Gary Johnson/William Weld: Can They Win Over Disaffected Republicans, Even in Weld’s Home State?

Part of the theory behind why nominating two former Republican governors for the Libertarian Party presidential ticket was such a no-brainer idea for 2016 was that the Republican Party, theoretic home of a lot of American desire to see a small, affordable, Constitutional government, was about to nominate a maniac who many GOP faithful could not in good conscience support.

The Boston Globe, from the land of L.P. vice presidential pick and former two-term Massachusetts Republican Gov. William Weld, does some reporting today trying to find some truth to that, and finds one former Weld chief of staff and a former state GOP chairwoman willing to go on the record as very glad to have an alternative to voting Donald Trump they can get behind.

Then it deflates the presumption by mentioning that Weld’s “political protege” and current Gov. Charlie Baker has not said he’d vote Johnson/Weld, and in fact says he’ll be joining the likely near-majority not voting at all in November for president. And while the campaign has not yet provided specifics publicly, they told the Globe that Weld’s promised fundraising prowess was, according to the Globe, going well.

Then there was this sad quote, which might well represent many more voters than the quoted:

“I think half the country has problems with either Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump, so a third-party alternative has appeal to them and to me,” said Rob Gray, a Republican consultant who once worked for Weld.

But he won’t be voting for Weld. He doesn’t want to waste his vote and fears that Johnson could serve as a spoiler who helps get Clinton elected.

“I love the guy,” he said of Weld. “But ultimately you have to make your choice between the two candidates who have a chance to win.”

Actually, collective choices about who to vote for defines who has a chance to win, and the winner would have won whether you vote for them or not. But those truths are hard to sell to American voters.

In another bit of the surprisingly continual major media attention the L.P. ticket continues to earn, The Washington Post this morning gave a semi-comprehensive look at Johnson’s issue stances for its readers, after noting two unusual things about Johnson as a Libertarian: his surprisingly high polling so far, and his willingness to shift away from a libertarian hardcore in some of his stances.

Author Max Ehrenfreund highlights Johnson’s belief in regulation over tort law as a solution to some environmental harms (though the article later points out Johnson is not currently supporting any specific federal action targeting global warming), and his willingness to use executive authority for some goals.

That latter point is not necessarily a libertarian sin if the goal is to restrict government size and scope, though a respect for the constitutional structure of distinct executive and legislative powers is often called upon by the libertarian and libertarian-leaning, generally as a means of making sure one or the other does not overstep its bounds in a non-libertarian direction.

The rest of the article does a decent job summing him up on the budget, taxation, abortion, criminal justice, and immigration, though foreign policy is ignored entirely here by the Post.

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The Gold Standard: Friend Of The Middle Class

Via AntoniusAquinas.com,

In-Gold-We-Trust

It has been theoretically demonstrated and seen in general practice that a monetary system of 100% metallic money devoid of central banking checks monetary inflation, prevents a general rise in the price level, and eliminates the dreaded business cycle while making all sorts of monetary mischief nearly impossible.  A gold standard is not only economically superior to any paper money scheme, but is morally just, which is why it is hated by the politically well-connected, academics, politicians, and the rest of the Establishment.

Often not discussed, however, even by its proponents is the beneficial effect that “hard money” has for the middle class.

It is not a coincidence that since the U.S. left the last vestiges of the gold standard in 1971with President Nixon’s nefarious decision to no longer redeem international central bank payments in gold, real wages for Americans have stagnated.  Nixon’s decision to put the nation on an irredeemable paper money standard set it on a course of economic ruination, which is why he should have been hounded from office not for his role in the bungled, petty cover up at the Watergate.

Stagnating wage rates have been confirmed by a number of studies, take, for instance one from the Pew Research Center which states that “today’s average hourly wage has just about the same purchasing power as it did in 1979. . . . [I]n real terms the average wage peaked more than 40 years ago: The $4.03-an-hour rate recorded in January 1973 has the same purchasing power as $22.41 would today.”*

While the absence of the gold standard has impoverished laborers, it has benefitted (not surprisingly) the very wealthy – hence, the reason why it was abandoned, as the Pew Study reports: “What gains have been made, have gone to the upper income brackets.  Since 2000, usual weekly wages have fallen 3.7% (in real terms) among workers in the lowest tenth of the earnings distribution, and 3% among the lowest quarter.  But among people near the top of the distribution, real wages have risen 9.7%.”

Of course, this was part of Nixon’s plan: redistribution of wealth from the middle class and low income groups via money printing to the political class.  Such a scheme, however, could have only happened if the gold standard was eliminated.

Since the start of the abominable Obama Administration in 2009, the adjusted monetary base of the U.S. rose from $1.772 trillion to $3.966 trillion as of March 16, 2016.  Of course, even these unfathomable figures as well as all other information supplied by the dominant media and government cannot be trusted.  It, therefore, can be safely assumed that the real money supply is more than officially reported.

Money, like every other good, is subjected to the immutable law of supply and demand.  Every increase in the money supply reduces the purchasing power of the monetary units which are already in circulation.  Naturally, since wages are paid in dollars, increases in the supply of them will decrease their purchasing power.  Thus, while nominal wages have gone up as the Pew Study shows, real wages (what wages can purchase) have stagnated.

The decline in real wages over the decades from profligate money printing has resulted in lower standard of living for wage earners and those living on fixed incomes. The rise in two income families is, in part, a consequence of a paper money economy and the fact that the financial survival of families now requires two incomes.  Two-income families have also profound cultural implications which are now manifesting themselves.

There has been much talk throughout the current presidential campaign about the financial decline of the middle class.  Candidates on the Left naturally talk of subsidies and more redistribution of wealth while those on the Right have called for tax cuts. While tax reduction of any kind is always welcomed and leads to economic growth, a sound monetary policy is just as important for a revitalization of the middle class.  Moreover, a return to honest money does not require any expansion of government spending or debt.

If policy makers truly want to improve the condition of the middle class, which consists primarily of wage earners, a return to a monetary order of “hard money” is an economic and moral necessity.

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Swedish Politician Says It’s “Worse” When Swedish Men Rape Women Compared To When Immigrants Do

In most sane circles, the act of rape is reprehensible and it makes absolutely no difference who perpetrated the act. However, in what will inevitably make blood shoot out of one's eyes to read, a politician in Sweden actually makes a distinction on the severity of the act depending on who committed it.

Swedish Left Party politician Barbro Sorman, who represents a district of the capital Stockholm, said on Twitter that it is "worse" when Swedish men rape women compared to when immigrants rape women because of cultural differences according to Breitbart.

"The Swedish men who rape do it despite the growing gender equality. They make an active choice. It's worse, Imo." Sorman tweeted, prior to deleting the Twitter account entirely.

When contacted by Sweden's Free Times, Sorman initially continued to defend the argument, however walked the argument back when pressed.

As Breitbart explains

When contacted by Sweden’s Free Times, Mrs. Sörman continued to defend this line of argument:

 

“Take a picture of Sweden as an equal society, where all are nurtured in equality. Then you can say that if you are brought up in it, you make an active choice to not be equal, rather than if you are brought up in a society that is not equal”, she said.

 

When pressed later, she backed tracked. She said the Tweets were “clumsily expressed”, adding: “I’m not saying it’s worse, of course not!”

The comments come at a time when 35 females were recently assaulted by "young men, who are foreigners" at a Swedish music festival in Karlstad. Adding even further relevance to the comments from an elected official, as we reported yesterday, a Swedish police report released last month said that, according to a survey carried out by the EU's rights agency, the country has the worst rates of sexual violence against women in all of Europe. As Infowars reports, Sweden is known as the rape capital of Europe due to immigrants being massively over represented in official rape statistics. Rapes in Sweden have skyrocketed by a stunning 1,472% from 1975 to 2014, when there were 421 and 6,620 sexual assaults respectively.

"77.6% of the country's rapists are identified as 'foreigners' (and that's significant because in Sweden, 'foreigner is generally synonymous with 'immigrant from Muslim country'). And even this likely understates the issue, since the Swedish government, in an effort to obscure the problem, records second-generation Muslim perpetrators simply as 'Swedes'." writes Selwyn Duke.

* * *

While it may be inconceivable that such comments are made, the comments actually align to how serious the country is about this horrific problem. Recall that Sweden's solution to Muslims attacking women was simply to have everyone wear a wristband that says "Don't Grope Me" on it.

This is yet another sad example of where we are as a society, and provides a little bit of insight as to why Sweden has the least amount of confidence in Donald Trump out of anyone in the world. Trump is inevitably entirely too politically incorrect for Sweden.

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The Revolt Against Globalism… Is Going Global

Submitted by Justin Raimondo via AntiWar.com,

There was William Galston at the European Council on Foreign Relations, listening to his fellow elitists and foreign policy honchos caviling about the rise of Donald Trump and bemoaning the fate of the European Union (EU) at the hand’s of Britain’s Euro-skeptics. As the assembled luminaries had a collective sad in their five-star hotel, wondering how the proles could’ve gotten so far out of hand, Galtson – longtime Democratic party hack, former domestic advisor to Bill Clinton, and a senior fellow at the “centrist” Brookings Institution – heard a call to arms. It was almost as if Cecil Rhodes, the British imperialist and original founder and financier of the Council on Foreign Relations, had spoken to him from on high – or, rather, from below – and commanded him to spread the Word far and wide:

“I realized that the stakes in the U.S. presidential election are even higher than I had thought. The fate of the entire postwar order hangs in the balance, and with it the prospects for democracy world-wide. Without vigorous American leadership, the prospects are not bright.”

Oh, yes, those shortsighted Little People are “turning inward,” and “this is understandable,” but, hey, “liberal internationalism is back on its heels” and the dreaded “ethno-nationalist populism” – i.e. resistance to the One World “global governance” schemes of Galston and his comrades – “is on the march.” What’s a globalist to do?

And it’s not just the English-speaking world that’s resisting the globalist agenda. Those Frenchies are getting restive, too, and the rest of Europe is balking at “the obvious candidate for continental leadership” for “historical reasons.” After all, everyone remembers the last time the Germans tried to impose “union” on the Europeans, so there’s that. See how prejudiced the Little People can be? They just don’t have the foresight to worry about the New Hitler – Vladimir Putin, if you even have to ask – who “senses a historic opportunity to exploit Europe’s divisions for his own purposes.” Why, he actually wants to trade with Europe, and that would undermine the war plans of the CFR types, who are fixated on restarting the cold war. Of course, they don’t actually say that in so many words, but the intent is clear enough. They put it like this:

“If Europe doesn’t hold together when facing a rearmed and resurgent Russia, the gains for democracy and free markets since the fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of the Soviet Union may well be rolled back.”

You know, “democracy” – like in Ukraine, where EUinspired mobs overthrew the elected President and the coup leaders immediately launched a vicious war against their own people in east Ukraine, killing many thousands and unleashing neo-Nazi regiments like the Azov Battalion on those who dared to resist. That’s “democracy” for you! And alarm bells should go off whenever you hear a top advisor to Bill Clinton, Al Gore, and Walter Mondale hail “free markets.” It’s a signal for the looting to begin.

As usual, everything depends on the United States – as inheritor of Rhodes’ beloved British empire – but, alas, the “ethno-nationalist” contagion has spread across the Atlantic, and it may be that the Yanks are not coming:

“Now is the worst possible time for the US to pull back and, as Donald Trump would have it, to reframe America’s relations with Europe as a transaction to be terminated if the sums don’t come up right. Franklin Roosevelt understood that a democratic Europe was a vital national interest of the US So did Ronald Reagan and every other postwar president. US diplomacy in 2017 and beyond must reflect this core reality.”

In the transaction preferred by Galston and his ilk, America always comes out the loser. That’s because we have a Mission, and it doesn’t matter how much it costs: we must bear the weight of Empire on our shoulders without complaint and without regard for the welfare of our own citizens. After all, anything less would be selfish: no, we mustn’t succumb to the requirements of common sense and fiscal sanity. It’s our sacred duty to police the world, so people like Galston can sit around in the Hague and determine the fate of entire peoples.

Forget Asia: we can’t “pivot” eastward while the Poles are pining for American aid and arms and the Romanians are unhappy with their lot. If we pay too much attention to where more than a third of the world’s population resides, as opposed to focusing on Estonia (population under two million) we’ll miss out on a real opportunity to start World War III with Russia. And let’s stop with the “complaints about insufficient European military and diplomatic burden-sharing” since these “have proved ineffectual in the past.” Just like that good-for-nothing uncle who keeps coming to you for “loans” that are never repaid, you just have to buck up and keep handing out the cash – because your own ineffectuality is your best friend.

As for those trade agreements which are mislabeled “free trade” but are really just protectionist trade blocs meant to “integrate” us into supranational entities – it’s really a shame the two presidential candidates have bowed to pressure from the Little People and come out against them. But it’s not too late to shore up the failing EU by signing the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP).

Galston and the globalists are frightened to death: their plans for a world-spanning Empire on which the sun never sets seem to be sinking beneath the same waves that have overwhelmed all the empires of the past. But they aren’t giving up their grand plans just yet: far from it. As Galston puts it:

“None of this can succeed unless the American people are persuaded that outward-facing military, diplomatic and economic arrangements are consistent with their own well-being. Increased defense spending, which enhances job-creation as well as national security, may well be needed. New measures to cushion vulnerable Americans against the wage and employment shocks created by trade are essential.”

All this “America first” nonsense has to be dispensed with, and fast: Americans must be weaned away from their selfish parochial concerns and made to see that we’re all citizens of the Global Village. And if all this “outward-facing” policy means pouring our wealth into renovating some ramshackle Ukrainian hamlet until it meets the standards of a typical American slum, well then let’s create jobs on the home front by arming to the teeth – after all, we’ll be needing a lot more bombs if we’re going to be fighting the Russians. Just keep those government printing presses rolling!

And here’s the punch line you’ve been waiting for, where the Galstonian agenda is revealed for all to see:

“Given current circumstances, robust internationalism is inconsistent with the fiscal austerity imposed by budget sequestration, let alone Paul Ryan-style proposals for retrenchment in the social programs that working Americans rely on for what is left of their security. Whatever its proponents may say, a smaller government at home means retreat abroad. This is the road to disaster, and we must not take it.”

Galston has understood what the National Review crowd and the Ted Cruz conservatives refuse to acknowledge. As that Old Right prophet and polemicist Garet Garrett put it:

“Between government in the republican meaning, that is, Constitutional, representative, limited government, on the one hand, and Empire on the other hand, there is mortal enmity. Either one must forbid the other or one will destroy the other. That we know. Yet never has the choice been put to a vote of the people.”

More than fifty years after those word were written, the people are rising up against the globalist agenda – against Galston and his fellow World Planners – and demanding that the issue be put to a vote of the people. The Republican party, long a fortress of internationalism, has been breached and taken by self-avowed America First nationalists, and our British cousins have thrown off the shackles of a supranational super-State -in-the-making, reasserting their sovereignty and inspiring rebels on the continent to follow their example.

The revolt against globalism is going global – and that’s a good thing for libertarians and for all opponents of Empire. Whatever the contradictions and ideological idiosyncrasies of the various anti-globalist forces now on the move, their victory is a precondition for the recovery of liberty in America. Because Galston is perfectly correct to say that “a smaller government at home means retreat abroad.” He understands what the leadership of the post-World War II conservative movement has spent decades evading – and, more importantly, now the rank-and-file are beginning to understand how they’ve been lied to all these years, and why the promises of their leaders have all come to naught.

This is a great step forward for libertarians: the consciousness of the masses is being raised to new heights. Our task now is to engage them, educate them, and recruit them as soldiers in the fight to take our country back from Señor Galston and the regnant elites he represents.

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“In Gold We Trust” Annual Report Shows New Bull Market “Emerging”

The “In Gold We Trust” Annual Report by fund managers, Ronald-Peter Stöferle and Mark Valek has just been published and is as ever essential reading for all seeking to better understand the gold market.

Inline image 1

Last year’s report by Ronnie and Mark from Incrementum in Liechtenstein, was downloaded more than 1.5 million times and the report is now one of the most widely read gold studies in the world. The 170-page publication is as comprehensive as ever with many great tables and charts. It concludes that a new gold “bull market is emerging.”

– Gold is back, a new bull market is emerging
– Increasing uncertainty about economic and political developments boosts the gold price
– Monetary stimulus ongoing: the BoJ and the ECB are creating the equivalent amount of the world’s entire annual gold production via their QE programs each month
– BREXIT: Uncertainty will negatively affect growth. Further monetary and fiscal stimulus to be expected to counter further disintegration of the Union
– Dollar strength upon US-recovery and normalization was major contributor to gold/commodity weakness of the last years
– The narrative of economic recovery is crumbling; US recession cannot be ruled out; faith in monetary policy measures declines
 
– Continued depreciation of the US dollar and strength in commodities may lead to higher inflation, or maybe stagflation
– The persisting low interest rate environment is leading to a revival in interest in gold investments on the part of institutional investors
– In addition to gold, this generally means a positive environment for inflation-sensitive assets like silver and mining stocks
– Incrementum confirms its long-term price target of USD 2,300 for June 2018 – New Gold “Bull Market Is Emerging
 
 
The full report can be read here 
 

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Gold and Silver News
China buyers drive silver prices higher (WSJ)
Silver crushes even gold as it powers to 2-year high (Marketwatch)
Gold retreats, correction seen short-term (Reuters)
Still stronger gold price ahead (Credit Suisse)
Precious Metals Shine Bright for Brexit Haven Seekers (Bloomberg)
Gold pushes back towards 2 year high, silver crosses $21oz (Reuters)
Is Gold the Answer to Negative Rates and Brexit Woes? (Bloomberg)

ETF Securities Reports Biggest One-Day Gold Inflow Since Financial Crisis (Zerohedge)
Bear Stearns 2.0? UK’s Largest Property Fund Halts Redemptions, Fears “Vicious Circle” (Zerohedge)
Detonation of the LBMA – It Wasn’t Brexit, Governor Carney (Safehaven)
Read More Here

Gold Prices (LBMA AM)
05 July: USD 1,344.75, EUR 1,207.05 & GBP 1,023.89 per ounce
04 July: USD 1,348.75, EUR 1,213.07 & GBP 1,016.42 per ounce
01 July: USD 1,331.75, EUR 1,199.51 & GBP 1,001.34 per ounce
30 June: USD 1,317.00, EUR 1,183.59 & GBP 976.82 per ounce
29 June: USD 1,318.00, EUR 1,191.64 & GBP 984.36 per ounce
28 June: USD 1,312.00, EUR 1,185.79 & GBP 985.84 per ounce
27 June: USD 1,324.60, EUR 1,200.49 & GBP 996.36 per ounce

Silver Prices (LBMA)
05 July: USD 19.73, EUR 17.69 & GBP 14.99 per ounce
04 July: USD 20.36, EUR 18.31 & GBP 15.36 per ounce
01 July: USD 19.24, EUR 17.29 & GBP 14.48 per ounce
30 June: USD 18.36, EUR 16.48 & GBP 13.61 per ounce
29 June: USD 18.21, EUR 16.42 & GBP 13.55 per ounce
28 June: USD 17.57, EUR 15.84 & GBP 13.17 per ounce
27 June: USD 17.70, EUR 16.06 & GBP 13.40 per ounce

Recent Market Updates

– 3 Charts Show “How Precious Brexit Is” for Gold and Silver Bullion
– Gold, Silver Best Performing Assets In H1, 2016 – Up 26% & 38%
– BREXIT Creates EU Contagion Risk – Ramifications for Investors, Savers and Companies In Ireland
– BREXIT Day – Markets Becalmed – Gold Panic Prelude – Trading Hours
– Gold Lower Despite “Panic” Due To “Supply Issues” In Inter Bank Gold Market
– Gold Slips Despite UK Gold Demand Surging – Investors “Seek Stability”
– Gold Prices Surge to Highest in Nearly Two Years On FED and Brexit Haven Demand
– Gold Bullion Has Little Downside, Brexit Or Not, Says HSBC
– Central Bank of Ireland Warns Risks are Debt, Brexit, Geopolitical Tensions and Migration
– Gold In Euros Surges 6.5% In June and 17% YTD On BREXIT Concerns
– Soros Buying Gold On BREXIT, EU “Collapse” Risk
– UK Gold Demand Rises On BREXIT “Nerves”
– Pensions Timebomb in “Slow Motion Detonation” In UK, EU, U.S.
– Silver – Perfect Storm Brewing in the Market
– Martin Wolf: There Will Be Another “Huge” Financial Crisis

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Tesla Drops On Report Of Another “Autopilot” Crash And Rollover

Last week, Tesla stock tumbled after it was belatedly revealed that a driver had been killed while his 2015 Model S, which had been in self-driving mode, failed to notice a turning truck and crashed into it head on, killing the driver (who may have been watching a Harry Potter DVD at the time). This led to bizarre developments: Fortune Magazine published a story in which it reported that on May 18, eleven days after Brown died, Tesla and CEO Elon Musk, in combination (roughly three parts Tesla, one part Musk), sold more than $2 billion of Tesla stock in a public offering at a price of $215 per share without ever having released a word about the crash.

This promptly led to a mini meltdown on Twitter by none other than Elon Musk, who far from coming off as a visionary geneius, instead quickly devolved into a pennystock hustler, for whom the “market response” is all that matters:

Today during the afterhours session, TSLA is once again dipping lower on a report in the Detroit Free Press that a local art gallery owner told police his 2016 Tesla Model X was in Autopilot mode when it crashed and rolled over on the Pennsylvania Turnpike last week.

The crash came just one day after the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration issued a report on a fatal crash in May involving a Tesla that was in self-driving mode.

The good news: both Albert Scaglione and his artist son-in-law, Tim Yanke,  survived Thursday’s crash near the Bedford exit, about 107 miles east of Pittsburgh.

The bad news: this is yet another example of a Tesla crashing in “self-driving” mode.

According to the DFP, Dale Vukovich of the Pennslvania State Police, who responded to the crash, said Scaglione told him that he had activated the Autopilot feature. In his crash report Vukovich stated that Scaglione’s car was traveling east, near mile marker 160, about 5 p.m. when it hit a guard rail “off the right side of the roadway. It than crossed over the eastbound lanes and hit the concrete median.”

After that the Tesla Model X rolled onto its roof and came to rest in the middle east bound lane. A 2013 Infiniti G37 driven in the westbound lane by Thomas Hess of West Chester, Pa., was struck by debris from the Scaglione car, but neither he nor his passenger were hurt.

Vukovich said he likely will cite Scaglione after he completes his investigation, but he declined to specify the charge. To be sure there is always the possibility that the driver is scapegoating the car for a human error, which can be quickly confirmed or denied.

As the DFP also notes, there’s not enough evidence to indicate that Tesla’s Autopilot malfunctioned, although the investigation is surely just starting, as is far greater focus on TSLA’s autopilot feature including its alleged safety.

Last Wednesday, the NHTSA announced it is investigating the design and performance of the Autopilot system after the abovementioned death of Joshua Brown, 40, who died in May 7 in Florida when his 2015 Tesla Model S hit a semi-truck while in self-driving mode, The federal agency said both the driver and the Autopilot system failed to detect the large tractor-trailer making a left turn in front of him,

But the driver of the truck said there was a Harry Potter video still running when the Tesla came to a stop about a quarter-mile from the impact.

Tesla says that before Autopilot can be used, drivers have to acknowledge that the system is an “assist feature” that requires a driver to keep both hands on the wheel at all times. Drivers are told they need to “maintain control and responsibility for your vehicle” while using the system, and they have to be prepared to take over at any time.

Later this month, NHTSA, which is authorized to set the safety rules for increasingly autonomous vehicles, will issue guidelines intended to set the near-term rules of the road in autonomous vehicle research.

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Do Not Show This Chart To Your Stockbroker

If there is one thing a stockbroker hates more than a losing stock investment, it's a winning bond investment; and for the last decade, boring old bonds have outperformed stocks…

US Treasury Bonds +70% over the last decade, topping the S&P 500's 63% gain…

 

With significantly lower volatility…

 

Of course there is another possibility… Up 114% over the same decade…

 

Two words… 'Great' and 'Rotation' from paper to hard assets.

Charts: Bloomberg

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Small Business Owner Explains Options: “Close, Hike Prices, Or Eliminate Jobs”

The mad dash to increase the minimum wage continues. Earlier we reported that New York and California had passed legislation that would raise the minimum wage to $15, and in June the District of Columbia also voted unanimously to raise the minimum wage to $15 as well.

 

In a statement sent to The Daily Signal, D.C. Council Chairman Phil Mendelson said the following:

The District can be an expensive place to live and therefore the concern about the minimum wage is more acute than would be the case is other areas of the country. I expect that the District will not be alone in the Washington metropolitan region, as similar legislation is pending in populous Montgomery County, Maryland.

One small business owner is not so thrilled about the announcement however. Carolina Story, co-owner of Straw Stick & Brick Delicatessen in northwest Washington said she is in shock about the minimum wage hike. "It puts a big stop on little startups like ours" Story said.

As The Daily Signal reports, Story took to Facebook in order to rant a bit about what the hike means to small business, especially Straw Stick & Brick. Story quickly added up the additional labor costs that the deli would would be forced to deal with as it struggles to stay profitable.

This means that a small business like mine—that needs to fill at least 11 entry level positions would have to pay those employees around $31,000 each per year which would amount to approximately $363,000 per year. Of course we would still need to fill at least [three] management positions which would obviously demand more than minimum wage—say maybe $40,000 per year on the low end (these positions deserve more pay but because of the entry level positions I am forced to be conservative).

 

That means that our yearly labor cost might rise to $483,000 in 2020. Business owners in my situation would need to make $1,932,000.00 per year in order to have a healthy business, pay ourselves a living wage, and cover fixed and variable costs.

Story went on to tell The Daily Signal that her original business plan now needs to be changed completely.

"All I know is that when I was working on my business plan, I knew what the cost was and I did not anticipate it growing from that to this within such a short period of time. It completely changes the business plan."

The deli, which has a staff of less than a dozen people, hires college and high school students to fill some positions and all current employees make above minimum wage. Story also hits upon the primary function of entry level jobs, which is to gain experience and move on – something that will go away as minimum wages continue to increase and small businesses can't afford to pay the labor cost.

"I have people who we hire to slice meat. They don't want to do that forever. They basically come in here so they can go on to their next step in life."

Story admits there isn't much she can do about it except to plan how to handle the coming wage hikes.

"I can't really do anything about it. All I can do as a business owner is work hard to figure out how to adjust. You have your small business owners who typically tend to work their butts off trying to be able to make their business work and grow it. But the reason I don't take a paycheck is because I'm reinvesting in this business to be able to grow it a little faster without taking loans."

Carolina concluded that there are really only three options for small business as minimum wage continues to be increased.

"Small business will either close, hike up their prices in hopes that the consumer understands, or consolidate positions and eliminate jobs. D.C. I love you – but boy oh boy are you making a big mistake!"

* * *

These types of warnings from small business owners will of course be ignored by the elites who wish to plan the entire economy, even if "economically, minimum wages may not make sense." The unintended consequences of these minimum wage hikes will be for some small businesses to shut down entirely, and for larger operations, mass layoffs and significant cuts to hours, just as WalMart and Starbucks have shown.

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After Losing $100 Billion On Terrible Stock Investments, The World’s Largest Pension Fund Is Doubling Down

Back in December 2014, when we first learned that Japan was willing to risk hundreds of billions in Japanese pensions to boost and prop up the domestic stock market – the only true “”arrow of Abenomics – by shifting cash out of bonds and into stocks in the country’s gargantuan (and world’s biggest) $1.4 trillion Government Pension Investment Fund, or GPIF, we wrote that “The GPIF Has A Warning For Japan’s Citizens: Abenomics Better Work, Or Your Pensions Are Toast.”

As the WSJ wrote then, “Japan’s $1.1 trillion government pension fund is betting that a long-term recovery and rising corporate profits will push Tokyo stock prices higher, helping the fund increase returns for the nation’s retirees. Mr. Abe has pushed for the fund to become a more aggressive and sophisticated investor. The fund decided in October to shift its portfolio to seek higher returns, slashing its target allocation to domestic bonds almost in half while nearly doubling that of domestic and foreign equities.”

Expectations that Mr. Abe’s policies will succeed have already helped double Japan’s benchmark stock index since late 2012. Further gains would no doubt benefit GPIF’s ¥23.9 trillion ($202 billion) domestic stock portfolio.

Oops.

Less than 2 years later, Abenomics is in tatters, the Japanese economy yoyo’s from recession to negligible growth, while the stock market has slid into a bear market having lost a quarter from its recent highs as a result of a surge in the Yen as the BOJ has largely wiped out all of its credibility with the now widely mocked decision to unleash negative rates.

And while all of the above is terrible news for Japan, whose demographic implosion assures a deflationary black hole no matter how much money the BOJ prints, those most impacted by Abe’s reckless decision are the country’s pensioners. Because as we concluded in December 2014, “unfortunately, for Japan, and its tens of millions of pensioners, the only news here is simple: the entire country is now held hostage by Japan’s last-gasp attempt to prove Monetarist and Keynesian policies work. Because, said otherwise, “Abenomics better work, or else all your pensions are toast.

Sadly, this process is now in play. Late last week, Morgan Stanley’s Yohei Iwao calculated that after suffering ¥5 trillion in losses in the year ended March 31, the GPIF has started off the new year with a another anti-bang, losing another ¥4.4 trillion in losses in the first quarter, or a total of just under $100 billion.

 

So with Abenomics careening off the cliff and headed for a traumatic death, and with Kuroda having become the laughing stock of central bank circles, has Japan finally learned its lesson? Will the GPIF rotate out of money-losing stocks and back into bonds which are currently trading at record high prices? According to Morgan Stanley, the answer is not a chance, for the simple reason that as a result of an upcoming asset rebalancing, the GPIF will have no choice but to buy even more money-losing stocks.

As Bloomberg reports, because shares held by Japan’s $1.4 trillion Government Pension Investment Fund have suffered such large losses, it will need to add to those holdings to meet targets for their weighting, while selling sovereign bonds whose value has soared. Assuming no re-weighting was done since Jan. 1, GPIF will need to buy 4.2 trillion yen ($41 billion) of local stocks and sell 9.8 trillion yen of Japanese government bonds to reach its goals. The brokerage didn’t give a time frame for this buying.

“Many foreigners think the pension rebalancing story is over,” said Yohei Iwao, executive director of the institutional equities division at Morgan Stanley MUFG. “But if we see any confirmation of more buying, it could help sentiment, at least in terms of pensions being there to support the downside.”

This may be good news for the short-term as a third party helps the BOJ in pushing stocks higher, but in the longer-run it simply guarantees even more losses as the Yen surge continue on the back of a Japanese economy that has lost virtually all levers to grow, including currency debasement. It also means that once the “rebalancing” dry powder is gone, there will be that much less in “money on the sidelines” after the upcoming buying spree.

Others, most notably those who will be selling all they can to the giant pension fund, are delighted:

GPIF rebalancing “is going to put a floor on stock declines in a market that’s full of uncertainty — it’s big,” said Koichi Kurose, Tokyo-based chief market strategist at Resona Bank Ltd. “It’s also important for the BOJ. A welcome story for them.”

The mechanics of the rebalancing are simple: Japanese stocks probably accounted for about 22% of GPIF’s holdings at the end of last month, while domestic debt made up 43% of assets, according to Morgan Stanley. He based his calculations on GPIF’s 23% weighting in domestic shares and 38 percent allocation to local bonds at the end of December and adjusted for market moves since then.

Meanwhile, the net upside from the GPIF’s recent capital allocation into stocks has already been more than wiped out as a result of the bear market in Japanese stocks. The Topix slumped 19% this year through June. Ironically, had the GPIF remains mostly in bonds, it would have a greater AUM than ever before: 10-year JGB yields tumbled to as low as minus 0.24% in the first half, while the yen gained about 16 percent against the dollar. This means nominal JGB prices have never been higher, which is bad news for those GPIF managers who dumped bonds to buy stocks… and lose trillions of yen in the process

* * *

There is a small glimmer of hope the pension fund won’t all all in just yet: while its portfolio structure means GPIF needs to buy more Japanese stocks and sell local debt, the pension’s managers are facing pressure from opposition lawmakers to do the contrary.  Yukio Edano, secretary general for the opposition Democratic Party of Japan, says GPIF has gambled with the state’s pension by shifting into stocks from bonds, and called for a reversal of strategy, the Asahi newspaper reported this month.

Another possibility is that, like in the US, where defined benefit pension plans are about to “throw in the towel” and rush headlong into purchases of long duration securities to offset their liabilities, Japan will likewise end its idiotic gamble with people’s savings all in the name of propping up stocks, and at least preserve the purchasing power that locals have worked all their lives to accumulate.

Still, this is virtually assured not to happen thanks to “astute advisors” such as Resona Bank’s Kurose who says “that’s exactly what they shouldn’t be doing. The only question is the timing…. They may take their time,” Kurose said, adding it could take between six months to a year to reach their targets. “It may not be enough to chase shares higher, but it’s enough to wipe out concerns of shares falling further.”

And that’s the kind of brilliant insight that Paul Krugman delivered to Abe several years ago when he first proposed this idea.

Sadly, for Japan, it is too late: as we explained before, the entire country is now held hostage by Japan’s last-gasp attempt to prove that Abenomics is right, even if it is now all too clear what the endgame is.

As such, out condolences to Japan’s retirees: not only do you face a demographic implosion, but you will have to face it with no funds once Abenomics is done propping up the market “other people’s money”, even if in this case the money belongs to all those tens of millions who have worked hard for decades to save it an allocate it wisely instead of handing it over to a lunatic with a monetary deathwish.

* * *

Finally, if there is still any confusion how all this plays out, re-read: “Paul Krugman Is “Really, Really Worried” That He Might Have Screwed Up Japan.”  And just because “Krugman is Krugman”, we’re never more than one Google
search away from a hilarious soundbite from the New York Times blog
archives, and so it’s with great pleasure and with everything said above
in mind, that we leave you with the following excerpt from a Krugman
classic entitled “Why Keynes Is Slowing Winning” ca. 2014: “Why does the tide finally seem to be turning? Partly, I think,
it’s just a matter of time; after six years it’s becoming hard not to
notice that the anti-Keynesians have been wrong about everything. And
the refusal of almost everyone on the anti-Keynesian side to admit any
kind of error has gradually made them look ridiculous.”

via http://ift.tt/29s2ZOF Tyler Durden

200+ Killed in Baghdad Terror Attack, Wave of Suicide Bombers in Saudi Arabia

More than 200 people were killed in a suicide bombing in a shopping mall in a Shia area of Baghdad for which the Islamic State (ISIS) claimed responsibility. The prime minister, Haider al-Abadi, called for three days of mourning, while facing protesters at his house and of his convoy who blamed lapses by the government for allowing such large amounts of explosives into residential neighborhoods.

ISIS promised more terrorist attacks on the West during Ramadan, but most of the attacks connected to them in the last month have come in majority Muslim countries like Bangladesh and Turkey. The Orlando shooting, in which 49 people were killed and where the shooter called 911 to pledge allegiance to ISIS, is the only major terrorist attack in the West during Ramadan, while more than 500 people have been killed in terrorist attacks and attacks on military targets attributed to ISIS or its adherents, with hundreds more killed by terror groups affiliating with ISIS, like Boko Haram in Nigeria and Al-Shabaab in Somalia.

The end of Ramadan saw a suicide bomber detonating himself near the Saudi security office of the Prophet’s Mosque in Medina, one of the holiest sites in Islam, after suicide bombers blew themselves up near a Shiite mosque in Qatif as well as near a U.S. consulate and a mosque in Jeddah. Analysts say the attacks represent a challenge by ISIS to Saudi Arabia’s authority as guardian of Islam’s holy cities of Mecca and Medina. There have been a number of ISIS attacks in the country in the last year.

Saudi authorities identified the Jeddah attacker as a Pakistani national who had been living in Saudi Arabia for 12 years. Pakistan said it would investigate the claim. A Saudi security spokesperson said the attackers intentions were “still unclear” since there was a mosque, local security forces, and a U.S. consulate in the vicinity of the bomber, whose vest only partially detonated.

Four security officers were killed in the attacks across Saudi Arabia. There were no claims of responsibility but authorities say the attacks bore the “hallmarks” of ISIS.

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