Options Traders Confidence Collapses Most Since August Crash

The realized (actual) volatility of the US equity market has plunged in recent weeks to its lowest since April 2015 as an odd complacency washed across risk assets emboldened by "whatever it takes" synonyms spewing from every and any central banker in the world. However, options traders appear to be losing faith in the market turmoil cease-fire as implied volatility (the market's best guess at future uncertainty) trades at its largest premium to historical volatility in over a year.

As Bloomberg reports, there have only been six days the S&P 500 swung more than 1 percent since the start of March, the longest comparable stretch of peace since May 2015. That’s lured automated funds that trade based on volatility trends to buy more U.S. stocks, increasing their ability to wreak havoc should markets start to crack.

Price swings have been relatively muted the past two months, but options traders are betting it won’t last. The gap between the one-month historical volatility, a measure of actual price swings, and what traders are willing to pay for protection is at its widest since August.

Implied volatility trades at a 55% premium to realized volatility – its highest in a year…

The last time this happened, as the chart suggests, the 'market' is perceiving the fragility in the calm is going to end very soon – just as it did in the summer of 2015, before the August crash.

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Trump, Sanders Show Voters Just as Irrational as Ever

George Mason University economist Bryan Caplan has long argued that one of the core facts about American politics is that voters tend to be irrational, and that it is easy for them to be so given that they don’t bear too much of the costs of being irrational while enjoying all the benefits.

He expressed this thesis at length in his book The Myth of the Rational Voter, a book excerpted here at Reason in the cover feature “The 4 Boneheaded Biases of Stupid Voters (And We’re All Stupid Voters).”

I applied Caplan’s thesis to the rise of Trump back in August, before the naive such as me knew he was going (nearly) all the way.

While Caplan insists that this crazy year doesn’t prove his point, which was correct all along, it does demonstrate it pretty vividly, particularly with the surprising rise of Trump and Bernie Sanders, who exemplify two of the irrational biases he pinpointed. (This article by Caplan I’m summinup g is a couple of months old, but I only came across it today and its observations are all the more pointed as Trump’s long march continues.)

While the public perennially exhibits what I call anti-market and anti-foreign biases, 2016 is egregious.  Sanders is anti-market bias personified, Trump is anti-foreign bias personified.  Sadly, my claim that the median American is a “moderate national socialist – statist to the core on both economic and social policy” looks truer than ever.

Caplan thinks Trump’s political entrepreneurial genius lies in fully embracing the median GOP voters anti-foreign bias more than other candidates, slightly constrained by elite opinion, have previously done. “it now looks like anti-foreign bias matters more to them than all other issues combined,” is Caplan’s take on Trump’s triumph.  

Caplan was more optimistic about our political system’s ability to not let the likes of Sanders and Trump get so far. “In 2016, one of the main dilution mechanisms has badly failed: Using social pressure to check and exclude hard-line demagogues,” he thinks.

But he hasn’t given up hope; our system has other sanity brakes on public irrationality.  Among them:

(a) While the public often likes crazy policies, they resent the disastrous consequences of those crazy policies.  This gives politicians a strong incentive for felicitous hypocrisy once they gain power – especially when contemplating policy change.  (b) The median voter has a short attention span, so relatively sane elites have more influence in the long-run than the short-run.  (c) Old-fashioned checks and balances: Congress, the Supreme Court, and state governments make it hard for Sanders or Trump to fulfill their promises even if they want to.

If American voters were rational, Caplan believes, “Sanders and Trump wouldn’t stand a chance.  None of the candidates would survive serious scrutiny, but Sanders and Trump would be thrown out as soon as they delivered one short speech.”

Caplan also plays with relative perceptions of cultural decay, noting that if Trump were Hispanic, “Opponents of immigration would plausibly fear that El Donaldo is a classic strongman plotting to turn the U.S. into a banana republic.  And they would hasten to the inference that Hispanics are fundamentally authoritarian and unfit for democracy. “

Who is fit for democracy? This election raises that question, good and hard.

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China Trade And The Inevitability Of Systemic Reset

Submitte dby Jeffrey Snider via Alhambra Investment Partners,

Throughout 2014 and even into 2015, the word “decoupling” was resurrected to try to calm growing unease about the direction of global growth. It’s first broad usage was during the first part of the Great Recession, as economists were sure that emerging markets then would be able to weather the “slowdown” of 2008 believed at that time confined to the US and Europe. It was an absurd suggestion but perfectly consistent with orthodox economics and its idea of closed systems.

When the word was brought back in 2014, it was under seemingly far more happy circumstances. China was acting curiously and places like Brazil were wrote off as if they had their own problems, maybe even big problems, but the US, Europe, and even Japan were supposed to be finally back on track. Again, the idea of closed systems propelled this “logic.” As I wrote in September 2014 under the headline China Profoundly Disagrees with FOMC Assessments:

That more than suggests not only a widespread slowdown, but also why Brazil and Australia are enthralled by recession. The larger question in a world obsessed by some ephemeral and eternally positive “global growth” construct (at least economists as they are in setting forward predictions about specific growth regimes) is how that Chinese slowdown fits within more unique circumstances about specific systems. When the first vestiges of Chinese production deceleration became apparent in early 2014, it seemed very curious to the mainstream because everything about “global growth” was headed in the “right direction.”

Since China’s economy was built to manufacture everything global growth could buy, it set up this major disagreement. How could industry in China be decelerating sharply and to lower and lower levels while economists saw only economic achievement for the US and the other developed markets? If economists were right particularly about the US, then they would have to explain why rapid US growth had suddenly forgotten to buy much from China.

They couldn’t, of course, which is what the word “decouple” was meant for, to simply wave China’s struggles away as if they were unimportant global components. Instead, “decouple” was as I wrote in 2014 applicable only to the FOMC and economists’ narrative about the US economy. Their views had departed from reality, as increasing Chinese misfortune was perfectly consistent with the underlying and intensifying US economic weakness obscured by whatever the BLS was producing as labor estimates.

Chinese trade figures for April 2016 are once again spotlighting the disparity, perhaps more intensely than ever. After such a hopeful rebound in March, the current monthly estimates further show that it is only economists and the mainstream narrative that sees these things. Exports rose 11.2% in March (revised), the cause of much sustained enthusiasm, but that followed -11.5% in January and then -25.4% in February. For Q1 overall, exports dropped nearly 10% which was the worst quarter since Q3 2009. So where March’s positive figure was thought to be the final turnaround, seeing -1.8% and once more a negative number for April suggests for the nth time unearned optimism like that which gave us the second set of “decoupling.”

ABOOK May 2016 China Trade Exports

For the FOMC and the narrative surrounding the US economy, the Chinese trade update was much worse than even -1.8%. Exports to the United States fell 9.3% year-over-year in April, an enormous decline that doesn’t indicate anything good about the state of the US economy two months removed from January/February ugliness. Where economic slowing in 2014 may have been due to a broader “global” problem including the US, Chinese exports to its largest market may be indicating that the world’s slowing and contraction might now be due mostly to the US. The coming months will be important in determining that as a possibility.

 ABOOK May 2016 China Trade Exports Longer

Because China’s industrial sector is awash in oversupply given these export levels, there is little demand from China to the rest of the world – the entire global economy is squeezed from top to bottom. Chinese imports fell almost 11% in April in contrast to what hope was extrapolated from a less negative import estimate in March.

 

ABOOK May 2016 China Trade Imports Monetary Policy

It shows that China’s external demand is frighteningly consistent, unmoved by either continual bursts of confidence or even PBOC “accommodation.”

ABOOK May 2016 China Trade Imports

That is what economists seem to be missing, as there is really no difference between -9% in exports or -2%; neither of those are +25% which is what the Chinese “need” to see in global trade terms. On the other side, the rest of the world had become expectant of robust Chinese exports inviting imports into China at 20-40% year after year. When China instead contracts in its inbound trade by consistently 10-20% it is both confirmation of the global economy as a singular deficiency and a likely very messy paradigm shift. Therefore, there isn’t any actual meaning in attempting to parse the monthly difference between -10% or -20% (or -7%) as they both signal the same thing.

Unless and until China’s trade levels find their way back to pre-crisis existence, there is only trouble ahead no matter the monthly variations. What we see in these estimates is global deconstruction which will only lead to more harmful distortion and continued negative factors.

According to a Wall Street Journal analysis of Chinese public companies, Chinese government support includes billions of dollars in cash assistance, subsidized electricity and other benefits to companies. Recipients include steelmakers, coal miners, solar-panel manufacturers, and other producers of other goods including copper and chemicals.

 

One beneficiary, Aluminum Corp. of China, or Chalco, said in October one of its units would shut down a roughly 500,000-ton-per-year smelter in the far-western Gansu region as it struggled to make profits. Executives prepped for thousands of layoffs.

 

Then Gansu officials slashed the plant’s electricity bill by 30%, employees say, and the factory was saved. Although a portion of capacity was taken offline, most is operational.

If there will ever be serious examination into why this downturn in “cycle” is so unusually elongated and historically inconsistent it would have to start with these kinds of “stimulus” measures. No slowdown in history has been fought tooth and nail quite like the one that began after 2011. It cannot possibly end in success, of course, that much should be fully apparent by now. The most it can accomplish is to keep the “V” shaped decline from occurring. In light of the cost of time, however, this slower, drawn-out downward slope is a much, much worse result.

Under the direction of orthodox economics (the fusion of Keynes and monetarism) the world’s “stimulus” apparatus is making a bad situation worse by (at best) dragging it out far longer than maybe it would have under more traditional business cycle conditions. They do so, of course, under the assumption that 2005 is still an available scenario and thus any weakness is a “temporary” deviation from the path returning there. Belief in the power of “stimulus” to make it happen prevents awareness of what is, again, really a paradigm shift that will not be altered. What we are analyzing, then, is not what awaits but how long it takes to get there and the huge, growing costs to delay what looks only inevitable.

The very idea of systemic reset immediately conjures the worst kinds of associations. It is understandable because going through it is not pleasant and humans by nature seek to avoid unpleasantness even where the probability of doing so is small. In economic terms, really financial since this is all being driven by the eurodollar’s retreat, systemic reset is indeed ugly and violent but ultimately fruitful. The reason for that is really simple, because any system pushed to the point where reset appears as increasingly inevitable is a system that is badly imbalanced and malfunctioning. The reset is the answer, not the problem. Delaying the answer only elongates the pain of the problem.

The systemic problem is what the eurodollar’s rise represented – an open world of financialism where credit was unrestrained not just in terms of debt proportions but within the very idea of money itself. It was highly unstable and only delivered the appearance of prosperity for those most disturbed by it (including the US). Getting away from it is the world’s first task for actual recovery, but authorities proceed as if this was all just some minor inconvenience.

 

ABOOK Apr 2016 Econ Baselines GDP Dark Leverage Supply

 

The end of the eurodollar system should be cause for global celebration but it is not since there is nothing ready by which to replace it. Instead, it comes on anyway and leaves only greater strain and uncertainty about what it will mean and the world might look like at that point.

 

via http://ift.tt/24Hs3on Tyler Durden

China Trade And The Inevitability Of Systemic Reset

Submitte dby Jeffrey Snider via Alhambra Investment Partners,

Throughout 2014 and even into 2015, the word “decoupling” was resurrected to try to calm growing unease about the direction of global growth. It’s first broad usage was during the first part of the Great Recession, as economists were sure that emerging markets then would be able to weather the “slowdown” of 2008 believed at that time confined to the US and Europe. It was an absurd suggestion but perfectly consistent with orthodox economics and its idea of closed systems.

When the word was brought back in 2014, it was under seemingly far more happy circumstances. China was acting curiously and places like Brazil were wrote off as if they had their own problems, maybe even big problems, but the US, Europe, and even Japan were supposed to be finally back on track. Again, the idea of closed systems propelled this “logic.” As I wrote in September 2014 under the headline China Profoundly Disagrees with FOMC Assessments:

That more than suggests not only a widespread slowdown, but also why Brazil and Australia are enthralled by recession. The larger question in a world obsessed by some ephemeral and eternally positive “global growth” construct (at least economists as they are in setting forward predictions about specific growth regimes) is how that Chinese slowdown fits within more unique circumstances about specific systems. When the first vestiges of Chinese production deceleration became apparent in early 2014, it seemed very curious to the mainstream because everything about “global growth” was headed in the “right direction.”

Since China’s economy was built to manufacture everything global growth could buy, it set up this major disagreement. How could industry in China be decelerating sharply and to lower and lower levels while economists saw only economic achievement for the US and the other developed markets? If economists were right particularly about the US, then they would have to explain why rapid US growth had suddenly forgotten to buy much from China.

They couldn’t, of course, which is what the word “decouple” was meant for, to simply wave China’s struggles away as if they were unimportant global components. Instead, “decouple” was as I wrote in 2014 applicable only to the FOMC and economists’ narrative about the US economy. Their views had departed from reality, as increasing Chinese misfortune was perfectly consistent with the underlying and intensifying US economic weakness obscured by whatever the BLS was producing as labor estimates.

Chinese trade figures for April 2016 are once again spotlighting the disparity, perhaps more intensely than ever. After such a hopeful rebound in March, the current monthly estimates further show that it is only economists and the mainstream narrative that sees these things. Exports rose 11.2% in March (revised), the cause of much sustained enthusiasm, but that followed -11.5% in January and then -25.4% in February. For Q1 overall, exports dropped nearly 10% which was the worst quarter since Q3 2009. So where March’s positive figure was thought to be the final turnaround, seeing -1.8% and once more a negative number for April suggests for the nth time unearned optimism like that which gave us the second set of “decoupling.”

ABOOK May 2016 China Trade Exports

For the FOMC and the narrative surrounding the US economy, the Chinese trade update was much worse than even -1.8%. Exports to the United States fell 9.3% year-over-year in April, an enormous decline that doesn’t indicate anything good about the state of the US economy two months removed from January/February ugliness. Where economic slowing in 2014 may have been due to a broader “global” problem including the US, Chinese exports to its largest market may be indicating that the world’s slowing and contraction might now be due mostly to the US. The coming months will be important in determining that as a possibility.

 ABOOK May 2016 China Trade Exports Longer

Because China’s industrial sector is awash in oversupply given these export levels, there is little demand from China to the rest of the world – the entire global economy is squeezed from top to bottom. Chinese imports fell almost 11% in April in contrast to what hope was extrapolated from a less negative import estimate in March.

 

ABOOK May 2016 China Trade Imports Monetary Policy

It shows that China’s external demand is frighteningly consistent, unmoved by either continual bursts of confidence or even PBOC “accommodation.”

ABOOK May 2016 China Trade Imports

That is what economists seem to be missing, as there is really no difference between -9% in exports or -2%; neither of those are +25% which is what the Chinese “need” to see in global trade terms. On the other side, the rest of the world had become expectant of robust Chinese exports inviting imports into China at 20-40% year after year. When China instead contracts in its inbound trade by consistently 10-20% it is both confirmation of the global economy as a singular deficiency and a likely very messy paradigm shift. Therefore, there isn’t any actual meaning in attempting to parse the monthly difference between -10% or -20% (or -7%) as they both signal the same thing.

Unless and until China’s trade levels find their way back to pre-crisis existence, there is only trouble ahead no matter the monthly variations. What we see in these estimates is global deconstruction which will only lead to more harmful distortion and continued negative factors.

According to a Wall Street Journal analysis of Chinese public companies, Chinese government support includes billions of dollars in cash assistance, subsidized electricity and other benefits to companies. Recipients include steelmakers, coal miners, solar-panel manufacturers, and other producers of other goods including copper and chemicals.

 

One beneficiary, Aluminum Corp. of China, or Chalco, said in October one of its units would shut down a roughly 500,000-ton-per-year smelter in the far-western Gansu region as it struggled to make profits. Executives prepped for thousands of layoffs.

 

Then Gansu officials slashed the plant’s electricity bill by 30%, employees say, and the factory was saved. Although a portion of capacity was taken offline, most is operational.

If there will ever be serious examination into why this downturn in “cycle” is so unusually elongated and historically inconsistent it would have to start with these kinds of “stimulus” measures. No slowdown in history has been fought tooth and nail quite like the one that began after 2011. It cannot possibly end in success, of course, that much should be fully apparent by now. The most it can accomplish is to keep the “V” shaped decline from occurring. In light of the cost of time, however, this slower, drawn-out downward slope is a much, much worse result.

Under the direction of orthodox economics (the fusion of Keynes and monetarism) the world’s “stimulus” apparatus is making a bad situation worse by (at best) dragging it out far longer than maybe it would have under more traditional business cycle conditions. They do so, of course, under the assumption that 2005 is still an available scenario and thus any weakness is a “temporary” deviation from the path returning there. Belief in the power of “stimulus” to make it happen prevents awareness of what is, again, really a paradigm shift that will not be altered. What we are analyzing, then, is not what awaits but how long it takes to get there and the huge, growing costs to delay what looks only inevitable.

The very idea of systemic reset immediately conjures the worst kinds of associations. It is understandable because going through it is not pleasant and humans by nature seek to avoid unpleasantness even where the probability of doing so is small. In economic terms, really financial since this is all being driven by the eurodollar’s retreat, systemic reset is indeed ugly and violent but ultimately fruitful. The reason for that is really simple, because any system pushed to the point where reset appears as increasingly inevitable is a system that is badly imbalanced and malfunctioning. The reset is the answer, not the problem. Delaying the answer only elongates the pain of the problem.

The systemic problem is what the eurodollar’s rise represented – an open world of financialism where credit was unrestrained not just in terms of debt proportions but within the very idea of money itself. It was highly unstable and only delivered the appearance of prosperity for those most disturbed by it (including the US). Getting away from it is the world’s first task for actual recovery, but authorities proceed as if this was all just some minor inconvenience.

 

ABOOK Apr 2016 Econ Baselines GDP Dark Leverage Supply

 

The end of the eurodollar system should be cause for global celebration but it is not since there is nothing ready by which to replace it. Instead, it comes on anyway and leaves only greater strain and uncertainty about what it will mean and the world might look like at that point.

 

via http://ift.tt/24Hs3on Tyler Durden

Record Number Of Parents Tell Kids They’re On Their Own When It Comes To College Bill

The current outstanding student loan debt in the United States is roughly $1.3 trillion, and getting bigger by the second.

The good news (for those not concerned about economic realities), Obama has just set the precedent that loans will be forgiven, the bad news, parents are now telling their kids to take out more student loans if they intend on going to college. But there is a twist.

 

According to Bloomberg, a new survey by Discover Financial Services found that 48% of parents think their child should pay a portion (if not all) of the cost of attending college, up from 39% four years ago. And just how will potential students pay that portion? Why, student loans of course. 32% of respondents said they would ask the bank for help, while 27% plan to rely on family savings, 4% said they would dip into retirement funds, and 3% even indicated that they may refinance their home to pay for their kids college.

Source: GRAPHIQ

Bloomberg goes on to offer up the silly notion that “free money” exists by way of government aid (FAFSA), stating that “about $2.7 billion in federal grant money was left on the table because parents didn’t bother to fill out these forms.” What Bloomberg fails to mention is that nothing is ever free, and also, as the government subsidizes the bill for those attending college, it only makes tuition more expensive.

The student loan bubble is something that we’ve been covering for years now (this is from 2012), and given the fact that parents aren’t able to help as much with the cost of tuition, the amount of debt burdening millennials will only get worse. As for those families planning to dip into savings or retirement funds to help out, if those funds are tied up in financial securities, we would recommend taking a wait and see approach to ensure those funds you’ve worked so hard for don’t dissappear when the market finally corrects.

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The Twilight Of The Gods (aka Central Bankers)

Submitted by Satyajit Das (former banker and author of The Age of Stagnation),

The current financial market volatility increasingly reflects loss of faith in policy makers. Celebrity central bankers are learning that they must constantly produce new miracles for their followers.

First, the measures implemented since 2009 created an artificial stability and an asset price boom in many markets.

 

But the absolute rate of GDP expansion and level of price changes is inadequate to solve global debt problems.

 

Second, new initiatives seem the risky response of clever but desperate individuals who have run out of ammunition and ideas. The actions of central bankers reflect George Santayana’s observation that “fanaticism consists in doubling your efforts when you have forgotten your aim”.

 

Central to this debate is negative interest rate policy (“NIRP”), now in place in Europe and Japan and under consideration in many other countries. NIRP will not create borrowing driven consumption and investment which generates stronger growth. Existing high debt levels, poor employment prospects, low rates of wage growth and over-capacity have lowered potential growth rates, sometimes substantially.

 

NIRP is unlikely to create inflation, despite central banker’s stubborn belief that increasing money supply can and will ultimately always create large changes in price level.

 

There are concerns about toxic by-products. Bank profitability is likely to be adversely affected. Potential erosion of deposits may reduce banks’ ability to lend and also reduce the stability of funding, something which central banks perversely want improved. Bank weakness has significant contagion risks. Profitability and solvency issues will affect investors in hybrid capital issues (such as the now controversial co-cos) and bail-in bonds which can be converted into equity or written down under certain circumstances. Designed to strengthen banks, these securities, merely shift the risk to investors, such as pension funds, insurance companies and individual savers.

 

The capacity of NIRP to devalue currencies to secure export competitiveness is questionable. Euro, Yen and Swiss France have not weakened to date despite additional monetary accommodation. One reason is that these countries have large current account surpluses: Euro-zone (3.0% of GDP), Japan (2.9% of GDP) and Switzerland (12.5% of GDP). The increasing ineffectiveness of NIRP in managing currency values merely reflects the fact that the underlying problem of global imbalances remains unresolved.

 

Third, the panic amongst policy makers is undermining belief in their powers.

 

The US Federal Reserve’s attempt to normalise interest rates has contributed to instability. Speculation of no further rate rise or a policy reversal, including potentially a new QE program or negative interest rates, has compounded confusion.

 

The European Central Bank (“ECB”) looks impotent, being increasingly under siege from friends (who insist they do more) and enemies (who insist they have overstepped their mandate). The ECB has failed to date to deal with weak banks and €1.2 trillion plus non-performing loans.

 

The Bank of Japan’s decision to switch to NIRP was in direct contradiction of an earlier statement made less than a month ago.

 

Chinese policy makers, until recently applauded as exemplary economic managers, have struggled to bring its stock market slide under control prevent capital outflows or avoid pressure to devalue the Yuan. The People’s Bank of China has resorted to aggressive market intervention and erratic fixing of the currency, designed to surprise and inflict losses on external “speculators”.

 

Facing slowing growth and unwilling to reform quickly, China is reverting to the strategy of increasing spending and bank lending. Credit growth is approaching the levels of 2009, ignoring the already high debt levels and financial stresses evident.

 

Fourth, despite the IMF urging bold, broad measures, the G20 showed little appetite for new initiatives. International co-operation is being replaced by conflict. Each nation is increasingly focusing fiscal and monetary policy on domestic objectives, whilst paying lip service to not seeking currency devaluation or beggar-thy-neighbour policies.

 

Fifth, there is recognition that available options have diminished. In recent weeks, there have been calls for more co-ordinated monetary easing, more fiscal stimulus and more structural reforms to support growth. The prescriptions are familiar and unlikely to be more successful on the umpteenth go-around. Policy makers would do well to heed Winston Churchill’s advice: “However beautiful the strategy, you should occasionally look at the results”.

For the moment, the volatility is confined to financial markets and the effect on the real economy is limited. The ever present risk is of a doom loop where financial market problems lead to banking system weakness which, in turn, feeds a credit crunch and a contraction in economic activity. That familiar movie does not have a happy ending.

via http://ift.tt/23D783q Tyler Durden

Presidential Candidate with Alleged Links to Death Squads Wins Election in Philippines

Davao Mayor Rodrigo Duterte, who openly wished he could’ve raped a victim of a gang rape perpetrated in his city first and said he’d kill his child if he caught him using drugs, has been elected the 16th president of the Philippines.

Duterte is a member and chairman of PDP-Laban, a populist left-wing party in the Philippines. The hardline “anti-crime” candidate, who has proposed increasing police and military salaries to decrease corruption and improve crime fighting, credited his focus on “law and order” for his long-standing lead in polls. “What I can promise you is that I will do my very best not just in my waking hours but even in my sleep,” he said.

Duterte has been accused of condoning and inciting death squads in Davao, where has been mayor for more than twenty years in three non-consecutive tenures. “If you are doing an illegal activity in my city, if you are a criminal or part of a syndicate that preys on the innocent people of the city, for as long as I am the mayor, you are a legitimate target of assassination,” he said in 2009.

Duterte, however, bristled at comparisons to Donald Trump. Duterte may be a bloodthirsty blowhard with little regard for the rule of law, but he insists he’s not a bigot. Outgoing President Benigno Aquino has warned Duterte’s election could lead the country back to dictatorship.

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‘Public Servants’ – Who Is Serving Whom?

Submitted by Matthew Bankert via The Mises Institute,

When was the last time you used a government “service”? Maybe you went to the DMV to get a new driver’s license, or maybe you signed up for new healthcare plan using Healthcare.gov (you’d better — or else!). Whatever transaction it was, there was a government employee on the other end — or as some like to call them, a public servant

Though the public’s perception of the Federal government is near rock bottom, there is still a generally positive view of government workers. A recent post from the official White House blog asks citizens to consider “making a difference as a public servant,” knowing that your work would help “make someone’s life just a little bit better.” (Presumably, those who are not public servants do not perform work that “makes a difference” or makes anyone’s life better.)  

There’s even a Public Service Recognition Week every year during May. From the president's proclamation on public service this year:

A Government of, by, and for the people is sustained only through the hard work and extraordinary sacrifice of millions of citizens willing to serve the country they love.

I am not interested in judging the hearts of government employees, but do public servants in reality make “extraordinary sacrifices” compared to everyone else?

Compensation

A study by the government’s own Congressional Budget Office (CBO) claims public sector employees earn more money and benefits than private sector employees, with the exception of those with a doctoral degree:

Average Compensation for Federal and Private-Sector Employees

The study says Federal workers with a professional or doctoral degree make up 7 percent of the Federal workforce. Therefore, 93 percent of Federal workers earn higher salaries plus benefits than comparable workers in the private sector. I'm still waiting for the "extraordinary sacrifice" we keep hearing about.

The Cato Institute makes a similar finding: “In 2014 total federal compensation [pay + benefits] averaged $119,934, or 78 percent more than the private-sector average of $67,246.” Even the New York Times seems to reluctantly concede that state and local government workers earn more.

Maybe the word servant makes you think of a butler or maid in some grand European estate. They labor away at menial, inglorious tasks without much recognition.

What if most of the servants make more money than the family for whom the servants work. Would they still qualify as servants?

Services

If their compensation is not less than the private sector, some may say public servants provide more important services. Even here some doubts are warranted. 

The average 401k is pessimistically forecasted by some to return 4 percent per year, while Social Security’s return on “investment” is less than optimal. For example, a single female turning 65 in 2030 will have paid $411,000 into Social Security and will only receive $371,000 in benefits. (For those of you not math savvy, that’s less than a 4 percent yearly return.)

Surely, the police are a government service bringing valuable security to civilians. Just a glance at the headlines over the last few years shows that is not always the case: Ferguson, New York, Baltimore, etc. Meanwhile in the private sector, the security company Threat Management in a decade of operation claims to have had “no deaths or injuries — either to our clients or to our own people — no criminal charges, and no lawsuits.” By the way, Threat Management provides their services to the poor for free.

But wait, you say, who else will study shrimp on treadmills? Undoubtedly, this is an area where the government excels. I could go on and on.

Revenue “Service”

As Frédéric Bastiat explains, the billions and billions in the civil servant payrolls does not descend miraculously on a moonbeam into the government’s coffers. They come from taxes. Bastiat says: “…understand that a public enterprise is a coin with two sides. Upon one is engraved a laborer at work, … that which is seen; on the other is a laborer out of work, … that which is not seen.” That is, money removed from the free economy via taxes is not allowed to go to whatever investment the owners of that money would have used it for, consequently generating another worker’s salary.

Murray Rothbard makes an interesting observation in Power and Market, chapter 4 about public servants themselves paying taxes: 

Bureaucrats are net tax consumers [, and] bureaucrats cannot pay taxes. … [T]he bureaucrat who receives $8,000 a year income and then hands $1,500 back to the government is engaging in a mere bookkeeping transaction of no economic importance (aside from the waste of paper and records involved). For he does not and cannot pay taxes; he simply receives $6,500 a year from the tax fund.

Furthermore, taxes are involuntarily extracted from the public, the lucky benefactors of the service provided. It is hard to deny that in other relationships where someone is demanding money from someone else, we do not refer to the demander as a servant. “Internal Revenue Service” is the name of the tax agency. Who is it serving?

Job Security

This hardly needs mentioning, but public servants are much less likely to be fired than workers in the private sector. Following the Great Recession (2007–2009), the private sector had cut 3.5 percent of jobs by 2010. The public sector (Federal, state, and local) only cut 0.5 percent

From the Federal Times on public employment generally:

The firing rate held at 0.46 percent of the workforce in both fiscal 2013 and fiscal 2014 — the lowest rate in 10 years.

 

The private sector fires nearly six times as many employees — about 3.2 percent — according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics …

Conclusion

For the sake of argument, let’s just say we need government employees for maintenance of fisheries, mail delivery, and invading Middle Eastern countries. Fine. Can we at least dispense with the misnomer public servant? A servant who makes more money than those “served” (by threat of force), provides subpar service, takes away jobs, and is immune to firing cannot be accurately titled servant.

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Hard LendingClub: Fallout From P2P Scandal Results In Another Resignation; John Mack Is Dragged In

The bad news for Hard LendingClub (or perhaps it is LendingClubbed) just keeps on coming.

As we reported earlier today, following the surprising “resignation” of the company’s CEO and Chairman, Renaud Laplanche as a result of an “internal board review of sales of $22 million in near-prime loans to a single investor”, which resulted in the stock losing a quarter of its market cap in minutes, subsequent revelations have seen the spotlight shining brightly on none other than former Morgan Stanley CEO and current Lending Club board member, John Mack, who according to Bloomberg invested in the same venture that led to the termination resignation of the CEO.

The reason why Mack was not shown the door, at least not yet, is that he allegedly did not know the company was weighing an investment in Cirrix Capital, and so wasn’t expected to disclose his holding. On the other hand, Laplanche presented the idea of having LendingClub invest in the venture to the board’s risk committee, while failing to disclose his personal stake. Indicatively, as of December 31, Mack had a 10% limited-partnership stake in Cirrix Capital while Laplanche held 2%.

To get a sense of just how circuitous the fund flows involved are, Cirrix is an entity managed by Andrew Hallowell’s Arcadia Funds LLC, which invests in online marketplace loans, including those from San Francisco-based LendingClub. In other words, aside from potential “related party” breaches, the conflicts of interest between the various equity and debt channels were striking, and sufficient grounds for the board to demand the CEO’s resignation for non-disclosure among other transgressions. 

And then LendingClub bought a 15% interest in Cirrix earlier this year for $10 million, Bloomberg adds citing regulatory filings. That decision was approved by the risk committee and without the full board’s involvement, one of the people said. Laplanche resigned Friday after an internal review faulted him for not informing the committee of his and Mack’s investment.

So far Mack has escaped unsathed from a scandal that has already cost the CEO his job and shareholders a third of their investment.

It wasn’t just John Mack: the investigation also found that LendingClub sold $22 million of loans to Jefferies Group that didn’t meet the investment bank’s criteria for purchase, another person said. As IFR adds, the US$22 million pool of near-prime loans was sold to Jefferies, but repurchased at par, with no loss to the US-based investment bank.

Meanwhile, LendingClub’s four-person risk committee which approved the $10 million investment, is led by former Visa Inc. President John “Hans” Morris, who took over as executive chairman after Laplanche’s departure. The committee also includes ex-U.S. Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers, Simon Williams, previously an executive at HSBC Holdings Plc, and Daniel Ciporin, a former MasterCard Inc. executive who’s a general partner of venture-capital firm Canaan Partners.

Adding to the highliy conficted picture, according to Bloomberg funds with backing from Laplanche and Mack had acquired $139.6 million of whole loans and $34.9 million of interests in whole loans, LendingClub said in its annual proxy filing last month, without identifying the funds. The company paid $7.4 million in interest to the family of funds, while earning $636,000 in servicing fees and $357,000 in management fees from the funds, according to the proxy.

The terms “were not more favorable than those obtained by other third-party investors,” according to the filing. As of April 1, the company, Laplanche and Mack owned about 31 percent of Cirrix.

In other words, while the underlying troubles that we first laid out in February involving LendingClub’s rapidly deteriorating business model remain a major issue, the reason why the CEO was sacked is because of what is emerging as a very conflicted, and cozy, use of the company – and its direct investment – as a slush fund, while potentially engaging in a transaction that was meant to cover up the deteriorating fundamentals.

And then, moments ago, the “Hard LendingClub” scandal du jour took a twist for the even worse, when Bloomberg reported that a senior LendingClub executive in charge of boosting sales of loans to investors left the company. 

Jeff Bogan, as head of the firm’s investor group, oversaw efforts to sell more loans to institutional and retail investors, as well as financial firms. LendingClub told some investors Monday that he had resigned, according to the person, who asked not to be identified because the situation isn’t public.

He is the first proverbial cockroach. There will be many more as the $1.8 billion company suddenly fights to avoid comparisons to such subprime blow up harbingers as New Century Financial.

* * *

For those curious, here is LC’s Board of Directors that at first blush had zero internal controls over loan creation, even if these involved tremendous conflicts of interest. Not surprisingly it is made up of some of the so-called “best and brightest” in the world of finance, and especially former Morgan Stanley employees. What is curious, is that according to the latest proxy statement, Morgan Stanley Investment Management is also the fifth largest investor in the company, owning 6.8% of the common stock. One wonders just how deep the rabbit hole goes in this one.

  • John Mack: John J. Mack is a Senior Advisor of both Morgan Stanley and KKR. He retired as Chairman of the Board of Morgan Stanley at the end of 2011 and also served as Chief Executive Officer of Morgan Stanley from June 2005 until December 2009.
  • Mary Meeker, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers:  Mary Meeker joined Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers as a partner in 2010, and leads KPCB’s $1 billion US Digital Growth Fund (DGF), which targets high-growth Internet companies that have achieved rapid adoption and scale. From 1991 to 2010 Mary worked at Morgan Stanley as managing director and research analyst, where she focused on discovering and understanding emerging technologies and supported category-defining companies during their critical phases.
  • Lawrence H. Summers, Harvard University: Lawrence H. Summers is the Charles W. Eliot University Professor & President Emeritus of Harvard University and the Weil Director of the Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business & Government at Harvard’s Kennedy School.
  • Hans Morris, General Atlantic: Hans Morris served as president of Visa Inc. from 2007 to 2009, where his primary responsibilities included managing all markets in which Visa did business. Hans tenure coincided with the global payments technology company’s initial public offering and a reorganization that merged several separate businesses into a new company.
  • Simon Williams, Former Group General Manager, Wealth Management, HSBC: Simon Williams was Group General Manager, Wealth Management at HSBC. He was a member of HSBC’s RBWM Global Executive Committee and was responsible for leading the development and growth of their wealth management business globally.
  • Daniel T. Ciporin, Canaan Partners:Dan Ciporin joined Canaan Partners in 2007 and is currently a General Partner specializing in digital media, financial technology and e-commerce investments.
  • Jeff Crowe, Norwest Venture Partners: With over 20 years of CEO and executive experience in technology companies, Jeff joined Norwest in 2004 and became managing partner in 2013. Jeff focuses on investments in the Internet, consumer, and software arenas. 2015 marked Jeff’s second consecutive appearance on the Forbes Midas List of tech’s top investors

As a result of today’s rapidly moving events, as of this moment the value of the Board’s LendingClub stock is about a third less than what it was on Friday afternoon. We expect that it will be worth even less in the coming weeks.

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