Elon Musk Reveals The Spaceship For Colonizing Mars – Live Feed

Having found his earth-based inventions and investments somewhat constricting. not to mention cash-burning, at this moment Elon Musk is speaking at the 67th annual International Astronautical Congress in Guadalajara, Mexico, an annual gathering of engineers and scientists devoted to tackling the grandiose and technical questions shaping the future of space exploration. Speakers this year also include NASA’s Scott Kelly, who spent a year at the International Space Station, and Buzz Aldrin, the second person to walk on the moon.

The event is most notable because for the first time, Musk will describe his long-anticipated plans for how to colonize Mars.

For those gathered today at the International Astronautical Conference in Guadalajara, Mexico, an animated video showing SpaceX’s new rocket – known as “Big Falcon Rocket” – presented in the clip below, provides a sneak peek of this ambitious initiative.

It was not immediately clear how many trillions in taxpayer subsidies, or follow-on equity and convertible offering the project would require to be brought to completion, although we do salute Musk’s vision.

* * *

Here are some of Musk’s initial comments:

“What I really want to achieve here is make Mars seem possible,” he says.

Musk says there are two fundamental paths for humanity: We stay on Earth forever until an eventual extinction event or we become a multi-planet species.

Musk says he wants to create a “self-sustaining city” on Mars.

Musk says using traditional methods to get to Mars would cost about $10 billion per person. Musk argues that if we can decrease the cost of going to Mars to around $200,000 per ticket, or about the average cost of a house in the US, more people would want to go.

Musk says that eventually there will be an extinction-level event on Earth. (Surely he means, beyond the “sixth extinction” that humans are currently bringing about.) But Mars is just as likely to be hit by an asteroid, proportional to its size. And when the Sun engulfs the Earth, Mars won’t be far behind.

“Early Mars was a lot like Earth,” Musk says, comparing the two planets. “It’s a little cold, but we could warm it up.”

Musk says it would be “quite fun” to be on Mars, since it has 62.5% less gravity than Earth, which would allow humans to lift heavy things.

Musk has been successful is in the way he characterizes huge problems and the ability to address them. Need an atmosphere? Yes, we can adjust that. Need it warmer? We can warm the planet, just like we have Earth.

And so on.

* * *

For those interested, watch him live below, while a live blog of the event can be followed at Bloomberg and Reuters.

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Deutsche Bank Fears Spark Buying Panic In Bunds (Despite Rising Germany Sovereign Risk)

Investors have piled into global developed market sovereign bonds as fears of Deutsche Bank collapse ripple through global markets. Interestingly, despite rising default risk concerns in Germany CDS, Bunds have been aggressively bid with negative yields now out to 15 years (and Finland NIRP to 10 years).

As Deutsche Bank risk explodes to record highs, Germany's sovereign risk has been rising…

 

But that rising risk has done nothing to hold back buyers of Bunds as the "global growth is awesome, bond curves are steepening" narrative is destroyed…

 

Driving the entire Bund curve below zero out to 15 years…

 

And Finland now NIRP to 10 years…

 

Charts: Bloomberg

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California Censors IMDB Because of Hollywood’s Alleged Ageism

90210California Gov. Jerry Brown has only a couple of days left to decide whether he’s going to sign or veto an important reform bill that would seriously reduce the ability of local law enforcement agencies to abuse the asset forfeiture process to seize and keep millions of dollars from citizens without having to prove they’ve committed a crime.

But in the meantime, we’ve got this: Brown has signed into law a bill that censors the Internet Movie Database (IMDB) in what appears to be a fairly straightforward violation of the company’s First Amendment rights. The IMDB is a familiar site for anybody looking to track down work by people in the film, television, and video games industry. It publishes the backgrounds of actors, their work histories, their biographies, and their birthdates.

That last part—birthdates (meaning ages)—is what several actors have a problem with. One sued unsuccessfully to try to force the IMDB to prevent the site from publishing her actual date of birth. The argument was that age discrimination in Hollywood and the acting industry is a serious, chronic issue, and publishing actors’ ages could harm their chances at finding work.

After that attempt failed, the Screen Actors Guild then pushed lawmakers in Sacramento to fix the problem for them. They responded by passing AB-1687, which forbids IMDB (or similar sites) from publishing or sharing birthdates or ages from paying subscribers (industry folks who use the site for employment services). Gov. Brown signed the bill into law on Sunday.

So, is this unconstitutional censorship? Yes it most certainly is, says nearly every lawyer The Hollywood Reporter consulted. In fact, the only attorney who was absolutely certain the law would survive a constitutional challenge and gave it a full-throated defense was the general counsel for the very union who pushed it through the legislature.

Some of the opponents:

“Creating liability for the truthful reporting of lawfully obtained information is deeply problematic under the First Amendment,” said UC Irvine dean and Constitutional scholar Erwin Chemerinsky. “It is different to say ‘men only’ or ‘women only’ or ‘whites only’ in an ad. That is discrimination that is impermissible. A birthday or an age is a fact, and I don’t think there can be liability under the First Amendment for publishing true facts.”

Said Bruce Johnson, of Seattle’s Davis Wright Tremaine, “Obviously, to the extent that it requires the removal of truthful information from websites reporting on matters of public interest, the statute would appear to be an unconstitutional abridgement of First Amendment rights.”

The bill’s sponsor, Democratic Assembly Majority Leader Ian Calderon, defended the law as a legitimate business regulation:

“Requiring websites to remove all age information from profiles would seem to run afoul of the First Amendment restrictions on the regulation of commercial speech,” Calderon had said in a statement to THR. “Limiting the bill to only subscribers makes it clear that the bill advances an important government interest — that of reducing age discrimination in a manner that is substantially related to that interest and no more extensive than necessary to achieve that interest.”

Yes, but it’s attempting to achieve the interest in reducing age discrimination by censoring a third-party site that is not responsible at all for the age discrimination these actors are claiming. This is the sort of mentality that has led to the European Union’s terrible “right to be forgotten” policies, which permit people to demand that search sites censor links to information about them that may be completely factually correct but that they nevertheless don’t want people to see. That’s a good reason why the rest of us should care. It may not directly affect us whether actors’ ages are allowed to be censored, but the justification for this government intervention can be directed elsewhere.

In addition, one lawyer noted, limiting the censorship to paying subscribers has the absurd side effect of requiring actors to “bribe” the IMDB for their silence by paying them to join up. Those who are not paying members would still face having their ages released.

Gabrielle Carteris, known to Gen-Xers as Andrea Zuckerman from Beverly Hills 90120, wrote a column for The Hollywood Reporter defending the law. She claims that the never would have gotten her role playing a teenager had people known she was actually 29 years old, which just goes to show she clearly never watched an episode of Glee.

The law does not go into effect until Jan. 1, assuming it is not legally challenged. IMDB did not respond to The Hollywood Reporter‘s questions.

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Maine Gov. Paul LePage’s ‘Binder of Drug Dealers’ Shows He Was Lying About the Race of Arrestees

Maine Gov. Paul LePage claimed last month that he had a three-ring binder showing that 90 percent of the suspected drug dealers arrested in the state were black or Hispanic. The binder, unbelievably, turns out to be real, but LePage’s statistics—much more believably, considering the state is almost 95 percent white—do not.

LePage made headlines in August when he declared that “people of color or people of Hispanic origin” were “the enemy” in the drug war. Facing accusations of racism, LePage tried to tamp down the controversy by calling a state lawmaker a “little son of a bitch socialist cocksucker” and claiming he had the statistics to back his comments up.

“Let me tell you this, explain to you, I made the comment that black people are trafficking in our state, now ever since I said that comment I’ve been collecting every single drug dealer who has been arrested in our state,” LePage said at a town hall event in August. “I don’t ask them to come to Maine and sell their poison, but they come, and I will tell you that 90-plus percent of those pictures in my book, and it’s a three-ringed binder, are black and Hispanic people from Waterbury, Conn., the Bronx and Brooklyn.”

In an impressive piece of public records trolling, the Maine ACLU immediately put in a freedom-of-information request for LePage’s binder. Lo and behold, it really exists. The governor’s office released the contents of the binder—about 150 pages of mostly news clippings and press releases—to the ACLU and media outlets Monday morning.

But the binder doesn’t back up LePage’s claim. It demolishes it.

According to the the Portland Press Herald:

Of the 93 people pictured in the binder, 37 appear to be either black or Hispanic, or about 40 percent of all the photos, while 56, or about 60 percent, appear to be white […]

His office has repeatedly sought to explain that LePage was specifically referring to out-of-state heroin dealers when he described the race of those arrested, not to dealers in other drugs like methamphetamine, whose photos also are in the binder.

But the photos of the 51 people facing heroin or other opioid drug charges show that only 47 percent, or 24 individuals, appear to be black or Hispanic. The remaining 53 percent, or 27 people, are white. Other press releases in the binder report the names of people charged with heroin trafficking but do not include booking mug shots.

In a statement, Alison Beyea, the executive director of the ACLU of Maine, said that “whether or not [LePage’s] assertions were deliberately misleading, they were dangerous and racist.”

“The governor has multiple agencies at his disposal that collect arrest data in Maine,” Beyea continued. “It is outrageous that he would rely on an incomplete collection of newspaper clippings and emails to make false, inaccurate accusations about people of color. It’s time for the governor to stop using people of color as a scapegoat for Maine’s drug problem, and to start proposing real solutions based on actual facts.”

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$356 Billion Fund Manager: “Now Is The Most Treacherous Time Ever. I’ve Never Seen This In My Career”

Last week we reported that Tad Rivelle, fund manager at the $195 billion TCW Group, uttered a harsh warning, telling readers of his newsletter that “the time has come to leave the dance floor“, providing numerous examples and anecdotes as to why that is the case.

 

Today it was the turn of Joe Baratta, the top dealmaker at Steve Schwarzmann’s $356 billion Blackstone Group, to follow up with a comparable warning.

Speaking at the WSJ Pro Private Equity Analyst Conference in New York, Baratta said that “for any professional investor, this is the most difficult period we’ve ever experienced”, adding that “You have historically high multiples of cash flows, low yields. I’ve never seen it in my career. It’s the most treacherous moment.”

Unlike strategic buyers who have used their inflated stocks as the acquisition currency of choice to engage in what until recently was a record M&A scramble, PE firms have been largely left out, as they have to invest their own equity which has not levitated at the same rate as the overall market, and are forced to plug the purchase gap with ever more greater amounts of debt. As Bloomberg notes, “the same lofty valuations that created ideal conditions to sell holdings and pocket profits have made it exceedingly difficult to deploy money into new deals at attractive entry prices.” 

Just like in the case of the global housing bubble, now openly blamed on central bank policies as UBS did overnight, several executives, including Blackstone Chief Executive Officer Steve Schwarzman, have pinned those unprecedented conditions squarely on the Federal Reserve’s near-zero interest rate policies.”

As a result of the prevailing asset bubble, Baratta said that Blackstone isn’t finding value in large leveraged buyouts of publicly traded companies. Instead, the New York-based asset manager is targeting smaller companies with low leverage, he said.

Still, when not buying Blackstone is mostly selling. In a separate interview with Bloomberg TV, Blackstone COO Tony James said that the firm is still selling more assets than it’s buying,

“We’re net sellers on most things right now — prices are high,” James said in a Bloomberg Television interview Tuesday. “Interest rates are so low and there’s so much capital sloshing around the world.” So much capital in fact, that Blackstone had no problem gathering $18 billion for its latest private equity fund last year. The firm also has an energy private equity vehicle, which finished raising $4.5 billion last year.

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Maine Gov. Paul LePage’s ‘Binder of Drug Dealers’ Shows He Was Lying About the Race of Arrestees

Maine Gov. Paul LePage claimed last month that he had a three-ring binder showing that 90 percent of the suspected drug dealers arrested in the state were black or Hispanic. The binder, unbelievably, turns out to be real, but LePage’s statistics—much more believably, considering the state is almost 95 percent white—do not.

LePage made headlines in August when he declared that “people of color or people of Hispanic origin” were “the enemy” in the drug war. Facing accusations of racism, LePage tried to tamp down the controversy by calling a state lawmaker a “little son of a bitch socialist cocksucker” and claiming he had the statistics to back his comments up.

“Let me tell you this, explain to you, I made the comment that black people are trafficking in our state, now ever since I said that comment I’ve been collecting every single drug dealer who has been arrested in our state,” LePage said at a town hall event in August. “I don’t ask them to come to Maine and sell their poison, but they come, and I will tell you that 90-plus percent of those pictures in my book, and it’s a three-ringed binder, are black and Hispanic people from Waterbury, Conn., the Bronx and Brooklyn.”

In an impressive piece of public records trolling, the Maine ACLU immediately put in a freedom-of-information request for LePage’s binder. Lo and behold, it really exists. The governor’s office released the contents of the binder—about 150 pages of mostly news clippings and press releases—to the ACLU and media outlets Monday morning.

But the binder doesn’t back up LePage’s claim. It demolishes it.

According to the the Portland Press Herald:

Of the 93 people pictured in the binder, 37 appear to be either black or Hispanic, or about 40 percent of all the photos, while 56, or about 60 percent, appear to be white […]

His office has repeatedly sought to explain that LePage was specifically referring to out-of-state heroin dealers when he described the race of those arrested, not to dealers in other drugs like methamphetamine, whose photos also are in the binder.

But the photos of the 51 people facing heroin or other opioid drug charges show that only 47 percent, or 24 individuals, appear to be black or Hispanic. The remaining 53 percent, or 27 people, are white. Other press releases in the binder report the names of people charged with heroin trafficking but do not include booking mug shots.

In a statement, Alison Beyea, the executive director of the ACLU of Maine, said that “whether or not [LePage’s] assertions were deliberately misleading, they were dangerous and racist.”

“The governor has multiple agencies at his disposal that collect arrest data in Maine,” Beyea continued. “It is outrageous that he would rely on an incomplete collection of newspaper clippings and emails to make false, inaccurate accusations about people of color. It’s time for the governor to stop using people of color as a scapegoat for Maine’s drug problem, and to start proposing real solutions based on actual facts.”

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Did a Student Actually Complain That This Harry Potter Mural Was Racist, Sexist, and Ableist?

Matthew Lewis… I can’t tell.

A student at the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse filed a formal complaint with the campus’s “Hate Response Team” alleging that a popular mural in one of the dormitories inappropriately depicts “white power, man power, cis power, able power, and class power.”

The triggering work of art depicts “before” and “after” versions of Harry Potter character Neville Longbottom, who was portrayed by actor Matthew Lewis in the films. The implication is that students enter the dormitory as the younger, awkward-looking Neville/Lewis, and exit the dormitory as the older, quite handsome Neville/Lewis. It’s a joke, of sorts.

But I suppose someone, somewhere, was bound to find it offensive. According to Heat Street, which obtained a copy of the unnamed student’s complaint:

The depiction of this metamorphosis “represents our ideal society and everything I am trying to fight against,” wrote the offended student, whose name is redacted. “It represents white power. Man power. Cis power. Able power. Class power. ECT [sic] ect. I am angry that I know the people who put this mural up, and I am anger [sic] because I know the people who let this mural be put up. Like I said earlier, maybe I am being a little sensitive, but it is how I feel. This represents, to me, our society, and I do not want it up on this wall. Why do we need a BEFORE and AFTER?”

The complaint, unearthed by a Heat Street records request for reports of bias on UW-La Crosse’s campus, was filed in April. We confirmed the mural remains up, despite the student’s complaint. By deadline, neither of the students who painted Neville Longbottom’s poster had responded to Heat Street‘s inquiry.

It doesn’t get much more ridiculous than that. Of course, the complaint might be fake—the student did not request a follow-up discussion with the university. Indeed, one member of the Hate Response Team seemed skeptical, according to Heat Street:

“Maybe 1,000 people could look at it and say it’s fake, they’re trying to be funny, but I always try to reach out,” [Amanda] Goodenough says. “Maybe it would be an opportunity to have a conversation. That’s what we need more of.”

National Review‘s Katherine Timpf took the complaint at face value and mercilessly mocked it.

I’m less sure it’s real, though it certainly could be. I’ve seen complaints that were at least this crazy before.

Perhaps that’s the most worrisome takeaway: in our current age of campus hyper-offendedness, it’s impossible to tell the genuinely traumatized apart from the trolls. Maybe that should make the university wonder whether it has defined “hate incidents” a little too subjectively.

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This Is What Trump Should Do In The Second Debate

Last night's debate has sparked a tsunami of conversations over who won, who looked more presidential, who coughed more, and who had bigger hands. What is more useful, however, is what can the candidates learn from this debate. Here are three readers' comments that summed up perfectly what trump should do in the second debate…

"The_Dude" was disappointed but had some useful questions for Trump to ask…

Do your homework Donald!  This isn't a game…

 

Does this guy prep at all or is he trying to throw it?

 

Question: Internet Security…you play into her hand discussing Russia and you don't fucking mention her server.

 

Question: Policing…she talks "training" cops…and you don't raise the issue of Fed overreach into local police forces?

 

Question: Iran..took him 3/4 if his time before mentioning $150B that will be used to build them nukes?

 

Question: Your taxes…hmm…I can show mine. ..how about we discuss the taxes of the Clinton Foundation and misappropriation?

 

Question: Your business bankruptcy…shit happens, let's talk about how this cunt made $150M without even having a business.

 

I could go on and on. ..WTF!!!!!!!!!

 

PS…Donald. next time Lester says anything outside of a question,  point out to him that it is not his fucking job.

But "VinceFostersGhost" offers a less aggressive suggestion of what the Trump casmpaign should do between now and the next debate…

Fuck all these skewed polls. The debate didn't matter, and it didn't change anyone's mind. That said, Hillary was well prepared for Trump, while Trump performed as if didn't prepare at all. Hillary kept Trump on the defensive all night long. Trump defends his ego against anything that makes him look small, and Hillary used that character flaw against him.

 

Trump should have been hammering the Clintons (that's right, Hillary and Bill) on putting Wall Street in change of America's economy, but he spent far too much time defending himself, so he didn't get that message out. Bernie Sanders proved that going after Hillary's being in Goldman Sachs' pocket was the most effective way to keep her on the ropes. When Sanders let up on those Wall Street attacks, his campaign, that had been succeeding against all the odds, crashed and burned.

 

Trump needs to paint the Clintons as the tag team that gave the country away to the banksters, and forced 76% of Americans into living a paycheck to paycheck lives. The Clintons allowed the banksters to steal not just the interest on our savings, but our savings in total, our pensions, our homes, our futures, and our children's children's futures. Proving this should not be difficult for Trump to do, if he would just spend more time exposing the Wall Street criminals, that own the Clintons, and less time defending his ego.

But "sessinpo" sees the endgame…

The country is already lost. The simple fact is we have a national debt that is unrepayable and no potus can change that.

 

Even if every current politician were removed, the FRB system were audited and changed, it would not change the fact we have an unrepayable debt and based upon that, a doomed us dollar. So many would agree that thrid world status is inevitable for this nation yet they still think trump can change that. That is not an awake person. That is a person frustrated and desperate. Some are just wanting trump for spite, to get those corrupt people that have destroyed this nation and I understand that. I want them punished too.

 

But if you are awake, you know where america is heading and you have been preparing no matter who is potus.

Or this…

 

If you have your own opinions of what you would ask the candidates…

 

Finally we leave it to Dilbert creator Scott Adams, who notes that the most interesting question has to do with what problem both of them were trying to solve with the debate.

Clinton tried to look healthy, and as I mentioned, I don’t think she completely succeeded.

 

But Trump needed to solve exactly one problem: Look less scary. Trump needed to counter Clinton’s successful branding of him as having a bad temperament to the point of being dangerous to the country. Trump accomplished exactly that…by…losing the debate.

 

Trump was defensive, and debated poorly at points, but he did not look crazy. And pundits noticed that he intentionally avoided using his strongest attacks regarding Bill Clinton’s scandals. In other words, he showed control. He stayed in the presidential zone under pressure. And in so doing, he solved for his only remaining problem. He looked safer.

 

By tomorrow, no one will remember what either of them said during the debate. But we will remember how they made us feel.

 

Clinton won the debate last night. And while she was doing it, Trump won the election. He had one thing to accomplish – being less scary – and he did it.

 

Read more here…

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Crude Chaos Strikes: Saudis Admit “No Deal” But “Hopeful” For November

Having failed completely to consumate a freeze deal in Algiers, the Saudi oil minister throws out a bone of hope to crude bulls that November’s OPEC meeting may see a freeze deal. Crude is testing its lows of the day but bouncing around like Hillary’s eyes as the minister desperately tries to keep the dream alive.

Headlines:

  • *SAUDI OIL MINISTER DOESN’T SEE OPEC DEAL ON WEDNESDAY (WTF! oh no!!)
  • *SAUDI OIL MINISTER SAYS SEVERAL FREEZE DEALS BEING DISCUSSED (phew so there’s hope!)
  • *SAUDI MINISTER SEES OPEC FREEZE DEAL POSSIBLE AT NOV. MEETING (great so buy?)
  • *FALIH: POSSIBLE OPEC DEAL MAY MAKE EXCEPTIONS FOR SOME MEMBERS (except you just blew out Iran?)
  • *NOVAK: RUSSIA AIMS TO KEEP OUTPUT AT CURRENT LEVELS (So Russia is out?)
  • *ALGERIAN OIL MINISTER SAYS OUTPUT CUT AMONG ALTERNATIVES (what a load of shit!)

And crude’s reaction…

 

So prepare yourself for 2 more months of rumors and denials as we head towards the November meeting which will once again produce nothing.. unless oil is at $20 going in.

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It’s Not Really About Deutsche Bank

Submitted by Jeffrey Snider via Alhambra Investment Partners,

It is never a good thing when official sources either named or unnamed are quoted in the media as denying bailout discussions. For any bank such rumors and denials are harmful because, obviously, they are a reflection of common perception. Furthermore, most people know all-too-well the true nature of any denials, thus reinforcing only that much more the troubling perceptions in the first place.

For Deutsche Bank to be the institution in question is altogether different. When Germany’s Commerzbank, for example, was forced to request a capital injection from the state’s bailout fund SOFFIN in November 2008 that was a sign of the times. It was just another bad sign in an ocean of them. Should Deutsche Bank even get connected to something like that is perhaps a sign of renewal of those times.

Deutsche Bank is not Commerzbank; in many ways Deutsche is the last remaining remnant of what is left of the reigning wholesale, eurodollar system. Where other banks long ago saw this depression for what it was (all risk, no reward), DB was siding with central bankers and deploying “capital” into EM’s and junk bonds. The bank was reticent to reject its derivatives book, once a source of nearly all its power and strength. And it was dreams of reclaiming lost grandeur that drove the bank into its currently perilous state. When the firm first announced estimates for its coming loss in October last year, I wrote:

The net result of this toxic stew of bastardized banking is a highly negative return (revenue) environment for CB&S in 2015 beyond all scale of 2013, while its efforts to reduce assets (especially risk weighted calculations) continue to fly against its “dollar” activities.

 

The firm managed to take the worst course possible by thinking the shrinking eurodollar system particularly post-May 2013 was an opportunity to replay lost pre-2007 financialism glory. To do that, the bank kept up its leverage and then went after the junk and EM bond bubbles with enthusiasm.

All that is forgotten in the mainstream media that wants to frame a systemically important bank’s troubles on once again regulation, or at least government action intruding into what it is supposed to be an otherwise stable and healthy environment. This weekend it was reported that Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel denied that the state would consider a rescue of Deutsche, even though the bank’s name literally means Germany’s bank.

Deutsche Bank AG shares fell sharply Monday morning on investor concerns about the German lender’s capital position ahead of an anticipated legal settlement with the U.S. Justice Department.

Any settlement with the US on fraud charges will not help, of course, but this is so much more than a legacy issue of the “dollar’s” role in the housing bubble/debacle. Lest anyone forget, it wasn’t strictly legal charges that pushed the bank into a tremendous loss and capital preservation mode last year. The media refuses to admit these facts because they fatally damage (yet again) both sides of QE – as a recovery “stimulus” and as a massive liquidity buffer denying any possibility of a global “dollar” shortage. The mainstream convention still views quantitative easing as “money printing” when Deutsche Bank shows quite clearly it wasn’t.

My own interest here is less about Deutsche Bank than it is the continued trajectory of the eurodollar system. I wrote not long ago about my thinking with regard to Deutsche Bank’s central role in the “dollar” run that started July 6 or so; today’s announcement is pretty bad, and likely just the beginning without some miracle turnaround, which adds up to nothing good about the “dollar” moving forward. Whatever negative effect Deutsche may have been having already in eurodollar liquidity, these results will quite likely speed that up.

In general terms, eurodollar liquidity is the ease or hardship of balance sheet capacity; the “bank reserves” that are a byproduct of quantitative easing whether dollars, euros, or yen just don’t factor all that much (I would write “not at all” except that there is some limited value to central bankers in perpetuating the myth’s effects on expectations). As balance sheet capacity goes, so does the whole global system. And though the eurodollar is often impenetrably complex and obscured, there are a few pieces of evidence that unambiguously substantiate its increasing illiquidity.

abook-sept-2016-db-10s-swap-spread

The close correlation of “global turmoil” and negative swap spreads is not some accident of nature. Both are symptoms of the same chronic money disease. Given Deutsche Bank’s status as the largest single purveyor of balance sheet factors through derivatives and FX, we would expect such a close relationship with its own share price. It isn’t a bank run at least in the manner the general public or economists might recognize, but the processes are remarkably, dangerously similar – especially how they become self-reinforcing beyond some unknowable tipping point.

In a traditional bank run, perceptions of the bank drive depositors to withdraw from the bank’s vault of money and cash rather than trust that the bank can meet all withdrawals, sticking the depositor with some unknown scale of loss. The intensity of the run, really illiquidity, is driven by further rumors about the bank’s position. At some point, the withdrawals themselves just confirm the negative perceptions, thus locking the bank into a downward spiral toward failure.

This process recurred in 2007 and 2008, only wholesale in nature and interbank in format; it was the rare occasion that depositors were involved (Northern Rock in September 2007 being most prominent). Liquidity providers in all kinds of eurodollar formats would react to “capital” loss perceptions by withdrawing liquidity to the point that the act of liquidity withdrawal (rather than losses by the target) itself was the agent of destruction – just as in the traditional bank run scenario. That is what ultimately took down Lehman, Bear Stearns, AIG, etc.

As has been the typical mainstream reaction, Deutsche Bank is being written about right now in a vacuum as if the actions and behavior (and losses) of last year were left only to last year. When global illiquidity first popped up (again) in the second half of 2014, it was regarded in the same way – a series of purportedly random, unrelated events. They had to be strung together in a benign chain of distinct actions because convention still holds QE to be money printing. Ditching that convention has the effect of connecting all these dots as a logical and ongoing progression of a “rising dollar” that is really a euphemism for “dollar shortage.”

And it really doesn’t take too many dots to connect. This isn’t to say that Deutsche Bank is in danger of a wholesale liquidity run, only that the bank is perhaps far closer to it than anyone in the mainstream will ever admit. As I wrote last year, it really isn’t even about Deutsche Bank.

abook-sept-2016-db-10s-30s-swap-spread

abook-sept-2016-db-ted2

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