Job Openings Back To All Time Highs: Yellen’s “Favorite Labor Indicator” Says Its Time To Hike

When last Friday’s disappointing payrolls report hit, which saw just 160K jobs added in April, stocks initially tumbled only to surge as the case of a June rate hike was quickly taken off the table. Not only that, but according to Fed Fund futures as of this moment, the Fed won’t hike until some time in early 2017. However, one look at the latest JOLTS data, admittedly Janet Yellen’s favorite jobs indicator, paints a very different picture.

According to the BLS, in March (there is a one time lag between JOLTS and the payrolls report), the number of job openings soared by 312K, and is now effectively at its all time high level of 5.8 million jobs. If this number is accurate (with the BLS that is a big if after we caught the BLS manipulating JOLTS data back in 2013), it means that the Fed should be hiking essentially… now.

 

Also confirming that the payrolls data does not capture the underlying euphoria in the jobs market was the quits level, or as Nick Colas calls it the “take this job and shove it” indicator, as it suggests confidence in the job market when people are quitting instead of being laid off/discharged. In April this series also rose by 25K to 3 million, also in line with the highest print since the financial crisis.

 

There was just one fly in the ointment: the total number of hires dropped by 218,000 in March, offset however by a 114K drop in separations. This was the second biggest drop in hiring since 2013, excluding only the surprising 276K drop record in January, which however was offset by a 385K hiring surge, mostly in retail workers, in February.

 

But the most interesting observation was that the total number of hires have finally caught up with where the 12 month cumulative change in jobs suggests they should be. The last time this happened, payrolls – and hires – promptly reversed. Will this happen again?

And if not, just what excuses will the Fed come up with this time to keep delaying its rate hike – after all, even the Fed’s Beige Book recently admitted that the FOMC is content with the pace of wage growth. Unless, of course, it was always “one and done” from the beginning…

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New Quinnipiac Survey – Trump and Clinton Tied in Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania

A Clinton match-up is highly likely to be an unmitigated electoral disaster, whereas a Sanders candidacy stands a far better chance. Every one of Clinton’s (considerable) weaknesses plays to every one of Trump’s strengths, whereas every one of Trump’s (few) weaknesses plays to every one of Sanders’s strengths. From a purely pragmatic standpoint, running Clinton against Trump is a disastrous, suicidal proposition.

– From February’s post: Why Hillary Clinton Cannot Beat Donald Trump

The latest Quinnipiac University Survey on the 2016 U.S. Presidential election is absolutely fascinating, and presents some very bad news for team Clinton, as well as all the clueless pundits who say Trump can’t win.

The major takeaway is that Trump and Clinton are locked in a total dead heat in the three key swing states of Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania. This is remarkable considering all the heinous things Trump said on his way to the GOP nomination, and the fact that he’s barely started to “sell” himself to the general electorate, which is his primary skill in life.

Several things we already knew were confirmed by the survey, such as the fact that Clinton dominates Trump when it comes to women and minorities. Trump likewise dominates when it comes to white men. The only interesting aspect is how huge the spreads are within these categories.

The truly fascinating takeaway from the survey is in the details. The key categories Clinton needs to do well in (the youth and independents) are areas in which she struggles mightily in these swing states. In contrast, Bernie Sanders dominates Trump in those two categories, proving once again that he’s by far the stronger general election candidate.

Here’s some of what we learned from Quinnipiac:

continue reading

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Germany Blinks Under IMF Pressure: Breakthrough Agreement To Do Nothing

Submitted by Mike Shedlock via MishTalk.com,

In the wake of an IMF threat to back out of the Troika deal with Greece, Germany blinked under the IMF pressure.

Well, sort of.

The result was not quite the debt relief the IMF wanted, but it was more than Germany was prepared to offer yesterday.

Please consider Berlin Opens Way to Greek Debt Relief Talks.

Germany eased its objections to debt relief talks for Greece on Monday as eurozone finance ministers sought to narrow their significant differences with the International Monetary Fund over Athens’ €86bn bailout.

 

With Greece facing €3.5bn in debt payments in July that it will be unable to meet without support, eurozone ministers said they were ready for a political push to break a stalemate between creditors over austerity measures and Athens’ debt burden.

 

The political space for a deal was opened on Monday by the readiness of Wolfgang Schäuble, Germany’s finance minister, to explore ways to ease Greek debt repayments. He had, until then, strongly resisted such talks as unnecessary, putting IMF participation in the programme in doubt.

 

Ministers said they would seek an agreement at a meeting on May 24. The package would require Greece to prepare “contingent” budget cutting measures to be enacted if its public finances failed to sufficiently improve, as well as parallel commitments from eurozone nations to deliver on promises of debt relief, covering the short, medium and long term. [Mish Comment: the noose around Greece tightens further]

 

The talks framed the discussion around options, such as interest payment holidays or extensions of debt maturities, while deferring the hard political battle over what is actually needed. [Mish Comment: They agreed to kick the can, nothing more.]

 

“Today was about opening the debate, exploring options and giving political guidance to the technical people,” said Jeroen Dijsselbloem, Dutch finance minister and chair of the eurogroup of finance ministers. [Mish Comment: They have been debating this for years.]

 

This may not go far enough to satisfy the IMF, whose managing director, Christine Lagarde, reiterated in a letter to EU ministers last week that Greece’s budgetary targets were unrealistic and that any effort to meet them should be based around deep economic reform rather than arbitrary, and potentially damaging, cuts.

[Mish Comment: The targets are still absurd.]

 

Some creditors may demand, however, more detailed commitments from Athens on what exactly would be triggered. [Mish Comment: the noose around Greece tightens further]

 

Governments have firmly and repeatedly rejected any formal writedown of their holdings of Greek debt, leaving them to look at other options, such as longer grace periods and extended payment timescales.

 

An ESM paper, seen by the FT, outlines a range of options including 5-year maturity extensions, capping annual loan repayments at 1 per cent of gross domestic product until 2050 and capping interest rates at 2 per cent. One more radical move mentioned is to buy out the IMF with cheaper and more long-term ESM loans.

 

Mr Tsakalotos said the discussion, while very broad at this stage, was a breakthrough: “It’s a great relief that we’ve had this debate on debt,” he said. “We are working on a situation where Greece can at last turn the corner.”

 

EU officials have made clear they do not want messy negotiations to clutter the run-up to the UK’s Brexit referendum on June 23 — meaning if no agreement is reached this month, discussions will not resume until shortly before a possible Greek default.

What a Joke!

  • The EU cannot tackle this issue out of fear of Brexit.
  • The EU agreed to do something, without saying what that means.
  • The EU is tired of IMF interference and wants to buy the IMF out.

The idea that noose tightening will allow Greece to “turn the corner” is the biggest joke of all.

It’s truly a sad state of affairs when the IMF makes more sense than anyone else in the picture.

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Wholesale Inventories-Sales Ratio Holds Near Record Highs As Automakers Suffer

While wholesale sales rose modestly MoM, the continued stagnation in wholesale inventories (lowest since 2010) bodes poorly for Q2 GDP. At 1.36x, the wholesale inventories-to-sales remains near record highs, but Automotive inventories to sales soared to cycle highs at 1.83x (as Auto sales dropped 0.7% MoM but inventories rose 1.0% MoM).

The gap remains wide…

 

Leaving inventories-to-sales near record highs…

 

As Automotive inventories continue to build as sales collapse…

 

Either sales must massively surge or inventory destocking (and thus recession-creating production cuts) begins soon.

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LendingClubbing Continues As Sellside Throws Up All Over Former Peer 2 Peer Darling

Until yesterday, Peer2Peer leader LendingClub was the darling of the sellside industry, with 12 buys, 7 holds and just 2 sells.

 

And as is usual on Wall Street, what a different 1 day makes because just hours after a major internal scandal was revealed that saw the CEO getting kicked out, and potentially implicating none other than LC board member John Mack, this morning it has been a relentless barage of negative notes from all those who until recently loved the stock.

Some examples, first from CRT which just cut LC to sell with a $5 price target…

 

… from Stifel, which cut the company from a Buy ($22 target), to Hold…

 

… and finally from William Blair, which just gave up on the company and suspended coverage.

 

However as CRT notes, the biggest risk to the company is not the internal scandal that was revealed yesterday, but something we have cautioned on since last year, namely that P2P lending is fast becoming the new “subprime” industry, in which lender rushed to hand out loans with little concern about the fundamentals. Well, those fundamentals are about to come back with a vengeance. To wit:

The primary risk facing this company is the robustness and growth potential of its funding base or market place model and the underlying performance of its installment loans. On a short-term basis, the shares will trade up and down on incremental news items tied to guidance, ongoing loan performance, and monthly fundings.

As a result, LendingClub just tumbled to fresh 52 weeks lows, trading just above $4/share.

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Forget Tightening… the Fed WANTS Inflation

Remember how the Fed claimed it was embarking on a tightening cycle?

Well, the Fed failed to hike interest rates in January, March AND April despite the “data” hitting levels at which the Fed said it would hike. There is now talk of a potential hike in June… but the Fed futures indicate less than half of traders expect another hike before February 2017.

All talk of a tightening cycle was just another “point” in the narrative of recovery. The fact is that there has been no significant recovery for the US economy. Sure things look great if you ignore glaringly horrific data points like the employment/ population ratio, and other unmassaged data points.

The reality is that since 2012, the US economy has flat-lined.

And this is despite the Federal Reserve pumping TRILLIONS of Dollars and maintaining ZIRP.

Meanwhile, the US’s Debt to GDP ratio has risen over 100%. The US, for all intensive purposes, is beginning to look like some of the bankrupt EU nations that required bailouts.

There are only two ways to deal with this:

1)   Inflation

2)   Restructuring

In the last few months, several Fed officials, most notably Fed Vice-Chair Stanley Fischer stated not only that inflation was appearing in the US but that this is something the Fed “would like to happen.”

In separate prepared remarks in Washington, neither Fed Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer nor Gov. Lael Brainard made direct reference to next week’s meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee. But Brainard argued for patience in rate increases amid possible risks that inflation and U.S. economic activity will fall.

“Tighter financial conditions and softer inflation expectations may pose risks to the downside for inflation and domestic activity. From a risk management perspective, this argues for patience as the outlook becomes clearer,” Brainard said.

Source: CNBC

AND…

Inflation is showing signs it could accelerate in the United States, a top Federal Reserve policymaker said in comments that back the view that the central bank will hike interest rates again this year.

“We may well at present be seeing the first stirrings of an increase in the inflation rate,” Fed Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer said on Monday in prepared remarks, adding that faster inflation was “something that we would like to happen.”

Source: Reuters

Now consider the latest from Chicago Fed President Charles Evans:

A top Federal Reserve official said Monday that the U.S. central bank should consider allowing inflation to temporarily rise above its 2% annual target…

 “Overshooting a little bit just to make sure you get to 2% strikes me as quite sensible,” Mr. Evans said during a panel discussion at CityWeek, a London financial-services conference.

He argued that a prolonged spell of too-low inflation carries greater risks and a brief overshoot may help anchor expectations of future inflation close to the Fed’s 2% goal.

Source: WSJ

The greater risk of low inflation is DEBT DEFLATION or the bond bubble bursting. As we noted before, the US sports a Debt to GDP ration of over 100%. Debt Servicing is already one of the largest expenses for the US budget at a time when rates are effectively at ZERO.

The Fed is opting for inflation. It is willfully letting the inflation genie is out of the bottle. Core inflation is already moving higher at a time when prices of most basic goods are at 19-year lows. Any move higher in Oil and other commodities will only PUSH core inflation higher.

The Fed is cornered. Inflation is back. And Gold and Gold-related investments will be exploding higher in the coming weeks.

We just published a Special Investment Report concerning a secret back-door play on Gold that gives you access to 25 million ounces of Gold that the market is currently valuing at just $273 per ounce.

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Best Regards

Graham Summers

Chief Market Strategist

Phoenix Capital Research

 

 

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Trump’s Right – Paying Back The National Debt With “Discounts” Is Already Official Policy

Submitted by David Stockman via Contra Corner blog,

Donald Trump says a lot of whacko things, and his recent wild pitches about defaulting on the national debt and replacing Yellen because she is not a Republican sound as if they were coming right out of his wild man wheelhouse. Certainly these statements have gotten mainstream financial journalists and editorial writers in high dudgeon.

Said the NYT editorial page about Trump’s observation that if things got bad enough he’d seek to negotiate “discounts” on Uncle Sam’s towering debt,

Such remarks by a major presidential candidate have no modern precedent. The United States government is able to borrow money at very low interest rates because Treasury securities are regarded as a safe investment, and any cracks in investor confidence have a long history of costing American taxpayers a lot of money.

Well, now. These “very low rates” could not have anything to do with the fact that the Fed has vacuumed-up $3.5 trillion of Treasury debt and its close substitute in GSE securities since September 2008. Apparently, the law of supply and demand has been suspended until further notice—-except for the fact that when Bernanke even hinted that the Fed might sell-down some of its grossly bloated balance sheet in April 2013 treasury yields erupted higher in the infamous taper tantrum.

The fact is, ultra low rates on Uncle Sam’s mountainous debt have everything to do with central bank manipulation of interest rates; and “confidence” in Washington’s fiscal rectitude is but an empty platitude.

There has been a central bank Big Fat Thumb on the scales for nearly two decades, and it now includes the $1.7 trillion of treasury debt owned by the People’s Bank of China (including its off-shore accounts), the $1.2 trillion owned by the BOJ and the nearly $7 trillion owned by central banks and their affiliates as a whole.

That’s right. The world’s central banks own more than 50% of the publicly traded US debt of $13.5 trillion, and not one single penny of it was purchased with real savings or anything which remotely resembles honest money. It was all scooped-up when central banks hit the “buy” key on their digital printing presses.

In short, the “very low yield” on US Treasury debt is the product of a giant monetary fraud, not a testament to the strength and safety of Washington’s credit. And it most certainly has nothing whatsoever to do with investor “confidence” in Washington’s integrity.

Just the opposite. The Wall Street traders are all-in on the scam. The marginal bond price is “discovered”, in fact, when fast money traders buy the stuff on 95% repo leverage while front-running the central banks.

So Donald Trump’s wild pitch in this instance can’t hold a candle to the truly scandalous arrangement under which Uncle Sam’s debt is actually priced. Even the treasury debt in commercial bank vaults is mainly there because regulatory authorities permit the fiction that it is risk free and therefore require zero capital backing.

Still, that didn’t stop the Washington Post from harrumphing even more self-righteously than the NYT. By its lights, Trump’s purported cave man views threated financial civilization itself:

If these phrases mean anything, they contemplate at least partial repudiation of the U.S. government’s obligations, sacrosanct since the time of the founding. The “full faith and credit” of the United States, established over centuries and embodied in its debt, is the glue that holds global finances together. The minute the United States tried to reduce its debt load by offering creditors less than 100 percent of principal and interest — i.e., by “discount,” or “making a deal,” like Argentina or Greece — every institution that had taken this country at its word would be instantly destabilized.What the Post was all lathered up about is the official policy

Here’s the thing. What the Post was all lathered up about is the official policy of the United States—–and one that is actually pursued with a punctilious vengeance. According to Janet Yellen and her entire posse of camp followers in the Eccles Building and on Wall Street, the Fed must move heaven and earth to boost the inflation rate to 2% annually.

Not only that, it must use the shortest measuring stick possible (the PCE deflator less food and energy) to track its progress and keep the printing presses running white hot to insure it stays there. That is, it must deliver 2% inflation at all hazards, world without end.

Then again, isn’t that the very skunk in the woodpile? After all, under a scenario of 2% inflation year-in-and-year-out, a 30-year US treasury bond will be worth exactly 54.5 cents on the dollar at maturity. The Donald could only imagine a discount of that depth.

Yes, the savvy insiders argue its 2% uber alles. That is, everything goes along for the inflationary ride—–prices, wages, profits, rents, indexed social benefits and the works. Except it doesn’t work that way in the slightest. Just like the Donald says, debtors get relieved and savers get creamed.

The deliberate national policy of 2% inflation is the most capricious form of economic injustice imaginable. Not even its perpetrators have a clue as to the utterly random incidence by which it impacts economic agents over time and the resulting windfall gains and losses in wealth which flow therefrom.

And that’s not the half of it. The Fed’s deliberate 2% inflation policy not only results in the arbitrary seizure of deep discounts on the public debt by the government, but also an immense dissipation of economic resources by the private sector. That is, all kinds of racketeers are enabled to make a handsome living peddling information and services which would never be needed under a regime of sound money.

Economists who work the “fed watch” beat are a prime example. If the Fed had stuck to the original passive rediscounting mission conferred on it by Carter Glass in 1913, there would be no open market operations and the Fed would not be stuffing its balance sheet with trillions of public debt, thereby drastically falsifying its price.

And that means that racketeers like the so-called economist quoted below would be as rare as white buffaloes. Lou Crandall thus declaimed in tones of righteous disdain:

“No one on the other side would pick up the phone if the secretary of the U.S. Treasury tried to make that call,” said Lou Crandall, chief economist at Wrightson ICAP. “Why should they? They have a contract” requiring payment in full.

Right!

The do have a contract—-and it’s to have 45% of their investment seized every 30 years by the central bank. And they even get to pay court jesters like Crandall to watch the central bank’s machinations as their wealth steadily erodes.

This is why Trump’s politically incorrect bluster is such a refreshing tonic. It exposes the entire tissue of fraud, corruption and willful deceit that underlies the Washington/Wall Street status quo.

None of his loudly remonstrating bettors, for example, even bothered to mention the context in which he mentioned the possibility of default in the form of negotiated discounts on the public debt. Namely, what happens, the GOP nominee inquired, if interest rates rise by “2, 3 or 4%”?

That is a perfectly valid question and one that is studiously avoided by the Keynesian Cool-Aid drinkers who pass for economists and fiscal experts. The truth is, interest rates must return to something like our current 2.3% core CPI inflation plus a 2% margin for risk, return and taxes or the entire monetary system will someday blow sky high.

Yet ten years from now the public debt will be $33 trillion at minimum—-unless you really believe that the central banks have abolished the business cycle and that the word “recession” will disappear from the face of the earth.

But then again, an average 4.5% carry cost on the prospective Federal debt would amount to $1.5 trillion of interest charges annually or 6X the $253 billion the CBO currently projects for net interest in 2016.

Can you say with the Donald, “debt discount”?

In fact, let us point out that the scam built into the phony $253 billion net interest figure for this year leaves Trump’s alleged voodoo economics far behind. To wit, in the most recent year, the Fed earned upwards of $120 billion from its $4.5 trillion trove of Treasury and GSE debt, but paid virtually nothing for its $4.5 trillion of liabilities because, alas, they were conjured from thin air.

So after paying the banks their IOER (interest on excess reserves) bribe of about $12 billion and the salaries of several thousand economists and other apparatchiks of dubious value, it remitted its “profit” of more than $100 billion to the US Treasury as an off-set to its interest expense.

Now, that’s voodoo economics, if there ever was such a thing. The Treasury might as well have issued non-interest bearing “greenbacks” in the first place and have been done with it. Today’s circular arrangement is just crank economics by another route.

Indeed, the Capitol Hill guardians of fiscal virtue being implicitly heralded by the Trump bashers have discovered that the Fed’s phony baloney profits are the gift that never stops giving.

After a two-year stalemate on the matter of the bankrupt highway trust fund, for example, these practitioners of “fiscal responsibility” dipped into allegedly excess system “profits” at the Fed to cover the gap.That is, between $25 billion and $70 billion of phantom profits from the Fed’s balance sheet, depending upon how you do the phony accounting, were pumped into the highway trust fund because these incompetent cowards could not see fit to cut out the massive waste which goes into mass transit, bicycle paths and the repaving of little used state roads, on the one hand, or raise the gasoline tax, which hasn’t been adjusted for inflation since 1993, on the other.

So “confidence” is being threatened because Donald Trump has told the truth that the Federal debt is on a track toward unmanageability and default while Washington plays games like this?

Moreover, the highway trust fund caper was only small beans. During the last several years, the reported Federal deficit has been reduced by upwards of $250 billion owing to another scheme of phony “profits” repatriation. Namely, Fanne Mae and Freddie Mac have generated giant profits under an accounting scheme that is a complete circular fraud, and then sent them back to the US Treasury.

These GSEs are effectively “renting” Uncle Sam’s credit rating in order to be in the multi-trillion mortgage guarantee and warehousing business without paying any meaningful rent for the long-term risks they are incurring. Stated differently, Washington is parking the risks off budget and booking the profits in its current accounts.

And that gets us to the loud screeching about the sacred independence of the Fed elicited by Trump’s welcome statement that he wouldn’t reappoint Yellen. Whether that is because she is not a Republican or because she is utterly incompetent as an economist doesn’t matter. The Fed is part and parcel of the state and its massive intrusion in private capitalism; the notion that it is “independent” is a just plain bad joke.

Yes, Uncle Sam’s credit standing is in deep trouble and the Fed is heading for a monetary calamity.

But these untoward prospects have nothing to do with a couple of alleged wild pitches from Donald Trump. Upon closer examination, it is evident that the Donald was actually right on the money.

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“The Longest Uninterrupted Selling Streak In History”- ‘Smart Money’ Sells For Record 15 Consecutive Weeks

Exactly one week ago, when looking at the record 14 consecutive weeks of selling by the “smart money” clients of BofA, i.e., hedge funds, institutions and private clients, we said that “maybe next week, which would mark a historic 15 weeks of consecutive smart money outflows, is when the tide finally turns, assuming the market slides here. Or perhaps, due to accelerating redemptions, it won’t, and the ongoing selling deluge will continue indefinitely. Find out one week from now.”

Overnight BofA revealed the answer, and as it turns out, it was the latter:

Last week, during which the S&P 500 fell 0.4%, BofAML clients were net sellers of US stocks for the 15th week, in the amount of $1.3bn. This has been the longest uninterrupted selling streak in our data history (since ’08)—previously the longest streak (in late ’10) was 12 weeks.

 

BofA breaks down the selling as follows: “net sales continue to be led by institutional clients, while hedge funds and private clients also remain sellers. Clients sold stocks in all three size segments last week. Corporate buybacks picked up last week, though are tracking below last year’s 2Q-to-date levels.”

 

Unexpectedly, this week we also saw the traditionally bullish, long-only pension funds join the selling fray:

Some further details:

Clients sold stocks in seven sectors plus ETFs last week. The biggest sales were of Industrials and Materials (third-largest and second-largest in our data history, respectively), after Industrials had seen positive flows and solid earnings results the week prior. Only Tech, Discretionary and Telecom stocks saw net buying, with flows into Discretionary the largest in eight months and Tech inflows their largest since Sept. Health Care continues to have the longest selling streak (ten weeks); this sector has been hurt by a positioning unwind and political uncertainty in an election year. No sector has seen more than two weeks of buying. Year-to-date, only Telecom stocks have seen cumulative inflows, and Utilities have seen the smallest net sales—with both of these sectors helped by the fall in interest rates and a push-out in the expected timing of the first Fed rate hike.

Breaking down the rolling 4-week data by client type:

  • Hedge funds have been net sellers on a 4-week average basis since early Feb.
  • Institutional clients have been net sellers on a 4-week average basis since early Feb.
  • Private clients have been net sellers of US stocks on a 4-week average basis since early January.
  • The four-week average trend for buybacks by corporate clients suggests a seasonal slow-down in S&P 500 buybacks in 1Q (Chart 24).

 

Looking at the four-week average trends by sector, BofA finds that there has been zero net buying, and notes:

  • Net selling: Tech since late Jan.; Staples since early Feb.; Industrials since mid-Feb.; Energy and Financials since late Feb; Materials and Health Care since mid-March; Consumer Discretionary since late March, Utilities since early April.
  • Notable changes in trends: ETFs saw a reversal to net selling after net buying since early April; Telecom saw a reversal to net buying after net sales since mid- March.

 

Finally, now that quiet period is over, BofA confirms that corporate buybacks picked up last week, though are tracking below last year’s 2Q-to-date levels.

 

At this point is has become moot to ask when the smart money buying will resume, and likewise just who, aside from corporations buying back their own stocks, is actually buying. As we reported last week, last week saw the biggest fund outflow since September 2015…

 

… suggesting it certainly is not retail that is rushing back into stocks.

In the meantime, the only thing preventing even more smart money selling is that the broader market is not even lower, leading to even more redemptions and liquidations. That may soon change is Carl Icahn, and his record -150% net short position in the market turns out to be right.

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A.M. Links: Trump vs. Clinton vs. Sanders, Facebook Denies Suppressing Conservative News, Obama Plans to Visit Hiroshima

  • Voters head to the polls today for presidential primaries in West Virginia and Nebraska.
  • According to a new poll, “former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump are running neck and neck in the key presidential Swing States of Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania, but Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont runs stronger against the likely Republican nominee.”
  • President Obama plans to visit Hiroshima later this month. It will be the first time that a U.S. president has visited the site of the atomic bombing.
  • Facebook is denying reports that it suppressed conservative news.
  • “The State Department has lost all archived copies of the emails sent to and from the man believed to have set up and maintained Hillary Clinton’s private email server during the four years she served as secretary, it said on Monday.”

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In Latest Shocking Twist, Brazil Impeachment Back On Track After Lawmaker Revokes His Own Annulment Call

Another day, another stunning reversal in Brazil’s neverending Rousseff impeachment saga.

Just hours after Brazilian stocks and currency tumbled when the head of Brazil’s lower house Waldir Maranhao said he would annul the soon to be former president’s impeachment process, the drive to oust President Dilma Rousseff is once again back on track after Maranhao reversed a decision that had earlier threatened to throw the entire impeachment process into chaos.

As Bloomberg reports, lawmaker Waldir Maranhao released a statement in the dead of night revoking his own call to annul impeachment sessions in the lower house. Reuters adds that in his official statement to the Senate, Maranhao did not cite any reason for backtracking on his surprise announcement on Monday to annul last month’s lower house vote to recommend the Senate try Rousseff for breaking budgetary laws although one can assume that it carried a substantial price tag.

Rousseff’s allies spent most of Monday trying to capitalize on the lower house leader’s call to annul last month’s impeachment vote in the lower house. Attorney General Jose Eduardo Cardozo said the administration could file an appeal with the Supreme Court by arguing that Maranhao was right in trying to halt the process. Earlier, Maranhao argued that lower house deputies shouldn’t have announced their intention ahead of the April 17 vote to send the motion on to the Senate.

Then, Maranhao reversed that call.

“I revoke my decision issued May 9, 2016, in which the lower house sessions were annulled,” Maranhao was cited as saying in a statement released by his office. He did not elaborate.

Senate President Renan Calheiros on Monday said Maranhao was “playing with democracy” and that the Senate would press ahead with a Wednesday vote on whether to suspend Rousseff for up to six months pending a trial.

The reversal to the reversal puts the Senate back in the spotlight, with a vote on whether to put the unpopular president on trial still slated for Wednesday. If successful, it would temporarily remove her from office.

As we reported yesterday, the shocking twist jolted investors and underscored the intensity of a power struggle that is sure to heat up even further in coming days. Since proceedings began in Congress late last year, legislators have engaged in shoving matches over procedural debates and Rousseff has accused her vice president of plotting a coup against her. The Supreme Court has also been forced to step in on several occasions to clarify legal questions and further involvement by the highest court can’t be ruled out.

Meanwhile the social mood is turning uglier by the second: TV footage showed anti-impeachment protesters burning tires to stop the traffic in some of Sao Paulo’s main roads, including that leading to the international airport. At the same time, government supporters have scheduled more protests for the next few days.

“Even the best laws aren’t good enough for the scale of this battle,” said Carlos Pio, a professor of politics at the University of Brasilia. “The impeachment process will continue and with it the noise, challenges and uncertainty that we’ve been seeing.”

For now, however, all those who were stopped out of their Brazilian exposure are back and bullish once again, perfectly oblivious of Brazil’s depressionary fundamentals. Trading in Europe signaled Brazilian markets were poised to rebound. The Lyxor ETF Brazil, an exchange-traded fund, rose more than 3 percent in Paris. Brazil’s Ibovespa index of stocks slipped 1.4 percent Monday, trimming gains that have made it the second best-performing stock market in the world this year.

Bloomberg adds that some questioned the motives of Maranhao, a little-known politician from the country’s northeast who himself is under investigation for corruption. The president seemed taken aback by his announcement and urged caution during a speech earlier in the day. She was likely taken even more aback by his abrupt U-turn.

And now that attention shifts to the next impeachment step, all eyes will be on the Brazilian senate where the vote is expected to pass. Senate President Renan Calheiros said the impeachment vote could occur after 7 p.m. local time on Wednesday. Legislators from the opposition cheered while supporters of the government stood up and shouted at the senator in protest.

Here is a brief recap from Bloomberg on how the senate impeachment process works

  • With a tally of 15 against 5, a Senate committee backed a report saying there is enough evidence to try Rousseff
  • Senate will vote on report and needs simple majority of 41 votes to start official impeachment hearings
  • If they win, Rousseff will temporarily step aside and Vice President Michel Temer takes over
  • Her mandate will be terminated if the opposition win a subsequent vote by a two thirds majority

via http://ift.tt/1WltQh5 Tyler Durden