Stocks Spike On “Good Jobs” As Crude Crashes

"Off the lows"…

 

So this just happened…

 

But it doesn't really matter when all it takes is a phone call…

 

Post-Payrolls, stocks faded until the US open, and then took off…

 

Thanks to Dennis Gartman, The Dow surged 250 points off the lows…

 

On the day, good jobs was bad news but good ISM was good news…

 

On the week, Small Caps soared but Trannies were unable to get out green…

 

Year-to-date, Russell 2000 and Nasdaq remain the red as Trannies outperform…

 

VIX was battered almost every day…trading to 13.00!

 

With VIX in control, stocks decoupled from bonds and FX carry….

 

Despite the equity strength, bonds also surged with yields down 6bps (30Y) to 15bps (5Y) on the week…

 

The USD Index tumbled most in 2 months to its lowest close since Oct 2015…(driven by a surge in JPY)

 

Gold managed to close the in the green (best week in a month) as crude was clobbered…

 

This was Crude's first losing week in 7 weeks – pushing crude to one-month lows…

 

So on the week – Stocks Up, Bonds Up, Gold Up, Dollar Down, Oil Down…

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart: Reminder – You Are Here


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The Trade Wars Begin: China Retaliates To Steel Tariffs With Global Anti-Dumping Duties

When looking back in history, December 23, 2015 may be the date the global trade wars officially began. On that day, as we reported at the time, the U.S. imposed a 256% tariff on Chinese steel imports.

It did so perhaps with good reason: with its local end markets mothballed, China was desperate to dump as much excess capacity as possible offshore with shipments of steel, oil products and aluminum all reaching new highs according to trade data from the General Administration of Customs, and the result was a dramatic drop in US prices.

On the other hand, with Chinese mills, smelters and refiners all producing far more than can be purchased domestically amid slowing domestic demand, as well as the government’s anti-pollution crackdown, China’s decision to ship the excess overseas was also understandable.

As Bloomberg wrote at the time, “the flood of Chinese supplies is roiling manufacturers around the world and exacerbating trade frictions. The steel market is being overwhelmed with metal from China’s government-owned and state-supported producers, a collection of industry associations have said. The nine groups, including Eurofer and the American Iron and Steel Institute, said there is almost 700 million tons of excess capacity around the world, with the Asian nation contributing as much as 425 million tons.”

2016 was expected to get even worse: Colin Hamilton, head of commodities research, said the the price of hot-rolled coil, used in everything from fridges to freight containers, may decline about 13 percent next year. China’s steel exports, which have ballooned to more than 100 million metric tons this year, may stay at those levels for the rest of the decade as infrastructure and construction demand continues to falter.

To be sure, it was India who launched the first shot, when it announced that it plans to step up its protection for debt-laden domestic steelmakers by imposing a minimum price on steel imports among other measures, Steel Secretary Aruna Sundararajan said in December. The import curbs are necessary to ensure a “level-playing field” for Indian companies after restrictions imposed in September failed to stop a decline in prices, she said.

And then it was the US’ turn, when shortly after India unleashed protectionist measures, the US Department Of Commerce announced that  corrosion-resistant steel imports from China were sold at unfairly low prices and will be taxed at 256 percent. The move was clearly aimed at China: imports from India, South Korea and Italy would be taxed at lower rates, while imports from Taiwan and Italy’s Marcegaglia SpA would not face anti-dumping tariffs.

We left it off by saying that “now that the US has fired the first trade war shot, it will be up to China to retaliate. It will do so either by further devaluing its currency or by reciprocating with its own protectionist measures against the US, or perhaps by accelerating the selling of US Treasurys. To be sure, it has several choices, clearly none of which are optimal from a game theory perspective, but now that the US has openly “defected” from the “prisoner’s dilemma” game, all bets are off.”

To be sure, just a few weeks later China proceeded with another dramatic devaluation of the Yuan, which may or may not have been accompanied by an aggressive selling of Treasury.

However the missing link was China unveiling its own protectionist response: a necessary and sufficient condition for fully symmetric trade wars.

It did so earlier today when, accused of flooding world markets with cheap steel, it imposed its own anti-dumping duties as high as 46.3% on electric steel products imported from Japan, South Korea and the European Union, the Ministry of Commerce said on Friday.

According to Reuters, the overseas suppliers include JFE Steel Corp, Nippon Steel and Sumitomo Metal Corp and POSCO, the ministry said in a notice posted on its website (www.mofcom.gov.cn). The ministry did not identify any EU supplier.

What is curious is that China, by far the world’s biggest steel producer, imports relatively small quantities of high-end steel products, including electric steel used in power transformers and generators. In other words the move was mostly symbolic, and a confirmation that China now believes it is being treated unfairly enough to where it can demand in-kind protectionism which will only escalate as the end demand to the global supply glut is simply not there.

The tariffs come at a time when the UK is up in arms over the decision by Tata Steel, the owner of much of UK’s steel industry, to sell its local plants in the process liquidating about 15,000 jobs. Tata blamed a flood of cheap Chinese supplies which means now that China has re-escalaed, thousands of newly laid off ironworkers in the UK (and elsewhere) will have a new global target which to blame for their troubles.

We doubt it will end there, because one trade wars begin, the logical consequences of currency wars, they rarely end amicably or on short notice, and on numerous occasions devolve into outright, conventional wars.


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“Whoever Wins In Cleveland, The Establishment Must Lose”

Submitted by Patrick Buchanan via Buchanan.org,

The Wisconsin primary could be an axle-breaking speed bump on Donald Trump’s road to the nomination.

Ted Cruz, now the last hope to derail Trump of a desperate Beltway elite that lately loathed him, has taken the lead in the Badger State.

Millions in attack ads are being dumped on the Donald’s head by super PACs of GOP candidates, past and present. Gov. Scott Walker has endorsed Cruz. Conservative talk radio is piling on Trump.

And the Donald just had the worst two weeks of his campaign.

There was that unseemly exchange with Cruz about their wives. Then came the pulling of the woman reporter’s arm by campaign chief Corey Lewandowski, an atrocity being likened by the media to the burning of Joan of Arc.

Then there was Trump’s suggestion, instantly withdrawn, that if abortion is outlawed, then women who undergo abortions may face some punishment.

This gaffe told us nothing we did not know. New to elective politics, Trump is less familiar with the ideological and issues terrain than those who live there. But the outrage of the elites is all fakery.

Democrats do not care a hoot about the right to life of unborn babies, even unto the ninth month of pregnancy. And the Republican establishment is grabbing any stick to beat Trump, not because he threatens the rights of women, but because he threatens them.

The establishment’s problem is that Trump refuses to take the saddle. Again and again, he has defied the dictates of political correctness that they designed to stifle debate and demonize dissent.

Trump has gotten away with his insubordination and shown, with his crowds, votes, and victories, that millions of alienated Americans detest the Washington establishment and relish his defiance.

Trump has denounced the trade treaties, from NAFTA to GATT to the WTO and MFN for China, that have de-industrialized America, imperil our sovereignty and independence, and cost millions of good jobs.

And who is responsible for the trade deals that sold out Middle America? “Free-trade” Republicans who signed on to “fast-track,” surrendered Congress’ rights to amend trade treaties, and buckled to every demand of the Business Roundtable.

The unstated premise of the Trump campaign is that some among the Fortune 500 companies are engaged in economic treason against America.

No wonder they hate him.

As for Trump’s call for an “America First” foreign policy, it threatens the rice bowls of those for whom imperial interventions are the reason for their existence.

If the primary goals of U.S. foreign policy become the avoidance of confrontations with great nuclear powers and staying out of unnecessary wars, who needs neocons?

Should Trump lose Wisconsin, he can recoup in New York on April 19, and the following week in Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Delaware and Maryland.

Yet, a loss in Wisconsin would make Trump’s climb to a first-ballot nomination steeper.

Still, if Trump goes to Cleveland, having won the most votes, the most states and the most delegates, stealing the nomination from him would split the party worse than in 1964.

The GOP could be looking at a 1912, when ex-President Theodore Roosevelt, who won the most contested primaries, was rejected in favor of President Taft. Teddy walked out, ran on the “Bull Moose” ticket, beat Taft in the popular vote, and Woodrow Wilson was elected.

Cruz says the nomination of Trump would mean an “absolute trainwreck” in November. But, Cruz, 45, with a future in the party, would be foolish to walk out as a sore loser, as Nelson Rockefeller and George Romney did in 1964.

A Cruz rejection of a nominee Trump would mean the end of Cruz. The elites would hypocritically applaud Ted’s heroism, publicly bewail his passing, then happily bury and be rid of him.

Cruz, no fool, has to know this.

If the nomination is taken from Trump, who will be 70 in June, he has nothing to lose. And as “Julius Caesar” reminds us, “such men are dangerous.”

Trump and Cruz, though bitter enemies, are both despised by the establishment. Yet both have a mutual interest: insuring that one of them, and only one of them, wins the nomination. No one else.

And if they set aside grievances, and act together, they can block any establishment favorite from being imposed on the party, as was one-worlder Wendell Willkie, “the barefoot boy of Wall Street,” in 1940.

All Trump and Cruz need do is instruct their delegates to vote to retain Rule 40 from the 2012 convention. Rule 40 declares that no candidate can be placed in nomination who has failed to win a majority of the delegates in eight states.

Trump has already hit that mark. Cruz almost surely will. But no establishment favorite has a chance of reaching it.

With Cruz and Trump delegates voting to retain Rule 40, they can guarantee no Beltway favorite walks out of Cleveland as the nominee — and that Ted Cruz or Donald Trump does.

No matter who wins in Cleveland, the establishment must lose.


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Judge Sides with Gay Brandeis Student Guilty of ‘Serious Sexual Transgression’ for Kissing Sleeping Boyfriend

KissA judge rebuked Brandeis University for denying fundamental due process rights to a student who was found guilty of sexual misconduct for a variety of non-violent offenses: most notably, because he had awakened his then-boyfriend with nonconsensual kisses. 

The process that Brandeis employed to investigate the matter was “essentially secret and inquisitorial,” according to Dennis Saylor, a federal judge who ruled that the accused student’s lawsuit against Brandeis should continue. 

This is a significant victory for advocates of due process in campus sexual misconduct investigations. It’s also an implicit skewering of affirmative consent as official policy. The accused, “John Doe,” was found responsible for stolen kisses, suggestive touches, and a wandering eye—all within the context of an established sexual relationship. His former partner and accuser, J.C., did not file a complaint with the university until well after the incidents took place. In fact, J.C.’s participation in Brandeis’ “sexual assault training” program caused him to re-evaluate the relationship. 

The two began dating in the fall of 2011. They broke up in the summer of 2013. In January 2014, J.C. made a two-sentence accusation against Doe, who was not informed of the nature of the charges against him. He was also denied a lawyer, the opportunity to evaluate evidence against him, and the opportunity to cross-examine witnesses, including his accuser. Brandeis uses the “special investigator” model to handle sexual assault disputes: a single administrator reviews the charges, investigates them, and makes a decision. There was no panel hearing. There was just one person’s decision. 

The investigator found Doe guilty on four of 12 charges, according to the court decision: 

First, at the very beginning of their relationship, John placed J.C.’s hand on John’s (clothed) groin while they were watching a movie in a dormitory room. J.C. now contends that the sexual contact was unwanted. John denies that the contact was non-consensual, and contends that it was simply the first step in their sexual relationship. Among other things, he notes that the two of them had sexual relations for the first time the very next day, and that they continued to have such relations for most of the next two years. He also contends that J.C. afterward recounted the episode in a humorous manner to friends, although the university would not accept his evidence of that fact. 

Second, John and J.C. frequently slept together in the same bed during their relationship. According to J.C., John would occasionally wake him up by kissing him, and sometimes persisted when J.C. wanted to go back to sleep. 

The other two charges involved Doe checking out J.C. in the shower, and an attempt at oral sex gone wrong. [Related: Students Had BDSM Sex. Male Says He Obeyed Safe Word. GMU Agreed, Expelled Him Anyway.]

The special examiner concluded that Doe’s behavior constituted “sexual harassment, invasion of privacy, and sexual misconduct.” Taken together, these thing constituted “sexual violence,” according to the investigator. 

Doe was not suspended, but Brandeis marked his permanent record. According to his transcript, he was found guilty of “serious sexual transgressions.” Consider that for a moment: Brandeis decided that being overly affectionate toward one’s boyfriend was a “serious” sexual transgression. 

In reaching this verdict, the investigator made a number of suspicious logical leaps. For instance, J.C.’s alcoholism subsequent to the breakup was counted as evidence in his favor, because other victims of sexual assault have lapsed into similarly destructive behavior. Saylor was quite critical of this thinking. “Surely ‘basic fairness’ requires more than rote recitations of generalizations about the way some victims of sexual misconduct sometimes react,” he wrote. 

Indeed, Saylor was critical of virtually all aspects of the sexual assault adjudication process as mandated by the federal Office for Civil Rights. [Related: Male Student Had Drunken Sex with Female Non-Student. Her Dad Called It Rape. Expulsion Imminent.]

Brooklyn College History professor KC Johnson, an expert on these issues, hailed Saylor’s ruling as “without a doubt, the strongest decision by any judge on campus due process since the Dear Colleague letter,” which initiated the Education Department’s recent wave of Title IX-based due-process suppression. 

Saylor’s decision merely holds that the lawsuit has enough merit to proceed: Doe has a reasonable claim that Brandeis violated its contractual promise of “basic fairness.” The decision does not take a side in the actual misconduct case. 

However, it’s impossible not to peruse the details and see the folly of a mandatory affirmative consent policy. As The Washington Examiner‘s Ashe Schow points out:

So a couple in a committed relationship – even a married couple – would have to follow a strict question-and-answer process for the sex to be considered truly consensual. And that’s negated if either party had been drinking. Further, there would be no way toprove the policy was followed unless it was videotaped, as the accusation would boil down to a he said/she said (in this case, a he said/he said) situation.

In a world where affirmative consent is a prerequisite for each and every conceivable sexual act, people who awaken their partners by kissing them are committing assault. 

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Florida Governor Signs Bill Requiring Actual Criminal Charges Before Seizing Property

Gov. Rick ScottSome great news in asset forfeiture reform is coming out of Florida. S.B. 1044, approved by the legislature earlier in the month, was signed into law today by Gov. Rick Scott.

The big deal with this particular reform is that, in most cases, Florida police will actually have to arrest and charge a person with a crime before attempting to seize and keep their money and property under the state’s asset forfeiture laws. One of the major ways asset forfeiture gets abused is that it is frequently a “civil”, not criminal, process where police and prosecutors are able to take property without even charging somebody with a crime, let alone convicting them. This is how police are, for example, able to snatch cash from cars they’ve pulled over and claim they suspect the money was going to be used for drug trafficking without actually finding any drugs.

Florida’s new law will make this a bit harder. From Florida Politics:

State Sen. Jeff Brandes, a St. Petersburg Republican, sponsored the measure, which was supported from both sides of the political spectrum….

“Florida is once again taking a leadership role in the defense of private property rights, and other states should look to our work and enact similar reforms to protect the rights of their residents,” Brandes said.

Bill Piper, senior director of national affairs for the Drug Policy Alliance, also celebrated Friday’s signing.

“The notion that police officers can take cash or other property from people never charged with any criminal wrongdoing and keeping any profits from the sale of seized property doesn’t sit well with the public,” he said. “Voters want action on civil asset forfeiture and it was smart politics for Gov. Scott to sign off on this.”

That’s good news for civil asset forfeiture reformers in the wake of the bad news earlier in the week that the Department of Justice has restarted its federal “equitable sharing” asset forfeiture program that allows law enforcement agencies to partner with the federal government and then keep a huge chunk of what they seize. Police departments often use this program to attempt to bypass restrictions their states put in place that either establish tougher rules for seizures or reduce how much money or property police are allowed to keep.

In Florida’s case, the law is written so that a property seizure may only take place if the owner of the property is arrested for a crime for which said property would be described as “contraband.” That appears to put in place restrictions that would avoid a federal bypass.

Read more about the law from the Institute of Justice here.

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How Donald Trump & Hillary Clinton Have Made the Libertarian Party Relevant

Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton, the likely presidential nominees of America’s two major political parties, would be among the best-known and most-disliked candidates in history. What better time for the Libertarian Party (LP), the only third party that will be on all 50 states’ ballots, to make their move into the mainstream?

Reason spoke with a number of senior LP officials, party supporters, and philosphical fellow travelers about the unique opportunity presented by the 2016 election. Though most agreed the LP was in a great position to present a distinct political platform through a legitimately viable candidate, some were more optimistic than others about the prospects for success, or even by what measure success could be determined.

Is the goal the White House, or just altering the national conversation by getting on the main debate stage? The LP knows voters want an alternative, but the party continues to struggle with its sales pitch and structural realities of a two-party system that marginalizes alternative choices. 

The LP’s three most prominent candidates, Gary Johnson Wants YOU to vote LPincluding former New Mexico Gov. Gary Johnson (who served two terms as a Republican and was the LP’s presidential nominee in 2012), squared off in a debate-style forum hosted by Fox Business Network’s John Stossel, which airs tonight at 9 P.M. ET. As the distant third-place finisher in 2012, Johnson scored about 1 percent of the popular vote and set an LP record of more than 1 million votes

A recent Monmouth University poll put Johnson at about 11 percent in a three-way race against Trump and Clinton, which probably says as much about Johnson’s viability as a “legitimate” candidate as it does about how nauseated voters are by the two choices offered by the ostensibly “serious” political parties.

But with the electorate expressing profound antipathy rather than resigned apathy toward their two likely choices for president, is the 2016 election the capital-L Libertarian moment we’ve been waiting for? Or will this be another wasted opportunity by a third party to make inroads with voters who are increasingly sympathetic to libertarian principles, even if they prefer not to officially identify with the party?

“The biggest thing that stops people from voting Libertarian is inertia,” Nicholas Sarwark, the LP’s Chair, told Reason in a phone interview. “They haven’t tried it before, but once they do, they’ll find out the sky doesn’t fall.” He likens the conventional wisdom that any vote which strays from the two-party system is a waste to the scene in Ghostbusters when the heroes are compelled to choose the form of their destructor.

If Trump or Clinton are the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man of this analogy, Sarwark says the LP’s candidate will present an alternative philosophy that rejects the default war-mongering of both the Democratic and Republican parties. According to Sarwark, the LP’s outreach is focused on spreading a positive message focused on encouraging people to embrace the “beautiful feeling of voting for what you believe in, and not against what you hated more.”

The LP’s Executive Director Wes Benedict told Reason that the combination of Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) dropping out of the GOP race and the ascension of Donald Trump has led to a spike in Libertarian Party membership. From what he’s observed in the comments left by new party members, Benedict believes a good deal of the boost is motivated by fears that a Trump presidency would lead to closed borders and a trade war with China.

When it comes to social issues, the LP’s Political Director Carla Howell calls Democrats and Republicans “Johnny Come Latelys” regarding gay marriage and criminal justice reform. Howell told Reason that the LP “would love it if [the major parties] co-opted our issues, but they usually don’t.” She added that while Republicans talk a good game when they’re running for office, “they don’t substantively reduce government” once they’re there, and the Democrats have never shown a true interest in “disentangling the US from the Middle East.”

A frequently deployed trope about third-party candidacies is that they act as spoilers, siphoning votes from one of the major parties and handing the election over to the other. The pathologically polite former President George H.W. Bush can barely bring himself to mention Ross Perot’s name decades after the Texas oil billionaire garnered almost 19 percent of the popular vote in the 1992 Presidential Election won by Bill Clinton. Likewise, the name Ralph Nader burns like hot fire on the lips of Democrats who blame the consumer advocate for depriving former Vice President Al Gore of the presidency in 2000 and handing it to George W. Bush.

In 2013, many Republicans blamed Libertarian attorney Robert Sarvis for tipping Virginia’s gubernatorial election towards Democrat Terry McAuliffe. But Sarwark says this perception is wrong, insisting that exit polls showed that Sarvis pulled more votes away from traditionally Democratic-leaning voters than from Republican Ken Cuccinelli, who he says was a “terrible candidate.” 

Sarvis himself told Reason in a phone interview that he also rejected “the premise that any candidate is a spoiler, but added that he would love it if a strong LP presidential candidate caused a ‘major party candidate to flameout,” which he said could be a “tipping point” in American electoral politics.

David Boaz, the executive vice president of the libertarian Cato Institute, told Reason that his expectations of an LP candidate being successful against two major-party candidates as loaded with baggage as Trump and Clinton are tempered by the fact that he’s seen third parties fail time and time again at making a significant impact on a national level.

Boaz, who worked on various LP campaigns decades ago, said that while Gary Johnson polling at 11 percent is an encouraging sign, “as you get closer to the general election, it’s very hard to persuade people to vote for a candidate they think has no chance of winning.”

He thinks Johnson’s full-throated support for marijuana legalization, if marketed correctly, could draw in a good amount of young people who currently support Sen. Bernie Sanders’ (I-Vt.) campaign for the Democratic nomination. Sanders pledged to push for the federal decriminalization of marijuana, and supports the right of states to opt for full legalization if they so choose. That has also polled very well among young people

Richard Winger, an attorney and the publisher of Ballot Access News, thinks the biggest hurdle facing the Libertarian presidential candidate is a lack of public visibility. Winger told Reason that when former Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) ran as the Libertarian nominee in 1988, the New York Times paid him no mind, but the fact that the Gray Lady prominently profiled Gary Johnson last month is proof that “things are changing.” He says Republicans in particular are coming to the “sudden shocking realization” that their party is “having a terrible problem and therefore people are interested in looking for alternatives.”

Winger, who donates his time and legal skills to fight local and state governments’ overbearing restrictions that frequently deny alternative parties the ability to get on the ballot, thinks getting the Libertarian candidate on the debate stage with the Democrat and Republican candidates “would do the trick” at helping to convince the public that the two major parties are out of touch and not serving their interests.

Currently, candidates are required to be polling at least 15 percent nationally toIsn't he cute? make it to the general election’s main debate stage. But Winger points to the lawsuit filed by the Libertarian and Green parties against the Commission on Presidential Debates, which argues that the entity illegally colludes with the two major parties to keep out the competition, as a crucial hurdle that could remake the American political system.

Whether getting a viable Libertarian candidate such as Johnson on the stage with Trump and Clinton is enough to level the playing field is uncertain. As Cato’s Boaz notes, convincing a majority of voters that a third-party ballot is anything other than a wasteful protest is something that has not yet ever been achieved.

What is indisputable is that neither of the two major parties can sell themselves as a party that is reliably anti-war and pro-personal freedom.

The LP’s Sarwark references a South Park episode to drive home that point. If voters can “let go of the fear” that the only two choices they have are between “the giant douche and the turd sandwich,” he says, they might actually get a president committed to the philosophy of “don’t hurt people and don’t take their stuff.” 

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No Rebound Here

The most important aspect of the US economy – consumption – appears to face a headwind as despite "awesome" jobs data, exuberant Manufacturing surveys, and talking heads fighting each other to come up with the most superlative superlatives for the US economy, UMIch exposes the fact that income growth expectations for Americans (the ones that are throwing their support behind Trump and Sanders) continues to slide.

All that post-QE3 "hope" is gone…

 

And Year-over-year shows no rebound here…

h/t @DougTee

 

Still who needs "hope" when the stock market keeps rising. As Jim Cramer explained to 'the people' this morning, "we need the stock market to go higher and the wealth effect to continue."


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Rebutting Matt O’Brien’s and the Washington Post’s Misguided Attack on Gold

It is our mission to rebut any mainstream article that spreads misinformation
about gold and/or shows a gross misunderstanding of monetary history. In Matt
O’Brien’s “Wonkblog” in the Washington Post on February 23, 2016, titled “This
might be Ted Cruz’s worst idea“, he does both. The ‘worst idea’ in this case refers
to the Texas Senator’s view that it would be to the benefit of the US economy
to return to a gold standard. One of O’Brien’s main arguments against the gold
standard, aside from his claim that apparently nobody on the “
University of Chicago’s ideologically
diverse expert panel”
thinks it a good idea, is that he believes goods and services priced in gold are more
volatile than goods priced in US dollars and, behold, sometimes prices can even
decline substantially. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Source:
Washington Post

 

Obviously
what O’Brien completely omits is that under a gold standard, the dollar and
gold are one and the same. With the same argument, O’Brien could have shown
that prices for US goods and services have been even more volatile when
measured in euros, Canadian dollars or Japanese yen, and then conclude that euros,
Canadian dollars and yen are much too volatile to be used as money (see Figure
1). Needless to say, more than 500 million people use those currencies every
day. If gold would have been the official currency of the United States since
1988, the price chart would have looked just as smooth, with the difference
that it would not be pointing up but it would be simply a flat horizontal line,
pretty much the way it was before 1971. 
This
is a simple point not hard to understand. Anyone who has spent a little bit of
time studying currencies, gold and economic principles in general understands it. 

  

 

US goods measured in
foreign currency are much more volatile than in USD (or gold for that matter).
It doesn’t mean much, which is why normally nobody would bother showing such a
chart
.

Source:
Bloomberg, GoldMoney

 

Let
us ignore all that for a moment and assume that for the past 30 years prices
for US goods and services under a gold standard would have indeed moved the way
in which they did when measured in gold. This reveals another flaw in O’Brien’s
tirade against gold. He claims that:

“After all, it’s not like the price of gold matters to
a middle-class family. It has nothing to do with the price of food or housing
or education or anything else that anyone who isn’t preparing for the end of
the world would need.”

That
is simply just plain wrong. O’Brien tries to prove his point of view in his chart
shown above that supposedly represents how prices changed since 1988 (a
completely arbitrary starting point) and how they would have changed under a
gold standard. As source he quotes the St. Louis Fed’s FRED database, but it
doesn’t say what the data actually show. One can only assume the creator of the
chart used the CPI deflator and overlaid it with the gold price. The problem
is, that doesn’t really reflect – to use Matt O’Brien’s own words – “what
matters to a middle class family.” This is because the CPI (and not gold) seems
to have actually quite little if not exactly “nothing to do with the price of
food, or housing or education or anything else to anyone”. So let’s look at how
prices for goods and services that are of particular relevance for the middle
class would have changed in gold. And we shall use O’Brien’s arbitrary starting
point of 1988 (and not the end of the gold standard in 1971 which would have
made sense or simply the end of the 20th century or anything else
more intuitive than 1988. 1988 could most likely be the
mathematically best starting point to support his flawed argument).

Let’s
start with energy. O’Brien doesn’t specifically mention energy even though it
certainly matters for a middle class family. According to the US Energy
Information Agency (EIA), 3.2 billion barrels of gasoline were consumed each
year in the United States on average during the past five years. At an average
price of USD3.30/gal, this equates to roughly USD1,400 per person (including
every child and retiree). But that is only half the bill, as total US crude oil
consumption is roughly seven billion barrels per year. This doesn’t mean that
an average household of four outright spends USD10,000 on fuel, because a lot
of fuel is consumed by company cars, trucks and other commercial vehicles and
machines. But in the end, those commercial costs drive the costs of products
and services consumed as well. Add bus tickets and airfares and the houses in
the northeast that rely on heating oil in the winter and you understand that
crude oil costs account for a large share of consumer expenditures, both directly
and indirectly. Overall, the US has spent roughly 6% of its GDP on crude oil
over the past five years. It clearly matters for the average middle-class
family. The chart below shows retail gasoline prices including taxes. As one
can see, gasoline prices tend to be somewhat less volatile when priced in gold.
This becomes even more evident if the time horizon is extended back to the end
of the gold standard in 1971. (For those who are interested in finding out why,
you can read our gold
price framework report here.)

 

Prices for petroleum
products are less volatile when measured in gold

Source: Bloomberg, Energy Information Administration,
GoldMoney

 

But maybe oil is the outlier, and O’Brien is right
when it comes to other important consumption goods? Well let’s look at food
then, because every middle class family needs food. The Economist magazine
publishes the price of a BigMac Burger for different countries in their BigMac
index. The idea is to compare the purchasing power of different countries’
currencies. But this also a great tool to compare how food prices have changed
over time. After all the Big Mac is a staple, served the same anywhere in the
US, a commodity that really didn’t change much since 1988, which makes it
perfect for our comparison. This chart looks a bit different. Prices do rise a
bit when measured in gold between 1995-2000, but are nowhere near as volatile as
O’Brien’s chart suggests. Then prices come down and eventually they end up slightly
below where they started in 1988.

This is nothing but a continuation of a trend that has
been present in human history for hundreds of years. It shows that society is
able to push the boundaries of scarcity with technological progress. Think of
how many calories per day the average American was able to purchase in 1800, in
1900, and how that has improved until 1950. It is a good thing that the average
American no longer has to spend half of his daily income for food as it was in
the past. Does it make sense to be afraid that expectations of declining food
prices will lead to lower aggregate demand because people will push the
purchase of food to a future date? Of course not. Is it a problem when the
average American has to spend a larger share of his disposable income for food?
It certainly is. The price of a BigMac has increased by 101% in dollar terms since
1988. In comparison, the median household income has only increased by 97%. It
might not look like much, but this runs completely contrary to the upward trend
in prosperity consumers enjoyed over the previous 200 years, during most of
which the US dollar was pegged to gold (or silver).

 

Even as the price
for a BigMac has risen faster than median household income, the price for a
BigMac measured in gold is now slightly below the price in 1988
 

Source: The Economist BigMac Index, Bloomberg, GoldMoney

 

Falling
prices (ie deflation) are the boogeyman of today’s mainstream economic
doctrines. The conventional wisdom is that it was deflation that pushed the US
economy from a normal recession into the great depression in the early 1930s.
If consumers expect the price for a good to be lower in the future, so the
argument goes, they will delay the purchase, which in turn will lower aggregate
demand, deepen the recession and possibly turn in into a prolonged depression.
Hence, price deflation has to be avoided at all costs. While this might make
some sense, consumers don’t always behave the way economist believe they
should. Take the iPhone for example. One can be sure that a year from now there
is a new model, and the current model will sell for half the price. Yet people
can’t seem to get enough of the newest one. Indeed, falling prices for
computers and most electronic goods have been the norm for years and yet sales
continue to rise.

Fact
is, falling prices are for most people a good thing. After decades of
stagnating real wage growth, lower prices are welcomed by the majority of US
consumers. And despite the claims of mainstream economists that there is strong
link between deflation and depression, historical data seems to prove
otherwise. In a
2004 research report for the National Bureau of Economics, UCLA’s Andrew
Atkeson and Patrick Kehoe from the Research Department of the Federal Reserve
Bank of Minneapolis analyzed economic data over a period of more than 100 years
for 17 countries and found that “the only
episode in which we find evidence of a link between deflation and depression is
the Great Depression (1929—34). But in the rest of the data for 17 countries
and more than 100 years, there is virtually no evidence of such a link
.” It
seems deflation doesn’t automatically lead to a recession or even a depression,
and even in regards to the great depression, Austrian School economists would
argue that Keynesian economists confuse cause and effect, that deflation was primarily
the result of the recession, rather than the other way round.

O’Brien
also brings up housing as an important part of the costs for a middle class
family and we are happy to cover that as well. Housing differs from a consumer
good in the sense that you don’t buy a house every day. You start saving for a
house and save over a very long time period until you have saved enough to make
the purchase, or at least the down payment. Hence volatility in prices
month-to-month are less of a concern. What really matters is how long you have
to save to buy the house (or pay it off if you finance it). Inflation is a real
problem however. If you put USD1,000 aside and 20 years later the purchasing
power of that USD1,000 is cut in half, it will become a Sisyphean task to save
enough money to buy a house.

Imagine
a young worker had just entered the workforce in 1988. His dream is to buy a
house one day. For that he puts USD250 aside at the end of every month. He
thinks he can get a mortgage and the bank will lend him 50% of the value of the
house when the time comes. He has now two choices: he can save in US dollars,
or he can save in gold. The below chart shows how long he has to save to
achieve his goal. If the had decided to make his savings in gold in 1988, it
would have taken him a bit under 20 years to accumulate enough wealth. But had
he decided to save in US dollars, house prices would have risen too fast for
him to ever reach his goal. By 2007 (the time he was able to buy the house was
he smart enough to save in gold), property prices had risen 102% in US dollar
terms according to data from the US census bureau. That means the first USD250
he saved in 1988 had lost 50% of its purchasing power. In contrast, the average
house in 1988 cost about 10kg of gold and by the time our house buyer was able
to afford the house in 2007, it had risen to only 10.6kg. Hence the first gram
he put aside in 1988 still bought him roughly the same amount of house.

Now
these calculation above ignore bank interest and you will argue that he would
have been stupid to save his dollars by storing them under his mattress. Surely
the interest earned from his money would have been enough to offset the loss in
purchasing power? Think again. We used the 12 month deposit rate and even
though in theory there was a brief moment where he actually would have been
able to purchase the house, it would have been a bold move right into the
crashing housing market, and it was probably not that easy to get a mortgage at
the time.

 

As house prices rise fast,
saving for a home becomes a Sisyphean task. Saving in gold has proven to be
much more efficient

Source:
US Census Bureau, Bloomberg, GoldMoney

 

The
Gold Standard as it existed prior to 1971 certainly had its flaws. But nothing
of what Matt O’Brien wants to make us believe is one of them. The main flaw in
the gold “standard” to which O’Brien and the ”ideologically diverse
panel of economists” refer was that it was fractionalized via a central bank
rather than being fully-reserved. People must remember that even though gold as
base money is superior to fiat, the gold standard of the 1920’s was still
flawed as the gold was held as base money by the Central Bank and the
Commercial Banks were able to extend or fractionalize that base money as
commercially circulating money at a factor of 6-8 times. Therefore, instead of
actually owning and using gold, citizens owned a fraction of a base of gold
depending on the ebbs and flow, booms and busts in the economy and business
cycle. As we know, a particularly large bust took place in 1929-1932 and the US
banking system, being only fractionally reserved, became subject to a bank run
and many banks thus failed.

Before
the central bank model was introduced in the US in 1914, the commercial banks
themselves were also generally only fractionally-reserved. That was a recipe
for occasional financial instability, known at the time as “Panics”. That
stands in sharp contrast to the gold standard we promote at GoldMoney Inc.: one
that is fully reserved and decentralized as there is no central controlling
entity extending or contracting credit against the gold. Rather, in our gold
standard framework, decentralized actors such as ourselves would use their
fully reserved gold to engage in commerce, trade, and productive activities. Extending
credit would be left to other institutions inclined to take such risk and, of
course, subject themselves to the risk of default or failure. But under this
framework the failure of credit institutions would not threaten the broader
financial system, the money itself—gold—or the economy more generally. There
would be no such thing as “Too Big To Fail”, as it were.

Together
with our sister company BitGold, we allow everybody to own physical gold stored
under their own name and use it for transactions, down to 0.03cts. It’s our
customers’ gold. It’s not a promise of future delivery, ownership in an obscure
financial vehicle that owns gold or some sort of token that represents gold.
It’s your gold, which nobody can encumber or debase.

The
gold standard was an effective way to combine the proven superiority of gold as
base money with the utility of paper currency for transactions (e.g. small
denominations, ease of exchange, efficiency etc.). To transact in actual gold
coin, especially for smaller transactions, was simply not practical at the
time. But technology now enables us to overcome all of that and to use gold not
only as a monetary reserve for circulating currency but as actual,
transactional money. In 2016, gold is now as easy and efficient to use for
transactions as the dollar or other major currencies are. In fact, it is
actually more efficient: In what
other currency can you transfer one dollar of value within seconds from any
point on the planet to another with no costs occurring or no need to create or
extend credit?

The
technology now exists to save, transfer, remit, redeem and otherwise conduct
one’s personal business and financial activities in gold. Hence, whether
governments decide to go back to a formal gold standard or not someday, people already
have the choice. So what do you say Mr O’Brien? Why not join our 800,000+ and rapidly
growing gold client base, now spread over 100 countries? Something tells us
that they are substantially more “ideologically diverse” than that panel of
“experts” who are telling them that they are wrong.


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1PKYmZ8 Gold Money

Gas Pipeline Uses 160 Eminent Domain Suits To Get Property In 3 States

Submitted by Irina Slav via OilPrice.com,

Eminent domain is a tough pill to swallow for Americans who take their property rights very seriously, and the aggressive moves by Sabal Trail to seize property for a natural gas pipeline running through three southern states is turning into a drama of immense proportions.

Sabal Trail, the joint venture planning to build a 500-mile natural gas pipeline through Georgia, Alabama, and Florida, has gone to court in order to secure the right of way through the land where the pipeline should pass.

So far, Sabal Trail has filed 160 eminent domain suits and more are expected, according to a report by the Orlando Sentinel. The company is desperately trying to get the right of way through 346 more properties, though it says it has already secured the agreement of 1,248 landowners in the area along the route.

But it’s doubtful that any of these will be allowed by the respective courts to reach the stage of contestation and litigation due to the stated regional importance of the pipeline project.

Florida satisfies almost two-thirds of its power needs with natural gas. Coal is a distant second at around 22 percent, making gas the major source of power for the state. The numbers are not as high for Georgia and Alabama, but natural gas is a significant component of the energy source mix there as well.

Sabal Trail, which is owned by Spectra Energy Corp (NYSE: SE) and NextEra Energy (NYSE: NEE), will carry one billion cubic feet of gas daily once it starts operating at full capacity, and will supply it to regional utilities Florida Power and Light, Duke Energy, and Spectra. Construction works are slated to begin in late June, and the pipeline should be operational in May 2017.

The pipeline project, however, is facing serious opposition, which focuses on environmental and health concerns.

Local government officials in Georgia earlier this month said Sabal Trail operators were using the eminent domain suits to threaten stakeholders into granting the right of way for the pipeline and, worse, relinquishing any responsibility for damages to the pipeline that could pose environmental and health risks. The state’s representatives last week rejected a resolution that would have granted Sabal Trail easement through the problematic properties.

There are those who believe that any opposition will be crushed, because the project is so important it cannot be stopped.

As for those who disagree, the news that Kinder Morgan has suspended the construction of the Palmetto pipeline because of strong local opposition is somewhat reaffirming. Palmetto would have carried crude oil from South Carolina to Florida, but the Georgia legislature passed a moratorium on new oil pipeline construction in the state.

There are a lot of groups fighting the construction of the pipeline, and the Sabal Trail is likely to have a tough time getting the necessary right of way.

While it argues that the project will not only be safe but also economically beneficial for the three states, opponents counter with the danger of sinkholes and gas leaks, and question the economic benefits of the project. They also argue that solar power is a better alternative to gas.

While Kinder Morgan has thrown in the towel, Sabal Trail seems determined to hold fast, despite what is working out to be a situation in three states that suggests American landowners feel the balance between their rights to property, and big business may be shifting in the latter’s favor too far and too fast.


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/22W5G0R Tyler Durden