2017 – The Year of Banana Skin

2016 is behind us and we have started a new year with great gusto and no small measure of anxiety. The potential for unknown unknowns turning into banana skins is very high. Right now we are looking at:

  • The broad US stock markets & the UK FTSE are breaking new highs
  • Investment flows are rotating from Bonds to Equities on the back of a Trump driven reflation outlook
  • Donald Trump is President Elect
  • The Fed has initiated a long anticipated rise in interest rates
  • Global Debt levels as a percentage of GDP has never been higher
  • Britain is going through the painful process of divorcing itself from the EU,
  • France is facing elections where far right and and anti EU parties may take power
  • Italy’s banking system is in crisis with the weight of EUR 300 Billion in bad debts
  • Germany’s Merkel is losing core support and the Anti – EU forces are gathering power
  • China is being buffeted by global protectionist rhetoric and lacklustre domestic demand, can she manage the domestic discontented?
 
 
What could possible go wrong?
 
Many of these changes have their genesis in misguided monetary policy, specifically those pursued by the US Fed in the 1990’s and since, with micro management of economies via stimulus, artificial interest rates and the Pandora’s box that is Quantitative Easing. The risk of the “2 a.m. tweet” where policy is poorly stated or misunderstood is very real. What is of real concern is that many of the themes we identify are based on developments that are very new and lack much historic context, especially when one considers the scale of the economies that may be effected.
 
2017 market performance will be determined by a number of themes.
  • Can Trump deliver reflation or are the markets set to be disappointed?
    Trump has been elected on with a mandate to shake up the establishment, to protect US jobs and to focus internally. The question is can someone with no political experience, significant conflicts of interest, despised by the right and liberal factions, within the US political establishment, deliver? The short answer is that no one knows, but so far he has proven all is naysayers wrong and you would be a fool to bet against his form. The USD dollar has strengthened to its highest level since 1984 and this will certainly  hurt US companies’ capacity to earn from foreign operations and thus suppress GDP.
  • Can the Fed normalise interest rates?
    The Fed has taken that first tentative step and started its long awaited tightening cycle. The concern is with debt levels at such elevated levels, can institutions wishing to refinance do so at newer higher rates and what will this do to debt affordability?
  • Will Britain and the EU agree an amicable divorce or will it be a nasty drawn-out affair? The EU has appointed a French bureaucrat as its chief negotiator who is seen as a federalist and someone who maybe likely to seek to punish Britain for leaving. On the British side Britain’s ambassador to the EU resigned yesterday. His resignation note hinted at “muddled” thinking within the British camp.

 

Outlook for Gold
 
Positive on continued strong 2016 demand. In 2016 GoldCore experienced significant increases in our bullion storage programme. Clients moved cash out of banks which they believe may be subject to bail-in risks as governments and regulator capitalise the banking systems with depositors cash deposits. Clients also sold gold proxy investments such as Gold ETF funds and Digital gold holdings where clients are forced to hold unallocated and unsegregated gold holdings in favour of GoldCore Segregated and Allocated gold storage.
 
We do not see a change in this trend and with strong account openings and a massive increase in interest from corporate treasurers seeking to diversify bank risk, we are very bullish for gold demand in the year ahead.
 
Allocations for gold should be between 5% and 20% depending on a clients risk appetite. Significant systemic risk is very real and can materialise from a number of sectors. Bank deposits remain at very real risk and diversification is advisable.
 

Gold and Silver Bullion – News and Commentary

GOLD TODAY – BUYING RE-EMERGES (BullionDesk.com)

Investors in ETFs to Hedge Funds Bail on Gold as Equities Rally (Bloomberg.com)

Gold prices dip in Asia with Fed minutes eyed for policy views (Investing.com)

PRECIOUS-Gold prices dip as dollar stays near multi-year highs (Reuters.com)

GOLD PRICE PARES GAINS ON DOLLAR STRENGTH (BullionDesk.com)

7RealRisksBlogBanner

The “Upcoming, Cataclysmic, Financial Big Bang To End All Big Bangs”-Upgraded From Inevitable To Imminent? (SilverSeek.com)

SWOT Analysis: Will Gold Bullion Be Positive in 2017? (GoldSeek.com)

Money Creation and the Boom-Bust Cycle (24HGold.com)

2017 – The Year of Monetary Revolution (GoldSeek.com)

What 12 ‘Financial Experts’ Predict For The Economy in 2017 (Spoiler Alert: It’s Ugly) (ZeroHedge.com)

Gold Prices (LBMA AM)

04 Jan: USD 1,165.90, GBP 949.98 & EUR 1,117.40 per ounce
03 Jan: USD 1,148.65, GBP 935.12 & EUR 1,103.28 per ounce
30 Dec: USD 1,159.10, GBP 942.58 & EUR 1,098.36 per ounce
29 Dec: USD 1,146.80, GBP 935.56 & EUR 1,094.85 per ounce
28 Dec: USD 1,139.75, GBP 931.29 & EUR 1,091.88 per ounce
23 Dec: USD 1,131.00, GBP 921.99 & EUR 1,082.25 per ounce
22 Dec: USD 1,130.55, GBP 916.20 & EUR 1,080.47 per ounce

Silver Prices (LBMA)

04 Jan: USD 16.42, GBP 13.36 & EUR 15.74 per ounce
03 Jan: USD 15.95, GBP 12.97 & EUR 15.34 per ounce
30 Dec: USD 16.24, GBP 13.20 & EUR 15.38 per ounce
29 Dec: USD 16.06, GBP 13.10 & EUR 15.36 per ounce
28 Dec: USD 15.85, GBP 12.96 & EUR 15.22 per ounce
23 Dec: USD 15.74, GBP 12.85 & EUR 15.06 per ounce
22 Dec: USD 15.77, GBP 12.78 & EUR 15.10 per ounce


Recent Market Updates

– US: Five Must Gold See Charts – Gold Miners Are “Running Out” of Gold
– Royal Mint And CME Make A Mint On The Blockchain?
– China Gold and Precious Metals Summit 2016 – GoldCore Presentation
– Trumpenstein ! Who Created Him and Why?
– Bail-Ins Coming? World’s Oldest Bank “Survival Rests On Savers”
– Fed’s “Fool Me…”, Silver Suppression, Euro Contagion In 2017?
– Fed Raised Rates 0.25% – Rising Rates Positive For Gold
– Shariah Gold Standard Is “Revolutionary” – Mobius
– Silver Fixing By Banks Proven In Traders Chats
– Euro Crisis and Contagion Coming In 2017
– ECB ‘Bazooka’ Reloaded Until At Least December 2017 – Euro Gold Rises 1%; 13% YTD
– UK £6 Billion Worse Off After Multi Billion Pound Gold “Accounting Error”
– Buy Silver – May Replace Gold As Money In India

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Trump Sides With Assange: “Russians Did Not Give Him The Info”

Many were wondering what topic Trump would tweet about on Wednesday morning, and the answer was revealed moments ago when the president-elect, instead of sparking another mini vendetta with a US corporation, instead referred to last night’s Jullian Assange interview on Fox News.

Taking a stab at the US intelligence services with whom Trump has been engaged in a back and forth over the alleged role of Russia in “hacking the elections, Trump promoted Julian Assange’s claim that Russia was not WikiLeaks’ source for stolen documents it released in the lead-up to the presidential election,  tweeting “Julian Assange said “a 14 year old could have hacked Podesta” – why was DNC so careless? Also said Russians did not give him the info!

Trump was referring to this particular exchange between Sean Hannity and the WikiLeaks founder:

HANNITY: Can you say to the American people, unequivocally, that you did not get this information about the DNC, John Podesta’s emails, can you tell the American people 1,000 percent that you did not get it from Russia or anybody associated with Russia?

 

ASSANGE: Yes. We can say, we have said, repeatedly that over the last two months that our source is not the Russian government and it is not a state party… Obama is trying to say that President-elect Trump is not a legitimate president.

As highlighted last night, the 1-hour-long interview also revealed Assange’s concerns about his future and his family, when he said that “big powerful actors will try and take revenge” for his revelations:

“I have been detained illegally, without charge for six years, without sunlight, lots of spies everywhere. It’s tough… but that’s the mission I set myself on. I understand the kind of game that’s being played – big powerful actors will try and take revenge…it’s a different thing for my family – I have young children, under 10 years old, they didn’t sign up for that… and I think that is fundamentally unjust… my family is innocent, they didn’t sign up for that fight.”

Trump’s tweet this morning follows another provocative, intelligence-focused statement from last night, in which the President-elect said that “the “Intelligence” briefing on so-called “Russian hacking” was delayed until Friday, perhaps more time needed to build a case. Very strange!”

We expect more accusations of “treason” to be lobbed at Trump as a result of this morning’s tweet, in which the president elect has chosen to side with the Wikileaks founder instead of US intelligence agencies in casting blame on Russia, as confirmed moments ago by The Hill article titled “Trump sides with Assange over intelligence community in tweet“.

Full Assange Interview below.

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The Trump Years: New at Reason

The Trump era starts soon.

John Stossel writes:

Two more weeks until the new administration begins!

I wonder if President Donald Trump will stick to his campaign promises—like reducing immigration and slamming consumers by imposing a 35 percent tariff.

Hope not.

But it could have been much worse.

Bernie Sanders wanted to make college free, even though professors say classes are filled with privileged students who party and just kill time.

Both Sanders and Hillary Clinton promised a higher minimum wage and a thousand other new commandments that would do more harm than good.

Every Republican candidate vowed to increase defense spending, even though the U.S. is going broke and already spends more than the next seven biggest nations combined, while half the democratic world freeloads off America’s armed forces.

View this article.

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Frontrunning: January 4

  • Trump Tariff on GM Would Violate NAFTA. That May Not Stop Him (BBG)
  • Obama Tries to Save Parts of Health Law Amid GOP Attack (WSJ)
  • Trump Puts Auto Makers, Trade Policy in Spotlight (WSJ)
  • British consumers borrow at fastest rate in 11 years as inflation threat rises (Reuters)
  • Investment banking fees fall 7 percent in 2016 dragged down by equity raisings (Reuters)
  • Manhattan Home Prices Are Tumbling Down (BBG)
  • Iraqi forces press gains against Islamic State in eastern Mosul (Reuters)
  • Turkey Detains Five Islamic State Suspects Linked to Nightclub Attack (BBG)
  • Israeli soldier convicted of manslaughter in killing of immobile Palestinian assailant (Reuters)
  • Repealing Obamacare Could be Trump’s First Lesson in the Glacial Pace of Congress (BBG)
  • No One Questioned This Hedge Fund’s Madoff-Like Returns (BBG)
  • Yuan Surges as China Seeks New Tools to Block Outflows (BBG)
  • French Presidential Candidate, Embracing His Catholicism, Challenges Secular Tradition (WSJ)
  • Exxon Mobil, Tillerson agree to cut all ties (Reuters)
  • U.S. banks gear up to fight Dodd-Frank Act’s Volcker rule (Reuters)

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

– Ford Motor Co scrapped a plan to build a $1.6 billion small-car factory in Mexico that Donald Trump had slammed, a move announced just hours after the President-elect knocked General Motors Co on Twitter for importing compact cars from Mexico to sell in the U.S. http://on.wsj.com/2hPy97k

– Exxon Mobil Corp has awarded former Chief Executive Rex Tillerson a $180 million retirement package as the company moves to break financial ties with President-elect Donald Trump’s nominee for secretary of state. http://on.wsj.com/2hPI5xC

– Qualcomm Inc views its latest smartphone chip as a “connected device” chip, a bid to outdistance rivals such as Intel Corp in the burgeoning market for gadgets and equipment with computing and communications capabilities built in. http://on.wsj.com/2hPNBR1

– Tesla Motors Inc’s fourth-quarter sales rose 27 percent – but not enough for the Silicon Valley auto maker to reach its goal of delivering at least 80,000 vehicles in 2016. http://on.wsj.com/2hPG70h

– Lawyers representing owners of tainted Volkswagen diesel-powered cars in Germany filed the first lawsuit seeking consumer compensation for damages from the car maker’s diesel scandal in a test case that could turn up pressure on it to compensate millions of European customers. http://on.wsj.com/2hPGKqB

– Intel Corp is acquiring a 15 percent stake in Here International B.V. for an undisclosed sum, joining the digital mapmaker’s core shareholders BMW AG, Daimler AG and Volkswagen AG’s Audi unit in developing navigation technology for self-driving cars. http://on.wsj.com/2hPznQi

– Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly is leaving to join NBC News, taking on a variety of roles for the broadcast network after rising to prominence over the course of more than a dozen years at the cable news juggernaut. http://on.wsj.com/2hPG7xj

 

FT

British Airways cabin crew plan to hold a 48-hour strike starting on Jan. 10, after suspending previous plans to walk out over Christmas, trade union Unite said on Tuesday.

Britain’s ambassador to the European Union, who sometimes clashed with London over its approach to Europe, abruptly resigned less than three months before Prime Minister Theresa May is due to trigger formal Brexit negotiations.

Britain’s exit from the European Union would adversely affect UK agriculture with the loss of income from the EU in the form of Common Agricultural Policy payments, uncertainty over the scope of new trade deals, and possibly stiffer trading competition from larger economies with lower animal welfare and food safety standards, according to a report published on Wednesday by the Environmental Audit Committee.

 

NYT

– Timothy G. Massad, the top United States derivatives regulator, said on Tuesday that he would step down as chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission when Donald Trump becomes president on Jan. 20. http://nyti.ms/2iGCV6O

– Euronext NV said on Tuesday that it had offered to buy the French arm of the London Stock Exchange Group Plc’s majority-owned clearing business, as the British company looks to win regulatory approval for a merger with Deutsche Boerse. http://nyti.ms/2iGDXA1

– Ford Motor Co said on Tuesday that it would scrap plans to build a small-car assembly plant in Mexico that President-elect Donald Trump has repeatedly criticized. Trump also threatened to impose tariffs on cars made in Mexico by General Motors Co. http://nyti.ms/2hPJvbA

– Anthony Atkinson, an acclaimed British economist who pioneered the study of changes in the distribution of wealth and income, allowing for a better understanding of poverty and inequality, died on Sunday in Oxford, England. He was 72. http://nyti.ms/2hOpn4E

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

** Finance and health ministers in the provinces and territories that have refused the federal government’s offer on health-care funding are asking for a meeting between premiers and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to put an end to the impasse. https://tgam.ca/2hPByyr

** Statements by U.S. transition officials and tweets by the President-elect Tuesday are bringing into question the future of jobs and exports from Canada’s auto industry, as Donald Trump warns that U.S. companies should not be allowed to sell internationally manufactured cars in the U.S. market without penalty. https://tgam.ca/2hPyEK0

** More than 300 city employees in Vancouver have been commandeered from other jobs to help with salting and sanding roads, as well as picking up garbage and ticketing people for failing to shovel sidewalks, as the region enters its fourth week of an unusually cold and snowy winter. https://tgam.ca/2hPm1yo

NATIONAL POST

** The British Columbia government’s newly unveiled “Home Owner Mortgage and Equity Partnership Program” will be giving out loans to first-time homebuyers who won’t have to make payments or incur interest for the first five years after buying (then, the interest starts at the buyer’s bank mortgage rate). http://bit.ly/2hPndC2

** TCL Communication, the Chinese company that manufactured the latest two devices for the former smartphone titan based in Waterloo, Ontario, released a teaser video for the next BlackBerry device on Twitter late Monday night. The four-second video zooms in on the physical QWERTY keyboard. http://bit.ly/2hPscTf

** City officials in Grande Prairie were justified in refusing an anti-abortion group’s advertising campaign for public buses because the ad was likely “to cause psychological harm” to women who’ve had or are considering having abortions, an Alberta judge has ruled. http://bit.ly/2hPCVNk

 

Britain

Euronext, which operates exchanges in Paris, Brussels, Amsterdam and Lisbon, has offered to buy the French clearing arm of LCH.Clearnet from the London Stock Exchange for 510 million euros. http://bit.ly/2iMT6g8

Belgian company TVH Group NV on Tuesday raised its offer for Britain’s Lavendon Group Plc to 444 million pounds, slightly pipping an offer from French rival Loxam SAS. http://bit.ly/2iMUUWv

The Guardian

Richard Cousins, the chief executive of the catering group Compass, has abruptly left his position as senior independent director of Tesco just days before Britain’s biggest retailer unveils its Christmas trading figures. http://bit.ly/2iMSxTp

A leading group of central bankers was due to meet on Jan. 8 to agree changes that could have forced some banks, largely in Europe, to hold more capital, but it was announced on Tuesday that the meeting had been called off. http://bit.ly/2iMRHX0

The Telegraph

Aberdeen Asset Management has led the call for other City investors to vote against Sports Direct’s embattled chairman Keith Hellawell’s re-election this week. http://bit.ly/2hP4nQe

Lulu Guinness, the British accessories brand best known for its lip-shaped handbags, has narrowed its losses after shutting unprofitable London shops and expanding overseas. http://bit.ly/2iMW6cn

Sky News

British Airways cabin crew plan to stage a 48-hour strike after rejecting an offer aimed at resolving a pay dispute. http://bit.ly/2iMUv6q

British clothing retailer Next is expected to provide a formal profit warning for its 2017 financial year in its fourth-quarter trading update on Wednesday. http://bit.ly/2iMVpzQ

The Independent

The UK Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index hit 56.1 in December, up from 53.4 in November, reflecting the country’s strongest manufacturing rate in 2-1/2 years. http://ind.pn/2iMKpCx

Paris could lure as many as 20,000 workers from Britain’s finance industry with the exodus potentially starting within weeks as the UK begins its withdrawal from the European Union, according to Europlace, the French capital’s lobby group. http://ind.pn/2iMSB5V

 

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Rex Tillerson To Sever All Ties With Exxon, Will Receive $182 Million

Ahead of his confirmation as Donald Trump’s proposed secretary of state, Exxon Mobil and the company’s former chairman and CEO Rex Tillerson, have agreed to sever all ties to comply with conflict-of-interest requirements.

If his appointment is confirmed Tillerson is set for a generous payday: as Reuters reports the value of more than 2 million deferred Exxon Mobil shares (worth about $182 million at Tuesday’s closing price) that Tillerson would have received over the next 10 years will be transferred to an independently managed trust, the company said in a statement. The share awards will be canceled and Tillerson will also surrender entitlement to more than $4.1 million in cash bonuses, scheduled to pay out over the next three years, and other benefits, Exxon Mobil said.

Separately, Tillerson also committed to the State Department that, if confirmed, he would sell the more than 600,000 Exxon shares he currently owns, the company said. It was not clear if the transaction would be exempt from all capital gains tax, although according ho historical precedent the answer is yes.

Exxon said last month its president, Darren Woods, will become chief executive and chairman in January following the retirement of Tillerson.

Tillerson could face a rocky confirmation process, given concerns among both Democrats and Republicans about his ties to Russia.

Full Exxon statement below

ExxonMobil, Tillerson Reach Agreement to Comply with Conflict of Interest Requirements

 

The board of directors of Exxon Mobil Corporation (NYSE:XOM) has reached an agreement with Rex W. Tillerson, former chairman and chief executive officer, to sever all ties with the company to comply with conflict-of-interest requirements associated with his nomination as secretary of state.

 

Under the agreement developed in consultation with federal ethics regulators, if Tillerson is confirmed as secretary of state, the value of more than 2 million deferred ExxonMobil shares that he would have received over the next 10 years would be transferred to an independently managed trust and the ExxonMobil share awards would be cancelled.

 

The trust would be prohibited from investing in ExxonMobil and the trustee would manage the assets consistent with government ethics rules. Payments to Tillerson from the trust would be subject to the same 10-year schedule that the cancelled awards would have had if they had continued in place.

 

Tillerson would also surrender entitlement to more than $4.1 million in cash bonuses, scheduled to pay out over the next three years, and other benefits such as retiree medical and dental benefits, and administrative, financial and tax support.

 

The one-time payment to the trust would be equal to the value of Tillerson’s cancelled shares based on a volume-weighted average price per share. Consistent with guidance from federal ethics regulators, the value would be reduced by about $3 million.

 

The trust would include forfeiture rules that would prohibit Tillerson from working in the oil and/or gas industry during the 10-year payout period.

 

The trust rules dictate that in the event of forfeiture, the money would be distributed to one or more charities involved in fighting poverty or disease in the developing world. Neither Tillerson nor ExxonMobil would have any control over the selection of the charities.

 

The net effect of the agreement is a reduction of approximately $7 million in compensation owed to Tillerson. Tillerson retired on Dec. 31 with more than 40 years of service with ExxonMobil.

 

Separate to the agreement with ExxonMobil, Tillerson has also committed to the State Department that, if confirmed, he would sell the more than 600,000 shares in ExxonMobil he currently owns.

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Offshore Yuan Soars Most In One Year On Fears Of Capital Controls

Following last night’s trial ballon by the PBOC, when as reported overnight the PBOC was studying possible scenarios of yuan exchange rate and capital outflows in 2017 based on models, stress tests and field research, and is preparing contingency plans, the Offshore Yuan has reacted accordingly, and soared by 0.9% to as high as 6.8950 per dollar as of 7:20pm in Hong Kong. That was the biggest increase on a closing basis since Jan. 11 last year.

Meanwhile, the onshore yuan up 0.3%, most since July. As shown in the chart below, the spread between the twois now the most negative since the start of 2016.

“China has been challenged by capital outflows and declining foreign-exchange reserves, and policy makers are taking measures to solve the problem,” said Eddie Cheung, a Hong Kong-based foreign-exchange strategist at Standard Chartered Plc, the most accurate forecaster for Asian emerging-market currencies according to a Bloomberg ranking. “Funds will continue to exit in the first half due to individuals’ purchases of the dollar and on concerns of U.S. political uncertainty.”

As further reported, in a familiar twist, China warned it may also further sell U.S. Treasuries in 2017 if needed to keep the yuan’s exchange rate stable, Bloomberg’s sources said, adding that the size of the reduction will depend on capital outflows and market intervention. The nation’s holdings of Treasuries declined to the lowest in more than six years in October as the world’s second-largest economy used its currency reserves to support the yuan.

For now, concerns of a full-blown clampdown are working, forcing yet another short squeeze in the yuan, although as usual the question remains how much of what the PBOC has warned about is it actually willing to implement, as it remains trapped: should it implement aggressive capital controls it will benefit the Yuan in the short end, however it will only lead to further capital flight in the longer run as concerns spread among the local population of what it is the PBOC is concerned about. Sure enough, earlier this morning Bitcoin hit $1,090 in US trading, the highest level in three years as capital flight using the digital – and still unregulated – currency continues.

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Federal Appeals Court Upholds Minnesota’s Indefinite Detention of Sex Offenders

Yesterday a federal appeals court upheld a Minnesota program that indefinitely detains sex offenders after they have completed their prison sentences under the guise of treating them for mental illnesses invented by the state legislature. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit overturned a 2015 decision in which U.S. District Judge Donovan Frank concluded that the Minnesota Sex Offender Program (MSOP) violates the due process rights of the people it imprisons. The appeals court said Frank wrongly applied strict scrutiny to the MSOP when he should have taken a much more deferential approach.

Frank correctly perceived that the “treatment” provided by the MSOP, which has never cured anyone in the program’s 23-year history, is a sham used to conceal a punitive purpose and justify preventive detention based on unsubstantiated fears of future crimes. He found that the Minnesota Commitment and Treatment Act (MCTA), which allows post-prison detention of “sexually dangerous persons” and offenders with “sexual psychopathic personalities,” was unconstitutional on its face and as applied to the plaintiffs because it was not narrowly tailored to advance a compelling state interest. Among other problems with the program, Frank noted that it has admitted more than 700 people but has not fully discharged anyone, does not conduct periodic assessments to verify that offenders still met the criteria for civil confinement, does not provide detainees with an opportunity for timely judicial review, does not provide the “less restrictive alternatives” mentioned in the MCTA, and imposes a heavier burden on people trying to win release than it does on local prosecutors seeking to commit them.

According to the 8th Circuit, none of that matters, because all the state had to do was avow good intentions. In considering the facial challenge to Minnesota’s law, Frank thought strict scrutiny was appropriate because the MCTA impinges on a fundamental liberty interest—i.e., the right not to be locked in a cage for the rest of your life. Frank was wrong about that, the appeals court says, because the Supreme Court “has never declared that persons who pose a significant danger to themselves or others possess a fundamental liberty interest in freedom from physical restraint.”

That way of framing the issue begs the question of whether the people confined by the MSOP do in fact pose a significant danger to others. Without periodic assessments, how can the state know? Unless someone petitions for release (which requires him to show he is “no longer dangerous”), the state apparently can just assume its treatment is not accomplishing anything. As Frank noted, “there is no meaningful relationship between the treatment program and an end to indefinite detention.”

Instead of applying strict scrutiny, the appeals court says, Frank should have asked whether the MCTA passes the “rational basis” test—a highly deferential standard that all but guarantees a challenged law will be upheld. “The appropriate standard is whether MCTA bears a reasonable relationship to a legitimate government purpose,” the court says. “MCTA is facially constitutional because it is rationally related to Minnesota’s legitimate interests.”

The 8th Circuit says strict scrutiny was also inappropriate in assessing whether the MCTA is unconstitutional as applied to the plaintiffs. To prevail on that claim, the court says, the plaintiffs had to show that their confinement not only violates a fundamental right but “shocks the conscience,” which is pretty hard to do for any kind of imprisonment this side of a Nazi concentration camp. “To meet this high standard,” the 8th Circuit explains, “the alleged substantive due process violations must involve conduct ‘so severe…so disproportionate to the need presented, and…so inspired by malice or sadism rather than a merely careless or unwise excess of zeal that it amounted to a brutal and inhumane abuse of official power literally shocking to the conscience.” Since Minnesota officials mean well (or say they do), the plaintiffs cannot possibly meet this standard.

The appeals court was unimpressed by the fact that the MSOP manifestly fails to accomplish what it purports to be doing: rendering sex offenders “no longer dangerous” by treating their statutorily defined conditions. Although “the Supreme Court has recognized a substantive due process right to reasonably safe custodial conditions,” the 8th Circuit says, it has never recognized “a broader due process right to appropriate or effective or reasonable treatment of the illness or disability that triggered the patient’s involuntary confinement.”

Twenty states and the federal government have laws allowing indefinite civil commitment of certain sex offenders, and Minnesota’s program is one of the most farcical. Criticizing Frank’s decision in 2015, Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton exposed the fallacy at the core of the MSOP. “It’s really impossible to predict whether or not [sex offenders] are at risk to reoffend,” Dayton said. “So the more protection you can give to the public, as far as I’m concerned, given their history, is entirely warranted, and that’s what this program does right now.” Yet the MCTA requires predictions about whether or not sex offenders “are at risk to reoffend”; if such predictions are “impossible,” the whole law is a crock.

It gets worse. “I don’t think any parent in Minnesota wants to subject their daughter or their son to a probability,” Dayton said. “They want to make sure their government is doing absolutely everything conceivably possible to make it 100 percent safe to walk in the park or to or from school.” So even if recidivism were predictable, Dayton would say that someone who is 99 percent guaranteed not to reoffend should nevertheless be locked up for the rest of his life. Just in case.

In light of the 8th Circuit’s decision, it looks like reform of the MSOP will have to be accomplished by legislators acting on their own initiative. But as Minneapolis Star Tribune notes, the decision relieves the pressure imposed by Frank’s ruling, “potentially derailing long-awaited reforms.”

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Federal Appeals Court Upholds Minnesota’s Indefinite Detention of Sex Offenders

Yesterday a federal appeals court upheld a Minnesota program that indefinitely detains sex offenders after they have completed their prison sentences under the guise of treating them for mental illnesses invented by the state legislature. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit overturned a 2015 decision in which U.S. District Judge Donovan Frank concluded that the Minnesota Sex Offender Program (MSOP) violates the due process rights of the people it imprisons. The appeals court said Frank wrongly applied “strict scrutiny” to the MSOP when he should have taken a much more deferential approach.

Frank correctly perceived that the “treatment” provided by the MSOP, which has never cured anyone in the program’s 23-year history, is a sham used to conceal a punitive purpose and justify preventive detention based on unsubstantiated fears of future crimes. He found that the Minnesota Commitment and Treatment Act (MCTA), which allows post-prison detention of “sexually dangerous persons” and offenders with “sexual psychopathic personalities,” was unconstitutional on its face and as applied to the plaintiffs because it was not narrowly tailored to advance a compelling state interest. Among other problems with the program, Frank noted that it has admitted more than 700 people but has not fully discharged anyone, does not conduct periodic assessments to verify that offenders still meet the criteria for civil confinement, does not give detainees an opportunity for timely judicial review, does not provide the “less restrictive alternatives” mentioned in the MCTA, and imposes a heavier burden on people trying to win release than it does on local prosecutors seeking to commit them.

According to the 8th Circuit, none of that matters, because all the state had to do was avow good intentions. In considering the facial challenge to Minnesota’s law, Frank thought strict scrutiny was appropriate because the MCTA impinges on a fundamental liberty interest—i.e., the right not to be locked in a cage for the rest of your life. Frank was wrong about that, the appeals court says, because the Supreme Court “has never declared that persons who pose a significant danger to themselves or others possess a fundamental liberty interest in freedom from physical restraint.”

That way of framing the issue begs the question of whether the people confined by the MSOP do in fact pose a significant danger to others. Without periodic assessments, how can the state know? Unless someone petitions for release (which requires him to show he is “no longer dangerous”), the state apparently can just assume its treatment is not accomplishing anything. As Frank observed, “there is no meaningful relationship between the treatment program and an end to indefinite detention.”

Instead of applying strict scrutiny, the appeals court says, Frank should have asked whether the MCTA passes the “rational basis” test—a highly deferential standard that all but guarantees a challenged law will be upheld. “The appropriate standard is whether MCTA bears a reasonable relationship to a legitimate government purpose,” the court says. “MCTA is facially constitutional because it is rationally related to Minnesota’s legitimate interests.”

The 8th Circuit says strict scrutiny was also inappropriate in assessing whether the MCTA is unconstitutional as applied to the plaintiffs. To prevail on that claim, the court says, the plaintiffs had to show that their confinement not only violates a fundamental right but “shocks the conscience,” which is pretty hard to do for any kind of imprisonment this side of a Nazi concentration camp. “To meet this high standard,” the 8th Circuit explains, “the alleged substantive due process violations must involve conduct ‘so severe…so disproportionate to the need presented, and…so inspired by malice or sadism rather than a merely careless or unwise excess of zeal that it amounted to a brutal and inhumane abuse of official power literally shocking to the conscience.” Since Minnesota officials mean well (or say they do), the plaintiffs cannot possibly meet this standard.

The appeals court was unimpressed by the fact that the MSOP manifestly fails to accomplish what it purports to be doing: rendering sex offenders “no longer dangerous” by treating their statutorily defined conditions. Although “the Supreme Court has recognized a substantive due process right to reasonably safe custodial conditions,” the 8th Circuit says, it has never recognized “a broader due process right to appropriate or effective or reasonable treatment of the illness or disability that triggered the patient’s involuntary confinement.”

Twenty states and the federal government have laws allowing indefinite civil commitment of certain sex offenders, and Minnesota’s program is one of the most farcical. Criticizing Frank’s decision in 2015, Minnesota Gov. Mark Dayton exposed the fallacy at the core of the MSOP. “It’s really impossible to predict whether or not [sex offenders] are at risk to reoffend,” Dayton said. “So the more protection you can give to the public, as far as I’m concerned, given their history, is entirely warranted, and that’s what this program does right now.” Yet the MCTA requires predictions about whether or not sex offenders “are at risk to reoffend”; if such predictions are “impossible,” the whole law is a crock.

It gets worse. “I don’t think any parent in Minnesota wants to subject their daughter or their son to a probability,” Dayton said. “They want to make sure their government is doing absolutely everything conceivably possible to make it 100 percent safe to walk in the park or to or from school.” So even if recidivism were predictable, Dayton would say that someone who is 99 percent guaranteed not to reoffend should nevertheless be locked up for the rest of his life. Just in case.

In light of the 8th Circuit’s decision, it looks like reform of the MSOP will have to be accomplished by legislators acting on their own initiative. But as Minneapolis Star Tribune notes, the decision relieves the pressure imposed by Frank’s ruling, “potentially derailing long-awaited reforms.”

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2017 Stock Rally Continues As Global Inflation Accelerates

Following another day of upbeat economic data, with growing signs that inflation on both sides of the Atlantic is accelerating, investors rediscovered their faith in the Trumpflation rally, pushing global stocks and US equity futures higher, fuelling a second day of 2017 equity gains ahead of today’s release of the Fed’s December minutes.

The dollar slumped and the euro moved further above $1.04 after data showed French consumer confidence hit its highest for nine years and businesses across the euro zone ended 2016 by ramping up activity at the fastest pace for five-and-a-half years. This followed similarly upbeat reports this week on U.S., UK, Chinese and Japanese business activity.

“The year has started with a stream of good macro stories which has justified a risk on position with investors,” Andrew Milligan, head of global strategy at Standard Life Investments told Bloomberg. He favors stocks and bonds of developed countries poised to benefit from a reflating U.S. economy that will boost the dollar over emerging markets.

The Eurozone composite Purchasing Managers’ Index climbed to 54.4 in December from 53.9 in November, IHS Markit said on Wednesday. That’s the highest in 67 months and above a Dec. 15 estimate. Strength in both the manufacturing and service sectors was due in part to a weaker euro, London-based Markit said in a statement. Economic expansion was signaled across the “big-four” nations, with Spain leading the way, followed closely by Germany.

Figures also showed that euro zone December inflation hit its highest since September 2013, which helped support a rise in oil, commodity prices and bond yields. Consumer prices rose 1.1% from a year earlier, following a 0.6% gain in November, according to Eurostat on Wednesday. That’s above a median forecast of 1 percent in a Bloomberg survey of economists. Core inflation, which excludes volatile items such as energy and food, increased to 0.9 percent last month.

The data follow the ECB’s decision to prolong quantitative easing to guarantee a sustained pickup in inflation in a year that could see economies hit by political uncertainty. Surprisingly strong accelerations of headline rates in Germany and Spain, mainly driven by a surge in the cost of oil, may strengthen the central bank’s focus on weakness in underlying price pressures as it assesses policy in coming months.

The unexpectedly strong acceleration in both regional and national inflation rates follows a 12.6 percent surge in Brent crude last month. ECB President Mario Draghi said in December that price growth remained weak, even as Executive Board member Benoit Coeure told Boersen-Zeitung last week that inflation could face upside risks. Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann, one of the ECB’s most hawkish officials, has argued in favor of a swift unwinding of stimulus once price growth allows, while Ifo President Clemens Fuest said in an interview published Tuesday the central bank may want to consider ending asset purchases as early as March.

“This latest data could mark the beginning of the end to ECB’s bond-buying program and expansive monetary policy as it edges closer to their inflation target of two percent,” Xtrade’s Chief Market Analyst, Paul Sirani, said.

Looking at global stocks, the MSCI All-Country World Index rose for a second day to trade 0.3 percent higher, and its index of major Asian shares excluding Japan rose for a seventh consecutive day, gaining 0.3%.

In Europe, The Stoxx Europe 600 Index was little changed, dragged down by declines on retailers. One of the biggest movers on major European bourses was UK retailer Next. Its shares fell as much as 14 percent after cutting its annual profit forecast and forecasting a difficult year ahead. The stock has lost nearly 40 percent over the past year.

Japan’s Topix index and Nikkei 225 Stock Average both gained at least 2.4 percent, the best first day of trading since 2013.

U.S. futures pointed to a higher opening of between 0.1 percent and 0.2 percent on Wall Street, priming the Dow Jones for another test of the 20,000-point mark.

In currencies, the potential for further U.S. rate hikes this year ensured profit-taking on the dollar’s run on Tuesday was limited to just 0.15 percent against a basket of currencies. The dollar’s strength in Asian trading helped Japan’s exporter-heavy stock market rally toward its biggest daily increase for almost two months.

The euro rose 0.3 percent to $1.0435, and the dollar gave up earlier gains against the yen to trade little changed at 117.75 yen. Euro zone inflation expectations are moving closer to the European Central Bank’s target of just below 2 percent, offering some welcome relief to ECB policymakers who for years have struggled to lift growth and inflation.

In rates, U.S. Treasury notes due in 2026 edged lower, with the yield rising one basis point to 2.457 percent.  German and UK yields were flat at 0.26 percent and 1.32 percent, respectively. Germany’s 10-year yield had hit a two-week high of 0.29 percent on Tuesday. The Markit iTraxx Europe Index of credit-default swaps on investment-grade companies declined one basis point to 69 basis points. A gauge of swaps on high-yield companies fell two basis points to 280 basis points, the lowest since July 2015.

Investors will now turn their attention to the minutes of the Federal Reserve’s policy meeting last month when it raised rates.

“What is important is the Fed’s view on inflation, especially after the (strong) ISM manufacturing survey data yesterday,” said Naeem Aslam, analyst at Think Markets. “Improvement in input prices is going to have an impact on final products which would, in turn, move the scale on inflation, upon which the Fed can no longer be reticent,” he said.

Market Snapshot

  • S&P 500 futures up 0.2% to 2256
  • Stoxx 600 down less than 0.1% to 366
  • FTSE 100 down less than 0.1% to 7177
  • DAX down 0.1% to 11572
  • German 10Yr yield up less than 1bp to 0.27%
  • Italian 10Yr yield down 2bps to 1.85%
  • Spanish 10Yr yield down 1bp to 1.41%
  • S&P GSCI Index up 0.4% to 392.2
  • MSCI Asia Pacific up 1.3% to 137
  • Nikkei 225 up 2.5% to 19594
  • Hang Seng down less than 0.1% to 22134
  • Shanghai Composite up 0.7% to 3159
  • S&P/ASX 200 up less than 0.1% to 5736
  • US 10-yr yield up 1bp to 2.46%
  • Dollar Index down 0.19% to 103.01
  • WTI Crude futures up 0.7% to $52.71
  • Brent Futures up 0.7% to $55.85
  • Gold spot up 0.6% to $1,165
  • Silver spot up 0.7% to $16.40

Top Global News

  • Ford, Toyota Form Telematics Bloc to Stymie Google and Apple: Mazda, PSA, Fuji and Suzuki join to ensure connectivity choice
  • J&J Judge Slashes $1 Billion Verdict Over Pinnacle Hip Implants: Judge found punitive-damage award was constitutionally flawed
  • Tesla Deliveries Miss Forecasts Again on Production Delays: Model S maker cites production challenges related to Autopilot
  • Bloomberg’s Winning Economic Forecasters Lay Out 2017 Calls: Most-accurate predictors of inflation, unemployment and growth explain their outlook for this year
  • Trump Tariff on GM Would Violate NAFTA. That May Not Stop Him: U.S. trade deal with Mexico and Canada forbids tariffsQualcomm’s Newest Smartphone Chip Aimed at PC Breakthrough: Snapdragon 835 will enable thinner handset with larger battery
  • Blackstone Said to Near Deal to Buy Sesac: WSJ reports company in advanced talks to buy Sesac, citing unidentified people familiar.
    Trump Says His Briefing on ‘So-Called’ Russia Hacking Is Delayed
  • China Said to Consider Options to Back Yuan, Curb Outflows
  • Qualcomm’s Newest Smartphone Chip Aimed at PC Breakthrough
  • Nikkei’s Financial Times Buys GIS Planning to Expand Services
  • Manhattan Home Prices Fall as Sellers Concede to Slowing Market

In Asia, equity markets traded mostly positive following gains on Wall Street, where strong data underpinned sentiment despite a slump in oil markets. Nikkei 225 (+2.5%) outperformed with gains of over 2.0% as the index played catch-up to yesterday’s advances on return from holiday with JPY weakness also benefiting exporters. Furthermore, the index also benefited from firm domestic manufacturing PMI data and rhetoric from PM Abe that he will continue to make the economy a priority and there will be no snap election. ASX 200 (+0.1%) stalled at 19-month highs, with weakness in real estate capping gains in the index. Shanghai Comp. (+0.8%) and Hang Seng (-0.1%) traded indecisive with cautiousness seen after another weak liquidity operation by the PBoC which effectively drained CNY 140bIn in liquidity today, while HSBC shares outperformed after the bank increased its 3-month CNH deposit rate in Hong Kong to 2.85%. 10yr JGBs traded lower despite a JPY 1.12tIn bond buying operation by BoJ as participants sought riskier assets on return to the market, while the yield curve steepened amid underperformance in the super-long end.

Top Asian News

  • China Said to Consider Options to Back Yuan, Curb Outflows: Authorites may order state-owned firms to sell dollars
  • India Sets Date for Polls Seen as Referendum on Modi’s Note Ban: Country’s most populous state heads to polls from Feb. 11
  • KFC’s Return to Malaysian Bourse Heralds Rebound in Deal Volumes: Fundraising from Malaysian IPOs is poised to rebound from the lowest in 16 years
  • Tencent Shares Losing $35 Billion Shows Depth of China Gloom: Technology giant has tumbled 13% from September record
  • Indonesia Temporarily Suspends All Military Ties With Australia: Move threatens to undermine improved relations between sides

European bourses have failed to remain afloat despite the spate of better than expected Eurozone PMI readings support by Germany and France. While the FTSE 100 continues to hover around record highs, however the index has been dragged lower by Next (-11%) after the company cut their profit guidance. Elsewhere, financials continue their strong start to the year with major financial names among the notable outperformers in Europe.

European Eco Data

  • (FR) Dec. Consumer Confidence 99, est. 99
  • (SP) Dec. Unemployment MoM Net (’000s) 86.8, est. -50
  • (SP) Dec. Markit Services PMI 55.5, 54.7 est.
  • (SP) Dec. Markit Composite PMI 55.5, est. 55
  • (IT) Dec. Markit/ADACI Services PMI 52.3, est. 52.6
  • (IT) Dec. Markit/ADACI Composite PMI 52.9, est. 53
  • (FR) Dec. Markit Services PMI 52.9, est. 52.6
  • (FR) Dec. Markit Composite PMI 53.1, est. 52.8
  • (EC) Dec. Markit Services PMI 53.7, est. 53.1
  • (EC) Dec. Markit Composite PMI 54.4, est. 53.9
  • (UK) Dec. Markit/CIPS Construction PMI 54.2, est. 52.5
  • (EC) Dec. CPI Estimate YoY 1.1%, est. 1%
  • (EC) Dec. CPI Core YoY 0.9%, est. 0.8%
  • (IT) Dec. CPI EU Harmonized MoM 0.4%, est. 0.2%
  •     (IT) Dec. CPI EU Harmonized YoY 0.5%, est. 0.3%

Top European News

  • Hard Brexit Looms Large With Resignation of U.K.’s EU Envoy: Rogers says negotiating expertise ‘in short supply’ in London
  • Euro-Area Inflation Outpaces Expectations as Oil Prices Surge: Consumer prices rise 1.1%, core inflation increases to 0.9%
  • CEZ Sees No Impact on 2017 Earnings From Czech Currency Cap Exit: Czech central bank plan to exit its currency-cap regime after 1Q will have “practically no impact” on CEZ’s 2017 earnings, CFO Martin Novak says
  • Swedish Six-Hour Workday Runs Into Trouble: It’s Too Costly: Swedes looking forward to a six-hour workday just got some bad news: the costs outweigh the benefits.

In currencies, the U.S. Dollar Index was 0.3 percent lower after touching its highest level since at least 2005. Across FX markets, the USD index has continued to run out of steam against its major counterparts with the US 10yr yield below 2.5% and USD/JPY moving further away from 118.00. Elsewhere, AUD/USD hovers at intra-day highs having tripped stops through 0.7250 while near term resistance resides at 0.7280. EUR/GBP has failed to find any firm direction with price action likely to be magnetised around 0.8500 amid a large vanilla option expiry worth lbln. Additionally, Eurozone inflation continued its upward momentum in December, accelerating at the fastest pace since 2013, however limited reaction had been observed given that the figures were largely in-line with consensus. The rand strengthened 1.4 percent as of 10:40 a.m. in London while the ruble added 0.3 percent in its second day of advances.  Citigroup strategists said in a Jan. 3 note to clients that “Russia and South Africa could be outperformers” in developing Europe, “but it might still be a bumpy ride for EMFX as the relatively hawkish FOMC signal from mid-December permeates.”

In commodities, crude oil futures climbed as much as 1.2 percent in New York after tumbling 2.6 percent Tuesday, before returning to broadly unchanged. Dampened sentiment has been due to concerns surrounding cooperation among other oil producing nations, while some note that Libya and Nigeria who are exempt from cuts have already made progress on increasing production. Elsewhere, Gold continues to remain in modest positive territory with prices in close proximity to 3-week highs while Copper rebounded of its worst levels overnight amid a mostly positive risk tone in the Asia-Pacific region.

US Event Calendar

  • 7am: MBA Mortgage Applications, Dec. 30
  • 8:55am: Redbook weekly sales
  • 2pm: FOMC Meeting Minutes, Dec. 14
  • 4:30pm: API weekly oil inventories

* * *

DB’s Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

It hasn’t taken long for markets to dust off the holiday cobwebs and start acclimatizing to 2017. The good news is that unlike the freefall sparked by China’s equity markets this time last year, the mood in 2017 is so far so good with some decent data out of the manufacturing sector helping to set the early pace.

Indeed after the generally positive data in Europe on Monday, the UK manufacturing PMI was yesterday reported as surging to 56.1 in December (vs. 53.3 expected) from 53.6 and to the highest in two and a half years. In the afternoon we then learned that the ISM manufacturing reading in the US had risen to 54.7 in December (vs. 53.8 expected) and the highest since December 2014. The details revealed that the new orders component surged to 60.2 from 53.0 in the month prior too which is particularly noteworthy in light of the recent strength for the US Dollar. To put in perspective this component printed at 48.8 in December 2015. Meanwhile the final manufacturing PMI for the US last month was revised up a tad to 54.3 (from 54.2). It’s worth noting that Greece is the only developed nation with a manufacturing PMI below 50 but even that reading (49.3) is still at a four-month high.

Equity markets were generally firmer across the board yesterday as a result with the Stoxx 600 closing +0.70% and the S&P 500 kicking off 2017 with a +0.85% gain. European Banks (+2.84%) have also started the year in style with the catalyst yesterday appearing to be the news that the Basel Committee had postponed a meeting due for this weekend to consider a contentious reforms package, fuelling expectations that some of the proposals could potentially be watered down. Meanwhile the US auto sector was also in focus after Ford announced that they were to scrap plans for a $1.6bn expansion in Mexico and instead create new jobs in Michigan following proposals by President-elect Trump to slap tariffs on foreign made vehicles. That news also came as Trump turned to social media to criticize General Motors for production of vehicles in Mexico. The Peso (-1.82%) was a notable underperformer in FX as a result.

If that wasn’t enough then a complete reversal for Oil also added another dimension to yesterday’s session. WTI Oil peaked at $55.24/bbl in the early morning, or over 2% higher, before then plummeting some 5% from those early highs to close -2.59% on the day at $52.33/bbl. Natural Gas also tumbled -10.66% for the biggest one-day decline since February 2014. While forecasts for milder weather in the US this month were attributed to the decline for the latter, there didn’t appear to be an obvious catalyst for the sharp swing in Oil aside from the continued strength for the Greenback.

Meanwhile the rates market was an interesting microcosm of the volatility that we expect this year. Yields initially surged in Europe supported by the early gains for Oil and then later on by the bumper inflation report in Germany where headline CPI jumped +1.0% mom in December (vs. 0.6% expected) and so helping the YoY rate to hit +1.7% from +0.7% in November and the highest since July 2013. The wider Euro area CPI report is due today and a similar jump, assuming it can be maintained, will surely give the ECB some food for thought. Anyway the data helped 10y Bund yields jump +7.7bps to 0.258% while yields in the periphery were anywhere from +9.0bps to +20.8bps higher. The Treasury market opened in similar fashion with that US data also helping matters and 10y Treasury yields peaked at 2.516% (after opening at 2.445%) before the energy complex went into reverse. Treasury yields completely unwound that move higher and finished unchanged by the closing bell.

A reminder that today we’ll also get the FOMC minutes from that December meeting where we’re expecting the tone to reflect the moderately more hawkish nature of the statement. Ahead of this sentiment has remained fairly buoyant in the Asia session this morning where bourses in Japan in particular have reopened in style. The Nikkei and Topix have surged +2.14% and +2.17% respectively with financials leading the way while there are also gains in China with the Shanghai Comp +0.39% and CSI 300 +0.42%. The Kospi and ASX are little changed along with the Hang Seng while credit indices are generally tighter in Asia Pac. US equity index futures are also up modestly while Oil has rebounded about half a percent.

Moving on. Yesterday we got the latest ECB CSPP breakdown as of the end of December. The numbers took on added interest with the addition of the primary and secondary market split too. With regards to holdings, the ECB announced total holdings of €51.07bn which works out as net purchases settled during the month of €3.89bn, albeit with an unsurprising slowdown into year end. In terms of the split, of the total holdings currently, €6.93bn or 13.6% were made in the primary market and €44.14bn or 86.4% were made in the secondary market. Interestingly while the overall primary market purchases (in percentage terms) were ramped up from June to October, they have held relatively steady over the months of November and December although this may also reflect the slowdown in the new issue market into the end of the year.

Meanwhile there were some interesting developments on the Brexit front in the UK yesterday too with the announcement that Britain’s ambassador to the EU, Sir Ivan Rogers, had unexpectedly resigned just a couple of months out from the UK’s formal resignation from the EU and prior to the end of his official tenure in October. Various reports suggested that Rogers was one of most experienced EU negotiators and was heavily criticized last year by Conservative eurosceptics. His resignation letter – obtained by the FT – stated that ‘serious multilateral negotiating experience is in short supply’ and that ‘we do not yet know what the government will set as negotiating objectives for the UK’s relationship with the EU after exit’. No obvious reason was provided for his early resignation although Rogers did confirm that it would make more sense to have a team in place which see’s Britain through the entire Brexit process. The news could come as a bit of a blow to the ‘Soft’ Brexit camp though and clearly comes at a crucial time in talks so it’ll be interesting to see if there is any further fallout following this announcement.

Looking at the day ahead, this morning in Europe we’ll get the remaining December PMI’s (services and composite prints) including the final revisions for the Euro area, Germany and France as well as a first look at the data for the periphery. Also due out this morning is the CPI report for the Euro area where headline inflation is expected to have ticked up to +1.0% yoy from +0.6%. The UK will also release the November money and credit aggregates data while in France we’ll get the latest consumer confidence print. Over in the US this afternoon the lone data release is the December vehicle sales data while later on this evening we’ll get the FOMC minutes from the December meeting.

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Turkey, Russia Unleash Over 100 Airstrikes On ISIS Targets After Nightclub Attack

Following the horrific New Year's Day attack on an Istanbul nightclub which left 39 people dead (which ISIS claimed responsibility for), Turkish jets have carried out a number of airstrikes against suspected ISIS group positions in Syria. Aerial footage released today showed more than 100 suspected militant targets had been hit by Turkey and Russia in separate operations.

Russia began hitting ISIL positions near al-Bab last week after Ankara and Moscow jointly brokered a cease-fire between the regime and opposition groups. Russian support came after Turkey criticized the U.S.-led international coalition for not backing its military offensive against ISIL.

As TVNZ reports, Turkish jets struck eight IS group targets, while tanks and artillery fired upon 103 targets near Al Bab, Anadolu quoted a senior military official as saying.

At least 22 suspected militants were killed and many structures destroyed, the agency added.

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