Ron Paul Fears False Flag Looms, Urges Americans To Resist Deep State Push For War On North Korea

We are seeing now in regard to North Korea a replay of the type of campaign the deep state and the media used in 2001 through 2003 to stir up the American people to support the invasion of Iraq.

 The Ron Paul Institute's Adam Dick writes that this is the assessment of former United States House of Representatives member and presidential candidate Ron Paul in a Tuesday interview with Alex Jones on the Alex Jones Show.

In the interview focused on US foreign policy and, in particular, relations between the US and North Korea, Paul declared:

Just remember … the propagandists, the deep state and the media, convinced the American people that Saddam Hussein was a danger, They’re doing the same thing now with North Korea.

In response to this propaganda, Paul, who has served as chairman of the Ron Paul Institute for Peace and Prosperity since leaving the US House, says Americans “ought to wise up and just not buy into this.”

Watch Paul’s complete interview here:

Paul wrote this week about the move toward a US war against North Korea in his editorial “How to End the Korea Crisis

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Frontrunning: September 27

  • Trump Will Let Congress Decide on Tax Rate for Top Earners (BBG)
  • Conservative firebrand defeats Trump pick in Alabama primary for U.S. Senate (Reuters)
  • U.S. Commerce Secretary says market access, protectionism top China issues (Reuters)
  • U.S. slaps steep duties on Bombardier jets after Boeing complaint (Reuters)
  • Dismayed Britain chides Boeing over Bombardier ruling (Reuters)
  • Cryptocurrency Derivatives? You Bet. This Trader Has 295% Return (BBG)
  • Manafort’s Offer to Russian Oligarch Was Tied to Disputed Deal (BBG)
  • There’s One North Korea Taboo China’s Leaders Won’t Talk About (BBG)
  • Mattis arrives in Afghanistan as rockets hit Kabul airport (Reuters)
  • Falling prices, borrowing binge haunt Midwest ‘go-go farmers’ (Reuters)
  • Canada Says It’s No Safe Haven for Immigrants Losing U.S. Protection (WSJ)
  • Ford and Lyft Sign Driverless-Car Agreement (WSJ)
  • Trump’s Made-in-America Car Campaign Hasn’t Spurred Investment (BBG)
  • Uber defends business model at UK tribunal on worker rights (Reuters)
  • Alstom, Siemens Announce Merger to Create European Train Giant (Reuters)
  • PepsiCo Lawyer’s Exit Is Focus of SEC Probe (WSJ)
  • Greek central bank dismisses Anonymous hacking claim (Reuters)
  • Amazon says Google has pulled YouTube from Echo Show device in tech face-off (Reuters)
  • Thai former PM Yingluck gets five-year jail term for negligence (Reuters)

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

– U.S. Senators criticized the Securities and Exchange Commission’s new leader, Jay Clayton, at a hearing on Tuesday for how the agency handled a 2016 breach of its cornerstone system for storing market-moving information. on.wsj.com/2fP9zjY

– Equifax Inc moved to take concrete action over its massive hack ahead of congressional hearings next week, announcing on Tuesday that Chairman and Chief Executive Richard Smith would step aside. on.wsj.com/2xDbnWS

– An investor group including U.S. private-equity firm TPG Capital is looking to sell its controlling stake in one of Indonesia’s oldest finance companies, BFI Finance Indonesia , in a deal that could value the company at about $1 billion, according to people familiar with the matter. on.wsj.com/2xzMvgX

– Republicans are reconsidering their plans to cut individual income tax rates for the highest-earning households to 35 percent, as they gear up to release a blueprint on Wednesday, according to people familiar with the discussions. on.wsj.com/2xymDBW

– Twitter Inc on Tuesday said it would begin testing a new limit of 280 characters, double its current limit, as a concession to users who have been clamoring for changes to the short-messaging service. on.wsj.com/2wSc8w9

– Uber Technologies Inc said it may cease operations in the Canadian province of Quebec in protest of more stringent training rules for drivers there. on.wsj.com/2frqR6qa

 

FT

Uber Technologies Inc has hired headhunters to look for a new UK chairman who can help repair its relations with regulators in one of its top European markets, according to a person close to the company.

The head of UBS Group AG’s investment bank, Andrea Orcel, called for quick agreement on a Brexit transition deal and warned that if such a decision is not agreed by March, there will be a “significant” shift out of UK.

Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour Party voted to bring disciplinary measures against any members found to be anti-Semitic, but activists said more action was needed to show that the party is serious about confronting the problem.

European Council President Donald Tusk said that Britain has finally abandoned its “have cake and eat it” strategy for Brexit negotiations, although he warned that more work had to be done to produce a breakthrough in talks.

 

NYT

– Twitter Inc said on Tuesday that it would test extending the text limit of a post on its service to 280 characters, to eliminate what it viewed as constraints that kept people from tweeting more frequently. nyti.ms/2wjZNge

– German industrial giant Siemens AG plans to merge its rail business with the French train equipment maker Alstom SA, the companies said Tuesday. nyti.ms/2wTTFzo

– Uber Technologies Inc said it would stop service in Montreal and the Quebec province next month rather than accept new government rules, the second setback in a week for the ride-hailing service’s international operations. nyti.ms/2xvKxAz

– Janet Yellen, the Federal Reserve chairwoman, said the U.S. Fed plans to keep raising its benchmark interest rate despite the weakness of inflation. nyti.ms/2wVoVt3

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

** Canadian regulatory policies effectively subsidize the world’s largest digital companies by exempting them from taxes and spending requirements imposed on Canadian broadcasters, Quebecor Inc Chief Executive Pierre-Karl Péladeau says. tgam.ca/2hwCP2M

** WestJet Airlines Ltd said its new discount carrier, Swoop, will start taking bookings in February and begin flying near the end of June, 2018. tgam.ca/2hwKRZB

** The U.S. government has imposed duties of nearly 220 percent on imports of Bombardier Inc’s C Series planes into the United States, a move that threatens to exacerbate trade tensions between the two countries and undermine sales prospects for the Canadian company’s most important aircraft. tgam.ca/2hviaw6

NATIONAL POST

** Twitter Inc will double its strict size limit on tweets to 280 characters from 140 characters for a small percent of users in every language but Japanese, Chinese and Korean, a Twitter Canada spokesperson confirmed Tuesday. bit.ly/2hwApRA

** Middle-class families in Canada are paying higher income taxes compared to a few years ago, despite claims by Ottawa that it has eased the tax burden on this income group, according to a new report by Vancouver-based think-tank, The Fraser Institute. bit.ly/2hwo0NA

** The Ontario government plans to unveil legislation Wednesday that would force drug companies and other businesses to publicly divulge the payments they make to health professionals, answering long-standing complaints about industry influence on the medical profession. bit.ly/2hvYb0h

 

Britain

The Times

The finance director of Northgate Plc has been sacked after he was convicted of assault. Northgate said in a statement that Paddy Gallagher, 54, had been “summarily dismissed due to his conviction for the summary offence of common assault.” bit.ly/2wV0r3j

The ousted boss of Airbus UK has landed at British aerospace company Cobham Plc. Paul Kahn was forced out of the Franco-German planemaker in the summer after less than three years in the job in a barely disguised falling out over Brexit and the future of Airbus’s substantial interests in the United Kingdom. bit.ly/2fqVtoD

The Guardian

The former boss and chief operating officer of Afren, a London-listed oil and gas exploration business, are to be charged with criminal offences in relation to an alleged 45 million euros ($53.05 million) fraud that led to the collapse of the 2 billion euro company. bit.ly/2wka3Vw

The chief executive of embattled credit agency Equifax Inc announced his retirement on Tuesday, in the wake of a massive data breach that exposed the personal information of 143 million people. bit.ly/2huDVvX

The Telegraph

British Steel has emerged from UK’s steel crisis with its first international acquisition, less than 18 months after Tata Steel abandoned the troubled business. bit.ly/2xuXuux

Uber Technologies Inc is looking to hire a UK chairman, just a week after being stripped of its licence to operate in London and as arch-rival Lyft eyes a move into the market. bit.ly/2xKyhMs

Sky News

Thousands of jobs could be at risk in Northern Ireland after a U.S. adjudication against the aircraft manufacturer Bombardier Inc. bit.ly/2fPvlV1

Sky News has learnt that a committee established by the Pensions and Lifetime Savings Association will follow up an earlier report by warning that the current system with thousands of smaller defined benefit schemes operating independently is “placing the retirement savings of millions…at risk”. bit.ly/2wj9OKE

The Independent

A London-based female Uber driver has issued sex discrimination proceedings against the ride-sharing company Uber Technologies Inc, claiming it unfairly disadvantages women who work for the group. ind.pn/2wSE5E7

Dyson has confirmed it will launch a battery-powered electric car in 2020. The vacuum cleaner company, which will spend 2 billion euros on the project, says its vehicles will be “radical and different”. ind.pn/2wjePCJ

 

 

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Financial Advice From Man Who Made $1+ Billion in 1929 – Importance Of Being Patient and “Sitting”

Financial Advice From Man Who Made $1+ Billion in 1929 – Importance Of Being Patient and “Sitting” 

 – Listen to Jesse Livermore and ignore the noise of short term market movements, central bank waffle and daily headlines  

– Stock and bond markets are overvalued but continue to climb… for now
– What goes up must come down and investors should diversify and rebalance portfolios despite market noise
– Behavioural biases currently drive markets, prompting legendary investors to be confused and opt out
– Lesson is to prepare portfolios for long-term and invest in assets that will act as hedge in next market correction or crash
– Gold performs well over the long-term and delivers to those “sitting” and being patient

When it comes to your investment portfolio it is harder than ever to sift through market and central bank noise and focus on the fundamental drivers and long-term strategy.

Take for example a quick glance at financial news pages this morning:

  • A story about bitcoin’s rise from $200 in 2013 to $5000 just three weeks ago –  a gain of 2,400%
  • Fed rate hike odds in December have soared to 78% thanks to Yellen’s “noisy” comments yesterday
  • Luxury homes in London’s best neighborhoods are set to rise by 20.3% over next five years – allegedly
  • Warnings of supply gap in oil production next year

Meanwhile, we look at more quiet, conservative gold and it has varied no more than $200/oz over the last four years.

It can be difficult to correlate this with a background of markets that are teeming with behavioural biases. Market reactions are short-tempered thanks to this age of instant information… and disinformation.

Greed and fear become more exaggerated than ever and greed is currently dominant.

The most recent individual to get frustrated with this state of affairs is money manager Hugh Hendry. Hendry recently decided to close his hedge fund, after 15 years. Hendry joined the likes of Eric Mindich, Leland Lim and John Burbank all of whom have shuttered hedge funds this year.

Market frustrations make us want to jump on money making bandwagon

In his round of send-offs Hendry explained how frustrating he had found markets. By nearly every measure they are over-priced, but few seem to care.

Hendry told Bloomberg:

“To my great, great, great horror, I became deeply correlated to the travails of President Trump’s presidency and of course these geopolitical events, which were sparked off in the Korean peninsula.”

Markets are reacting to short-termisms and click-bait headlines.

Consider this: stocks, bonds and property prices are at all-time highs. They’re not alone, private equity and some collectibles (considered alternative assets) are also at all time highs.

But they keep on going.

Occasionally it can feel as though nothing will take the steam out of the sails of markets which by all measures should be dramatically faltering.

Momentum is a powerful thing … especially in the short term.

At the end of H1 2017 the S&P500, the Dow and Nasdaq Composite posted their biggest gains in recent years.

Stock prices fluctuate on a daily, monthly and even quarterly basis. These fluctuations often have very little to do with the fundamental value of the business.

Short-termism, speculation and stock buy backs are the main drivers of stocks today.

In 1960 the average period for holding a NYSE stock was eight years and four months. Today, according to Credit Suisse, the average period for holding a stock across the broader US stock market is four months.

We know from experience that this kind of trading behaviour and pricing activity cannot continue.

What goes up must come down. But obviously no-one knows when.

This is frustrating in this day and age. At a time when information is at my fingertips it can be infuriating to not have an answer.

But, we must be patient.

Importance of patience – a time-old skill

We were reminded of one of the greatest examples of investing with patience by Tim Price of Price Value International.

Price tells the story of Jesse Livermore, a legendary trader.

Livermore was extraordinary. Born in 1877, Livermore ran away from home as a child and soon began trading stocks.

By the time he was 20, he had already amassed a fortune of $3 million, more than $75 million in today’s money.

Livermore sold short, i.e. bet that stock prices would fall, just prior to the 1907 crash, as well as the 1929 crash.

His bets were so lucrative that, going into the Great Depression, Livermore had a fortune of more than $100 million, or about $1.4 billion today.

But Livermore wasn’t just great at making money from overheated markets. He was also a master of losing money.

This book is widely and rightly regarded as an investment classic. It is also crammed with valuable observations about the practice of speculation and successful trading.

Among them, the importance of being patient and disciplined:

“After spending many years in Wall Street and after making and losing millions of dollars I want to tell you this: It never was my thinking that made big money for me. It was always my sitting.”

The success of long-term investing and damage of short-term reactions is not just anecdotal.

In its 2016 Quantitative Analysis of Investor Behaviour,  US investment firm Dalbar found the leading cause of 20 years of diminished returns was investors’ own behaviour.

They tended to indulge in ‘panic selling, excessively exuberant buying and attempts at market timing’.

Time pressures of thinking 

We shouldn’t be surprised that investors struggle to take a Jesse Livermore approach these days. Not only are we surrounded by instant news but we are also pressured into delivering regular results.

Hedge fund managers such as Hendry have to give their clients regular updates. All of us who hold investments with managers receive quarterly or annual reports. Money managers must report their results.

Of course, this is good for transparency but can you imagine how most people these days would feel if they thought money managers were telling them their investments hadn’t done very much? They would want to move their money, they’re not seeing much change which in today’s minds means their is little value.

This is why we like gold

For precisely this point, we like gold. It requires patience, over the long-term it likes to filter out the noise that comes from the likes of Trump tweets and pumped up stocks.

Gold has performed extremely well since 1999. During the tech-fuelled stock market collapse of 2000-2003 gold stood strong. It made further gains during the disaster of the Iraq war, further boosted by the likes of Enron-esque scandals.

Following the financial crisis in 2007/ 2008, it posted some of its biggest gains.

Not bad for something that has just sat in the background for the last near-twenty years.

Regardless of how much gold you choose to hold in your portfolio the main message is clear: do not manage your portfolio on a daily basis, consider it as something which requires care over the long-term. This is why gold serves a portfolio so well.

This is something those who are just beginning to consider their long-term finances should seriously pay attention to.

Millennials take note

Earlier this year The World Gold Council’s John Reade, chief market strategist and head of research (and former managing partner at Paulson & Co.) spoke about the need for millennials to consider not only long-term investing and diversification but how gold played a key role.

“Millennials are an interesting case study; they are going to be working and investing a long time so you need to think about more than just the short term … Gold is a great diversifier for a portfolio but it is more than that. It is a source of returns that is commiserate with equities over the last 10, 20 years.”

Investing in gold is a commitment for the long-term. In order to enjoy long-term investing, participants must have both patience and an ability to tolerate periods of less-than-desireable performance.

It is vital millennials consider the performance of an asset over a long-period of time, as they are just starting to build their portfolios and need to prepare for the next 20, 30, 40 years or more.

The most prominent financial event in millennial’s memory is the collapse of Lehman brothers. Those who invested in gold before or soon after the financial crash have fared well.

Gold is the true reward of patient investing 

Investing expert Warren Buffet famously stated that his preferred time to hold a stock is “forever.”

We know that equities are different to gold bullion but there is some transferable knowledge here.

The precious metal has delivered solid returns on a long-term basis. Investors must not be put off by the weaker performance of  the last four years. Instead they should ask what has driven the price over the last ten, twenty and forty years since the end of the Gold Standard.

Those long-term drivers have not suddenly disappeared. Currencies continue to be devalued, savers continue to earn very little on their savings and uncertainty is ever-growing in the political and economic worlds.

Gold is a proven hedge against instability and market turmoil. In recent years it has gained in popularity thanks to  low interest rates and financial uncertainties.

In the long-term, holding on to gold has been shown to be quite lucrative for many investors. But the key is a long-term focus,  patience and “sitting” …

News and Commentary

Gold prices steady after Hawkish Yellen comments (Reuters.com)

Stocks Mixed in Asia as Consolidation Continues (Bloomberg.com)

Hedge fund Paulson & Co calls for joint shareholder action vs gold miners (Reuters.com)

Billionaire John Paulson Targets Gold CEOs Over Pay (Bloomberg.com)

Gold settles lower after back-to-back daily gains (MarketWatch.com)

 Bullion surges as North Korea tensions resurface. Source: Bloomberg

U.S. Dollar No Longer the Dominant ‘Haven’ Currency – BOAML (Gata.org)

Thoughts on global gold mine supply (Gold.org)

If China links oil to gold, the world will change (Plata.com)

Economic Winter Is Coming: Recap of My Experience at Nexus Crypto / Blockchain Conference (GoldSeek.com)

What Would Happen If the Moon Was Made of Gold? (HuffingtonPost.com)

Gold Prices (LBMA AM)

27 Sep: USD 1,291.30, GBP 963.83 & EUR 1,099.54 per ounce
26 Sep: USD 1,306.90, GBP 969.59 & EUR 1,105.38 per ounce
25 Sep: USD 1,295.50, GBP 957.89 & EUR 1,089.26 per ounce
22 Sep: USD 1,297.00, GBP 956.15 & EUR 1,082.09 per ounce
21 Sep: USD 1,297.35, GBP 960.56 & EUR 1,089.00 per ounce
20 Sep: USD 1,314.90, GBP 970.53 & EUR 1,094.79 per ounce

Silver Prices (LBMA)

27 Sep: USD 16.89, GBP 12.58 & EUR 14.38 per ounce
26 Sep: USD 17.01, GBP 12.67 & EUR 14.43 per ounce
25 Sep: USD 16.95, GBP 12.57 & EUR 14.27 per ounce
22 Sep: USD 16.97, GBP 12.52 & EUR 14.18 per ounce
21 Sep: USD 16.95, GBP 12.58 & EUR 14.24 per ounce
20 Sep: USD 17.38, GBP 12.84 & EUR 14.48 per ounce


Recent Market Updates

– “Gold prices to reach $1,400 before the end of the year” – GoldCore
– Commodities King Gartman Says Gold Soon Reach $1,400 As Drums of War Grow Louder
– Bitcoin “Is A Bubble” but Gold Is Money Says World’s Biggest Hedge Fund Manager
– Pensions and Debt Time Bomb In UK: £1 Trillion Crisis Looms
– Gold Investment “Compelling” As Fed May “Kill The Business Cycle”
– “This Is Where The Next Financial Crisis Will Come From” – Deutsche Bank
– Global Debt Bubble Understated By $13 Trillion Warn BIS
– Bitcoin Price Falls 40% In 3 Days Underlining Gold’s Safe Haven Credentials
– Gold Up, Markets Fatigued As War Talk Boils Over
– Oil Rich Venezuela Stops Accepting Dollars
– Massive Equifax Hack Shows Cyber Risk to Deposits and Investments Today
– British People Suddenly Stopped Buying Cars
– Buy Gold for Long Term as “Fiat Money Is Doomed”

 

Important Guides

For your perusal, below are our most popular guides in 2017:

Essential Guide To Storing Gold In Switzerland

Essential Guide To Storing Gold In Singapore

Essential Guide to Tax Free Gold Sovereigns (UK)

Please share our research with family, friends and colleagues who you think would benefit from being informed by it.

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Americans With Disabilities Act Regulations Another Obstacle to Free Speech at Berkeley: New at Reason

Closed captioning can be prohibitively expensive for archived lectures the school wants to make available to the public.

John Stossel writes:

A third threat to free speech at University of California, Berkeley has led to more censorship than political rioters or college administrators.

It’s the Americans with Disabilities Act.

Berkeley is expensive. Out of state students must pay $60,000 a year. But for five years, Berkeley generously posted 20,000 of its professors’ lectures online. Anyone could watch them for free.

Then government regulators stepped in.

The Americans with Disabilities Act stipulates, “No qualified individual with a disability shall… be denied the benefits of… services.”

As with most laws, people can spend years debating what terms like “denied,” “benefits” and “services” mean.

President Obama’s eager regulators, in response to a complaint from activists, decided that Berkeley’s videos violated the ADA. The Justice Department sent the school a threatening letter: “Berkeley is in violation of title II… The Attorney General may initiate a lawsuit.”

View this article.

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JPMorgan Ordered To Pay Over $4 Billion To Widow And Family

A Dallas jury ordered JPMorgan Chase to pay more than $4 billion in damages for mishandling the estate of a former American Airlines executive.

Jo Hopper and two stepchildren won a probate court verdict over claims that JPMorgan mismanaged the administration of the estate of Max Hopper, who was described as an airline technology innovator by the family’s law firm. The bank, which was hired by the family in 2010 to independently administer the estate of Hopper, was found in breach of its fiduciary duties and contract. In total, JP Morgan Chase was ordered to pay at least $4 billion in punitive damages, approximately $4.7 million in actual damages, and $5 million in attorney fees.

The six-person jury, which deliberated a little more than four hours starting Monday night and returned its verdict at approximately 12:15 a.m. Tuesday, found that the bank committed fraud, breached its fiduciary duty and broke a fee agreement, according to court papers.

“The nation’s largest bank horribly mistreated me and this verdict provides protection to others from being mistreated by banks that think they’re too powerful to be held accountable,” said Hopper in a statement. “The country’s largest bank, people we are supposed to trust with our livelihood, abused my family and me out of sheer ineptitude and greed. I’m blessed that I have the resources to hold JP Morgan accountable so other widows who don’t have the same resources will be better protected in the future.”

“Surviving stage 4 lymphoma cancer was easier than dealing with this bank and its estate administration,” Mrs. Hopper added.

Max Hopper, who pioneered the SABRE reservation system for the airline, died in 2010 with assets of more than $19 million but without a will and testament, according to the statement. JPMorgan was hired as an administrator to divvy up the assets among family members. “Instead of independently and impartially collecting and dividing the estate’s assets, the bank took years to release basic interests in art, home furnishings, jewelry, and notably, Mr. Hopper’s collection of 6,700 golf putters and 900 bottles of wine,” the family’s lawyers said in the statement. “Some of the interests in the assets were not released for more than five years.”

The bank’s incompetence caused more than just unacceptably long timelines; bank representatives failed to meet financial deadlines for the assets under their control. In at least one instance, stock options were allowed to expire. In others, Mrs. Hopper’s wishes to sell certain stock were ignored. The resulting losses, the jury found, resulted in actual damages and mental anguish suffered by Mrs. Hopper. With respect to Mr. Hopper’s adult children, the jury found that they lost potential inheritance in excess of $3 million when the Bank chose to pay its lawyers’ legal fees out of the estate account to defend claims against the Bank for violating its fiduciary duty.

Confirming that much of America does not hold Wall Street in high regard, the court’s verdict form showed that  jurors awarded $8 billion in punitive damages against the bank. Alan Loewinsohn, attorney for Jo Hopper, said in an interview there may be duplication of some of the damage findings. He asked the jury to take into account the bank’s worth and asked them for $2 billion in punitive damages. “I believe they used that figure for the other parties in the case as well,” he said.

As a result, he said, the punitive damage award could end up being “somewhere between $4 billion and $8 billion.” The verdict form also shows jurors were advised to consider factors including “the net worth of JPMorgan.” JPM has a market cap of about $330 billion.

At the lower end of that range, the jury’s award would erase almost two-thirds of the $6.6 billion profit that JPMorgan generated globally during the second quarter. According to Bloomberg, it would rank high among the largest sanctions ever levied against the bank – somewhere between the $2.6 billion it agreed to pay in 2014 for allegedly failing to stop Bernard Madoff’s Ponzi scheme, and a $13 billion settlement it reached with government authorities in 2013 for its handling of mortgage bonds that fueled the financial crisis.

“Mrs. Hopper asked the jury to send a message loud enough for JP Morgan to hear it all the way to Park Avenue in Manhattan,” said Loewinsohn, “Hopefully, that message has been received.”

Probably not: sadly for widow Hopper, she is unlikely to see the full award: large punitive damages verdicts like the one in the Hopper case are often scaled back because the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled they can’t be disproportionate to actual damages. In this case, the jury awarded less than $5 million in actual damages.

The bank said it acted in a professional manner and in good faith on Hopper’s estate and is “highly confident” the jury verdict won’t stand under Texas law.

“Clearly the award far exceeds any possible interpretation of Texas tort reform statutes,” Andrew Gray, a spokesman for the bank, said in an emailed statement. “There has been no judgment entered by the court based on this verdict.”

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Trade War Escalates After US Slaps Canada’s Bombardier Jet With 220% Tariff

The fourth round of Nafta talks began in Ottawa over the weekend, and as US Trade Rep Robert Lighthizer and his Mexican and Canadian counterparts scramble to produce a deal by the end of the year – a self-imposed, “soft” deadline – Boeing inflamed trade tensions by winning a decision to slap a massive tariff on struggling Bombardier’s C-Series jet, potentially severing one of the last lifelines for the once-proud aircraft manufacturer.

As Bloomberg reports, the Commerce Department slapped import duties of 220% on Bombardier’s C Series plane Tuesday, agreeing with Boeing’s complaint that “improper” government subsidies allowed Bombardier to illegally dump their jets on the US market. The preliminary determination threatens to upend Bombardier’s planned deliveries next year to Delta Air Lines Inc., which ordered at least 75 jets with a list value of more than $5 billion, an order which was critical for Bombardier after a rocky stretch of weak sales.

The penalties create a new hurdle for Bombardier’s Chief Executive Officer Alain Bellemare, who is trying to turn the company around after the C-Series came in more than two years late and $2 billion over budget.

The announcement promptly slammed Bombardier securities, and this morning its euro-denominated bonds maturing in 2021 tumbled the most in more than two years. According to Bloomberg, the senior unsecured notes are currently down by more than seven price points at 99.963.

The decision is only the latest provocation from US trade hawks, who’ve sought to impose stiffer import penalties on a range of Canadian industries, frequently blaming government subsidies. In August, Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross provoked an angry response from Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau – who threatened a “thickening” of the US-Canada border.

The Bombardier-Boeing spat has roiled trade relations just as the U.S. tries to renegotiate NAFTA.

“Even our closest allies must play by the rules,” U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said in announcing the decision on Canadian jets with 100 to 150 seats.

Meanwhie, Canadian officials who are participating in the Nafta talks quickly criticized the Commerce Department's decision, with Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland saying Canada “strongly disagrees” with the U.S. probes into its aerospace industry.

“This is clearly aimed at eliminating Bombardier’s C Series aircraft from the U.S. market,” said Freeland, who was scheduled to dine with U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer in Ottawa on Tuesday during the third round of Nafta talks.

U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May earlier said, “I am bitterly disappointed by the initial Bombardier ruling. The government will continue to work with the company to protect vital jobs for Northern Ireland.” Bombardier is the largest manufacturing company in Northern Ireland; its rail division employs ~3,500 in the U.K., according to the company’s website.

Of course, the decision is only a preliminary finding and must be upheld by the US International Trade Commission for it to take effect in a final decision expected next year, which is, notably, after the deadline for renegotiating Nafta, as Reuters points out. Delta is alleging that Bombardier is engaging in harmful business practices similar with those used by European rival Airbus SE to win business in the 1990s, according to Boeing.

In a statement, Bombardier called the decision “absurd.”

“We strongly disagree with the Commerce Department’s preliminary decision,” Bombardier said in a statement, calling the magnitude of the proposed U.S. duty “absurd.”

 

The simple truth is that Bombardier created a superior aircraft that is more efficient, more comfortable, and quieter. The C Series serves a market segment not supported by any U.S. manufacturer. Delta wants to bring this remarkable new aircraft to the U.S. flying public. Boeing wants to prevent U.S. passengers from realizing these benefits, irrespective of the harm that it would cause to the U.S. aerospace industry and the cost to airlines and consumers.

And although the ITC’s decision is months away, Bombardier has reason to worry: the tribunal earlier this month ruled in favor of the bankrupt US subsidiary of a German solar panel manufacturer, clearing the way for President Donald Trump to slap import tariffs on cheap foreign solar panels, which are almost exclusively manufactured in China. The move was interpreted as an escalation of the soft trade war that began when Trump ordered an investigation into China’s IP policies that could clear the way for more tariffs.

However, as Reuters explains, to win its case before the ITC, Boeing must prove it was harmed by Bombardier’s sales practices, despite not using one of its own jets to compete for the Delta order. Dan Pearson, a senior fellow at the libertarian Cato Institute think tank in Washington, said before the announcement that proving this argument could be difficult for Boeing.

“This (ITC case) cannot be a slam dunk,” said Pearson, a former ITC chairman. “I‘m having a hard time figuring out how Boeing was harmed by this.”

According to Reuters, the Commerce Department’s announcement and accompanying fact sheet on the preliminary duty order did not provide any rationale or methodology for how it calculated the 220% duty. The CSeries has a “sticker price” of $79.5 million, but carriers like Delta usually receive discounts of about 50%. If imposed, the duties would more than triple the cost of a CSeries aircraft sold in the U.S. to about $61 million per plane, based on Boeing’s assertion that Delta received the planes for $19 million each. Bombardier has disputed the $19 million sales figure.

Though the Bombardier-Boeing dispute has expanded to two Continents, British Prime Minister Theresa May asked the Commerce Department to go easy on Bombardier to protect manufacturing jobs in Northern Ireland, and angered Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who put a planned purchase of Boeing Super Hornet fighter jets on hold in retaliation for Boeing’s complaint, Reuters reports that the spate probably wont' affect Nafta negotiations, according to unnamed Canadian officials.

A source familiar with the Canadian government’s thinking said the Boeing trade dispute was  “separate” from the NAFTA talks.

 

“This in no way is part of our conversation” the source said. “People should not read too much into this piece today.”

Reuters points out that the size of the tariff is unusually high, though Commerce did approve a massive 256% final duty on Chinese cold-rolled steel last year.

Bombardier shares are down 15% over the past month due to uncertainty surrounding the Commerce Department’s decision. Bombardier, which also has a rail business, has endured a string of bad luck this year. Earlier, it missed out an opportunity to combine the rail business with Siemens, the German manufacturer. Instead, Siemens decided to combine the business with French rail operator Alstom.

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Dollar Surges, Bonds Dump Ahead Of Trump Tax Plan

S&P futures are set for a higher open (+ 0.1%) despite the expected hit to the Dow from Nike which is down over 3% on unexpectedly poor revenue growth, as European stocks gain while Asian shares dropped. Like yesterday when the big story was the jump in the USD ahead of Yellen's (rather hawkish) speech, so today the greenback's levitation has continued, this time propelled by today's unveiling of Trump's tax plan.

On the eve of its unveiling, Trump said lawmakers should expect a “very, very powerful document” that would cut taxes “tremendously” for the middle class. If passed, the plan would be Trump’s first significant legislative win since taking office in January. ”The idea that Trump could be reaching across the aisle, talking about tax cuts to middle and low income households, if it comes to pass, we are talking a pretty material fiscal boost to the U.S. economy. This sort of easy fiscal policy is why the markets are reacting the way they have,” said Mark Dowding, co-head of investment grade at BlueBay Asset Management.

Based on leaks to date, what we know is that Trump will unveil a 35% individual tax rate (although Congress will decide whether to create a higher bracket), and the rate on corporations will be set at 20%, down from the current 35%, while the standard deduction will double. Trump’s “basic idea about tax reform should lead to higher Treasury yields,” supportive of the dollar, said Brown Brothers Harriman fx strategist Masashi Murata." He was right: the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index rose to the highest level since Aug. 18 and Treasury yields jumped to the highest in two months. Broad dollar strength was fueled by Janet Yellen’s hawkish tone in which she cautioned against tightening "too gradually" which sent December rate hike odds to 70%…

… and expectations for U.S. tax reforms dominated currency trends Wednesday, with Asia's emerging-market currencies falling while the yen took the biggest hit among peers. The Australian and New Zealand dollars also declined, while the euro extended losses below $1.18, as the pound briefly fell below $1.34 amid lingering Brexit uncertainties.

“Yellen’s comments gave more certainty about another rate hike by the end of the year,” said DZ Bank rates strategist Daniel Lenz. “Further details of Trump’s tax plans and whether this proceeds smoothly will be of interest — it should be a boost to the economy and mean a generally higher bond yield environment.”

Stocks in Europe climbed, with all major country benchmarks in the green, helped by the morning declines in the EUR and GBP against the USD. Cyclical sectors that had surged on the prospect of “Trumpflation” resulting from the president’s pro-growth campaign pledges were the day’s top gainers, with miners up 0.9 percent. Financials outperformed, as Standard Charted and RBS have received broker upgrades, with the sector further benefiting from the increased chance of a December move from the FOMC.

Asian equity markets were mostly lower amid a lack of catalysts as the MSCI’s index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan dipped 0.1 percent. The ASX 200 (-0.1%) was negative amid weakness seen in commodity stocks and gold miners after the precious metal slipped below USD 1300/oz, while Nikkei 225 (-0.3%) failed to benefit from a weaker currency and was pressured on mass ex-dividends with over 120 stocks in Nikkei 225 and over 1000 in the TOPIX trading ex-dividend today. Chinese markets outperformed their peers with Hang Seng (+0.5%) and Shanghai Comp. (+0.05%) kept afloat after firmer Chinese Industrial Profit growt.

China’s central bank set its daily currency fixing stronger than expected on Wednesday, a move interpreted by traders as a show of support for the yuan before the start of a week-long holiday. As a result, the onshore yuan strengthened for the first time in three sessions, although the offshore Yuan since pared all gains and was trading at 6.64 at last check. China's seven-day repo rate dropped 3bps to 3.12%; while overnight funding cost rises 1bp to 2.90%. In offshore markets,the overnight CNH Hibor rose 38bps to 2.21% while the HKD strengthend 0.03% to 7.8096 per dollar, paring earlier gain of as much as 0.09%. 

Meanwhile, Treasury 10-year yields jumped to an eight-week peak, while 2-year hit highest since 2008, driving up those on bunds and gilts as well. Ten-year TSY yields climbed seven basis points to an eight-week high of 2.30 percent. Two-year U.S. Treasury yields touched their highest since 2008 after Fed Chair Janet Yellen said on Tuesday it would be “imprudent” to keep rates on hold until U.S. inflation hit 2 percent. Bunds dropped from the open as the Treasury sell-off, which started late on Teusday on reports of Trump tax plan, gained momentum with various factors contributing, before 10y yields stalled just shy of 2.30%. According to Bloomberg, block sellers were seen in bund futures add pressure as stops are run. Weakness in JGBs added to the rates selling pressure.

WTI crude slid a second day, but remained close to $52 a barrel after data showed U.S. stockpiles dwindled last week. Safe havens including gold, the yen and the Swiss franc extended declines as North Korea dropped off the radar for the time being. Copper rose for the first day in six as traders closed positions before the quarter-end and a holiday in China. The industrial metal rose 1.1 percent to $6,485 a ton. “You see not only that demand in China is doing well, but also that in the longer term demand will increase even more from other sectors, like the electric vehicle industry. At this stage the fundamentals are very supportive of stronger prices,” ABN Amro analyst Casper Burgering said.

Market Snapshot

  • S&P 500 futures up 0.1% to 2,499.00
  • STOXX Europe 600 up 0.3% to 385.10
  • MSCI Asia down 0.4% to 160.55
  • MSCI Asia ex Japan down 0.02% to 528.70
  • Nikkei down 0.3% to 20,267.05
  • Topix down 0.5% to 1,664.43
  • Hang Seng Index up 0.5% to 27,642.43
  • Shanghai Composite up 0.05% to 3,345.27
  • Sensex down 0.7% to 31,367.47
  • Australia S&P/ASX 200 down 0.1% to 5,664.28
  • Kospi down 0.07% to 2,372.57
  • German 10Y yield rose 4.9 bps to 0.457%
  • Euro down 0.5% to $1.1735
  • Brent Futures down 0.2% to $58.31/bbl
  • Italian 10Y yield rose 1.6 bps to 1.83%
  • Spanish 10Y yield rose 0.5 bps to 1.617%
  • Brent Futures down 0.2% to $58.31/bbl
  • Gold spot down 0.2% to $1,290.95
  • U.S. Dollar Index up 0.6% to 93.48

Bulletin Headline Summary from Ransquawk

  • European equities trade marginally positive, as financials out-perform
  • The greenback continues to gain ground against its major pairs, with pricing now at 80% for December
  • Looking ahead, highlights include US durables, Pending Home Sales, DoE, RBNZ rate decision, President Trump on Tax and further central bank speak

Top Overnight News

  • President Donald Trump and Republican leaders will launch an urgent effort to get a major legislative win this year, announcing a long-awaited tax plan that will immediately set off a fight over how much top earners should pay
  • Siemens AG and Alstom SA agreed to merge their rail businesses in a deal that brings together former arch-rivals from Germany and France to create a European transportation giant aimed at countering competition from China
  • The U.S. Commerce Department slapped import duties of 220 percent on the C Series plane Tuesday, citing improper subsidies after a complaint by Boeing Co.The preliminary determination threatens to upend Bombardier’s planned deliveries next year to Delta Air Lines Inc., which ordered at least 75 jets with a list value of more than $5 billion
  • Volkswagen AG’s Scania unit was fined 880.5 million euros ($1.03 billion) by the European Union for price-fixing, a year after other members of a truck cartel reached a record settlement with regulators
  • Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen said gradually raising interest rates is the most appropriate policy approach amid higher uncertainty about inflation, reinforcing the U.S. central bank’s forecast for another hike this year
  • China’s central bank set its daily currency fixing stronger than expected on Wednesday, a move interpreted by traders as a show of support for the yuan before the start of a week-long holiday
  • The Brexit bill may have just gotten even bigger. As the U.K. and EU haggle over the size of Britain’s exit payment, documents show pension costs for EU officials rose more than 5% in 2016. Higher pension costs will increase what the EU thinks the U.K. should pay
  • Tokyo Governor Yuriko Koike launched a new national party, giving her less than a month to pull together a political force capable of repeating local election victories over PM Shinzo Abe on the national stage
  • Standard Chartered, CaixaBank Lead Europe Banks Rally on Yellen
  • Morneau Won’t Budge on Deficits Despite Canada’s Red-Hot Growth
  • Manafort’s Offer to Russian Is Said to Be Tied to Disputed Deal
  • Nike Declines After Athletic Giant Gives Bleak Outlook for U.S.
  • Micron Sees More Good Times Ahead in Memory Chip Market
  • Chip Equipment Stocks May Move After ‘Big’ Micron Capex Forecast
  • Cintas FY Revenue View Midpoint Beats Est.; Shares Rise 4%
  • Gas Flow From Tamar Offshore Reserve Restarted
  • Alstom, Siemens Forget High-Speed-Rail Feud Amid Asian Onslaught

Asia markets were mixed amid a lack of catalysts and after similar indecisiveness on Wall St. where the DJIA posted a 4th consecutive loss and the Nasdaq outperformed as tech rebounded from its worst performance in over a month. ASX 200 (-0.1%) was negative amid weakness seen in commodity stocks and gold miners after the precious metal slipped below USD 1300/oz, while Nikkei 225 (-0.3%) failed to benefit from a weaker currency and was pressured on mass ex-dividends with over 120 stocks in Nikkei 225 and over 1000 in the TOPIX trading ex-dividend today. Chinese markets outperformed their peers with Hang Seng (+0.5%) and Shanghai Comp. (+0.05%) kept afloat after firmer Chinese Industrial Profit growth, although upside was limited amid the absence of open market operations by the PBoC. Finally, 10yr JGBs were subdued and tracked the losses in USTs, as a risk averse tone in Japan and BoJ Rinban operation for JPY 880bln of JGBs failed to inspire demand. Chinese Industrial Profits (Aug) Y/Y 24.0% (Prev. 16.5%). PBoC refrained from open markets operations today. PBoC set CNY mid-point at 6.6192 (Prev. 6.6076)

Top Asian News

  • Singapore Home Prices Have Bottomed, Hong Kong ‘Crazy,’ BNP Says
  • No Volatility Here: How Taiwan’s Currency Became World’s Dullest
  • The Mystery of the $1.8 Billion Korean Bond Selloff
  • China Iron Rises From June-Low as Mills Seek Supply Before Break
  • Indonesia Supreme Court Rejects Semen Indonesia’s Review Request

European equities trade in marginal positive territory with US futures pointing to a recovery over the pond, while European bourses have been helped by the morning struggles for EUR & GBP. Financials out-perform, as Standard Charted and RBS have received broker upgrades, with the sector further benefiting from the increased chance of a December move from the FOMC. Fixed income markets struggled overnight, as the pricing of tightening from the Fed was evident. Bunds have found some support around the 161.16 level, although any further hawkish follow-up from today’s Fed speakers could act as a further drag on prices. In the periphery, spreads are modestly tighter, although price action could become increasingly focused on the fallout of the upcoming Catalonian independence referendum. The headline issuance will come from the US today, with 2y FRN and 5y note auctions expected.

Top European News

  • Cryptocurrency Derivatives? You Bet. This Trader Has 295% Return
  • Sabadell, CaixaBank Share Rise as Catalan Concerns Subside
  • Carillion Surges on M&A Speculation, Short Interest Elevated
  • Italian Manufacturing Confidence Rises to Highest in 10 Years
  • Cerberus’s Bawag Plans the First Austrian Bank IPO in 12 Years

In currencies, a bullish greenback has dictated FX price action following Yellen’s hawkish skew, stretched into early European trade, as some key levels have been broken. USD/JPY trades through September’s highs, finding some resistance curtesy of a 2017 trendline, alongside the touted 112.70 – 113.00 range, with heavy stops called around these levels. EUR/USD has also suffered, now in August’s range looking back towards 1.17. The NZ rate decision will be expected on the NY closing bell, with expectations on the RBNZ to remain on hold. The bank may reiterate comments that its monetary policy is to remain accommodative for a considerable time. Kiwi trade remains with concern of the election results, as a coalition is yet to be formed and New Zealand’s kingmaker party has stated that they will not decide on a partner before Oct. 7. Canadian Finance Minister Morneau said he sees higher rates ahead given where the economy is at but noted rates are still historically low, while he added the Canadian economy can do well with the currency at current levels.

In commodities, WTI crude futures have seen a modest pullback this morning from the advances seen in the wake of last night’s API draw with sentiment turning this morning amid reports Nigeria's NNPC expects their force majeure on Bonny Light to be lifted 'very soon'. Precious metals have weakened, as money moves from risk off flow. Gold has broken through the month’s lows, through 1288.00 and the previous heavy resistance seen through the year. Russian energy minister Novak says will examine extending OPEC oil output pact beyond March if makes sense, according to Die Presse.

Looking at the day ahead, there is durable and capital goods orders for August, pending home sales and MBA mortgage applications. Onto other events, we have three more Fed speakers, including: Bullard, Brainard and Rosengren. Further, President Trump will speak at Indiana on tax reform. Elsewhere, France’s finance minister is due to present the 2018 budget and outlook for the next 5 years.

US Event calendar:

  • 7am: MBA Mortgage Applications, prior -9.7%
  • 8:30am: Durable Goods Orders, est. 1.0%, prior -6.8%; Durables Ex Transportation, est. 0.2%, prior 0.6%
  • 8:30am: Cap Goods Orders Nondef Ex Air, est. 0.3%, prior 1.0%; Cap Goods Ship Nondef Ex Air, est. 0.1%, prior 1.2%
  • 10am: Pending Home Sales MoM, est. -0.5%, prior -0.8%; NSA YoY, est. -0.5%, prior -0.5%

Fed speakers:

  • 9:15am: Fed’s Kashkari Speaks at Higher Education Event
  • 1:30pm: Fed’s Bullard Speaks on Economy and Monetary Policy
  • 2pm: Fed’s Brainard Speaks at Minority Banker Forum
  • 7pm: Fed’s Rosengren to Speak to Money Marketeers in New York

DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap.

The main things to discuss today are Yellen and Macron’s speeches yesterday and the fact that we should get a bit more info about the next steps towards any hopes of Trump’s tax plans surfacing.

Firstly, Mrs Yellen’s speech on inflation and monetary policy had a few mixed messages, but the bond markets seemed to take a slightly hawkish bias from it. Yellen repeated her view that the current low inflation likely reflects many factors, some of which are temporary and some may be structural such as underlying changes in firms and consumer behaviour as well as the growing importance of global supply chains and online shopping. Notably, she suggested the Fed “may have misjudged the strength of the labour market, the degree to which longer-run inflation expectations are consistent with our inflation objectives”. In terms of what this means for rates, she cautioned the Fed “should be wary of wary of moving too gradually”, in part given the possibility that the labour market could overheat and create inflationary problems down the track. Conversely, “persistently easy monetary policy might also eventually lead to increased leverage and other developments”. For these reasons, she noted that “it would be imprudent to keep monetary policy on hold until inflation is back to 2%”. Nonetheless, she conceded the Fed will stay flexible, noting we “must be ready to adjust our assessment of economic conditions and outlook when new data warrant it”. The probability of a December rate hike (per Bloomberg) has now increased 3.4ppt to 66.6%.

Staying in the US, President Trump is expected to speak at Indiana today (5pm local time / EDT) on tax reforms, although it’s unclear what level of details will emerge. Bloomberg reports the tax framework could include: 1) cutting the corporate tax rate to 20% (from 35% existing) with businesses allowed to immediately write off their capex for five years, 2) cut the top individual tax rate to 35% (from 39.6% existing), with other tax brackets at 12% and 25%, 3) for companies looking to repatriate profits back to US, there will be a one-time tax, but the rate is unclear and 4) for pass-through entities (eg: partnerships and limited liability companies), their tax rate will be capped at 25%. We will wait and see the exact details, although a reminder that DB’s Brett Ryan’s “A primer on tax reform and the upcoming budget debate”, showed that getting tax reforms implemented will not be easy.

Moving on now to Macron’s vision for a “profound transformation” of the EU. At a high level, he said “Europe needs to be an economic and monetary power” that could rival China and US and that the “Europe we know (today) is too weak, too slow, too ineffective”. Further, time was running out to counter the rise of far-right nationalism and “give Europe back to its citizens”. In his one hour and 40 minutes speech, he has outlined a range of proposals, including: the need for a common EU budget and finance minister, common EU policies on defence, asylum and corporate tax rates, as well as the formation of European universities, a digital protection agency, border police, civil protection force as well as a common military intervention force. Notably, Macron has acknowledged that his vision will require support from Mrs Merkel, which will be more challenging post the election result.

Thus far, responses have been somewhat mixed. The EC President Juncker said “Europe requires courage” and “we now need a closely united, stronger and democratic Europe” and Germany’s Greens co-leader Cem Oezdemir said it was a ‘strong speech” and “now need close collaboration with Paris”. On the flip side, Hans Michelbach (a member of Merkel’s parliamentary caucus) said Macron’s proposals were “unsuited to moving Europe forward”. Elsewhere, Czech’s ANO party leader Andrej Babis said “all these proposals…all of this further integration…Juncker and Macron should think of why Brexit happened”.

Moving on to another hot topic at the moment, overnight, President Trump has reiterated that “we’re totally prepared for…military option (on North Korea)… but (it’s) not a preferred option”. Elsewhere in the Asia session China’s August industrial profits grew 24% yoy (vs. 16.5% previous) – the most in four years, with statistics officials attributing the growth to faster producer price inflation and lower costs. Asian markets are trading a bit mixed, as we type, the Nikkei (-0.29%) and ASX 200 (-0.34%) are down slightly, the Kospi is broadly flat, while the Hang Seng (+0.50%) and CSI 300 (+0.07%) is marginally higher.

Turning to market performance yesterday now. US bourses were little changed with the S&P (+0.01%) and Nasdaq (+0.15%) up slightly, while the Dow dipped 0.05%. Within the S&P, tech stocks partly recovered (+0.40%) from yesterday’s sell off. Elsewhere, the real estate and consumer staples sector advanced slightly, but other sectors were all in the red. European markets were mixed and also little changed, with the Stoxx 600 (+0.03%) and DAX (+0.08%) marginally higher, while the FTSE 100 dipped 0.21%.

Over in government bonds, core bond yields were slightly higher while peripherals outperformed, leading to a small reversal of Monday’s trend. At the 10y part of the curve, core bond yields were c1bp higher (UST +1.6bp, Bunds +0.8bp, OATs +0.6bp) but changes at the 2y maturities were mixed but little changed. Elsewhere, peripherals have outperformed at the 10y part of the curve, with Portugal (2Y: +1bp; 10Y: -4bp) and Spanish (2Y: unch; 10Y: -2bp) bond yields down modestly.

Turning to currencies, the EURUSD weakened 0.46% and is now down c2% from earlier in the month. The US dollar index strengthened 0.34% following Yellen’s speech, while GBPUSD was broadly flat. In commodities, WTI oil dipped 0.65% after stronger gains on the day before following reports that Turkey may restrict Kurdish oil exports that passes through its territory. Elsewhere, precious metals were modestly lower (Gold -1.28%; Silver -2.12%), while other base metals are mixed but little changed this morning (Copper -0.08%; Aluminium -0.15%; Zinc +0.47%).

Away from markets now and onto Brexit. The EC President Donald Tusk met with UK PM Theresa May yesterday and noted that there is “not sufficient progress yet” on Brexit talks and that PM May’s concessions doesn’t go far enough, noting the “philosophy of having a cake and eating it is finally coming to an end”. Elsewhere, Bloomberg reports that sources familiar to the Irish government’s preparation for Brexit expect the post Brexit transition period to extend beyond two years (flagged by PM May) to as much as five.

Over in the US, final efforts to repeal Obamacare has effectively ceased for now with Senator Collins of Maine also opposing the change. Co-sponsors for the health bill Bill Cassidy and Lindsey Graham said “we don’t have the votes (for a repeal)” but remained hopeful, noting “we’re coming back to this after taxes (reform).”

Before we take a look at today’s calendar, we wrap up with other data releases from yesterday. In the US, the Richmond Fed manufacturing index for September was above markets’ expectations at 19 (vs. 13 expected) and now back at its high for the year with improvements in both the shipments and new orders index. The Conference board consumer confidence index was a touch lower than expected at 119.8 (vs. 120), although the weakness is in the context of a downward revision (-2.5pt) to the prior month’s reading. Elsewhere, new home sales fell 3.4% mom in August (560k vs. 585k expected), with much of the decline due to lower building in South, likely reflecting some impacts from Hurricane Harvey. Notably, house prices as per the CoreLogic house price index for 20 key cities have slightly beat at 5.8% yoy (vs. 5.7% expected).

In France, the September business confidence (109 vs. 110 expected) and manufacturing confidence (110 vs. 110 expected) was broadly in line and remains at a six-year high. Elsewhere, UK’s August finance loans for housing came in at GBP$41.8bln (vs. GBP$41.7bln).

Looking at the day ahead, Italy’s July industrial orders and confidence indicators on manufacturing, consumer and economic sentiment will be due this morning. Then France’s consumer confidence and the Eurozone’s M3 money supply data are also due. Over in the US, there is durable and capital goods orders for August, pending home sales and MBA mortgage applications. Onto other events, we have three more Fed speakers, including: Bullard, Brainard and Rosengren. Further, President Trump will speak at Indiana on tax reform. Elsewhere, France’s finance minister is due to present the 2018 budget and outlook for the next 5 years.

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One Trader Asks Whatever Happened To “Don’t Fight The Fed?”

Something appears to be off. After two consecutive admissions by Janet Yellen that the Fed has lost its grasp on the “mystery” of inflation, the market no longer appears eager to chase the direction of every Fed proclamation, especially the recent, hawkish ones. And, as Bloomberg’s Mark Cudmore writes this morning, “whether it’s because the Fed has lost credibility or just because Yellen is viewed as a lame duck approaching the end of her term, it doesn’t matter – U.S. rates and the dollar show investors aren’t buying what she’s selling.”

As a result, and because markets like narratives, Cudmore notes that “the combination of a freshly hawkish Fed and a potential tax plan is too appealing a story to ignore: it’s a tale of fiscal policy and monetary policy working together to support higher U.S. yields and a stronger dollar.” In short: the Bloomberg strategist is a big fan of being long the USD and short bonds here, unwilling to fight both a Trump administration dead set on cutting taxes, as well as a Fed where the divergence between its own and the market’s rate hike expectations is the widest it has ever been.

Then again, looking at the sharp move higher in the USD – and yields – in the past two days, the market may be coming round to the same conclusion.

Cudmore gives more reasons to just do it, and buy the dollar, in his latest Macro View note titled appropriately…

Whatever Happened to ’Don’t Fight the Fed?’

 

Investors may be suspicious of the Fed’s willingness to raise rates again in December, but this seems like a poor risk-reward time to fight the rise of U.S. yields and the dollar.

 

Janet Yellen was consistent in following up last week’s Fed meeting by reiterating that she’s keen to tighten again and isn’t worrying too much about the lack of inflation.

 

Markets shrugged. Traders aren’t yet convinced by another 2017 hike. Whether it’s because the Fed has lost credibility or just because Yellen is viewed as a lame duck approaching the end of her term, it doesn’t matter — U.S. rates and the dollar show investors aren’t buying what she’s selling.

 

People are likely to regret this cynicism, at least in the short term. Trump and Republican leaders are set to announce the long-awaited tax overhaul plan on Wednesday. With expectations so subdued, there’s a low bar to impress the market with some concrete details and nice soundbites .

 

The ability for companies to immediately write off capital expenditure for at least five years is one example of something the market would welcome, even if its ability to survive the legislative process is unknown.

 

The one-off profit-repatriation tax is also key. The reaction function of companies to different tax levels is still unknown but the dollar is likely to be boosted purely by the topic’s return as a discussion point.

 

Markets like narratives. And the combination of a freshly hawkish Fed and a potential tax plan is too appealing a story to ignore: it’s a tale of fiscal policy and monetary policy working together to support higher U.S. yields and a stronger dollar.

 

Never mind that the tax plan will struggle to get through congress and don’t worry that the Fed might be making a policy mistake. Those are issues for another time, not this week.

 

And dollar traders might want to register that while Janet Yellen’s term is expiring in 2018, she’ll still be firmly in charge for the December meeting. So maybe they shouldn’t be so quick to dismiss her policy views right now.

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Three Cheers For MEP Dan Hannan: Why Not A Better Brexit Deal For Everyone?

Authored by Mike Shedlock via MishTalk.com,

The EU values political correctness more than jobs.

The result was a collapse in support for Angela Merkel, and the rise of AfD and FDP in Germany. Let’s not forget Marine Le Pen in France, Beppe Grillo in Italy, and the far right in Austria.

For the sake of political correctness, the EU is bound and determined to punish the UK for Brexit even though new studies suggest that a Hard Brexit Will hurt the EU More Than Britain.

The European Union will lose more than twice as many jobs as Britain after a hard Brexit, research by one of the world’s leading universities found as tough UK-EU divorce talks begin in Brussels.

 

Hard Brexit describes what will happen if the UK and EU fail to reach a divorce deal by 29 March 2019. Britain would revert to WTO tariffs on imports and exports to and from the EU rather than the zero tariffs afforded by membership of the bloc.

 

The return of tariffs to goods and services would cost 526,830 British jobs and 1.209 million jobs in the remaining 27 EU member states, according to researchers at Belgium’s University of Leuven, one of the top 50 global universities. The damage would lead to a 4.48% drop in UK GDP and 1.54% in EU GDP, researchers found.

Free Trade Benefits

As I have pointed out previously, a free trade agreement can fit on a napkin. Her is my proposal once again: “Effective immediately all subsidies and tariffs cease regardless of what any other nation does.”

The first nation that adopts that policy will see an enormous economic benefit.

Very few people fully understand free trade. Even fewer politicians understand free trade. One of the few who does understand is British MEP Daniel J Hannan.

In a Telegraph Op-Ed Hannan writes By embracing free trade, we can use Brexit to make everyone better off.

Free trade is actually between individuals, not nations.

The following caption is correct.

Institute for Free Trade

On September 27, Hannan launched the Institute for Free Trade (IFT).

We want to use Brexit to boost global commerce. We have an International Advisory Panel made up of statesmen who successfully pursued liberalisation in their own countries, from Spain’s José María Aznar to Australia’s Tony Abbott. Brexit, after all, shouldn’t just be about having an engaged and global Britain; it should be about reviving a stalled world trading system.

 

Why does such an institute need to exist? Largely because, however successful free trade has been in practice, it remains counterintuitive.

 

In rich countries, people fear being undercut by lower wages. In poor countries, conversely, they fear being overwhelmed by superior technology. Logically, these worries cannot both be justified; and, in truth, neither of them is. Free trade between a rich and a poor country, as between any two countries, benefits both.

Excellent Set of Hannan Tweets

Better Deal For Everyone

Hannan’s last Tweet is my favorite of the group. Why not a better deal for everyone?

The EU is a customs union, not a free trade union. It promotes clean energy but puts tariffs and restrictions on solar panels and countless other items.

EU Hypocrites on Free Movement of Goods

Think goods move freely? Then think again. Please consider French Farmers Dump 90,000 Bottles Worth of Spanish Wine Because…Spanish!

EU Hypocrites on Free Movement of Services and Freedom of Establishment

In Germany, a license to bake cupcakes does not allow one to bake pretzels or donuts.

Freedom of movement is a downright lie. A prime case in point is Germany’s Apprenticeship System.

After 18 months of study, $2,200 in tuition and three exams, Ewa Feix is now permitted by German law to bake two variations of cupcakes.

 

“Not pretzels, not Black Forest gâteau, not bread,” said Ms. Feix, a Canadian who moved to Germany in 2009. Becoming a professional bread baker entails a three-year apprenticeship and more exams.

 

Germany’s thicket of rules and standards shields roughly 150 professions from competition, from ski instructors to well-diggers. Stiff fines await uncertified practitioners. German authorities conduct thousands of enforcement raids each year.

Ridiculous EU Rules

There are a lot of claims and counter-claims over Ridiculous EU Rules but Business Insider investigated. Here are the ones labeled true.

  1. Banana’s cannot be too bendy.
  2. It is illegal to claim water hydrates you on a bottle of water.
  3. Prunes cannot be promoted for a bowel function effect.
  4. Turnips cannot be labeled “swedes”, except in one place.
  5. Diabetics are banned from driving (passed but not enforced).
  6. Eggs cannot be sold by the dozen, they have to be sold by weight.

In regards to prunes, the EU ruled “The evidence provided is insufficient to establish a cause and effect relationship between the consumption of dried plums of ‘prune’ cultivars (Prunus domestica L.) and maintenance of normal bowel function.”

In regards to eggs, they can be packaged by the dozen, but the package has to include the weight. This is nothing but needless red tape.

The UK does not need any of this madness.

Fair Trade is Unfair

In response to every article like this one, I get slews of emails and comments along the lines of “I support fair trade”.

Such arguments are presented by people who want to drive up prices or protect their jobs at your expense.

Here is my counter-reply: Fair Trade is Unfair; In Praise of Cheap Labor; Are Bad Jobs at Bad Wages Better than No Jobs at All?

The unions howl they want “fair trade”. Fair to whom? The answer is fair to their self-interests, damn the enormous costs to everyone else.

China Doesn’t Play Fair!

Also consider Reflections and Reader Comments on Free Trade: “China Doesn’t Play Fair!”

My inbox and comment box are filled with reader comments and emails telling me “China doesn’t play fair”.

As part of that allegation, many point out Chinese pollution. I’ve written about that many times myself. Yes, it’s disgusting.

Let’s assume for a second that China is the one and only nation that plays unfair, or if you prefer plays the “most unfair.” Let’s also assume China subsidizes its manufacturers.

Who Benefits, Who Loses?

The logical conclusion of such an arrangement is the Chinese government is robbing its people for the express benefit of citizens of the United States.

There is no other logical conclusion. To subsidize exports, every person in China has to pay a cost, via taxation, pollution or both.

The winners are US consumers.

Reader Stuki eloquently explained the math in response to one of my free trade posts. He writes …

In order for a foreign government to subsidize one sector, it must necessarily pull the money from others, rendering them less competitive. Conversely, by subsidizing steel, the Chinese government is indirectly subsidizing each and every industry that uses steel as an input, in the US and elsewhere. While simultaneously taking that subsidy back from their home market companies, in order to pay for the steel subsidies.

 

So, the net result is the Chinese government subsidizing a low value add, albeit politically well connected, industry at home, while disproportionately subsidizing higher valued add industries abroad. Any way you look at it, it’s a better deal for foreigners than for the domestic Chinese. Which shouldn’t come as a surprise, because, as Friedman has pointed out, the Chinese government is taxing it’s own people, in order to pay for free gifts to foreigners.

 

If we would only be so lucky…… Of course, the Chinese collectively aren’t nearly stupid enough to not understand that. So the whole “subsidize” gift we’re supposed to be getting from China is, in reality, nothing more than the figment of some congressman-on-the-take’s imagination, planted there by the lobbyists for whatever LBO shop happens to have bought the steel maker that paid for his campaign.

Problems with Free Trade?

There are no problems with free trade, but there are two rules that prevent free trade.

  1. Every country wants free trade for exports
  2. No country wants free trade for imports

“Fair Trade” is a concoction by industries that seek or need protection via tariffs and import restrictions, to the damage of everyone else.

It is absurd to have everyone pay triple for underwear to “save 500 underwear manufacturing jobs” but that is precisely what the “fair trade” advocates seek.

Steel tariffs, Trump’s current hot button, constitute a similar story.

Steel tariffs may protect a small percentage of jobs in the steel industry (at best), but that is at the expense of auto manufacturing, fence manufacturing, etc. jobs, as prices rise everywhere else.

Fair Trade Irony

Finally, think of all the trucking, shipping, and shelf-stocking, and refueling jobs lost when trade slows because of protectionism.

Ultimately, the only “fair trade” is “free trade”.

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FX Technicals: Is the US Dollar’s Down Done?

The US Dollar has been relentlessly sold against FX peers since January 3rd, 2017 ….

shedding pips-a-plenty versus EUR, GBP, JPY, CHF, CAD, AUD, NZD … 

Uncle Buck has been pummeled ..

until now. 

 

Following a series of explicit failed new highs in early-mid March …

the USD weekly chart shows just one bounce attempt worth examining (at the end of March, from 3.27.17 – 4.7.17) ..

until now. 

 

DXY (Daily)

 

dxy daily super dmi and price channel

 

Relative Strength (RSI) Comparisons – 240 Minutes

 

The following two charts show composite RSI and DMI values for each individual currency. These composite RSI and DMI values are derived from performing data comparisons across all currency pairs.

 

Note that on 9/8 (the recent $ swing low of 91.01) …

the USD (in green) registered the lowest RSI value (26) and DMI value (-30) of any currency ..

and by a wide margin.

 

Now, the US Dollar sports the highest RSI and DMI values of any currency; suggesting that it may be primed for an upside breakout.

 

fibozachi forex force rsi comparisons

 

Directional Movement (DMI) Comparisons – 240 Minutes

 

fibozachi forex force dmi comparisons

 

USDJPY (Daily)

 

usdjpy daily bullish flag

 

EURUSD (Daily) – Gap Fill

 

For more EURUSD technical analysis: 

FX Technicals: Pre-Draghi

Why the US Dollar is About to go Up, and the Euro Isn’t. 

 

eurusd daily gap fill

 

EURUSD (Weekly) – Trendline Resistance

 

eurusd weekly trendlines

 

GBPUSD (Daily) – Price Channel

 

gbpusd daily channel breakout resistance

 

GBPUSD (Weekly) – Trendline Resistance

 

gbpusd weekly trendlines

 

Check out www.Fibozachi.com to learn about modern technical analysis and trading indicators that actually work.

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