are among the lowest securities on DB's capital structure and are screaming that problems loom.

In English – CoCo bonds are contingent convertible bonds, and are converted into equity first in case of a bail-in.

 

Dragging the entire German market down – DAX down to 1-year lows…

 

As Bloomberg reports,

This focus on potential credit risk at some of the biggest banks is a shift from recent years, when they seemed resilient from a credit standpoint even as analysts raised doubts about their future profitability. After all, regulations that prompted them to cut costs and reduce risk-taking would probably make them better able to meet their debt obligations, at least in theory.

 

But that theory only goes so far, and not enough apparently to justify buying subordinated financial debt that could get wiped out in a worst-case scenario. Investors seem to be rapidly selling lower-ranked bank securities, particularly notes tied to European firms with significant exposure to commodities companies and borrowers in China.

 

Investors really don’t have a sense of just how much pain banks will feel from souring energy prices and the global growth slowdown. Many are not waiting around to find out.

Is it time to panic yet?


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One Of The Biggest High Frequenecy Traders Warns Of Potential Market “Catastrophe”

Back in April 2009, we wrote what may be the first seminal article predicting the failure of capital markets as a result of widespread predatory high frequency trading and fragmented market structure when we laid out “The Incredibly Shrinking Market Liquidity, Or The Upcoming Black Swan Of Black Swans.” Several years later, and countless flash crashes, we have been proven right, however one thing is missing: “the catastrophe” that finally wakes up people to the dangers of all the individual things we have warned about over the years.

Today, we are one step closer to that day, when none other than the head of one of the biggest high-frequency trading companies, Mark Gorton of Tower Research, warned that there are several faultlines in the structure of increasingly electronic, automated financial markets that could lead to a “catastrophe” in the long run, according to the FT. 

To be sure, Mark Gorton, has a clear conflict of interest: being one of the largest HFT members himself, with his company dominating program trading on the NYSE with his Latour Trading subsiiary, the founder and head of Tower Research Capital argued that exchanges have become far more efficient with the advent of more computerised markets, but “cautioned that increasing complexity brought new dangers that needed to be mitigated.”

In other words, don’t blame the HFTs, blame the markets, which is to be expected from a person who will be out of a job if HFT is banned.

He further adds that “The recent evolution of markets from manual to electronic trading has had huge benefits and investors save money every day due to the lower cost of trading. But electronic trading brings with it a number of new risks, and we need to continue to strengthen the resiliency of electronic markets,” Mr Gorton told the Financial Times.

What keeps Gorton up at night? The short answer: the lack of safeguards at exchanges to prevent HFT firms like his from dragging the whole thing down:

The high-frequency trader is particularly concerned over the lack of risk controls at exchanges, which he said constituted a “large hole in the middle of the system that needs to be filled”.

 

HFT outfits and investment groups that use algorithmic strategies say they have a latticework of different safeguards to prevent ultra-fast computerised strategies from running haywire, which has been further reinforced after one high-profile market maker, Knight Capital, imploded in 2012 after losing $10m a minute in a 45-minute electronic trading rampage.

 

Regulators and bourses such as the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq have introduced a clutch of reforms and firebreaks in recent years — especially in the wake of a “flash crash” in 2010 that underscored how automated markets have become — such as circuit-breakers when stocks or markets fall by a certain amount.

 

Nonetheless, exchange-level risk controls remain “limited at best” and should assume there will inevitably be glitches, bugs and errant trading algorithms that could cause problems in the wider market, according to Mr Gorton.

Glitches from algorithms, he forgot to add, such as the one Tower uses each and every day to scalp and frontrun billions of trades in order flow.

However, his warning, conflicted as it is, is spot on: the market will crash again, it is only a matter of time, simply because the HFTs have captured market regulators so well, nobody has any idea what is going on any more: “We need a regulatory framework that assumes that any single system in the market will fail and insures that we have multiple redundant levels of checks that can catch failures in other parts of the system,” he said.

What is Gorton’s suggestion?

Mr Gorton highlighted in particular the lack of a centralised position-tracking mechanism for the US stock market, the need to refine and synchronise market circuit-breakers between highly correlated markets, such as cash equities and futures, and the absence of clarity over what it takes for trades to be declared invalid.

In other words, focus on the symptoms, shutting down markets when things go haywire, not the underlying cause, which as we have said since 2009 is simple: broken markets, designed to benefit just one group of traders.

Exchanges can in certain cases cancel trades when there is “clearly erroneous execution”. Usually this happens automatically when someone tries to trade at a clearly illogical price, but bourses are given more latitude in times of extreme turbulence.

For HFT that help make markets by trading constantly at lightning speed, that can be problematic as it “creates a situation where market participants are forced to pull back during times of extreme stress due to uncertainty about their positions due to potential trade breaks, and this weakness can contribute to a crash in the future”, Mr Gorton said.

 

While electronic, computer-driven markets have been a boon to investors, some of these holes should be addressed, the former Credit Suisse trader and electrical engineer said.

 

“We’re creeping in the right direction, but unless we proactively address these issues, sometime in the next several decades we are going to experience a catastrophe due to runaway computerised trading,” Mr Gorton said.

One question remains, the biggest one: why come public with this warning, which even the most naive traders can between the lines on? The answer is simple – as we have predicted long before the Sarao debacle, once the next big crash happens, everyone will be looking for the scapegoat, and one will be readily available: the same market parasites who have long abused the broken market on the way up, getting rich beyond their wildest dreams, will be those blamed for everything that went wrong on the way down, if only to deflect from the farce that central bankers have unleashed upon capital markets: the High Frequency Traders. And judging by this FT piece, they now know it very well…


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Oil Spikes Near $33 After Turkey-To-Invade-Syria Rumor

Yesterday it was chatter of 6 (non-Saudi) OPEC members agreeing to an emergency meeting (to do what exactly?) that ramped crude (despite dismal production, inventories, and demand data). Today it is talk of Turkey potentially invading Syria from the Russian defense minister…

“We have serious grounds to suspect intensive preparations by Turkey for a military invasion on the territory of the sovereign state of Syria,” Major General Igor Konashenkov, Defense Ministry spokesman, told journalists.

And crude is spiking back toward $33..

 

As RT reports, developments on the Turkish-Syrian border give serious grounds to suspect that Ankara is planning a military invasion in Syria, the Russian Defense Ministry said.

“We are recording more and more signs of concealed preparations by the Turkish military,” he added.


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The Heirs to Bush-Obama Militarism: New at Reason

There’s no point splitting hairs over whether Texas Sen. Ted Cruz or Florida Sen. Marco Rubio is the more egregious warmonger. Both love the bloody and costly U.S. empire. Both believe in American exceptionalism. Both want to pour money into the military, as though America were militarily threatened. Both want to prevent detente with Iran, which poses no danger, and both hype terrorism as an existential threat.

If you need further proof of the essential sameness of Cruz and Rubio, writes Sheldon Richman, you need only observe their attempts to portray Barack Obama as a peacenik determined to dismantle the American empire. Considering that Obama is bombing at least seven Muslim countries; sending more troops to Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria; and backing the Saudis’ genocidal war in Yemen—and that he supported Secretary of State Clinton’s disastrous regime-changing intervention in Libya—we can imagine what Cruz and Rubio think a hawkish foreign policy should be. 

View this article.

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Martin Shkreli, Valeant CEO Testify In Congressional Hearing On “Skyrocketing” Drug Prices – Live Feed

Everyone’s favorite pharma “bro” Martin Shkreli is set to testify before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform on Thursday morning. 

The purpose of the hearing, as delineated on the committee’s website is as follows: 

  • To discuss methods and reasoning behind recent drug price increases.
  • To discuss the role of pharmacy benefit managers in negotiating drug prices, and address concerns about the lack of transparency in pricing contracts. 
  • To discuss impediments to a timely review and approval of generic drug applications, and how the government can improve the efficiency and competitiveness in the market. 

Live feed:

Also present will be Howard B. Schiller, interim CEO of Valeant and Janet Woodcock Director, Center for Drug Evaluation and Research for the FDA. Here are the background bullet points:

  • The wholesale price for thirty of the top-selling U.S. drugs increased 76 percent between 2010 and 2014, which represents eight times the general inflation rate.
  • Pharmaceutical companies cite, among other things, shareholder accountability and high research and development costs as reasons for price increases.
  • Industry analysts have cited “declining market competition” as one of the factors driving recent drug price increases.  
  • Generic drugs, which can cost eighty to eighty-five percent less than their brand equivalents, historically have played an important role in the health care marketplace by offering a lower-cost alternative to brand drugs.
  • However, the number of generic drug applications submitted to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is outpacing approved applications by a three to one margin with approximately 3,800 applications still awaiting action.  
  • Under the Generic Drug User Fee Amendments of 2012, the FDA will receive approximately $1.5 billion over five years from industry fees to speed the public’s access to safe and effective generic drugs.

Below, find a new memo which traces Shkreli’s decision to jack up the price of Daraprim by 5,000% last September.

Memo on Turing Documents


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PBOC In Da House? Yuan Spikes To 3-Week Highs

Its deja vu all over again in the land of speculative Yuan shorts today. With Golden Week looming, it appears PBOC is stomping on the throat of speculative shorts in the offshore Yuan with another gross intervention. The last 2 days have seen “someone” panic-buying Yuan higher by a stunning 800 pips, smashing CNH back to 3-week highs when then PBOC last intervened in size

Offshore Yuan spikes 800 pips to 3-week highs…

 

That’ll show you George Soros… or not – let’s see what happens next week when China is “closed.”


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Craig Hemke: Unhinged Silver Fix and S&P Death Candle

 

 

 

Craig Hemke: Unhinged Silver Fix and S&P Death Candle

Posted with permission and written by Rory Hall, The Daily Coin (CLICK FOR ORIGINAL)

 

 

I sat down with Craig Hemke, TFMetals Report to get a much-needed update on the S&P Death Candle and to get his take on what happened with silver last Thursday.

Ponzi schemes are as old as time.

We live in unprecedented times. In 2012 the U.S. government legalized propaganda and since then the lies and deceit we are fed have become common place, not to mention more disconnected from reality than ever before. If we look at the outrageous unemployment number, being 5% when reported on January 8th, 2016, anyone with a brain knows that something is out of balance. The labor participation rate is somewhere around 1950’s level. I ask you, has the population of the U.S. grown since the mid 1950’s? If the answer is yes, then something is wrong with the unemployment number being reported.

Turning our attention to something only slightly larger, like the S&P 500, NASDAQ and DOW Jones Industrial Average we see, once again, nothing but fantasy. These “markets”, which represent a vast amount of wealth held by the average American, have been rigged, for the past five years, with currency provided by the Federal Reserve through their program of Quantative Easing (QE). Corporate stock buy backs have been at all time highs for several years, in direct correlation to QE. This is now coming to an end. All ponzi’;s end the same way – when there are no more people to put more currency into the scheme it crashes.

In 2001 the stock market experienced its first big crash since 1987. There was approximately a 49% down turn in the S&P. In 2008, when we were sold a bill of goods by the Federal Reserve, Congress and the Treasury Dept., the S&P crashed again and experienced a 56% down turn and the joke “my 401k is now a 201k” was born. This is no laughing matter. The markets are currently set up with the exact same pattern as both 2001 and 2008. If, by the end of February the S&P closes below 1920, it is currently at 1940, the patterns that were unleashed in 2001 and 2008 will be in full view. I am not a financial advisor and I am not offering financial advice, I am merely pointing out patterns that Craig Hemke identified a few months ago. These patterns can be seen in the chart below:

EVENING AND WEEKEND AVAILABILITY (installation, handyman, wardrobe, bed, dresser) * I am a professional 10 yr experienced assembler & installer who provides quality and quick services to put together/assemble your new items. * VERY competitive pricing. Do not pay the overhead from a large company. * Any brand can be done. Most cabinet, TV mounting, curtains and blinds as well. * Full ID presented and am open to providing any other info/documents to help you feel more comfortable in the process. FOR BEST SERVICE ACCURATE QUOTES PLEASE SIMPLY: --- 1) Call or Text or Email --- 2) Product names AND/OR model numbers OR a copy of store receipt --- 3) Your address or intersection. 416-985-1447 ------ 123assembly@gmail.com

image/TFMetals Report

This is presented to keep this idea in the front of your mind. The criminals at the Federal Reserve, the “too big to jail” banks and the federal government are all gunning for your wealth. Are you doing what you can to protect your wealth or are you allowing someone working for commissions to manage your wealth for you?

If we turned to one of the most rigged, manipulated markets on planet earth we see there was, yet, another anomaly on Thursday January 28, 2016. Most people are completely unaware of this situation happening as there was almost no coverage provided by the mainstream media.

Did you know there was a complete disconnect between the silver price and silver futures price by 0.80$ per ounce? Did you know the “market” was held open for an additional 14 minutes while the criminals, I mean the people setting the “fix”, scrambled to try and figure out what happened? Do we know what happened? Absolutely not. No one is saying what happened and there has been no one to press the issue. Silver on the COMEX dropped from $14.45/ounce to $14.25/ounce in about a second. Once again, no explanation.

This is what we do know, as reported by Bullion Desk

“Unfortunately, it’s not [a mistake],” Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy for Saxo Bank, told FastMarkets. “This could be the end of the fix. It took 14 minutes to find a fix – they obviously found a fix way off of the market.”
Another source also suggested that the continued existence of the fix has been put in jeopardy by the huge discrepancy in today’s price, adding that many producers – who still use the price as their daily reference – may have lost significant amounts of money if any contracts have been settled according to the fix.
“A huge number of contracts are still settled on that price,” another said. “This will no doubt cause significant problems.”

These are interesting words, and a very interesting situation, as they come on the heels of the Chinese stating their new physical gold/gold futures market will be online within the next 60 days. We have been hearing this for some time and to this I say – we will see. Personally, I have little faith the Chinese will be bringing this new market online in the timeframe they describe. They have already missed two “deadlines”.

The Chinese also, this past week, announced they would no longer be publishing the Shanghai Gold Exchange volume of gold moving through the Exchange! This makes the vast majority of physical gold movement completely opaque to the world. Very interesting timing of all these events/announcements taking place.

I would strongly suggest listening all the way through as your wealth could possibly be in jeopardy at this very moment.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rory Hall, Editor-in-Chief of The Daily Coin, has written over 700 articles and produced more than 200 videos about the precious metals market, economic and monetary policies as well as geopolitical events since 1987. His articles have been published by Zerohedge, SHTFPlan, Sprott Money, GoldSilver and Silver Doctors, SGTReport, just to name a few. Rory has contributed daily to SGTReport since 2012. He has interviewed experts such as Dr. Paul Craig Roberts, Dr. Marc Faber, Eric Sprott, Gerald Celente and Peter Schiff, to name but a few. Visit The Daily Coin website and The Daily Coin YouTube channels to enjoy original and some of the best economic, precious metals, geopolitical and preparedness news from around the world.

 


Craig Hemke, Our Weekly Wrap-Up and Ask The Expert interviewer began his career in financial services in 1990 but retired in 2008 to focus on family and entrepreneurial opportunities. Since 2010, he has been the editor and publisher of the TF Metals Report found at TFMetalsReport.com, an online community for precious metal investors.

 


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Explaining Today’s Collapse In US Worker Productivity

Nonfarm Productivity collapsed by 3% QoQ, notably worse than expected as labor costs jump.

 

 

 

Economists are gnashing their teeth to explain this "plunging productivity paradox" – we think it is rather simple…

 

While only modestly tongue in cheek, here is what is really going on…

Just under two years ago, when Bank of America's economic team still produced meaningful commentary instead of blaming the growth slowdown on the snow (especially after it said not to blame the growth slowdown on the snow), it pointed out that the real reason the US recovery was aging (this was in the summer of 2013) was the tumble in worked productivity. This is what BofA said then: "what we show below is that, outside of the tech boom in the late 1990s, productivity tends to slow as business expansions mature. Our current 'expansion' is now thoroughly mature."

 

This time, Bank of America was absolutely right.

And finally, here is Eugen Bohm-Bawerk explaining how US productivity is now on par with Agrarian slave economics…

monetary policy has become slave to the service sector as it has become linked to the much touted wealth effect (capital consumption) that is now an integral part of the American business cycle.

Now it is time to take a closer look at productivity measured in terms of GDP per capita. While this is not an entirely correct way to measure productivity, it does adhere to new classical growth model theories which posit that in a developed economy, reached steady state, the only way to increase GDP per capita is through increased total factor productivity. In plain English, growth in GDP per capita equals productivity growth. The reason we use this concept instead of more advanced productivity measures is to get a long enough time series to properly understand the underlying fundamental forces driving society forward.

In our main chart we have tried to see through all the underlying noise in the annual data by looking at a 10-year rolling average and a polynomial trend line.

In the period prior to the War of 1812 US productivity growth was lacklustre as the economy was mainly driven by agriculture and slaves (slaves have no incentive to work hard or innovate, only to work just hard enough to avoid being beaten). From 1790 to 1840 annual growth averaged only 0.7 per cent.

As the first industrial revolution started to take hold in the north-east, productivity growth rose rapidly, and even more during the second industrial revolution which propelled the US economy to become the world largest and eventually the global hegemon (see bonus chart at the end).

As a side note, it is worth noting that while the US became the world largest economy already by 1871, Britain held onto the role as a world hegemon until 1945. Applied to today’s situation in light of the fact that China is, by some measures, already the largest economy on the planet, it does not mean it will rule the seven seas anytime soon. In our view, they probably never will, but that is a story for another time.

Adjusting for the WWII anomaly (which tells us that GDP is not a good measure of a country’s prosperity) US productivity growth peaked in 1972 – incidentally the year after Nixon took the US off gold. The productivity decline witnessed ever since is unprecedented. Despite the short lived boom of the 1990s US productivity growth only average 1.2 per cent from 1975 up to today. If we isolate the last 15 years US productivity growth is on par with what an agrarian slave economy was able to achieve 200 years ago.

In addition, the last 15 years also saw an outsized contribution to GDP from finance. If we look at the US GDP by contribution from value added by industry we clearly see how finance stands out in what would otherwise have been an impressively diversified economy.

With hindsight we know that finance did more harm than good so we can conservatively deduct finance from the GDP calculations and by doing so we essentially end up with no growth per capita at all over a timespan of more than 15 years! US real GDP per capita less contribution from finance increased by an annual average of 0.3 per cent from 2000 to 2015. From 2008 the annual average has been negative 0.5 per cent!

In other words, we have seen a progressive (pun intended) weakening of the US economy from the 1970s and the reason is simple enough when we know that monetary policy broken down to its most basic is a transaction of nothing (fiat money) for something (real production of goods and services). Modern monetary policy thereby violates the most sacred principle in a market based economy; namely that production creates its own demand. Only through previous production, either your own or borrowed, can one express true purchasing power on the market place.

The central bank does not need to worry about such trivial things. They can manufacture the medium of exchange at zero cost and express purchasing power on the same level as the producer. However, consumption of real goods and services paid for with zero cost money must by definition be pure capital consumption.

Do this on a grand scale, over a long period of time, even a capital rich economy as the US will eventually be depleted. Capital per worker falls relative to competitors abroad, cost goes up and competitiveness falls (think rust-belt). Productive structures cannot be properly funded and the economy must regress to align funding with its level of specialization.

In its final stage, investment give way for speculation, and suddenly finance is the most important industry, pulling the best and brightest away from every corner of the globe, just to find more ingenious ways to maximise capital consumption.

As the slave economy got perverted by incentives not to work, so does the speculative fiat based economy, which consequently create debt serfs on a grand scale.

Bonus chart:

 


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A.M. Links: Hillary vs. Bernie, Cruz Says Trump Is ‘Losing It,’ U.N. Panel Rules on Julian Assange

  • Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders will face off tonight at a Democratic presidential debate in New Hampshire.
  • Donald Trump is now claiming that Ted Cruz “stole” the Iowa caucus. Cruz says that Trump is “losing it.”
  • Paul Ryan to conservatives: “The Left would love nothing more, they would love nothing more than for a fragmented conservative movement to stand in a circular firing squad and fire so that progressives can win by default.”
  • “WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange’s three-and-a-half-year stay in the Ecuadorian embassy in London amounts to ‘unlawful detention’, a United Nations panel examining his appeal will rule on Friday.”

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