Manufacturing Recession Deepens: Factory Orders Drop To Five Year Low; 16 Consecutive Declines

In 60 years, the US economy has not suffered a 16-month continuous YoY drop in Factory orders without being in recession. Moments ago the Department of Commerce confirmed that this is precisely what the US economy did, when factory orders not only dropped for the 16th consecutive month Y/Y, after declining 1.7% from last month…

 

… but at $454 billion for the headline number, this was the lowest print since the summer of 2011.

Market reaction: stocks rebound on the news and are now well in the green.


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ISM New York Drops To September Lows As All Components Decline; Employment Plunges

While last week’s Chicago’s PMI staged a strong bounce from its recent contraction and back into expansion, New York did not. ISM New York just printed at 50.4, just barely above the contraction point, and the lowest headline print since mid 2015.

 

The extremely noisy time series continues to swing, this time lower, with every single underlying component deteriorating in the month of March.

But the most troubling reading was the employment print, which after staging a strong rebound last month, collapsed to just 40.9, the second worst print in the current decade.


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Japanese Traders Are Getting Angry: “The BOJ Is Destroying The Functioning Of The Market”

Back in the summer of 2014, when the ECB first unveiled NIRP, many were concerned that this submersion into the monetary policy twilight zone would first crush Europe’s money markets. However, at least until now, European MM funds have proven relatively resilient,

The story in Japan is different.

When the Bank of Japan announced they were instituting NIRP back in January, they intended to spur lending and push inflation up. As often is the case with central planners, their academic theory was much different than the economic reality.

Money market has fallen off a cliff in Japan, and the freeze in short-term credit markets can be solely attributed to the BOJ’s negative interest rate policy. So far, in a contrast to the financial crisis, activity is frozen simply because brokers are having a hard time pricing and processing transactions as opposed to concern over counterparty risk (for now). Firms have capital to sustain this short-term freeze at the moment, but the break in this market is certainly something to keep a close eye on.

This sums up the sentiment in Japan: “Among central banks, the BOJ is the one that destroys functioning markets the most,” Izuru Kato, the president of Totan Research in Tokyo was quoted by Bloomberg.

Companies will slash staff and scale back operations where activity is grinding to a halt, exposing markets to spikes in rates when the time comes for normalization.”

What normalization?

As Bloomberg shows, the interbank call market hit a record low at the end of March.

 

As the BOJ continues to push on the NIRP string, the list of unintended consequences grows by the minute. Outside of the short term credit freeze and complete inability to set borrowing costs, there are more concerns starting to bubble up. Banks may be preparing to lay off workers due to the lull in transactions, which won’t help their wage and inflation issues. Traders are simply trying to front run BOJ asset purchases as a way to earn profits, as the rest of the “market” is eroding – which is spilling over to banks of course, as their inability to make money lending forces them to turn to a buy & sell to the BOJ model for profits.

We’re not sure what other unintended consequences will show themselves over the coming months, but one thing is certain: The BOJ losing control, or perhaps it already has.

Finally, we can’t help but wonder just how much of Japan trader anger is the result of the Nikkei crashing 1000 points since Yellen’s dovish appearance, one which seemingly shifted the balance of monteray power away from Europe and Japan (and their surging currencies) to benefit China by way of a weaker dollar. How long before Kuroda is forced to re-escalate once again in the increasingly more anguished global currency wars?


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Rejoice: Fat Fucks Now Outnumber Starving People on Earth!

For the first time in the long and mostly sad history of humanity, “there are now more fatty lardbuckets on the planet than there are undernourished people,” notes the Adam Smith Insitute, a British libetarian think tank.

More precisely, a study in the British medical journal The Lancet that looked at global Body Mass Indices (BMIs) finds that, between 1975 and 2014, “The world has transitioned from an era when underweight prevalence was more than double that of obesity, to one in which more people are obese than underweight.” Global lifespans over the same 40-year period cranked up from 59 years to over 71 years and while malnutrition still persists in places, The Lancet notes, “The world is at once fatter and healthier.”

The reasons for this momentous tipping of the scales are mostly linked to all the things current candidates running for president of the United States have lately started attacking, such as freer trade, globalization, and automation. Some of our trade deficit with China, for instance, surely ends up being consumed as food by the people there, whose long history of starving was part of every baby boomer and even GenXer’s childhood: Eat your food. There are children starving in China. The machines, robots, and other technology that free all but 1 percent of Americans from agriculture (what Marx and Engels themselves slagged as “the idiocy of rural life) mean we get more food out of smaller numbers people and smaller plots of land. And of course, letting the wretched of the Earth move from poorer countries to richer countries plays a role (even as those poorer countries themselves get richer).

As Reason’s Ronald Bailey, whose book The End of Doom, exhaustively charts these sorts of great improvements in other areas, writes, “poverty and with it, malnourishment] has been receding at the same time that economic freedom has been rising around the globe.”

But of course every silver lining must include a cloud, right? And so The Lancet sees not a cause of celebration when “what’s for lunch” is no longer quite the existential riddle but only grounds for gloom and doom. As one of the authors of the study says:

Although it is reassuring that the number of underweight individuals has decreased over the last four decades, global obesity has reached crisis point.

We hope these findings create an imperative to shift responsibility from the individual to governments and to develop and implement policies to address obesity.

I’m pretty confident that state-based solutions to people having too much food will lick that problem like, well, Mr. Creosote licking his plate. Aren’t you?

Full study here.

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Prof Wants UVA’s ‘Problematic’ Mural Censored Because It Depicts Fun, Title IX Violations

MuralSome members of the University of Virginia community want a piece of art—a mural—censored, altered, or completely painted over because it depicts students and professors partying together. 

The behaviors of the fictional characters in the painting would likely violate Title IX, said UVA music professor Bonnie Gordon, a vocal critic of the mural, in an interview with newsplex.com. 

Artist Lincoln Perry painted the mural, which covers the walls of Old Cabell Hall, over the course of 16 years. It was finished in 2012.  It features a number of different scenes of revelry involving men and women of various ages and in various states of undress. In one panel, a woman has chained a man to a pillar. In another, a woman can be scene leaping onto a dean’s back. In still another scene, a woman offers her bra to a much older man standing on a balcony. 

According to the news story, criticism of the mural focuses mostly on a sole panel, in which a student and professor “obviously have been doing something that would be a Title IX violation,” according to Gordon. It’s not totally clear to me which panel runs afoul of federal sexual harassment guidance. The story includes a picture of the man-chained-to-pillar scene, but the accompanying video shows the balcony scene during the news reporter’s relevant monologue. I’m not sure why any of the depicted actions would “obviously” violate Title IX, except in the sense that all sexual behavior on or near a university campus, involving one or more persons affiliated with a university, is now construed to violate Title IX. 

First, a disclaimer: if UVA administrators really want to change, alter, or otherwise update the mural, they obviously have that right. Maybe it’s a bad piece of art. Maybe Gordon’s suggestion to let art students repaint it is a good one. But it’s one she recommends for entirely the wrong reasons: 

“I think it should go,” said music professor Bonnie Gordon, who works in Old Cabell Hall and sees the mural every day. “It condones a certain kind of party culture in which women are depicted in ways that look problematic to me.” … 

Gordon says she’s troubled when she sees prospective first-year students come through Old Cabell Hall with their parents. 

“This is what they walk past,” she said. “This is not the image that I want my son or daughter to associate with college.” 

Again, the painting’s problematic-ness is implied—some sexual activity between men and women is hinted at—and this is sufficient to invoke the dread specter of Title IX. Never mind that the college experience does actually involve sex for a great many students. Never mind that professors and students have been sleeping together, for mutual benefit, as long as universities have existed. Perhaps the mural should be replaced with a famous historical painting depicting Greek culture? Alas, I suppose not. (You would think Renaissance painters had never even heard of Title IX!) 

Today is the five year anniversary of the infamous “Dear Colleague” letter: five years have elapsed since the Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights drastically ramped up efforts to force universities to police sexual harassment on an entirely subjective basis and adjudicate sexual assault without regard for due process. The evidence that these federally-driven efforts have destroyed the basic free expression rights of a great many university students and faculty members is overwhelming. [Related: Policing Students’ Sex Lives Costs Colleges Millions, But Nobody’s Happy with the Results] 

But I can think of no more fitting example of Title IX overreach than Gordon’s response to the Perry mural. This is the landscape of higher education in 2016: all remotely sexual activity is presumed to violate Title IX in some way. Students are so delicate and infantilized—so incapable of making their own decisions—that they need protection from modern art. 

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The triumph of the invisible hand

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

“By virtue of exchange, one man’s prosperity is beneficial to all others.” – Frédéric Bastiat.

It remains one of the most powerful metaphors in economics. In 1850 Frédéric Bastiat gave the world the story of the broken window. The son of a shopkeeper accidentally breaks a pane of glass in the shop. A crowd gathers at the scene. Pretty soon, the onlookers jump to the conclusion that it’s an ill wind that blows nobody any good. Admittedly, the shopkeeper is out of pocket by the cost of a window. But the glazier just summoned will reap the benefit. Where would poor glaziers be in a world without broken windows? Imagine all the good uses to which the glazier can put his new-found windfall from repairing the damage. Think what he could buy. All that new money circulating through the economy. Perhaps we might all be better off if more windows got broken on a regular basis?

“Stop there!” cries Bastiat, addressing the crowd directly.

“Your theory is confined to that which is seen; it takes no account of that which is not seen.”

Hence the title of Bastiat’s essay: ‘That which is seen, and that which is not seen’.

The six francs paid to the glazier for effecting his repairs are what is seen. The crowd can speculate to its heart’s content to what luxurious end those francs might be expended. But what is not seen is what the shopkeeper might have done with those six francs if he had not had to pay them to the glazier in the first instance. He would, perhaps, have bought some new shoes, or a book for his library.

“To break, to spoil, to waste, is not to encourage national labour; or, more briefly, destruction is not profit.”

Government projects may seem to create work for some, but there is also a someone who must pay for them, and that someone is normally the taxpayer. And if the capital is raised from the bond market, it doesn’t come directly from today’s taxpayer – it is extracted from tomorrow’s.

Such projects may also divert spending from a more deserving group. Some government spending might even involve the outright destruction of wealth.

There are, after all, only three ways in which money can be spent. You can spend your own money on yourself. You can spend your own money on other people. Or you can spend other people’s money on other people.

The last is the spending prerogative of government. And government is not the best allocator of capital. Milton Friedman wryly suggested in 1980 that if you put the federal government in charge of the Sahara Desert, within five years there’d be a shortage of sand.

As the world economy gets more and more financialised, and as more and more capital starts flowing in ways that are less than wholly transparent, Bastiat’s metaphor only becomes more powerful over time.

And more misunderstood. The economist Paul Krugman, for some reason allowed a regular forum in The New York Times, wrote in the aftermath of the Japanese earthquake and tsunami of 2011, that “the nuclear catastrophe could end up being expansionary.. remember, World War II ended the Great Depression”.

Krugman would also claim that the threat of an invasion by space aliens could bring the US economy out of recession within eighteen months.

Not to be outdone, the economist Larry Summers, formerly senior economic adviser to President Obama, told CNBC that Japan’s earthquake and tsunami “may lead to some temporary increments, ironically, to GDP as a process of rebuilding takes place. In the wake of the earlier Kobe earthquake, Japan actually gained some economic strength.” As Bloomberg’s Caroline Baum somewhat tartly responded, “Too bad Japan had to wait sixteen years for another opportunity.”

UK politicians are currently scrambling over each other to point fingers of blame for the collapse of prospects in what remains of the British steel industry – which has been in slow but terminal decline for decades.

Government is not the best creator of jobs, either; its best economic efforts should normally be devoted to keeping out of the way and letting a free market do its job. Saving Tata Steel’s interests in the UK is, sadly, a lost cause.

China’s surplus capacity in steelmaking is now bigger than the entire steel production of Japan, America and Germany combined. The Economist notes that in 2015, British steelmakers contributed less than 1% of world supply. Helping steel workers retrain is the right thing to do. Throwing taxpayers’ money at keeping doomed steel mills alive is not.

Peter Tasker, writing for the Nikkei Asian Review, highlights the purchase of Japan’s Sharp by Hon Hai Precision Industry, better known as Foxconn. The deal marks the end of Sharp’s 104-year history as an independent business.

Tasker also cites Renault’s 1999 acquisition of Nissan Motor as the “model for a successful foreign takeover”. The company’s newly drafted CEO, Carlos Ghosn, introduced a rigorous rationalization programme, slashed surplus capacity, and dramatically cut the number of the company’s suppliers.

Today Nissan is one of the world’s most successful car companies. But there is no shortage of Japanese companies with a legacy of operational resilience going back centuries. Tasker cites by way of example the Sumitomo Group (founded a century before the United States), Sudo Honke, Japan’s oldest sake brewer (formed in 1141) and Hoshi Ryokan, a hot springs hotel established in 718. “Such businesses have survived for so long because they have provided what customers wanted through centuries of upheaval.”

But foreign investors seem to have given up on Japan, and have resorted to their old habits of treating its stock market like some kind of ATM machine.

John Seagrim of CLSA points out that for the week ending 11th March, foreign investors sold ¥1.58 trillion of Japanese stocks, the biggest weekly sale of Japanese equities since records began. The magic of markets, however, is that for every seller, there must be a buyer. Trust Banks and pension funds have been net buyers of Japanese stocks for 13 of the last 18 weeks. And not everybody regards foreign players in Japan as particularly sophisticated. Interviewed on Bloomberg, Brian Heywood of Taiyo Pacific Partners says that he welcomes the selling by overseas investors, because it largely represents dumb money:

“When the market punctures, there are companies that we want to add to. The market overreacts. We know the company. We’re at 3 percent and we’d like to be at 6 percent. We use it as an opportunity.. Over the last several years, Japan’s market grew more than almost any other equity market, and it’s still one of the cheapest markets in the world. It had margin expansion but it had valuation compression.”

Japan’s ¥137 trillion Government Pension Investment Fund – the largest pension fund in the world – has more than doubled its domestic equity allocation, from 12% to 25%. Now that Japanese interest rates have gone negative, and Japanese bond yields look distinctly unattractive, being also mostly negative, it seems increasingly likely that Trust Banks and other Japanese pension funds will follow the GPIF’s lead and raise their equity holdings. A secular shift towards greater institutional ownership of the market, allied to compelling valuations, accounts for Japan remaining the single largest country allocation in our global value fund.

When it comes to capital allocation, you can go with the dead hand of the State, or you can follow the market’s invisible hand. We favour the latter.

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Saudis Retaliate To “Oil Freeze” Fallout: Ban Transport Of Iranian Crude In Territorial Waters

At first, when it announced the terms of its “oil freeze” agreement with Russia one month ago, Saudi Arabia seemed willing to grant Iran a temporary exemption from the supply freeze, at least until it recovers its pre-embargo production levels. That however changed on Friday when the country’s Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, shocked Saudi Arabia’s Arab allies in the Persian Gulf, telling Bloomberg his country would only join the freeze curbe Iran – and all other OPEC member nations – also joined.

Following the Friday announcement, yesterday Iran’s oil minister Zangadeh made it clear that the country rejects Saudi demands, and would continue ramping up production at will, in the process making the April 17 Doha meeting meaningless.

And then, in a new and unexpected retaliation by Saudi Arabia for Iran’s intransigence, moments ago the FT reported that Saudi Arabia has taken steps to slow Iran’s efforts at increasing oil exports, banning vessels that transport Iranian crude from entering their waters, according to traders and shipbrokers.

More details from FT:

Iranian vessels carrying the country’s crude are restricted from entering ports in Saudi Arabia and Bahrain, according to a circular sent by a shipping insurance company to its members in February.

 

The notice said ships that have called to Iran as one of its last three ports of entry will also require approval from the Saudi and Bahraini authorities before entering their waters. Shipbrokers and traders have relayed the same messages since.

 

Iranian oil executives have expressed their concern about the message circulating in the market, saying it is only adding to problems they face in selling their crude.

 

Saudi Aramco, the state oil company, and The National Shipping Company of Saudi Arabia (Bahri) did not respond to requests for comment.

It is not clear just how much of an impact this escalation will have because as shown in the map below, Saudi territorial waters are hardly a major factor in Gulf shipping lanes.

However, considering that Iran already faces insurance, financing and legal obstacles despite the lifting of sanctions linked to its oil industry in January, and considering the amount of clout the Saudis have with financial partners, its attempt to make Iran’s oil production more difficult will surely reap at least partial success.

Indeed, as the FT adds, oil tanker association Intertanko and other industry participants say no formal notice has been given by Saudi Arabia but uncertainty is making some charterers less willing to lift Iranian crude.

”It’s seen as an unknown risk,” said one shipbroker. “No one wants to disrupt their relationship with the Saudis.”

As a reminder, the amount of oil being stored at sea off the coast of Iran has risen by 10 per cent since the start of the year, data from maritime data and analytics company Windward show, and now stands at more than 50m barrels.

But what is perhaps far more troubling for Iran is that on Friday president Obama criticized Iranian leaders for undermining the “spirit” of last year’s historic nuclear agreement, even as they stick to the “letter” of the pact.

According to the Hill, in comments following the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington, Obama denied speculation that the United States would ease rules preventing dollars from being used in financial transactions with Iran, in order to boost the country’s engagement with the rest of the world.

Instead, Obama claimed, that Iran’s troubles even after the lifting of sanctions under the nuclear deal were due to its continued support of Hezbollah, ballistic missile tests and other aggressive behavior.

 

“Iran so far has followed the letter of the agreement, but the spirit of the agreement involves Iran also sending signals to the world community and businesses that it is not going to be engaging in a range of provocative actions that are going to scare businesses off,” Obama said at a press conference.

 

“When they launch ballistic missiles with slogans calling for the destruction of Israel, that makes businesses nervous.”

 

“Iran has to understand what every country in the world understands, which is businesses want to go where they feel safe, where they don’t see massive controversy, where they can be confident that transactions are going to operate normally,” he added. “And that’s an adjustment that Iran’s going to have to make as well.”

And so a new potential bullish catalyst for oil emerges: If Obama’s anger grows, and if the Iran agreement is ultimately unwound, that would mean that all of the excess oil brought on market by Iran, would promptly be taken off the market once more, in the process eliminating the supply glut overnight.

It remains to be seen if Obama is ready to sacrifice his foreign “legacy” just to boost the price of oil, and thus, gas at the pump. Then again, considering over the weekend Goldman made a huge U-turn on the “low oil is good for the economy”, and if Obama’s advisors start whipsering in his ear how higher oil prices are critical for US energy companies, that may be precisely what ends up happening.


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When Sex Is Not a Crime, Why Should Sexting Be?

In a New York Times op-ed piece published today, Amy Adele Hasinoff, a professor of communication at the University of Colorado, Denver, amplifies the concern that reforms aimed at making the legal treatment of teenaged sexters less punitive could have the opposite effect. “Once they have the option of lesser penalties,” Hasinoff writes, “prosecutors are more likely to press charges—not only against teenagers who distribute private images without permission, but also against those who sext consensually.” In fact, more prosecution is the avowed goal of some legislators who sponsor sexting-specific bills.

Hasinoff, one of the experts I quoted in my post about Colorado’s proposed reforms last week, agrees that it makes no sense to treat consensual nude images that teenagers share with each other as a kind of child pornography, which exposes them to the threat of felony charges and registration as sex offenders. “Though most prosecutors do not use these laws against consensual teenage sexters, some do,” she says. “The University of New Hampshire’s Crimes Against Children Research Center estimates that 7 percent of people arrested on suspicion of child pornography production in 2009 were teenagers who shared images with peers consensually.” Robby Soave reports recent examples here, here, and here.

While about two dozen states have passed laws addressing this issue, the typical approach is to create a new misdemeanor offense for minors whose sexting violates the letter of bans on child pornography without victimizing anyone. But if there is no real victim, why treat this behavior as a crime at all? Hasinoff, author of Sexting Panic: Rethinking Criminalization, Privacy, and Consent (University of Illinois Press), argues that it would be better to emulate statutory rape laws by “exempting teenagers who are close in age and who consensually create, share or receive sexual images.” In other words, if it is legal for two teenagers to have sex with each other, it should be legal for them to exchange nude selfies.

Hasinoff cites New Mexico’s recent reform, which makes child pornography charges inapplicable to a teenager who receives a picture from a peer, as a step in the right direction, although “teenagers who create or share sexual images can still be convicted of child pornography production or distribution.” New York, another state Hasinoff mentions, offers an alternative to criminal charges in cases involving images exchanged between people 20 or younger whose ages are no more than five years apart. In such cases, the “offenders” can avoid criminal charges by undergoing an eight-hour “education reform program” that covers the dangers of sexting and cyberbullying. But as in most states, felony charges are still allowed.

“Like any sexual act,” Hasinoff writes, “consensual sexting is somewhat risky and requires trust, but it is not inherently harmful as long as partners respect each other’s privacy and are attentive to consent. Studies have found that around 3 percent of Americans report that someone has distributed private sexual images without their permission, and around 10 percent of sexters report negative consequences. The risk of distribution is significantly higher among those who were coerced into sexting.” Hasinoff argues that an indiscriminately punitive approach to sexting discourages true victims from coming forward because “teenagers know that if they report the incident they may be punished at school and possibly charged with the same offense as the perpetrator.”

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Raised Hands Violate University Safe-Space Policy

If you think that the sex and speech climate at U.S. universities has gone awry, U.K. college campuses are becoming downright dystopian. Remember last year, when British student leaders declared clapping too triggering and requested that students show approval with jazz hands instead? Now students have moved on to tackling another menacing movement: the raised hand.

Granted, raising one’s hand has long been the universal symbol of “I have a question,” especially in educational environments. But sometimes hand-raising can denote disagreement with a speakers’ position, or even exasperation, and that’s where we get into dangerous territory, say University of Edinburgh students. The move could be viewed as disrepsectful—and thus a violation of the school’s “safe space” policy.

Last week Imogen Wilson, vice president for academic affairs with the student association, was threatened with removal from her position after she “raised [her] arms in disagreement” during a council debate and shook her head disapprovingly.

The Edinburgh Student’s Association safe-space policy says student association members must treat each other with consideration and respect, and this is defined as “refraining from hand gestures which denote disagreement or in any other way indicating disagreement with a point or points being made. Disagreements should only be evident through the normal course of debate.”

Wilson will remain in her position, after a student council vote on her removal broke in her favor, 33 to 18.

On Twitter, Wilson wished that people would stop focusing on the safe-space debacle at the Student’s Association meeting and more on the association’s debate over issues related to Israel and Palestine.

Wilson also complained that her story is being used to mock safe-space policies—which are actually formalized guidelines at many U.K. schools, not simply rooms full of bubbles—in general, instead of seen as a singularly overzealous application of the policy. “I completely understand the importance of our safe space policy, and will defend it to the ground,” she told HuffPost UK, “but I did not think that was fair, and had it gone further I would have either left or argued against it.” 

But other Edinburgh students say that this isn’t some isolated incident, and the safe space policy, as written, is inherently problematic. Following the tense student association meeting, Charlie Peters, a first-year Edinburgh student who had been in attendance, created a petition to overhaul the school’s safe space policy. “In a free and liberal society such as ours, it is imperative that people remain able to express their views, regardless of what others may think of them,” it states. “This is currently not possible at the University of Edinburgh.” 

“The more ideas we challenge and discuss in public, the likelier we are to arrive at a moral and serious truth,” Peters continued Peters. “I believe an institution which upholds the principles of free speech and diversity is superior to a Students’ Association that patronises its own students by insinuating that they cannot handle opinions that differ from their own. We are adults, we do not need condescension or safeguarding. EUSA does their students a huge disservice by engaging in this malpractice.”

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Trump Says Kasich Taking ‘His’ Votes, Should Drop Out, Documents Leaked About Off-Shore Accounts, Greece Deports Migrants to Turkey: A.M. Links

  • Donald Trump has moved on to calling for John Kasich to drop out of the Republican race for president. Trump complained that he’d “automatically win” if Kasich just quit. Wisconsin Republicans and Democrats vote tomorrow. House Speaker Paul Ryan, of Wisconsin, says he’s “not running for president, period, end of story.” Meanwhile, Bernie Sanders, who has supported murderous communist regimes around the world, accused Wisconsin’s governor, Scott Walker, and his “right wing ideology” of killing people.
  • A Washington-based journalism group leaked information from a legal firm in Panama about the off-shore assets held by politicians as well as private citizens from several countries. The government of Great Britain has already demanded the data on assets o identify possible targets for prosecution.
  • Greece has deported the first batch of migrants to Turkey per a new European Union agreement with that country.
  • About 25 people were killed and dozens injured after a string of attacks in Iraq aimed at Shi’ite militias and government forces. The Islamic State (ISIS) claimed responsibility for several of the attacks.
  • At least 50 people died during flash floods in Pakistan.
  • A second Amtrak derailment in Philadelphia in the last year killed two people, both Amtrak employees working on track. Federal authorities are investigating.

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