Broken Stoxx 50, 600 Feeds “Resolved” Moments After Europe Close

Having been offline for over two hours ahead of the European close, in a rerun of the market-wide breaks so familiar to US-based traders and which are meant to serve as comprehensive “circuit breakers” blamed on various technical glitches,  moments ago – right at the European close – we snarked that Eurex whose Stoxx 50 and Stoxx 600 feeds were mysteriously “offline” for hours, can now reopen. After all, Europe was now closed by definition.

 

Not even 5 minutes later, we got confirmation of precisely what we comically thought was about to happen: the Eurex issue had been magically “resolved.” After all, with everything else closed and thus preventing further selling, there was no further need to remain “broken.”

  • EUREX SAYS STOXX UNDERLYING FEED ISSUE HAS BEEN RESOLVED

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The Big Fat Lie: New at Reason

In moderation, fat doesn’t harm health or cause weight gain. Who knew?

A. Barton Hinkle writes:

If you have even a passing acquaintance with current events, then you’ve probably seen a host of headlines about the ostensible revolution in dietary thinking. “Eating Fat Is Good for You: Doctors change their minds after 40 years,” blared a London newspaper in 2013. “Why Experts Now Think You Should Eat More Fat,” explained Men’s Journal the next year.

Last month The Economist made “The Case for Eating Steak and Ice Cream.” Last week Time argued that “The Case for Eating Butter Just Got Stronger.” That article cited an earlier Time cover story noting that “fat had become ‘the most vilified nutrient in the American diet’ despite the scientific evidence showing it didn’t harm health or cause weight gain in moderation.”

The new dietary bugbear is sugar, now the target of “Twinkie taxes,” soda taxes, and the opprobrium of public scolds everywhere.

This is pretty big news, given the drumbeat of advice Americans have been receiving for so long. Starting in the 1980s the federal government’s urged people to shun fats and cholesterol and load up on carbs. A 1990s food pyramid from the USDA placed bread, rice, and pasta at the base, suggesting a person eat six to 11 servings a day—but only two or three servings of meat or eggs and even less of fats.

View this article.

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Domino #6: Canada Life Halts UK Property Fund Redemptions “For Up To Six Months”

It's probably nothing…

Domino #1: *STANDARD LIFE INV PROPERTY DROPS 15%; TRADING IN FUND SUSPENDED

In a stark flashback to the catalytic event that ultimately brought down Bear Stearns in 2008, and subsequently unleashed the greatest financial crisis in history, last night we reported that Standard Life, has been forced to stop retail investors selling out of one of the UK’s largest property funds for at least 28 days after rapid cash outflows were sparked by fears over falling real estate values.

 

As we further noted, citing an analyst, “given the outflows the sector seems to be experiencing, this could well put downward pressure on commercial property prices,” said Laith Khalaf, senior analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown. “The risk is this creates a vicious circle, and prompts more investors to dump property, until such time as sentiment stabilises.”

 

As we concluded, whie Brexit is not a Humpty Dumpty event, where all the Fed’s horses and all the Fed’s men can’t glue the eggshell back together, it is an event that forces investors to wake up and prepare their portfolios for the very real systemic risks ahead. And, indeed, if Standard Life was the first domino, moments ago the second domino also tumbled when as Bloomberg reported that Aviva Investors Property Trust is as of this moment "frozen" citing "extraordinary" market conditions.

Domino #2: *AVIVA SUSPENDS TRADING ON AVIVA INVESTORS PROPERTY TRUST

As the FT adds, Aviva Investments said it had prevented retail investors from selling out of its £1.8bn UK Property Trust since Monday afternoon.

 

Cited by Bloomberg, Aviva said in an email that "market circumstances, which are impacting the wider industry, have resulted in a lack of immediate liquidity" adding that "we have acted to safeguard the interests of all our investors by suspending dealing in the fund with immediate effect…. Suspension of dealing will give Aviva Investors greater control in managing cash flows and conducting orderly asset sales in order to meet our obligations to investors.”

Domino #3: *M&G SUSPENDS TRADING IN M&G PROPERTY PORTFOLIO FUND

As Bloomberg reports, M&G suspends trading in property portfolio, feeder funds, according to statement on website.

 

"Investor redemptions in the fund have risen markedly because of the high levels of uncertainty in the U.K. commercial property market since the outcome of the European Union referendum.

 

Redemptions have now reached a point where M&G believes it can best protect the interests of the funds’ shareholders by seeking a temporary suspension in trading."

Domino #4: *HENDERSON SUSPENDS UK PROPERTY PAIF & PAIF FEEDER FUND
Henderson temporarily suspends all trading in the Henderson U.K. Property PAIF and the Henderson UK Property PAIF feeder funds to safeguard the interests of all investors, according to statement.
 
Decision due to “exceptional liquidity pressures” after Brexit and recent suspension of other direct property funds

Domino #5: COLUMBIA THREADNEEDLE SUSPENDS PROPERTY FUND: FT

As The FT reports,

 

Columbia Threadneedle, the £323bn asset manager, has also confirmed it had suspended redemptions from its Threadneedle UK Property fund, blaming uncertainty in the UK property market following the referendum.
The company said in a statement:

 

We have not been immune to the recent trend of retail outflows from the sector and so far these requests have been met from the cash balance retained within the Threadneedle [fund].

 

However, it is expected that these requests to sell will continue for the time being due to uncertainty in the market following the UK referendum result, therefore the temporary suspension of dealings allows sufficient time for the orderly sale of assets, and protects the interests of all investors.

Prices were already tumbling before they halted trading…

 

And now Domino #6: *CANADA LIFE SUSPENDS U.K. PROPERTY FUND, PA REPORTS

Canada Life said it suspended dealing in its £222 million property fund to "protect the interests of all investors in the property funds".

 

It added in an alert to financial advisers: "We did not take this decision lightly as we understand how this may affect you and your clients. We will endeavour to lift the deferral as soon as practically possible."

 

Canada Life said it would be deferring requests for withdrawals from its commercial property fund from 3pm on Tuesday, for up to six months.

Other firms are expected to follow suit as the investor exodus picks up.

But the Investment Association has sought to allay concerns, saying earlier this week that the ability to suspend trading "prevents fund managers from being forced to sell, in this case property interests, too rapidly and helps them achieve a better outcome for all their clients".

We are less sure that this will 'calm' anything and as Laith Khalaf, a senior analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown cited above, put it, “the dominoes are starting to fall in the U.K. commercial property market, as yet another fund locks its doors on the back of outflows precipitated by the Brexit vote. It’s probably only a matter of time before we see other funds follow suit."

And they are… in a hurry.

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A Period of Major Civil Unrest is Coming – How to Win the Inevitable Confrontation with the Status Quo

Screen Shot 2016-07-06 at 9.24.54 AM

At this point I’d like to remind everyone that crime in the U.S. has been dropping since the 1990’s. So why has domestic police force militarization been growing exponentially since then? Ostensibly, it is for the “war on terror” and to keep us safe. In reality, we know this is bullshit. Just like the NSA’s unconstitutional spying hasn’t stopped a single terrorist attack, turning local cops into a domestic army hasn’t done a single thing to make us safe. To the contrary, it is creating an environment where the general public harbors increased resentment and skepticism toward police, and the police view the citizenry as the “enemy.” This takes the societal tinderbox that already exists and makes it downright explosive. Ferguson is just the latest example of the tension bubbling to the surface, but there will likely be many more in the future.

– From the 2014 post: “A Good Time Was Had By All” – The Obamas Dance the Night Away as Ferguson, Missouri Burns

Last spring, I highlighted the egregious and barbaric shooting of Walter L. Scott as he fled from a South Charleston, South Carolina police officer. In light of recent events, it’s crucial to recall the sordid details of this case. As such, here’s a excerpt from the post, South Carolina Cop to Be Charged with Murder for Shooting Man 8 Times in the Back as He Ran Away:

continue reading

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Five Bricks In The ‘Wall Of Worry’

Via Macro Man blog, 

While Macro Man has run a small short in the SPX over the last several months (though he took half off near the post-Brexit lows), he has not necessarily characterized himself as particularly bearish on the world.   For sure, there have been causes for concern- notably the through the looking glass impact of negative interest rates- but on the whole he has subscribed to a "muddle through" scenario for most macro outcomes.

Increasingly, however, he's observing a bit of cause for concern.   Admittedly, much of this is through the financial market channel…but that may be because in many parts of the world, the growth and inflation impulse has been lousy for a couple of years.  This is not to say that he's rushing out to purchase shotguns and tinned beans; rather, it's merely an acknowledgment that the bigger the confluence of disquieting factors, the greater the possibility of a financial accident that spills properly into the real economy.

For the relentlessly bullish, consider these another five bricks to add to the wall of worry:

1) Ten year yields reach all time lows.  While no single market has a monopoly on wisdom, it's certainly been the case over the last decade that bond investors have been more prescient than their equity counterparts at sniffing out trouble in both the real economy and the financial system.  While the low levels of US bonds yields generally reflects the dearth of yield on offer elsewhere, the recent nosedive is clearly indicative of concern that the global economy has received a nasty shock.  Generally, investors should treat the bond market like E.F. Hutton: when it talks, you really ought to listen.
 

It seems virtually inconceivable that the Fed will put rates up before December, and quite possibly not even then.  This in turn sends a similar message to a pilot shouting "OH NO" into the intercom of an airborne 747.  Even if the current rally in bonds is overcooked, the secular trend of yield curve flattening at such low levels of yield is not a bullish one.
 

  
2)  China.   OK, it's not exactly new news, but the great Chinese currency devaluation continues apace.   While the Chinese have previously used periods of global turmoil to adopt a policy of stability, this time around they seem more interested in kneecapping the RMB as quickly as possible.  If anything, the Brexit volatility has encouraged an acceleration in the RMB's devaluation against its reference basket:
 

 

Macro Man observed right after the Brexit vote that upside pressure on USD/CNH was likely to intensify, and so it's proved.   Stories circulated yesterday about PBOC agents intervening in the forward market (so as not to draw down stated reserves too quickly), which serves as a useful reminder that capital continues to flow out of China at a solid clip; upside pressure on USD/RMB will only intensify this phenomenon.   As we observed last August and again in January, when developed markets notice, good things rarely happen.

3) GBP/JPY.   Obviously there is nothing magical about the GBP/JPY cross; there's no secret squirrel following its progress and using its undulations to make a series of unusually prescient bets in global markets.   Yet its collapse represents the twin loci of pressure in foreign exchange markets: sterling weakness and yen strength.  To put things into perspective, this time last year GBP/JPY was around 187, a week or two shy of making a push up to 195.  Now?  it's looking all but certain to crash through 130.
 

Now, some observers may point out this decline has merely retraced the move from late 2012 through last summer, and this would of course be correct.   However, the pace of the decline is naturally substantially faster than the rally, and the twin pressures upon sterling (to weaken) and the yen (to strengthen) reflect a substantial disequilibrium that has yet to be reflected in, say, US equity markets.  Not that it should move Spooz tick for tick; of course it shouldn't.  But insofar as the pair reflects negative outcomes on both sides of the ledger (yes, a weaker pound will help UK exporters, but it's difficult to permanently devalue your way to prosperity) , it merely adds to the deflationary impulse being felt in many parts of the globe.   Historically, the US at least has been relatively immune to these types of events; then again, historically the US has had a much bigger growth buffer than it currently enjoys (solid Q2 tracking notwithstanding.)

4)  UK economic newsflow.  So another couple of property funds throw up gates amongst reports of significant investor concern.   While it's true that this was probably an inevitability given the liquidity mismatch between assets and liabilities, the fact is that it's come in the immediate aftermath of the Brexit vote…which sends a signal that it will have an impact.   Prosaically, the lessons learned from financial crisis are that when confronted with gates, you sell what you can, not what you want.  We'll see if they're applied this time around.   More immediately, consumer confidence has taken a significant tumble; perhaps yesterday's elimination of a couple of Tory also-rans will provide a boost, but somehow Macro Man thinks not.
 

 5) Italian banks.    As slow-moving train wrecks go, the Italian banking collapse has moved at light speed compared to Greek sovereign debt.   By most other standards, however, it's been a long, drawn-out, and painful process.  Banca Monte dei Paschi was founded in 1472, and it feels like it's been collapsing ever since.   While the authorities implemented a short selling ban yesterday, it seems difficult to credit that short sellers were the reason for bank's demise (as opposed to a veritable Mt. Etna of turds on the balance sheet).  It does seem like the long drama may be reaching its denouement soon, however; BMPS has more than  halved in price since the Brexit vote, and barring a reverse split will soon reach the "Planck price" of the minimum possible increment.
 

Perhaps the penny will remain suspended in mid air and the can will be kicked down the road once again.  In that case, dip-buyers can probably look forward to another relief rally.

But there's a funny thing about the wall of worry.   The more bricks you add to it, the smaller the remaining space to exit risk positions through the front door.  As Macro Man noted, he's not headed for the basement bunker yet…but he's getting a little nervous.

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Is There a “Conservative Case For Letting Clinton Skate?”

Hillary ClintonWhile FBI Director James Comey recommended the Justice Department not pursue criminal charges against Hillary Clinton, he didn’t exactly stint on criticism of her actions and those of her staff. Indeed, given his long list of particulars, his prosecutorial cop-out was a non sequitur.

Be that as it may. Over at Bloomberg View, national security writer Eli Lake (an occasional Reason contributor) lays out “the conservative case for letting Clinton skate.” It is to my mind pretty creative and pretty unconvincing.

Part of Lake’s case is that much of the classified and top-secret stuff that was almost certainly what Comey was talking about was already widely known and discussed in the media.

Many outlets have reported that some of [the Clinton materials] dealt with the U.S. targeted killing program. Until recently these drone strikes were considered top secret. At the same time they were widely reported and discussed in Washington, to the point where President Barack Obama himself joked about his drone strikes at a White House Correspondents Association dinner.

“We know that until very recently the administration considered the discussion of specific targeted killing operations to be highly classified, and in fact covert action,” said Steven Aftergood, the director of the Project on Government Secrecy for the Federation of American Scientists. “Outside of government most people find that ridiculous because it has been reported around the world.” 

And there’s this larger point Lake makes:

Conservatives have an interest in diminishing state secrecy, not empowering it. Even for something like the 2012 attack on the U.S. diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya, the mishandling of classified information played a crucial role in exposing the White House narrative that the attack was really a demonstration gone awry. Had it not been for timely leaks of classified assessments, the public would not have known until after the 2012 election how many U.S. officials on the ground contradicted the White House line.

Read the full article here.

Come on, get real. “Conservatives” and Republicans are interested in diminishing state secrecy only when a Democrat or liberal is in the White House. Or perhaps even more narrowly, only when it suits their political or electoral ends. I remember very few right wingers being happy when whistleblowers such as William Binney, Thomas Drake, Chelsea Manning, or Edward Snowden came along. At the start of the War on Terror, characters such as Donald Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney, and John Ashcroft were never slow to suggest that loose lips sink ships and that even congressional demands for information were either not really necessary or advisable.

And when it comes to Clinton specifically, she has a long record of trying to lower the biggest boom she can on people she thinks compromised state secrets.

That said, I do appreciate the gesture Lake (disclosure: a friend) is making here and I do think it touches on a larger point.

Whether the powerful like it or not, or know it or not, transparency is upon us and it’s going to be harder and harder—if not downright impossible—for governments, corporations, churches, you name it, to keep things hidden. There are just too many ways for the beans to be spilled. The proper and effective response to this new age is not to double or triple down on secrecy laws but for governments to live in the light of the day and have fewer secrets. That means giving up the ability to act however a government wants, but it also means that the decisions for which it makes convincing arguments will actually be supported by its citizens. The same goes for corporations and other organizations.

When Wikileaks dumped a huge cache of diplomatic messages in 2010 conservatives called for “whacking” the organization even though the United States came out looking relatively good. Unlike many other countries, we didn’t say one thing publicly about our intentions and something very different during private communications with other members of the American government. THAT sort of honesty and integrity is the only defense against revelations in the Age of Transparency, but it also means a willingness (or even necessity) for actually being, well, honest and having integrity. That’s something that is all too often in short supply in governments and their functionaries.

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Domino #4: Henderson Suspends $5 Billion UK Property Fund Over “Exceptional Liquidity Pressures”

Does '4' make a trend? First Standard Life, then Aviva, followed by M&G and now this morning, due to "exceptional liquidity pressures" Henderson has suspended trading in its $5bn UK property fund and all of its feeders. Is it time to panic yet?

Things are getting bad fast in Britain…

Domino #1: *STANDARD LIFE INV PROPERTY DROPS 15%; TRADING IN FUND SUSPENDED

In a stark flashback to the catalytic event that ultimately brought down Bear Stearns in 2008, and subsequently unleashed the greatest financial crisis in history, last night we reported that Standard Life, has been forced to stop retail investors selling out of one of the UK’s largest property funds for at least 28 days after rapid cash outflows were sparked by fears over falling real estate values.

 

As we further noted, citing an analyst, “given the outflows the sector seems to be experiencing, this could well put downward pressure on commercial property prices,” said Laith Khalaf, senior analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown. “The risk is this creates a vicious circle, and prompts more investors to dump property, until such time as sentiment stabilises.”

 

As we concluded, whie Brexit is not a Humpty Dumpty event, where all the Fed’s horses and all the Fed’s men can’t glue the eggshell back together, it is an event that forces investors to wake up and prepare their portfolios for the very real systemic risks ahead. And, indeed, if Standard Life was the first domino, moments ago the second domino also tumbled when as Bloomberg reported that Aviva Investors Property Trust is as of this moment "frozen" citing "extraordinary" market conditions.

Domino #2: *AVIVA SUSPENDS TRADING ON AVIVA INVESTORS PROPERTY TRUST

As the FT adds, Aviva Investments said it had prevented retail investors from selling out of its £1.8bn UK Property Trust since Monday afternoon.

 

Cited by Bloomberg, Aviva said in an email that "market circumstances, which are impacting the wider industry, have resulted in a lack of immediate liquidity" adding that "we have acted to safeguard the interests of all our investors by suspending dealing in the fund with immediate effect…. Suspension of dealing will give Aviva Investors greater control in managing cash flows and conducting orderly asset sales in order to meet our obligations to investors.”

Domino #3: *M&G SUSPENDS TRADING IN M&G PROPERTY PORTFOLIO FUND

As Bloomberg reports, M&G suspends trading in property portfolio, feeder funds, according to statement on website.

 

"Investor redemptions in the fund have risen markedly because of the high levels of uncertainty in the U.K. commercial property market since the outcome of the European Union referendum.

 

Redemptions have now reached a point where M&G believes it can best protect the interests of the funds’ shareholders by seeking a temporary suspension in trading."

And now Domino #4: *HENDERSON SUSPENDS UK PROPERTY PAIF & PAIF FEEDER FUND
Henderson temporarily suspends all trading in the Henderson U.K. Property PAIF and the Henderson UK Property PAIF feeder funds to safeguard the interests of all investors, according to statement.
Decision due to “exceptional liquidity pressures” after Brexit and recent suspension of other direct property funds

The $5 billion fund was already dropping fast…

 

As Laith Khalaf, a senior analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown cited above, put it, “the dominoes are starting to fall in the U.K. commercial property market, as yet another fund locks its doors on the back of outflows precipitated by the Brexit vote. It’s probably only a matter of time before we see other funds follow suit."

We could not have said it better ourselves.

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What Matters

By Chris at http://ift.tt/12YmHT5

This weekend just gone, my wife and I drove our kids to a park on the other side of town for a kite flying contest. Let me just say that kite flying inspires me for all of 10 minutes. Maybe… just. I guess it’s sort of pretty but it’s completely pointless and, unless you could get the kites to fight one another, I really can’t get enthused.

In any event… After putting her kite together, my daughter dropped the car keys on what is an immense field. A field which was by now teeming with hundreds of kite flyers, sausage sellers, ice cream carts, and other parents who were probably aching to get home to do something else while smiling at their spawn saying, “Oh, yes Johnny, isn’t it lovely?” as Johnny giggles at a kite shaped like a bucking donkey. Or maybe it was a horse. Or a seahorse. I don’t know.

Once the realisation hit that the car keys were lost somewhere on this immense landscape of green grass, I immediately longed for the boredom of watching kites and people, mumbling platitudes to excited children.

Now the hunt was indeed on and hunt we did. It turned into two flipping hours of hunting.

While walking around in circles, mumbling, and staring intently at the grass, the only thing distinguishing me from a mentally ill person was the lack of drool coming from my lips. And this was when I bumped into another lost soul. A woman was doing pretty much the same thing. “I lost my engagement ring,” she told me in a whispered but somewhat hysterical voice. I felt really sorry for her and normally would have grabbed my kids and set about helping her find it. Where were you last? What does it look like? Etc.

But no! After just a few seconds I quickly evaluated her problem and my problem which involved night falling soon and having to call a friend to come and pick us up. I wished her luck and continued my search.

For me it was more important that I solve my problem before attempting to help solve hers.

Determining what is most important and clearing the noise – no matter how “important” it may seem – is of course the hallmark of many a successful person.

For today’s podcast I have recorded a brief message to you regarding recent events and what they may mean for all of us going forward.

I cover Brexit, China, and gold. There are many other areas that are indeed important but it’s also wise to take in information in bites size chunks as our brain actually assimilates and synthesises information better when doing so.

What Matters

I was going to publish this on Monday as per my usual schedule but then realised with irony that it was the 4th of July and the US readers would be celebrating their own “Brexit day”.

And so let me wish all readers a fantastic Independence Day. Independence from ignorance and independence from bad ideas. My wish is that, as a reader, you’ll be gaining critical thought which is easily the most important step towards self independence.

– Chris

PS: Some kind soul picked up our keys and – since they were branded – managed to somehow (not sure how) find our car, leave a note on the windscreen with his phone number and a message to call him, and then hide the keys under the hub of the wheel. Thank you! You saved me from more bloody kites as well as the logistical pain of getting home for a spare set.

“Focusing is about saying no.” – Steve Jobs

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Ex-ECB Banker Stokes Europe’s Banking Panic: “People Are Starting To Withdraw From The Market”

The latest red flag about the solvency and viability of the European banking sector came this morning from none other than the chairman of Societe General and former ECB executive board member, Lorenzo Bini Smaghi who warned today that Italy’s banking crisis could spread to the rest of Europe.

“The whole banking market is under pressure,” the former European Central Bank executive board member said in an interview with Bloomberg Television on Wednesday. “We adopted rules on public money; these rules must be assessed in a market that has a potential crisis to decide whether some suspension needs to be applied.”

But what is most concerning is that one can make the argument that the former central banker was almost doing all he can to stoke panic: “There is no rationality in the market, it’s all very emotional. People are starting to withdraw from the market and to go to very liquid and safe assets.”

Why pour even more gasoline on the European banking fire? Simple: the financier is hoping for an overhaul of European bailout regulations saying that “rules limiting state aid to lenders should be reconsidered to prevent greater upheaval.” In other words, the countdown to the elimination of the brand new “bail in” process as a banking resolution mechanism appears to have started in order to avoid depositor panic that they may be next in line to “impairments”.

A summary of Bini Smaghi’s key points:

  • “There is no rationality in the market”
  • People are starting to withdraw from the market and to go to very liquid assets
  • “The bail-in wil scare the markets and small investors”
  • Europe needs a credible back-stop for its banking system, EU banking rules need to be assessed, policy makers need to be pragmatic
  • European solution is needed for Italy; “in this situation, you need policy to step in”
  • Opportunity to consolidate Italian banking industry
  • Germany has too many banks that are not profitable
  • Market concern on Brexit is that we’re in for “very long” negotiations
  • U.K. economy is sitting on major imbalances’’
  • U.K. cutting corporate taxes creates risk of tax competition across Europe, leading to bigger deficits and debts

His interview is below:

The stress across Europe’s various institutions is palpable: as we have continuously reported, European banking stocks resumed their descent (especially now that even BlackRock has said it is selling the sector) as policy makers disagreed and sometimes issued contradictory statements about what may come next. Deutsche Bank AG, Germany’s largest lender, tumbled another 6.1% to its lowest level since at least 1989. Societe Generale, France’s second-biggest bank, which Bini Smaghi has chaired for just over a year, fell 1.8 percent as of 2 p.m. in Paris.

Nowhere was the confusion, greater, however, than in Italy where Finance Undersecretary Pier Paolo Baretta, responding to the unprecedented implosion of the country’s 3rd largest and most insolvent bank, Monte Paschi, said in an interview on RAI radio Wednesday morning that a “technical solution” on Monte Paschi could be hours away, before issuing a statement an hour later that said “no intervention is expected in the next few hours.”

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble, speaking at a news conference in Berlin hours later, said his Italian counterpart Pier Carlo Padoan told him that Italy intends to stick to the banking-union rules.

The resulting confusion meant that while Monte Paschi has seen a brief rebound on hopes of some bailout, other Italian banks are now sinking fast: the largest Italian lender, UniCredit SpA, has slumped more than 60% this year and replaced its chief executive officer amid speculation the bank will need to tap its investors for more capital. Its shares fell 1.4% Wednesday.

Yet while the Italian fire rages, Europe refuses to concede to Matteo Renzi’s demands for a bail out instead of a bail in. “Despite the struggling market, it’s important to protect the regulations established for European banks since the financial crisis” said Klaus Regling, CEO of the EU Stabilization Fund in a separate television interview. Many solutions under the existing rules are still available to Italy, he said, the main of which of course is impairing depositors in one or more insolvent banks and thus launching an even greater bank run and even more bank failures.

“The Italian government is in a dialogue with the European Commission on how to apply the framework to these specific circumstances,” Regling said. “I am confident they will find a way.”

For now no way is obvious.

Meanwhile, the former ECBer did all he could to push up the panic level: Bini Smaghi said on Bloomberg TV that Europe’s banking market faces the risk of a systemic crisis unless governments accept the idea of taxpayer money as the ultimate recourse. Any intervention should be as swift as possible, he said.

In other words, going back to square one.

Both Italy and Germany have too many banks that are not profitable and more consolidation is needed, he said. Italy must do more to deal with non-performing loans, and Prime Minister Matteo Renzi will have to take politically unpopular steps, including encouraging mergers that will lead to job cuts, Bini Smaghi said.

“What’s needed is a European solution,” he said. “So far, we’ve had national solutions. We need a clear backstop.”

Translation: all that macroprodential bullshit we have heard so much about really means just one thing: more taxpayer bailouts are inevitable.

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President Obama Explains His ‘Strategy’ In Afghanistan – Live Feed

While details are sparse, AP reports that President Obama will announce today his plans to increase to around 8,400 the number of U.S. troops in Afghanistan when he leaves office. The numbers reflect a compromise between Obama's original plan and what many military commanders had recommended. Obama had planned to drop troop levels from 9,800 to 5,500 troops by the end of 2016. But Taliban resurgence has forced Washington to rethink its exit strategy. We are sure Killary will follow his lead…

 

Live Feed…

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