Saudi Grants Qatar 2-Day Ultimatum Extension As Saudi King Unexpectedly Skips G-20 Summit

With the original ultimatum issued by four Arab states accusing Qatar of supporting terrorism, expiring at midnight on Sunday, the Saudi-led coalition agreed to extend the deadline for Doha to comply with its list of demands until late on Tuesday a, even as U.S. President Donald Trump voiced concern to both sides about the dispute. According to a joint statement posted on Saudi state news agency SPA, the four countries agreed to a request by Kuwait to extend by 48 hours Sunday’s deadline for compliance. They have not specified what further sanctions they could impose on Doha, but commercial bankers in the region believe that Saudi, Emirati and Bahraini banks might receive official guidance to pull deposits and interbank loans from Qatar.

As Reuters adds, foreign ministers from the four countries will meet in Cairo on Wednesday to discuss Qatar, while Arab media reported that Qatari foreign minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman al-Thani arrived in Kuwait on Monday to deliver Doha’s formal response to the Arab demands. Mediation efforts, including by the U.S., have so far proven fruitless after the four states cut diplomatic and commercial ties with Qatar on June 5, accusing it of supporting terrorism, meddling in their internal affairs and advancing the agenda of regional foe Iran, all of which Qatar denies.

Separately, Trump spoke to the leaders of Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the Crown Prince of Abu Dhabi in the UAE to discuss his “concerns about the ongoing dispute”, the White House said.

“He reiterated the importance of stopping terrorist financing and discrediting extremist ideology. The president also underscored that unity in the region is critical to accomplishing the Riyadh Summit’s goals of defeating terrorism and promoting regional stability,” the White House said. “President Trump, nevertheless, believes that the overriding objective of his initiative is the cessation of funding for terrorism,” it said.

On Monday morning, Trump tweeted that he “spoke yesterday with the King of Saudi Arabia about peace in the Middle-East. Interesting things are happening!”

Meanwhile, Qatari officials say the demands are so strict that the four countries never seriously intended them as a negotiating position and see them as being aimed at hobbling Doha’s sovereignty. As we reported over the weekend, Qatar called the charges baseless and says the demands, which include closing al Jazeera TV and ejecting Turkish troops based there, are so severe that they seem intended to be rejected with the Qatar Foreign Minister saying that “There is no fear from our direction. We are ready to face the consequences.”

Still, Qatar said it is interested in negotiating a fair and just solution to “any legitimate issues” of concern to fellow member states of the Gulf Cooperation Council.

As we discussed last weekend, the UAE’s minister of state for foreign affairs, Anwar Gargash, has played down the chances of an escalation, saying “the alternative is not escalation but parting ways”, suggesting Qatar may be forced out of the GCC. Gulf countries have insisted the demands were non- negotiable.

While it appears that neither side is particularly interested in escalating the Qatar “crisis” to its next level, whatever it may be, the most interesting news came out this morning when Reuters reported that Saudi Arabia’s King Salman bin Abdulaziz will not attend a July 7-8 summit of the Group of 20 leading global economies in Hamburg, Germany, a German government spokesman said on Monday, providing no reason for the decision.

Steffen Seibert said the Saudi government had notified Berlin that the 81-year-old monarch would not participate in the annual meeting of G20 leaders. It was not immediately clear what prompted the monarch’s sudden change in plans.

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Trump To Talk Syria, Ukraine With Putin At G-20 Summit; “Russian Meddling” Reportedly Not On The Agenda

Last week we quipped that it appeared as though Trump had officially scheduled his first kick-off planning session for the 2020 presidential elections when NBC News confirmed that he and Putin would meet later this week at the G-20 Summit in Hamburg.  While details are still scarce on the agenda for the meeting, the White House is now saying that discussions between the two controversial world leaders will center around Syria and Ukraine.  Per The Hill:

President Trump reportedly plans to talk with Russian President Vladimir Putin about Syria and Ukraine when the two leaders meet later this week.

 

Two administration officials told CNN the talks will likely focus around the disputes in Syria and Ukraine, but there has not yet been a formal outline for the meeting.

 

Trump is expected to talk to Putin about Russia’s support for Syrian President Bashar Assad and Moscow’s actions in Ukraine.

Unfortunately, and much to the chagrin of CNN, “Russian meddling” will apparently not be a topic of conversation.

Administration officials also don’t expect Trump will bring up the Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election during his meeting with Putin, the network reported.

Trump Putin

 

Of course, while the media is intensely looking for hints of what will be discussed, Trump’s National Security Advisor, H.R. McMaster, told reporters last Thursday that “there is no specific agenda. It’s really going to be whatever the president wants to talk about.”

But while the White House is planning to improvise, The Guardian notes this morning that Moscow has been planning how to address this first meeting for months now. 

Maxim Suchkov, a member of the Moscow-based Russian International Affairs Council, said foreign policy experts had been invited by the foreign ministry as early as March to “brainstorm” ideas about what Moscow should be offering and asking for.

 

Suchkov said that Russian diplomats were thinking about the relationship in “four big baskets”, including regional issues such as Ukraine and Syria, establishing military channels of communication, and economic relations. The biggest and vaguest of the four involved the contours of the international order, and in particular “what world would the US and Russia want to live in peacefully”.

 

The Russian foreign minister, Sergey Lavrov, set out in a speech on Friday what such a new order would look like: in place of the west seeking to impose “pseudo-liberal values” across the globe there would be a balancing of the national interests of major powers, he said.

One of Moscow’s immediate demands is the return of two Russian diplomatic compounds, in Maryland and New York, from where its officials were expelled by the Obama administration in December in retaliation over the Kremlin’s interference in the election campaign.  The White House led by Trump has explored handing back the sites, perhaps stripped of diplomatic immunity, but the issue is politically fraught in Washington at a time when the city is gripped by the Russia investigations.

Meanwhile, with the Senate already voting 98-2 to strengthen sanctions against Russia, all eyes will also be watching to see whether Trump’s views on potentially relaxing those sanctions shift.  The House is expected to vote on the measures in the days following the Trump-Putin meeting. Any unilateral action by Trump in Hamburg to relax pressure on Moscow is liable to cause a backlash in Washington.

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Facebook’s Solar Powered Drone Has Successful Test Flight: Potential Internet Access To Billions

Authored by Mike Shedlock via MishTalk.com,

Four billion people on the earth have no internet access. That will change if Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg’s solar powered drone plan works.

A previous trial of his drone ended with a crash landing, but a May 2017 Test of the Aquila Drone was a huge success.
 

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg’s long-term plan for the drone, called Aquila, is to have it and others provide internet access to 4bn people around the world who are currently in the dark.

 

“When Aquila is ready, it will be a fleet of solar-powered planes that will beam internet connectivity across the world,” he wrote on Facebook.

 

The drone flew with more sensors, new spoilers and a horizontal propeller stopping system to help it better land after the crash in December. It was in the air for an hour and 46 minutes and reached 3,000ft.

 

The drone weighs about 1,000lbs and has a longer wingspan than a Boeing 747. It runs mostly on autopilot but there are manned ground crews to manage certain maneuvers.

Aquila Drone Video

If this is a success, and I expect it to be, it will not only bring free or extremely cheap internet access to the world, but also free or extremely cheap phone service.

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Trump Tweets WWE Gif, NJ State Govt Shutdown, Japan Aims for the Moon: A.M. Links

  • Another weekend of rallies in favor of and against Donald Trump.
  • President Trump tweeted a gif of a WWE appearance of him that placed the CNN logo over the head of Vince McMahon, who Trump bodyslams in the clip. Outrage ensued.
  • The state government in New Jersey shut down over a budget stand-off, closing state beaches but leaving state troopers on the road.
  • Eight people were injured in a shooting outside of a mosque in Avignon.
  • China said a U.S. warship sent to the South China Sea represented a “serious political and military provocation.”
  • Japan has a plan for a manned mission to the Moon.

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Key Events In The Coming Holiday-Shortened Week: Payrolls, Fed Minutes, ISM, G-20

In this holiday shortened week, which sees Canada shut to start the week, and US markets close at 1pm on Monday ahead of the July 4th holiday on Tuesday, the focus will be on US Nonfarm payrolls (consensus expect 185k), the FOMC minutes and central bank meetings by the RBA and Riksbank. Traders will also look at June auto sales data, Global Flash PMIs for June, while on the political front, the top event is the G20 summit kicking off in Germany on Friday.

A quick look at the key event: June payrolls: Consensus expects nonfarm payrolls to increase by 185k in June after a weaker-than-expected 138k job gain in May. Some sayd the weak job growth in the prior month could have been due to the early timing of the survey reference period. The unemployment rate should remain unchanged at 4.3% and average hourly earnings may grow by 0.3% mom.

Also watch for FOMC minutes along with Riksbank & RBA: The minutes of the June FOMC meeting are likely to sound more cautious than the statement or press conference. BofA economists signal that the themes to watch are the debate over inflation, the agreement over balance sheet normalization and the discussion on financial conditions. They expect minutes to still point to balance sheet normalization in the September meeting and a path of higher rates.

Two central banks are due this week: This is likely to be another placeholder meeting for the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) and policy is set to remain neutral with the cash rate remaining at 1.5%. There looks to be little risk that the RBA will follow other central banks with a hawkish signal. Against the backdrop of normalizing global monetary policy, we remain cognizant that the Riksbank have frequently disappointed in the past and this remains a risk, but their previous insistence on an easing bias is looking increasingly at odds with economic reality and out of step with other major central banks.

In other data:

  • In the US, we mainly wait for labor market report and FOMC meeting minutes. There will also be ISM and trade balance.
  • In the Eurozone, releases include retail sales, factory orders and industrial production. We also have final PMI releases where we expect prior readings to be confirmed.
  • In UK, beyond PMIs, we wait for industrial production, trade balance and house prices.
  • In Japan, we mainly have confidence indicators.
  • In Canada, we have PMIs, building permits and labor market data.
  • In China, key releases include PMI, foreign reserves and consumer inflation

A visual breakdown of the key events across the DM space, courtesy of Bank of America:

Courtesy of DB, here is a breakdown of the key events by day:

  • Today we’re kicking off in Europe with the final revisions to the June manufacturing PMIs along with a first look at the data for the UK and periphery. Also due out this morning is the Euro area unemployment rate for May. Over in the US this afternoon we’ll also receive the final manufacturing PMI revision along with the manufacturing ISM for June and May construction spending. Later this evening we’ll also get June vehicle sales data.
  • Tuesday looks to be quiet with Independence Day in the US. The main attraction is likely the RBA meeting overnight while the only data due out is Euro area PPI.
  • Wednesday looks to be much busier. Overnight in Asia we’ll receive the remaining Caixin PMIs in China and Nikkei PMIs in Japan. In Europe we’ll also get the remaining services and composite PMI revisions as well as retail sales data for the Euro area. In the US on Wednesday data due out includes factory orders for May and the final durable and capital goods orders revisions for May. The FOMC minutes from the June meeting will then be out in the evening.
  • Turning to Thursday, factory orders in Germany is the only release of note in Europe while in the US we’ll get the June ADP print, initial jobless claims, May trade balance, ISM non-manufacturing for June and the final PMI revisions (services and composite).
  • We close out the week in Europe on Friday with industrial production in Germany and trade data and industrial production in France and the UK. In the US on Friday it’s all about the June employment report including nonfarm payrolls.

Away from the data, the Fedspeak this week consists of Bullard this morning, Powell on Thursday and Fischer on Friday. The ECB’s Praet and Nowotny speak tomorrow and Weidmann and Nowotny speak on Thursday on the future of the euro. The ECB minutes are also due out on Thursday. Other events to note this week are China President Xi Jinping’s visit to Moscow on Tuesday where he is due to meet Putin. Germany’s Merkel and China’s Xi meet ahead of the G20 summit on Wednesday and the summit itself is on Friday and Saturday. The Fed will also publish its 2017 monetary policy report to Congress on Friday ahead of Yellen’s testimony on July 12th.

* * *

Finally, here is Goldman with a breakdown of key events in the US together with expectations:

The key economic releases this week are ISM manufacturing on Monday, ISM non-manufacturing on Thursday, and the employment report on Friday. There are several scheduled speaking engagements by Fed officials this week, including a speech by Fed Vice Chair Fischer on Thursday. The minutes from the June FOMC meeting will be released on Wednesday. Additionally, the Federal Reserve will publish the July 2017 Monetary Policy Report to Congress on Friday ahead of Chair Yellen’s testimony to Congress the following week.

Monday, July 3

  • 04:35 AM St. Louis Fed President Bullard (FOMC non-voter) speaks: St. Louis Fed President James Bullard will give the keynote speech at the “Applications of Behavioural Economics and Multiple Equilibrium Models to Macroeconomic Policy Conference” organized by the Bank of England, the National Institute of Economic Research, Warwick University, and the ESRC Centre of Macroeconomics in London, UK.
  • 10:00 AM ISM manufacturing, June (GS 55.8, consensus 55.2, last 54.9): We expect the ISM manufacturing index to climb 0.9pt to 55.8 in the June report. Overall, regional manufacturing surveys were mixed in June. The Empire State (+20.8pt to +19.8), Richmond Fed (+6pt to +7), Kansas City Fed (+3.0pt to +11), and Chicago PMI surveys showed notable improvements. However, the Philly Fed (-11.2pt to +27.6), Dallas Fed (-2.2pt to +15.0), and Markit PMI manufacturing surveys all showed month-over month declines. On net, our manufacturing survey tracker—which is scaled to the ISM index—rose to 57.2 in June from 55.5 last month.
  • 10:00 AM Construction spending, May (GS +0.3%, consensus +0.3%, last -1.4%): We expect construction spending to increase 0.3% after a weaker-than-expected report last month, which showed broad-based declines in private and public residential and nonresidential spending.
  • 4:00 PM Total vehicle sales, June (GS 16.6mn, consensus 16.5mn, last 16.6mn): Domestic vehicle sales, June (GS 13.1mn, consensus 12.9mn, last 12.8mn): Our auto analysts expect total vehicle sales to decline on a year-over-year basis to 16.6mn, due to a pull-back in fleet and softness in retail auto sales.

Tuesday, July 4

  • US Independence Day holiday. US equity and bond markets are closed.

Wednesday, July 5

  • 10:00 AM Factory orders, May (GS -0.3%, consensus -0.5%, last -0.2%); Durable goods orders, May final (last -1.1%); Durable goods orders ex-transportation, May final (last +0.1%); Core capital goods orders, May final (last -0.2%);  Core capital goods shipments, May final (last -0.2%): We estimate factory orders fell 0.3% in May, following a 0.2% decrease in April. The May durable goods report showed modest decreases in core capital goods orders and core capital goods shipments, both below expectations.
  • 02:00 PM Minutes from the June 13-14 FOMC meeting: The June FOMC meeting delivered a hawkish surprise to markets that seemed to have expected the Fed to react more strongly to a string of three consecutive soft CPI reports. Instead, the FOMC signaled confidence in the inflation outlook, kept the dots largely stable, and announced a schedule of caps for the runoff of Treasuries and MBS. In the minutes, we will look for further discussion of the soft inflation data and the committee’s views on the weights attached to the inflation misses relative to the risk of a labor market overshoot.

Thursday, July 6

  • 04:05 AM San Francisco Fed President Williams (FOMC non-voter) speaks: San Francisco Fed President John Williams will give a speech titled “The Global Growth Slump: Causes and Consequences” at The Economic Society of Australia’s Eminent Speaker Series 2017 in Sydney, New South Wales. Audience Q&A is expected.
  • 08:30 AM Initial jobless claims, week ended July 1 (GS 245k, consensus 243k, last 244k); Continuing jobless claims, week ended June 24 (consensus 1,938k, last 1,948k): We estimate initial jobless claims edged up 1k to 245k in the week ended July 1. We see few notable outliers in the state-level data from last week. However, we note that initial claims can be particularly volatile around this time of year due to annual summer auto-plan shutdowns. Continuing claims – the number of persons receiving benefits through standard programs – have begun to trend up, following a sharp decline in the first four months of the year.
  • 08:30 AM Trade balance, May (GS -$46.3bn, consensus -$46.3bn, last -$47.6bn): We estimate the trade deficit narrowed by $1.3bn in May. The Advance Economic Indicators report last week showed a narrower goods trade deficit, and we forecast a similar narrowing in the broader trade balance in this week’s report.
  • 10:00 AM ISM non-manufacturing, June (GS 56.3, consensus 56.5, last 56.9): Service sector surveys were mixed in June, and we expect ISM non-manufacturing to move lower to 56.3. The Philly Fed (+10.4pt to +19.7) and Dallas Fed (+4.2pt to +11.9) non-manufacturing surveys rose, while the New York Fed (-4.0pt to +2.6, SA by GS) and Richmond Fed (-6pt to +13) surveys pulled back. On net, our non-manufacturing survey tracker declined to 55.4 in June from 56.0 last month.
  • 10:00 AM Fed Governor Powell (FOMC voter) speaks: Federal Reserve Governor Jerome Powell will give a speech “The Case for Housing Finance Reform” at an event hosted by the American Enterprise Institute in Washington D.C. Audience Q&A is expected.
  • 07:30 PM Fed Vice Chair Fischer (FOMC voter) speaks: Federal Reserve Vice Chair Stanley Fischer will give a speech on government policy and labor productivity at the Martha’s Vineyard Hebrew Center Summer Institute in Massachusetts. Audience Q&A is expected.

Friday, July 7

  • 8:30 AM Nonfarm payroll employment, June (GS +180k, consensus +177k, last +138k); Private payroll employment, June (GS +175k, consensus +175k, last +147k); Average hourly earnings (mom), June (GS +0.3%, consensus +0.3%, last +0.2%); Average hourly earnings (yoy), June (GS +2.6%, consensus +2.6%, last +2.5%); Unemployment rate, June (GS 4.3%, consensus 4.3%, last 4.3%): We estimate nonfarm payrolls rose 180k in June, following a 138k increase in May and compared to three- and six-month moving averages of 121k and 161k, respectively. Labor market fundamentals remained broadly stable – business employment surveys remain at strong levels, and the Conference Board’s labor market differential rose to a new cycle high – though we note the month-over-month deterioration in jobless claims data. Additionally, we expect a reduced impact from labor supply constraints this month, reflecting students and graduates entering the labor force in June. This suggests scope for reacceleration in payroll growth relative to May. We expect the unemployment rate to remain stable at 4.3%, with some upside risk to 4.4% as continuing claims edged higher and the participation rate may rebound, reflecting entry of students and graduates into the labor force. Finally, we expect average hourly earnings to increase 0.3% month over month, reflecting somewhat favorable calendar effects, and 2.6% year-over-year (with upside risk to 2.7%).
  • 11:00 AM Federal Reserve Board to publish July 2017 Monetary Policy Report to Congress

Source: BofA, Goldman, DB

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Is Gundlach Wrong On 2-Year Notes: Some Thoughts From Bloomberg

After this weekend’s mini tweetstorm by Jeff Gundlach on the fate of 2Y Tsys, here is a response from Bloomberg’s macro commentator Wes Goodman.

Jeffrey Gundlach, the chief investment officer at DoubleLine Capital LP, says that it’s “very hard” to be optimistic on two-year Treasuries with yields at an eight-year high. He may have a point, but they still could be a haven amid a broad bond-market sell-off. 

While Treasuries may be poised to extend last week’s losses, two-year notes will probably dodge most of the declines.

 

As central bankers from Europe, the U.K., Canada and the U.S. have begun talking about the prospects for tightening, short-term yields should be roaring higher. And they are, in all those regions except the U.S.

 

The Fed has indicated it plans to raise rates once more in the second half of 2017. That would mark a slowdown in the pace from the one hike every three months since December. What’s more, traders aren’t convinced policy makers will even move again this year. The odds of a hike by Dec. 31 are barely 50%, based on federal funds futures and the effective rate as calculated by Bloomberg’s implied probabilities model.

 

At least some of the Fed tightening will come in the form of balance-sheet reduction, mitigating the need for additional hikes

 

The U.S. has a yield advantage, with the two-year at about 1.39%. The rates are about 1.10% in Canada, 0.36% in the U.K. and minus 0.57% in Germany.

 

Leveraged funds hold a net long position in two-year Treasury futures, even after some recent reduction.

 

Shorter maturities by definition don’t have the duration of longer-term debt, so losses will be limited if yields rise across the spectrum.

 

Gundlach commented in a Twitter post Friday that a jump in two-year yields had taken them past a technical hurdle set in the first quarter of 2008.

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Is Libertarianism a “Stealth Plan” To Destroy America?

As its title suggests, Democracy in Chains: The Deep History of the Radical Right’s Stealth Plan for America, by Duke historian Nancy MacLean, is filled with all sorts of melodramatic flourishes and revelations of supposed conspiracies. Chains, deep history, radicals, stealth—is this non-fiction or an Oliver Stone film? Even the cover depicts a smoke-filled room filled with ample-chinned, shadowy figures! This book, virtually every page announces, isn’t simply about the Nobel laureate economist James Buchanan and his “public choice” theory, which holds in part that public-sector actors are bound by the same self-interest and desire to grow their “market share” as private-sector actors are.

No, MacLean is after much-bigger, more-sinister game, documenting what she believes is

the utterly chilling story of the ideological origins of the single most powerful and least understood threat to democracy today: the attempt by the billionaire-backed radical right to undo democratic governance…[and] a stealth bid to reverse-engineer all of America, at both the state and the national levels, back to the political economy and oligarchic governance of midcentury Virginia, minus the segregation.

The billionaires in question, of course, are Koch brothers Charles and David, who have reached a level of villainy in public discourse last rivaled by Sacco and Vanzetti. (David Koch is a trustee of Reason Foundation, the nonprofit that publishes this website; Reason also receives funding from the Charles Koch Foundation.) Along the way, MacLean advances many sub-arguments, such as the notion that the odious, hypocritical, and archly anti-capitalistic 19th-century slavery apologist John C. Calhoun is the spirit animal of contemporary libertarianism. In fact, Buchanan and the rest of us all are nothing less than “Calhoun’s modern understudies.”

Such unconvincing claims (“the Marx of the Master Class,” as Calhoun was dubbed by Richard Hofstadter, was openly hostile to the industrialism, wage labor, and urbanization that James Buchanan took for granted) are hard to keep track of, partly because of all the rhetorical smoke bombs MacLean is constantly lobbing. In a characteristic example, MacLean early on suggests that libertarianism isn’t “merely a social movement” but “the story of something quite different, something never before seen in American history”:

Could it be—and I use these words quite hesitantly and carefully—a fifth-column assault on American democratic governance?

Calling attention to the term’s origins to describe Franco’s covert, anti-modern allies in the Spanish Civil War, MacLean writes

the term “fifth column” has been applied to stealth supporters of an enemy who assist by engaging in propaganda and even sabotage to prepare the way for its conquest. It is a fraught term among scholars, not least because the specter of a secretive, infiltrative fifth column has been used in instrumental ways by the powerful— such as in the Red Scare of the Cold War era— to conjure fear and lead citizens and government to close ranks against dissent, with grave costs for civil liberties. That, obviously, is not my intent in using the term….

And yet, it’s the only term up for MacLean’s job since “the concept of a fifth column does seem to be the best one available for capturing what is distinctive in a few key dimensions about this quest to ensure the supremacy of capital.” Sure, “fifth column” is a dirty, lowdown, suspect term among historians because using it trades in hysteria at the service of the ruling class rather than rational analysis intended to help the downtrodden. But come on, people, we’re in a twilight struggle here, with a movement whose goals have included, among other things, ending censorship; opening the borders to goods and people from around the world; abolishing the draft and reducing militarism; legalizing abortion, drugs, and alternative lifestyles; reforming criminal justice and sentencing; focusing on how existing government operations, especially K-12 schools, have hurt poor and minority Americans; and doing away with occupational licensing and other barriers to entry for business owners, among other things. So much for hesitation on MacLean’s part. Fifth column it is! As for carefulness, it’s worth noting in passing that MacLean identifies former Attorney General Ed Meese and foreign-policy hawk Bill Kristol as libertarians, which must be as much of a shock to them as it is to, well, actual libertarians.

Clearly this sort of book, published by a major house (Viking) and written by an eminent historian (MacLean is a chaired professor at Duke and author of highly regarded books), is ideological catnip to people who dislike libertarianism and its growing influence in politics and culture. At the increasingly hard-left New Republic, Alex Shephard introduces an interview with MacLean by writing that Democracy in Chains “exposes the frightening intellectual roots of the radical right, as well as its ultimate ambition: to erode American democracy.” At NPR, novelist Genevieve Valentine writes

As MacLean lays out in their own words, these men developed a strategy of misinformation and lying about outcomes until they had enough power that the public couldn’t retaliate against policies libertarians knew were destructive. (Look no further than Flint, MacLean says, where the Koch-funded Mackinac Center was behind policies that led to the water crisis.)

Let’s leave aside the fact that Flint’s water supply contamination was due to decades of local mismanagement and a stimulus project gone wrong, hardly the sort of thing that mustache-twirling libertarians espouse. Democracy in Chains is chicken soup for the souls of liberals, progressives, and members of the “resistance” who want to believe that libertarians don’t just want to destroy or reform ineffective and inefficient public-sector agencies and institutions, but actually want to kill people or destroy them irreparably. Because really, how else can you make a buck in a free market, right?

If liberals and leftists are uncritically celebrating MacLean’s attack, scholars and commentators with specific and general knowledge of Buchanan’s work and libertarianism are taking a more jaundiced view. Reason will be publishing a review essay in the coming weeks but in the interim, here’s a survey of some of the sharpest rejoinders to date.

Historian Phillip W. Magness, trained at Buchanan’s former perch of George Mason University, takes particular issue with MacLean’s linking of Buchanan to characters such as Calhoun and the poet Donald Davidson, the leader of the self-styled Fugitives and Agrarians in the 20th-century South. Like Calhoun, the Agrarians treated capitalism and modernity with contempt, as a sort of mirror image of an equally soulless and totalitarian communism. MacLean asserts that Davidson, who railed against an increasingly centralized “Leviathan” state, was central to Buchanan’s worldview. But Magness notes that Buchanan never studied with him nor ever quoted him in his collected works. As with her non-hesitant, careless use of “fifth column,” MacLean’s real purpose in linking Buchanan with Davidson is to smear the former. Writes Magness:

MacLean has a very specific reason for making this claim, and she returns to it at multiple points in her book. The Agrarians, in addition to spawning a southern literary revival (the novelist Robert Penn Warren was one of their members), were also segregationists. By connecting them to Buchanan, she bolsters one of the primary charges of her book: an attempt to link Buchanan’s economic theories to a claimed resentment over Brown v. Board and the subsequent defeat of racial segregation in 1960s Virginia.

In another post, Magness notes when MacLean tries to link Buchanan to Calhoun, she instead starts citing work by Murray Rothbard, who actually was harshly critical of Buchanan. This sort of slippery maneuver permeates Democracy in Chains, as Case Western’s Jonathan Adler documents at the Volokh Conspiracy blog in The Washington Post. At Medium, Russ Roberts writes about MacLean’s treatment of George Mason economist Tyler Cowen, who also directs the Koch-funded Mercatus Center. MacLean suggests that Cowen welcomes the weakening of governmental checks and balances because doing so supports her thesis that libertarians want to take over the government by “stealth.” As Roberts points out, MacLean is guilty of intellectual malpractice:

MacLean left out the word “While” that begins Cowen’s sentence. Then she left off the key qualifier that completes the sentence — the point that the downside risk of weakening checks and balances is substantial. There is nothing here suggesting Cowen is in favor of weakening democracy or the Constitution. By quoting only a piece of Cowen’s sentence, MacLean reverses his meaning.

Unfortunately, MacLean does not just quote Cowen out of context. She ignores anything in Cowen’s essay that conflicts with her portrayal of Cowen as a sinister enemy of American institutions and democracy.

MacLean’s Duke colleague, the political scientist Michael Munger, has authored the most exhaustive and harshly critical review of Democracy in Chains to date. Writing for the Independent Institute, Munger damningly characterizes the book as

a work of speculative historical fiction. There is considerable research underpinning the speculation, and since MacLean is careful about footnoting only things that actually did happen she cannot be charged with fabricating facts. But most of the book, and all of its substantive conclusions, are idiosyncratic interpretations of the facts that she selects from a much larger record, as is common in the speculative-history genre. There is nothing wrong about speculation, of course, but there is nothing persuasive about it either, in terms of drawing reliable conclusions about history.

The entire essay comes as close to required reading as any libertarian would decree. Munger is not simply scoring points or picking apart the argument made by someone from a different tribe or camp; he’s actually laying bare how ideologically motivated texts paper over gaps in evidence and logic by focusing on small details to the exclusion of actually giving an accurate view of the larger picture. In the grip of a thesis she wants to be true, MacLean simply sifts through huge amounts of data and evidence, keeping only small chips of bones and fossils that she can use to construct a skeleton with which to scare people who already agree with her.

The contribution of Democracy in Chains…is to do two things…: Identify James Buchanan as the focal point of the revolution, and identify the content of Public Choice research and teaching as anti-Constitutional and anti-democratic…. Buchanan did not believe in unlimited majority rule. But then, as Buchanan often rightly said, nobody believes in unlimited majority rule. Democracy is and must be a balancing of, on the one hand, the rights of minorities, and, on the other, the ability of the majority to have its way within the domain established as “political” by the constitution. That’s another thing that is remarkable about Democracy in Chains: MacLean does not assign Buchanan a straw man position. She (correctly) gives Buchanan’s position as being the mainstream view, the one that everyone actually agrees with. And then she tries to defend the straw man position, the one that no one actually believes. Remarkable. The position she assigns Buchanan is this: He thought that democracy should be limited, to protect minorities. Um…okay. Yes, that’s right. We all believe that.

Which isn’t to say that Munger finds no value in the book:

Democracy in Chains is well-written, and the research it contains is both interesting and in many cases illuminating. But as an actual history, as a reliable account of the centrality of the work of James Buchanan in a gigantic conspiracy designed to end democracy in America, it turns far away from its mark. It is the story of an alternative past that never actually happened.

Despite its central failings, I too found the book interesting, if mostly as a way of understanding the ways in which libertarian thought is considered by those hostile to it. Ultimately, Democracy in Chains reveals less about a not-so-shadowy group of people who, as a t-shirt puts it, are “diligently plotting to take over the World and leave you alone” and more about progressives and liberals who choose to live in a dream world.

Other takes worth a read include ones by Jonah Goldberg, David Bernstein, David Henderson, Steve Horwitz, Jason Brennan, and Jonathan Adler.

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Silver Is Now Offered At a Discount, Report 2 July, 2017

Have you ever been in a discussion about gold, when someone blurts out “we don’t have enough gold to operate a gold standard!” We have a standard retort. “Oh, that’s interesting. Please tell us how much gold you think would be necessary, and how you calculated it.”

We have never heard a coherent answer to this question. Most people just don’t like gold, and will say whatever words they think will dismiss the monetary question entirely, without actually having to address the issues.

The common answer from the gold community is not much better, “We could have a gold standard, if gold was at the right price.”

Here is the typical logic: divide the money supply by the amount of gold. The result tells you the price of gold to fully back the money supply. Let’s first use M1 (we are aware that which measure of money supply to use is debated, but we don’t think it much matters). M1 today is $3.5 trillion, according to the Fred Economic Data published by the St Louis Fed.

Divide this by the amount of gold. Often, this is supposed to be the amount of gold held by the Fed itself, some 8,000 tons or 233 million ounces. The answer comes out to $15,000 per ounce.

Or, you could take global M2 money supply of about $70 trillion and divide by total known gold stocks of 180,000 tons or 5.79 billion ounces, which is $12,000 per ounce.

It doesn’t work that way. Each ounce of gold is not a bucket, to collect its pro rata share of the dollar rainwater that falls out of the sky.

To use a historical anecdote as an analogy, the Medievals thought that if you throw a rock, it flies straight until it runs out of force, and then it turns the corner and falls straight down. It’s tempting, easy, simple, convenient—and wrong. Rocks do not fly that way. And the price of anything, including gold, is not set by dividing quantities.

This approach is based on an assumption, that every printed bank note is to be fully backed by the corresponding quantity of gold. However, it never worked like this historically. An honest bank is obligated to redeem its currency on demand, but that does not mean it would keep all that gold lying about in a vault. Why issue a currency, just to buy gold, store it, and incur costs?

This is a curious position for advocates of the gold standard to take. Money is still defined as the dollar. But money is to be backed by gold, which is not money (as money is the dollar)—so what does that make gold?

This stock goldbug answer—that the gold standard is just a matter of price—is transpicuous. In saying this, he shows that he just wants gold to go to $12,000 or more.

He wants to be rich, by front-running the herd. All those people will desperately need gold—come the day. And the goldbug plans to be there, parceling out his gold in exchange for the finest luxuries. He will readily part with it, when its purchasing power goes up by 10 times.

Needless to say, this is not an attractive vision of the future for most people. There are many reasons why they remain firmly in favor of central banks and against gold. This is one of them. So, if you want to win support for the gold standard, please don’t argue that gold will go up.

By the way, this is not a path to get to the gold standard anyways. It is true that, today, no amount of gold is enough. A few thousand tons are produced by the miners every year, but that is absorbed by the market. All new gold goes into hoards.

In the late 19th century, at the peak of the gold standard, the world’s monetary system and trade was run out of London. There were about 150 tons of gold in London at the time. Today, miners in just the state of Nevada produce 160 tons. Whatever it was that made the gold standard work, it was not an impossibly large quantity that we couldn’t hope to muster today.

A higher price will not bring gold into circulation. Gold did not circulate when its price was $250 in 1999, nor when it hit almost $2,000 in 2011. It will still not circulate if the price hits $15,000 in the future. High or rising prices will not do the trick. In the classical gold standard, it was not high price that did it.

This discussion of price begs a very serious question. What does price mean, if the money has a price measured in terms of something else? If the money is gold, then what is its price to be measured in? If gold is not the money, then what does gold standard mean? In our vision of the gold standard, gold is recognized as money, and prices are measured in terms of money, i.e. in terms of gold.

If it was not high price of gold, what was it that brought gold into circulation?

Interest.

Without interest, gold leaves the market. No amount is enough. Private hoards are a bottomless pit, as we see today. Without interest, why risk your gold by lending it? As to spending it, why spend gold when you can spend paper? People may be happy to be paid in gold, but no one wants to pay gold out.

But if interest is allowed to rise, then more gold is attracted into the market. Gold owners seek a return on their gold.

It may be urban legend—we have been unable to find the quote recently—that in one of the banking panics around the turn of the last century, someone approached John Pierpont Morgan. “There is a crisis in New York, a shortage of gold, what are we going to do?!”

“Raise the interest rate. 4% will draw it off the continent, and 5% will pull it down from the moon!”

At what rate would you be willing to lend your gold? Please tell us.


This week, the price of gold dropped $15, and that of silver 10 cents.

As always, we are interested in the fundamentals. The discussion above may inform one’s decision to own gold, but it is of no use in trading. Trading requires a picture of the current market conditions, the supply and demand conditions. Monetary Metals provides the only true measure of the fundamentals. But first charts of their prices and the gold-silver ratio.

Next, this is a graph of the gold price measured in silver, otherwise known as the gold to silver ratio.

In this graph, we show both bid and offer prices for the gold-silver ratio. If you were to sell gold on the bid and buy silver at the ask, that is the lower bid price. Conversely, if you sold silver on the bid and bought gold at the offer, that is the higher offer price.

The gold-silver ratio fell slightly this week.

For each metal, we will look at a graph of the basis and cobasis overlaid with the price of the dollar in terms of the respective metal. It will make it easier to provide brief commentary. The dollar will be represented in green, the basis in blue and cobasis in red.

Here is the gold graph.

We had a rising price of the dollar (the mirror image of the falling price of gold). The abundance fell (the basis) and the scarcity rose (the cobasis). Funny how the cobasis likes to snap to zero, more often than random chance would dictate.

Our calculated gold fundamental price rose about $6 (chart here).

Now let’s look at silver.

The same pattern occurs in silver, rising scarcity. And the silver cobasis also hit 0.

Zero is an interesting number for the cobasis, because it’s the margin where decarrying becomes profitable. Decarrying is when you sell metal and buy a futures contract to recover the position. This trade does not require credit, only the metal.

Of course, as the metal trades the cobasis is constantly moving around. When someone bids up the futures contract, the cobasis subsides into negative territory. When the future is sold off, the cobasis rises. It crossed the zero line many times on Friday. When it is negative, there is no arbitrage opportunity. When it is positive, there is.

It should be interesting to see if the cobasis moves firmly into positive territory this week.

Our silver fundamental price increased $0.53 to $17.85. Here is a graph showing the discount (green) or premium (red) for silver.

The last time silver had such a large discount was the first week of May. After that, the price rose more than $1.25.

 

Monetary Metals will be exhibiting at FreedomFest in Las Vegas in July. If you are an investor and would like a meeting there, please click here.

 

© 2017 Monetary Metals

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Musk Announces First Model 3 Delivery On July 28, Forecasts Exponential Growth From There

Tesla stock is popping this morning after Tesla investors and Elon Musk fanboys got some much-anticipated, if largely expected, news on the rollout of the Model 3 when shortly after 11pm Pacific time Elon Musk tweeted that the mid-range model has passed all its regulatory requirements for production two weeks ahead of schedule. “Expecting to complete” the first car Friday, Musk wrote in a Twitter post.

The company will hold a handover party for its first 30 customers of the Model 3 on July 28, he said in a separate post.

Tesla aims to produce 100 of the cars in August before ramping up to 20,000 a month in December, Musk said.

This is how Musk envisions the Model 3 production ramp up to look like, courtesy of Bloomberg.

PUtting Tesla’s ambitious ramp up in context, the company delivered 25,051 vehicles in Q1 and aims to make 500,000 in 2018 and 1 million in 2020.

The Model 3, Tesla’s most affordable car yet starting around $35,000, had been expected to begin production in July, but until last night there had been little news on how the preparations at Tesla’s factory in Fremont, California, were progressing according to Bloomberg. When a Twitter follower of the CEO asked him last week to “please have mercy” and give more information on the release, Musk responded cryptically that he would offer “news on Sunday.” The Model 3 is the culmination of Tesla’s 15-year-quest to reach mainstream consumers with a smaller, more affordable electric car.

Tesla is scheduled to disclose global vehicle sales for the second quarter as early as Monday morning. The company is projected to have sold 23,655 vehicles during the three-month period, according to the average estimate of four analysts surveyed by The Wall Street Journal.

Meanwhile, Tesla stock is liking the announcement, and after dipping last week during the latest tech slam, was up

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SocGen: “Global Stocks Are Trading At 21.5x P/E: What Equities Need Now Is Higher Revenue Growth”

As we begin the second half of the year, which follows one of the best 6-month periods for global stocks in history, largely courtesy of a record ongoing liquidity injection by central banks (which however, is rapidly slowing down), here is SocGen’s x-asset strateigst, Andrew Lapthorne, laying out where we stand, noting that the MSCI World positive run continues – at 21.5x P/E, the same level where it was in 2004 from where it continued on a 70% run -even as Europe has its worst month since Brexit, and summarizes that what global stocks need to continue their rally is not high bond yields, but higher revenue growth.

Global developed equity markets managed by a whisker to deliver another positive month in June with MSCI World rising 0.2% in US dollar terms. This enabled the index to maintain is longest monthly positive run – eight positive months in a row – since the 2003/04 recovery when it rose for eleven straight months. As was the case back in 2003/04, this latest streak has been entirely backed by a run up in reported profits, i.e. 100% of the price return over this period was courtesy of higher reported EPS, with valuation changes contributing very little, i.e., the PE multiple, high that is it still is, has stuck at 21.5x over the entire eight months.

 

21.5x PE is also where MSCI traded back in March 2004, yet despite this high multiple MSCI World went on to deliver a further 70%+ return over the next 40 months. Could we see the same again? Well, profit margins are not as depressed today as they were in 2004 (so potential for margin expansion is more muted) but more importantly sales growth is still in short supply. Globally, sales growth ran at 13% per annum between 2004 and 2007. Switch to the present and we see that even with the pick-up in commodity prices over the last 12 months, sales growth is still struggling to get to 4% per annum, while ex Oil & Gas, global revenues are where they stood three years ago.

 

This latest positive run was also maintained despite the most marginal of gains. In currency neutral terms, the index actually edged down, with exactly the same amount of stocks in the index rising as falling. Europe also suffered its worst month since the Brexit vote, having been hit by its own bout of ECB/BOE tapering fears. Usually there is an inverse relationship between bonds and equities, but bond price anxiety in equities last month was quite high. Higher revenue growth, not higher bond yields is what equities need to go up from here.

 

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