South Korea’s Ex-President Park Arrested On Bribery Charges

After being formally impeached just three weeks ago, former South Korea President Park Geun-hye was arrested on Friday in connection with a corruption scandal that led to her removal from office, Yonhap reports.

The Seoul Central District Court issued a warrant to detain Park on charges of bribery, abuse of authority, coercion and leaking government secrets, after a marathon hearing the previous day. State prosecutors filed the request on Monday to arrest Park, citing the graveness of the alleged crimes and the possibility of the destruction of evidence.

Park, ousted in a historic ruling on March 10, became the country’s third former president to be arrested over criminal allegations, following Roh Tae-woo and Chun Doo-hwan.

A full timeline of Park’s fall from grace can be found in our most recent post on the topic.

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NY Times Outs White House Sources Who Provided Intel Reports To Nunes

In the latest development surrounding last week’s announcement by Devin Nunes, according to which President Trump and his associates were incidentally swept up in foreign surveillance by American spy agencies, the NYT reports that the pair of White House officials who played a role in providing Nunes with the intelligence reports behind his claim, have been identified.

The NYT has outed the Nunes sources, who it claims are Ezra Cohen-Watnick, the senior director for intelligence at the National Security Council, and Michael Ellis, a lawyer who works on national security issues at the White House Counsel’s Office and formerly worked on the staff of the House Intelligence Committee.

 As reported previously, Nunes had refused to identify his sources, saying he needed to protect them so others would feel safe coming to the committee with sensitive information. He first disclosed the existence of the intelligence reports on March 22, and in his public comments he has described his sources as whistle-blowers trying to expose wrongdoing at great risk to themselves.

Amusingly, the NYT adds that “the officials spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe the intelligence, and to avoid angering Mr. Cohen-Watnick and Mr. Ellis.”

 In other words, the US has devolved to the point where one set of anonymous sources is doxxing another set of anonymous sources in the pursuit of a political agenda.

Cohen-Watnick is a former Defense Intelligence Agency official who was originally brought to the White House by Michael T. Flynn, the former national security adviser. The officials said that earlier this month, shortly after Mr. Trump wrote on Twitter about being wiretapped on the orders of President Barack Obama, Mr. Cohen-Watnick began reviewing highly classified reports detailing the intercepted communications of foreign officials.

Some further background on Cohen-Watnick from forward.com:

President Donald Trump reportedly overruled a decision by National Security Adviser Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster in order to keep a Jewish National Security Council aide in his current position. Trump overruled the decision on Sunday after Cohen-Watnick, 30, appealed to White House advisers Stephen Bannon and Jared Kushner, Trump’s Jewish son-in-law, Politico reported

 

McMaster had told Ezra Cohen-Watnick, senior director for intelligence programs at the NSC, that he would be moved to a different position at the NSC after CIA officials had pushed for his ouster, according to Politico.

 

A Washington consultant told Politico that Cohen-Watnick and Flynn “saw eye to eye about the failings of the CIA human intelligence operations,” and that the “CIA saw him as a threat, so they tried to unseat him and replace him with an agency loyalist.

Additionally, the NYT adds, that the intel reports consisted primarily of ambassadors and other foreign officials talking about how they were trying to develop contacts within Mr. Trump’s family and inner circle in advance of his inauguration. 

Cohen-Watnick has allegedly been reviewing the reports from his fourth-floor office in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building, where the National Security Counsel is based.

Perhaps more importantly, the NYT sources say the description of the intelligence is in line with Mr. Nunes’s own characterization of the material, which he has said was not related to the Russia investigations when he first disclosed its existence in a hastily arranged news conference on March 22.

It was not immediately clear if now that the identity of the Nunes sources has been revealed, whether Nunes will make the contents of the confidential documents public.

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Trump’s Deputy Chief Of Staff Is Leaving The White House

President Trump’s deputy chief of staff and long-time staffer for Reince Priebus, Katie Walsh, is leaving the White House according to Politico. She’s expected to work on outside efforts to support the Trump administration, the AP noted, including helping the RNC and the independent group America First.

“Katie Walsh has accepted a position with an outside organization,” a White House official said. “She has been a tremendous asset to the president and we are confident she will be so in her new role as well.”

The move comes after a rough week for Trump, capped by the failure of his healthcare plan last Friday.  As The Hill notes, Trump allies inside and outside the White House were frustrated by the level of involvement from political non-profits, such as the pro-Trump America First Policies, in touting the measure. More from Politico:

The move has the blessing of the highest ranks of the White House. “You’ve got to have somebody from the inside who has the blessing of the man himself,” said the source close to the White House.

 

Walsh is expected to serve as an adviser both to a pro-Trump nonprofit and the RNC. The non-profit, America First, is stocked with veterans of the campaign and has been struggling to get off the ground.

 

An official close to the outside group said the final decision on Walsh’s move was made mid-morning on Thursday. Walsh will be running the day-to-day operations of America First and will replace Rick Gates, a former Trump campaign official who had been in that role, the official said. The outside group has been in talks with the White House for the last two months about personnel matters, the official added.

Walsh is close to Trump’s chief of staff, Reince Priebus, who has been blamed by some Trump supporters for the president’s early stumbles. She served as Priebus’ chief of staff when he led the Republican National Committee. As Politico adds, the move could also have significant implications for Priebus, who is losing one of his top lieutenants in the West Wing.

“He basically took away Reince’s political secret service. She was his eyes and ears inside,” said a source close to Trump quoted by Politico.

Walsh has had a rapid rise within the political ranks: she was named deputy finance director at the RNC in January 2013 before her 30th birthday, and was elevated to the top finance job just six months later. She helped lead the RNC’s mammoth fundraising operation through the 2014 midterm elections, and she became chief of staff under Priebus at the RNC in 2015. As an RNC veteran, she brought her ties to the Republican establishment with her to the White House, contrasting with insurgent Republicans like policy adviser Stephen Miller and chief strategist Steve Bannon.

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Beauty and the Tax-Fattened Oligarch

As you know, “Beauty and the Beast” is a fairy tale about a wealthy, powerful creature who holds a woman captive until Stockholm Syndrome kicks in and she learns to love Big Brother. Now that a new version of the story has hit the theaters, Dan Sanchez reminds us that the Beast’s bride isn’t his only victim:

As the new film’s opening sequence makes explicit, the prince paid for his lavish lifestyle by levying taxes—so high that even lefty Hollywood regards them excessive—on the hard-working, commercial townspeople discussed above. The party-animal prince being transformed into a sulking beast may have amounted to a 100% tax cut for the town; no wonder the townspeople are so cheerful and thriving when we first meet them!

All princes and other nobles, after all, are descended from marauding warriors who settled down and transmuted plunder and tribute (protection money) into taxes and other feudal obligations.

This reminds me of my idea for a new version of “Sleeping Beauty”—one that focuses not on the comings and goings of various ruling-class parasites but on the prosperity that surely swept the countryside while the castle slept for 100 years.

Anyway, Sanchez (who claims he doesn’t want to be a “childhood-ruining killjoy,” but c’mon, that’s half the fun) uses the new film as a nice hook for some anti-feudal, pro-commercial history. To read the rest, go here.

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In Ominous Sign For Banks, Equity Trading Revenues Continue To Drop

It’s not just the HFT industry that has cannibalized itself so much, while spooking regular traders out of the markets, there is hardly any revenue growth left (as the WSJ showed last week). After suffering a substantial drop in bank equity trading revenues over the past several years, there was hope that finally this key P&L items of sales and trading would post a modest pick up. Alas, whether due to lack of volatility, declining interest in equities, or simply because many no longer have faith in the market, this is not happening despite the S&P recently rising to an all time high of 2,400.

In 2016, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency reported that equity trading revenues at U.S. banks fell 13% in 2016 from the previous year. The slide contrasts with a 9% rise in overall trading driven by interest-rate and currency products. Globally, the biggest dozen banks suffered a 13% drop in equity trading in 2016, the first meaningful annual decline since 2012, according to research firm Coalition.

And while there were some modest signs of a pick up in late 2016, this appears to have been a false dawn. According to the WSJ, as the first quarter wraps up this week bankers say the weakness experienced last year is continuing. That is prompting questions about whether banks should be preparing for a longer-lasting decline in the business, rather than a cyclical dip.

“Client volumes are down…that’s an industry issue,” said Morgan Stanley President Colm Kelleher at a conference in late March. When comparing Morgan’s first quarter of this year with the last quarter of 2016, he concluded that the equities business was “not doing as well.”

 

While equities trading isn’t as big at many Wall Street banks as bond and currency trading, it still accounted for $28 billion in revenue for the top five U.S. banks in 2016, or more than 10% of total revenue. Banks generate equities revenue in a variety of ways: from executing stock trades or buying and selling derivatives related to equities, to services like locating shares for clients to bet against.

The slow but steady decline in equity-trading-revenue is deepening despite higher volumes and big index price swings in the wake of the U.K.’s Brexit vote in June and November’s U.S. presidential election.

A key driver behind the revenue collapse is the direct influence of central banks, which have crushed volatility to near record low levels.

Overall subdued volatility in equities markets lead more trades to be executed via the cheapest electronic means, rather than by banks’ traders or through more expensive and complex derivatives. Equity-derivatives revenue fell 21% last year globally, according to Coalition, which works with banks to track industry trends.

Banks tend to earn more money when investors are willing to pay more to get trades done quickly, or at guaranteed prices due to worries over unpredictable price movements. Those fears have dropped. Expectations of stock volatility fell in both the U.S. and Europe overall last year, and has dropped further in 2017.

Morgan Stanley and Oliver Wyman estimated in a recent report that some $15 billion in expected equity revenue has vanished, due to “changes in client behavior and the growing role of electronic trading.” Additionally, about 15% of the fee pool in the biggest, most liquid markets, such as stocks, has moved to nonbank firms. Those firms can cheaply execute standard trades like moving in and out of exchange-traded funds.

Another driver: the transition away from human trading and toward passive, algo-intermediated markets.

Virtually all trading today involves electronic algorithms in some fashion, but some are more complex than others. Banks charge clients about four times the rate for the most complex individual “high touch” trades than ones that simply follow a pre-set portfolio strategy, according to Greenwich Associates.

Meanwhile, investment firms have balked at paying higher trading fees to banks due to a shift by their own clients to index funds, which command much lower fees. Those funds in turn put pressure on their bankers.

As discussed repeatedly on this website, the shift away from active trading and toward passive, has also slammed the buyside and hurt some of Wall Street’s best clients.

This means that some of the most iconic hedge funds, which typically generate big fees for banks, have been shutting down. Just this month, Eric Mindich’s Eton Park Capital Management LP said it would close, part of a trend that has left banks with fewer trading clients. Banks had already been responding to some of the changes. Over the past decade, banks shifted resources from human trading and research to high-speed electronic markets.

To be sure, banks tried to react to technological changes in the market, and over the past decade, banks shifted resources from human trading and research to high-speed electronic markets.

As the WSJ notes, for a while, that pivot paid off and from 2012 to 2015, equities trading revenue at banks either rose or stayed relatively stable, a contrast to fixed-income trading, which was hurt by regulatory changes and central banks’ low interest-rate policy.

However it did not last for equities. As revenues tumbled in 2016, operating margins in stock trading also dropped to 23% from 36% the prior year, according to Coalition. Banks often provide computerized trading algorithms to clients, but it is a competitive business with high development and regulatory costs.

The operating margins for completing stock trades fell to just 5% last year, according to Amrit Shahani, research director at Coalition. It was more than 7% in 2015, and more than 10% before the financial crisis.

 

Next, European rules set to kick in next year will bar investment firms from buying research from banks in exchange for directing trades to those banks. Analysts expect that investment firms will stop trading with some of the affected banks, or will demand lower rates because they are no longer getting bundled research.

Some banks, such as Barclays, realize what is coming, and have closed their “high touch” equity sales-and-trading desks in Asia, while Japan’s Nomura Holdings cut its research and derivatives in European stocks, and CLSA, a unit of China’s Citic Securities, closed down its U.S. stock research team.

Meanwhile, in the latest attempt to offset declining revenues, the biggest banks in stock trading are trying to expand market share in the prime brokerage business; that gamble too however is doomed to fail as in 2016 the hedge fund industry shrank for the first time since the financial crisis, with more hedge fund closures than openings.

What can prompt the much-anticipated return of not only equity trading revenues, but trader participation? Some ideas include a renormalization of capital markets, where zombie companies aren’t rewarded with short squeezes or random Chinese takeovers, where a Shiller PE of 30x isn’t considered a “new normal”, and where central banks don’t step in every time there is a 10% drop in stocks. Until that happens, Wall Street’s melting ice cube will continue to liquify, resulting in even more transformations, where once busy trading floors such as this one

… ends up looking like this.

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“Trickle Down” Has Failed; Wealth And Income Have “Trickled Up” To The Top .5%

Authored by Charles Hugh Smith via OfTwoMinds blog,

Central bank policies have generated a truly unprecedented “trickle-up” of wealth and income to the top .5%.

Over the past 20 years, central banks have run a gigantic real-world experiment called “trickle-down.” The basic idea is Keynesian (i.e. the mystical and comically wrong-headed cargo-cult that has entranced the economics profession for decades): monetary stimulus (lowering interest rates to zero, juicing liquidity, quantitative easing, buying bonds and other assets– otherwise known as free money for financiers) will “trickle down” from banks, financiers and corporations who are getting the nearly free money in whatever quantities they desire to wage earners and the bottom 90% of households.

The results of the experiment are now conclusive: “trickle-down” has failed, miserably, totally, completely.

It turns out (duh!) that corporations didn’t use the central bank’s free money for financiers to increase wages; they used it to fund stock buy-backs that enriched corporate managers and major shareholders.

The central bank’s primary assumption was that inflating asset bubbles in stocks, bonds and housing would “lift all boats”–but this assumption was faulty. It turns out most of the financial wealth of the nation is held by the top 5%.

As for housing–yes, a relative few (those who happened to own modest bungalows in San Francisco, Seattle, Portland, Toronto, Vancouver, Brooklyn, etc.) on the left and right coasts have registered spectacular gains in home appreciation as the housing bubbles in these cities now dwarf the 2006-07 real estate bubble. But on average, the gains in home appreciation have barely offset the declines in real (adjusted for inflation) household income.

These charts illustrate the abject failure of the “trickle-down” economic theory.The majority of the assets that have soared in value are owned by the top 5%:

 

Wages as a share of GDP (gross domestic product, i.e. the nation’s total economic activity) has been declining for decades:

 

The only segment of households who have registered gain in real income over the past 20 years is the top 5%:

 

Even excluding capital gains–the source of much of the wealthiest class’s income–wealth disparity has reached astonishing asymmetries: most of the gains are flowing to the top 0.5%:

 

The Clinton, Bush and Obama presidencies shared one commonality: the wealth of the bottom 90% cratered in their presidencies while the wealth of the top .1% skyrocketed.

 

Central bank policies have generated a truly unprecedented “trickle-up” of wealth and income to the top .5%. Evidence supporting “trickle down” is nowhere to be found, at least in the real world.

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Five Charts That Obliterate the Common Market Narratives of 2017

Market narratives are myths.

Look at this chart. Which asset class would have been better to own in 2017 thus far… the blue line or the black line?

It’s obviously a no brainer, the black line has nearly doubled the blue line’s performance year to date.

Here’s the chart with legends included. Surprised?

Thus far in 2017, the financial media has been running the narrative that stocks are THE asset class to own. But the reality has been very different. With the exception of two weeks in March, Gold has outperformed stocks for the entire year to date.

At Phoenix Capital Research, we don't care about market narratives, we care about making money from the markets. Which is why this next chart should be of interest:

Guess which sectors this chart is showing…

Obviously one of these has been outperforming the other in a big way.

Guess which sectors they are…

That’s correct, the DEFENSIVE sector of utilities is CRUSHING financials… despite the financial media running a non-stop narrative of financials being THE sector to own!

Now… why would a defensive sector be the TOP performer year to date?

To pick a special report that outlines how to prepare and profit from market collapses, swing by:

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Best Regards

Graham Summers

Chief Market Strategist

Phoenix Capital Research 

 

 

 

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The U.S. Intelligence Community’s Emphasis on Offensive Capabilities is Dangerous, Idiotic and Authoritarian

Earlier today, Edward Snowden posted the following tweet calling attention to a very important article published at Reuters.

The article highlights the fact that U.S. intelligence agencies spend 90% of their budgets on offensive capabilities as opposed to defense. The disastrous results of such an emphasis should be obvious to everyone, all you have to do is look at what this attitude has done to U.S. foreign policy, as well as domestic police departments. When you focus all your spending and energy on developing new weapons, the urge is to find an excuse to use them. Disastrous consequences typically follow (unnecessary SWAT raids and the wholesale destruction of countries).

When it comes to intelligence agencies, the focus on offense results in two horrible outcomes. Less cybersecurity for everyone and an ability for the government to spy on, and hence blackmail, the world.

Reuters reports:

continue reading

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Mom Arrested for Leaving Kid Alone for 5 Minutes. Anything Could Have Happened.

TargetThe desire to criminalize imperfect moms continues unabated. This week it was a New Hampshire mom, Dina Dambaeva, a native of Russia, who left her 2-year-old in the car while she went to return an item at Target—an errand she expected to take five minutes.

It ended up taking about half an hour, someone must have called the cops, and though the child was completely fine, the mom was arrested because, according to the Hooksett Police:

“Anytime you have child of that age, alone, and unattended, there is a ton of risks that can happen to them,” said Hooksett Police Sgt. Matthew Burke.

Which is true. But of course, had she dragged him across the parking lot, there are “risks” too. This flip side of the equation never gets any play, in our rush to imagine the worst of any mom and any situation involving an unattended child.

In fact, we have been trained to imagine the worst, not just by the cops but also by the media, which treats fantasies as potential facts if not alternative facts. Here’s how NECN News beefed up the story:

Area shoppers said they could not help but imagine the worst.

“Just someone breaking in and maybe abducting the child,” said Michelle Yang.

“I would never leave my child in the car, no, there’s no excuse,” said Penny Gurley.

Wow, what great reporting. When I was a TV reporter at CNBC long ago, we used to call this type of man-on-the-street thing “AAA” for “Ask Any Asshole.”

So the fact that the policeman could imagine something terrible happening (as could two onlookers, quoted only to make the story more juicy), the mother is treated as if she deliberately left her child to be possibly kidnapped.

The mom, who probably thought that by leaving Russia she had escaped a totalitarian system that dictated her every move, tried explaining that where she comes from, it is still normal to let your child wait in the car.

“I thought it was going to take five minutes, I didn’t know it was going to take more,” she said. “I’m not the worst mother in the world, I just did one tiny mistake, and people judge me for that.”

Judge we do. So why not try judging from a place of rationality? Here’s a mom who loves her son, did not put him in any kind of likely danger, and comes from a country where this practice is common. So even if this was a mistake, let’s not treat it like an act of abuse. What parent hasn’t had some less-than-perfect moments?

We cannot keep arresting people for something very rare and unpredictable that could have happened. Otherwise we could start arresting parents for letting their kids walk down the stairs (they could have fallen!) or eat food (they could have choked!).

And yet, Dambaeva will be in court this May, facing a misdemeanor charge of endangering a child.

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The Definitive Brexit “Wall Chart”

Yesterday the UK government triggered Article 50 and fired the starting gun on a two-year negotiation towards the UK’s exit from the EU. These negotiations will be complex and contentious, and as Goldman writes this morning, the open question is whether they will prove constructive or adversarial.

While Goldman provides an extensive analysis of next steps, including a framework of the three most imporant issues to watch, what we found most useful for readers is the following “Wall Chart” which lays out in clear detail not only what the next two years will look like for the Brexit process, but superimposes on it parallel key events from across Europe.

Brexit wall chart — The Long March: A crowded schedule for the two-year negotiation

With that out of the way, here are excerpts from Goldman’s take on Article 50 and the long march to Brexit, as well as the three main issues to watch:

By Goldman analysts Andrew Benito, Huw Pill and Dylan Smith

Article 50 and the long march to Brexit — Three issues to watch

Yesterday (March 29), the UK government triggered Article 50 and thus fired the starting gun on a two-year negotiation towards the UK’s exit from the EU. These negotiations will be complex and contentious. The open question is whether they will prove constructive or adversarial.

In the context of political negotiations in general — and EU negotiations in particular — process is an important determinant of outcome. Keeping track of process is central to understanding whether we will end up with a mutually beneficial agreement or a Brexit that is unnecessarily costly for both sides.

Given each party has its own interests and domestic political constraints, EU negotiations inevitably require an element of compromise. By broadening the set of issues that the contracting parties can trade off against one another, two mechanisms underlying EU negotiations promote such compromise: (1) the principle that “nothing is agreed until everything is agreed”; and (2) the practice that agreement is only achieved at the last moment.

Applying these mechanisms to the Brexit negotiation may improve the chances of a constructive final outcome. But they imply that few concrete decisions will emerge in the coming months. In the meantime, businesses are left in limbo.
We identify three indications that would suggest Brexit negotiations are proceeding in a constructive rather than adversarial manner, increasing the likelihood of a benign outcome:

  • Substantial discussions on a broader final agreement (including on post-Brexit trading arrangements) start before agreement is reached on the mechanics of the exit itself.
  • The EU-27 show flexibility over the timing (and thus immediate magnitude) of payments to settle the UK’s legacy liabilities to the EU, which would avoid them becoming an obstacle to constructive negotiation owing to domestic political resistance in the UK.
  • Most importantly, the UK government shows a preparedness to accept ECJ jurisdiction over any transitional phase after Brexit, even if this entails a political climb-down from its established ‘red lines’.

* * *

What to watch #1. Whether difficulty in reaching an exit agreement (in particular, over its financial aspects) holds up progress on other dimensions of the negotiation will be an important early indicator or whether the Brexit discussions are amicable or adversarial.

Even if they improve the chances of eventually reaching a mutually agreeable compromise, these two procedural mechanisms come with costs. Businesses have to plan ahead. Lack of any concrete agreement until autumn 2018 at the earliest leaves their decision-making in limbo. Contingency plans have to be activated. From the UK perspective in particular, the risk exists that nothing being agreed until everything is agreed at the last moment leads to a closing of the political barn door after the economic horse has bolted.

A changing political context — in both the EU and the UK

For many continental European politicians, Brexit is an unfortunate and (in their eyes) unnecessary distraction. They have plenty on their plates already: fixing Euro area governance; dealing with immigration from the Middle East and North Africa; facing down the rise of Eurosceptic populism at home; addressing security threats from Russia and the Middle East; and managing the economic nationalism of the new US administration.

In the face of these challenges, progress in deepening European integration has stalled, as tacitly acknowledged at last week’s summit to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the Treaty of Rome. The recent Commission white paper was realistic in sketching out scenarios for the future of the EU, where the prospect of further integration was limited.[1] European leaders have publicly (although not uncontroversially) discussed the potential for a “multi-speed” Europe.

There are those on the UK side who believe a fractured and weakened EU will be forced to accommodate British demands within the Brexit negotiation, particularly on immigration issues. While there is validity in this view, we believe an important distinction needs to be drawn between public concern over immigration from outside the EU (which is rising in many EU countries, in sympathy with concerns in the UK) and heightened concern in the UK over immigration from within the EU.

More generally, the sustainability of the EU in its current form is open to debate over the medium term, since it is widely accepted that institutional and governance reforms are needed to make the Euro area more workable. Electoral risks in France and Italy over the coming year cannot be ignored. But even if a troubled EU may create some tactical advantages for the UK’s Brexit negotiators, they need to be careful what they wish for: an EU in chaos is directly damaging to the UK’s economy and financial system, and is unlikely to constitute a rational and attentive negotiating partner.

Our working assumption is that the EU-27 will continue to operate on broadly the current basis through the two-year Brexit process. We are sceptical that fundamental changes to the EU will take place over that horizon which create greater flexibility to accommodate the UK in a form of associate membership.

In parallel, the political situation within the UK may also be in flux: political uncertainties are not one-sided. PM May’s overall parliamentary majority is small. Internal division within the ruling Conservative party over the character of Brexit and the compromises with the EU-27 that are possible persists. Calls for a general election to bolster Ms. May’s political position are returning. The weakness of the Labour opposition has re-opened questions about a realignment of political parties.

Moreover, the territorial integrity of the UK is again being questioned. Less than three years after the Scottish referendum, Scotland’s Parliament has again called for a vote on independence on the grounds that the nature of the UK union will fundamentally change upon Brexit. Albeit for longstanding historical reasons more than over Brexit, Northern Irish politics is in turmoil. Commitments to maintain a ‘soft’ border between the north and south of Ireland after Brexit raise questions about whether a similar soft border could be established between Scotland and England, allowing the former to remain within the single market as its government has proposed.

Brexit negotiations will take place in a context of political and institutional uncertainty.

* * *

What to watch #2. Transitional arrangements between Brexit in March 2019 and agreement on a new UK/EU relationship are key. Flexibility on the UK side towards accepting ECJ jurisdiction during this interregnum despite the political climb-down from established ‘red lines’ this would involve would be a signal that a constructive outcome can emerge.

As Brexit becomes more immediate, parts of the UK government have started to show greater flexibility, at least with regard to the transitional arrangements. In part, this reflects practicalities. While accumulated European regulation and directives (the acquis in Eurospeak) can be transposed directly into UK law via the envisaged Great Repeal Bill, the regulatory authorities to implement those rules in the UK simply do not exist at present. Even if the expertise required is available domestically, creating, staffing and funding those institutions takes time.

Relying on the existing European institutions beyond March 2019 may therefore simply be a matter of necessity in some cases. Recognition of such necessity may open up scope for a constructive compromise for the transitional period despite the political obstacles, and thus for less adversarial negotiations about the final arrangements. But should a hard line be imposed by the Eurosceptic hard Brexiteers, this would damage prospects for successful conclusion of a mutually beneficial final deal.
Agreeing a new trade relationship

The UK government’s negotiating position establishes that it does not seek to participate in the EU’s single market or customs union. As regards trading relationships, the “deep and special partnership” sought by the UK with the EU after Brexit (to quote from yesterday’s letter triggering Article 50) is therefore likely to take the form of an Free Trade Agreement (FTA).[4] But — notwithstanding its name — an FTA represents a significant degradation in the nature of that trading relationship relative to the status quo.

An FTA is likely to neglect trade in services and focus on trade in goods. Unless agreements on services — which typically involve much deeper (and more politically sensitive) treatment of regulation and labour mobility — can be established in parallel, this implies a significant deterioration in the UK’s access to EU markets in the services sector within which it has specialised.

By their nature FTAs require local content rules. Otherwise third countries could circumvent trade restrictions of some members of the FTA by exporting to the member with easiest access. (The distinction between an FTA and a customs union is that the former allows participants to run their own commercial policy with the rest of the world, whereas the latter requires adherence to a single common commercial policy.) But policing local content requirements is potentially bureaucratic and invasive.

One way of overcoming the shortcomings of an FTA would be to create sector-specific carve-outs, whereby certain industries or activities are treated on a different basis from the normal rule. Such an approach has been entertained for the UK post-Brexit (e.g., in financial services, where the City of London plays a special role as a financial centre; and/or for the auto sector, where pan-European supply chains are the norm). But defining sectors may prove controversial. As with local content requirements, the bureaucratic process of policing sector-specific deals (and their limits) threatens to be costly in time and efficiency, and thus may mark a significant degradation in trading arrangements to that currently available within the single market.

All in all, the more ambitious the scope and depth of any FTA, the more that it will rely on goodwill and trust among the contracting parties. This is one of the mechanisms whereby the process will determine the outcome of the Brexit negotiation. If trust is lost early in the discussions (e.g., over the financial cost of exit), the more difficult it will be to find a constructive way to address the practical difficulties of policing local content requirements and industry or sector borders, which are likely to be crucial elements of any future trade agreement.
Settling outstanding bills

* * *

What to watch #3. Understandably, the EU-27 will expect the UK to cover the costs of any reliance on EU institutions or programmes after Brexit. Flexibility on the EU-27 side regarding the timing (and thus immediate magnitude) of payments to settle the UK’s legacy liabilities — thereby avoiding these becoming a domestic political obstacle to constructive negotiations in the UK — would represent a positive signal for a mutually beneficial final outcome.

The long march to Brexit

Brexit negotiations are complex. Little concrete can or will be finally agreed until the end of the Brexit process. This leaves business decisions in limbo.

We identify three indicators of progress in the negotiations: (1) willingness to conduct exit negotiations in parallel with discussion about the new UK/EU relationship; (2) EU-27 flexibility over the timing of UK payments to meet legacy financial obligations; and (3) UK government flexibility over the jurisdiction of European courts and institutions during any transitional phase after Brexit. We believe these indicators will signal whether a constructive or adversarial approach is being adopted by the negotiating parties.

The immediate reaction to PM May’s Article 50 letter has not been constructive. British Eurosceptics have been understandably rigid on the government’s red lines, while Germany’s Chancellor Merkel has emphasised the EU-27’s insistence on sequencing exit negotiations ahead of talks on a new EU/UK relationship. But much of this reflects attempts to harden opening bargaining positions.

If such rigidity were to be maintained into the fall of this year, we would become more concerned that an adversarial negotiation could lead to ‘cliff edge’ outcome on Brexit, with the likely economic disruptions that would cause. But our base case remains that an agreement can be found for tariff-free trade in goods between the EU and UK, an outcome that would require some flexibility on both sides. Nonetheless, this outcome falls well short of the status quo.

via http://ift.tt/2ofcpER Tyler Durden