Smith Students Get Lecture on Libertarian Connection to ‘Traditional Bigotry’

At Smith College last week, students were treated to a discussion on the connection between libertarians and “traditional bigotry.”

The full title of the talk, from activist and academic Loretta Ross, is “Connections Between Far Right, Religious Right, Economic Conservatives, Libertarians, and Traditional Bigotry.” (Perhaps “Everyone to the Right of Me in Any Capacity Is a Bigot” was already taken.) Ross is regularly an associate professor at Hampshire College, where she teaches a course called “White Supremacy in the Age of Trump.”

It’s part of a four-week discussion series that Ross is leading at Smith, the historic Massachusetts women’s college. Next month, Smith will bring Democracy in Chains author Nancy McClean—who hates libertarians so much she can’t imagine anyone would be critical of her book without a Koch Brothers-orchestrated conspiracy—to campus.

As a private educational institution, Smith can certainly offer whatever programming its administrators please. And far be it for me to judge Ross’ talk by its title—that’s the kind of illiberal nonsense that helped get my panel on Title IX booted from another private university campus last week.

In an email, Ross tells me her talk is “about the way white supremacy infiltrates and affects all political parties, and races and genders of people, regardless of their political labels.”

In any case, it’s odd to lump libertarianism, an ideology centered on natural rights and the inherent worth of the individual, in with more collective-oriented ideologies like those espoused by religious conservatives or the “far right.” We also don’t have much in common with either group when it comes to social and cultural concerns.

Alas, this tendency is all too typical from Democrats and other liberals, who often can’t or won’t imagine a paradigm beyond the left/right divide. Hence libertarians—who defended marriage equality, ending the drug war, and demilitarizing police long before Democrats did—must be right-wing because we also favor deregulation and gun rights.

Traditionally, libertarianism—like most movements—has included people all over the morality and tolerance scale. It’s an intellectual and political tradition with roots in radical equality movements that also led to racist fever swamps like LewRockwell.com. It’s not a perfect movement, by any means, but its heroes include some of the most outspoken historical critics of traditional bigotry. And its current adherants have been vociferous opponents of alt-right bigotry and populist nationalism more broadly.

For more of Reason’s recent output on the subject, see:

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Crude Oil- Bearish reversal at 8-year falling resistance

Crude Oil has been moving sharply higher the past few weeks. Last week we shared with Sectors Extreme & Premium members that Crude Oil had created an important pattern to finish the week while hitting an important price point.

Below looks at the chart shared with members last Friday-

Crude oil weekly chris kimble chart

CLICK HERE TO ENLARGE CHART ABOVE

Line (A) has been important support and resistance several times over the past 8-years. In 2011, this line took place as support as bullish reversal patterns took place at (1) and Crude rallied for the next few years.

After Crude started turning weak, bearish reversal patterns took place as Crude was kissing the underside of falling resistance at each (2).

The rally of late saw Crude Oil kiss the underside of falling resistance line (A) at (3), where a bearish reversal pattern took place to close last week.

Crude Oil bulls do not want to see reversal patterns take place below this resistance line. If reversals do take place at this key line, it would send concerning message to this sector.

Crude bulls want it to be different this time and see it break above this key resistance line!

 

 

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We identify high probability big pattern reversals and breakouts in global indices, sectors, commodities, several metals and select individual stocks

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Who Was Las Vegas Shooter Stephen Paddock And What Was His Motive

While there are still relatively few details about the man responsible for the deadliest mass shooting in US history, or his motive to kill at least 50 people and injure over 400 people, here is what we know so far, courtesy of the Telegraph:

The gunman responsible for the worst mass shooting in modern US history is believed to be a grandfather who lived in a remote desert home, reports Telegraph's Leon Watson. Stephen Paddock, 64, was named by police as the perpetrator who left more than 50 dead. He was killed when officers blasted their way into his hotel room. Las Vegas police said they had located "numerous firearms within the room that he occupied." Las Vegas Sheriff Lombardo said officers had confronted Paddock on the 32nd floor across the street from the concert. "There were at least 8 guns and a number of long rifles in the alleged shooter’s room", per Las Vegas Police Undersheriff Kevin McMahill.

In the latest police update, Las Vegas undersheriff Kevin McMahill confirmed that Stephen Paddock died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound as police made entry to his Las Vegas hotel room. He also confirmed that Paddock, who is believed to have checked into the hotel on Thursday, had more than 10 guns.

McMahill added that Marilou Danley is overseas and that officers have made contact with her.  She is believed to be Australian and of Indonesian origin.

Where was he from?

Paddock is reported to have lived in a retirement village in Mesquite, Nevada, since June 2016 and was born on April 9, 1953. It is claimed he previously lived in Reno, Nevada, from 2011 to 2016, and also had an address in Melbourne, Florida, from 2013 to 2015. He has also lived in Henderson, Nevada, and several locations in California since 1990, it is reported.

Mesquite is located about 80 miles, or an hour and 16 minutes, away from Las Vegas, along Nevada’s border with Arizona. Mesquite, a city in Clark County, is home to about 17,400 people, including several retirement communities, along with casinos and golf courses.

Did he act alone?

Despite initial reports of multiple gunmen, police do not believe at this time that there were any other attackers. Sheriff Joseph Lombardo, of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department, described Paddock as a "lone wolf". Officers were initially seeking his traveling companion – Marilou Danley – who has now been located. She is believed to have been his roommate, however the police have since announced they do not believe she was involved in the shooting.

At this stage, Paddock does not have any known ties to terrorist organization and no motive has been put forward. When asked by a reporter if it was an act of terrorism, Sheriff Lombardo said: “No, not at this point. We believe it was a local individual. He resides here locally.

"I’m not at liberty to give you his place of residence yet, because it’s an ongoing investigation, we don’t know what his belief system was at this time. … Right now we believe he is the sole aggressor at this point and the scene is static."

Was Paddock known to authorities?

NBC reports that he was. But public records do not show any criminal convictions for Paddock in Nevada. Mesquite Police told CBS News that he was not known to them, and that he lived in a retirement community, is a white male and wasn't a military veteran.

What was his motive?

He was not believed to be connected to any militant group, Clark County Sheriff Joseph Lombardo told reporters.

"We have no idea what his belief system was," Lombardo said. "We've located numerous firearms within the room that he occupied."

How did he die?

According to Las Vegas undersheriff Kevin McMahill, Stephen Paddock died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound as police made entry to his Las Vegas hotel room. He also confirmed that Paddock, who is believed to have checked into the hotel on Thursday, had more than 10 guns.

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Vegas Mass Shooting Deadliest in U.S. History, Trump Dedicates Golf Trophy to Puerto Rico, Police Violence in Catalonia Independence Vote: A.M. Links

  • At least 50 people were killed in the course of a mass shooting in Las Vegas.
  • President Trump dedicated a golf trophy to the people of Puerto Rico, which was devastated last month by Hurricane Maria.
  • The president also contradicted Secretary of State Rex Tillerson on whether negotiation with North Korea was still possible.
  • Ohio Governor John Kasich suggested he could leave the Republican Party if it didn’t fix itself.
  • ISIS claimed responsibility for two women stabbed at a train station in Marseilles.
  • Police in Catalonia attacked voters trying to participate in a referendum on independence that Spain insists is illegal—yes on independence won overwhelmingly.
  • O.J. Simpson was released from prison.

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No, Harvard Students, Betsy DeVos Is Not a ‘White Supremacist’

DeVosLast week, Education Secretary Betsy DeVos visited Harvard University’s Institute of Politics to discuss her school choice agenda. Students in the audience interrupted her several times; some even held up a sign accusing her of being a “white supremacist.”

The irony, of course, is twofold. One, the subject of DeVos’s Harvard address—school choice—is a policy that offers low-income students of color a respite from the hopelessness of the failing traditional public school systems in many cities. Two, DeVos’s recent major policy accomplishment was rescinding the Obama administration’s infamous Title IX “dear colleague” letter, a move that will restore a modicum of fairness to campus sexual harassment trials—trials that disproportionately disadvantage male students of color.

This makes DeVos a “white supremacist”? Please.

Regardless of what liberal activist groups like the NAACP think of them, school choice reforms have a proven track record of providing opportunities for poor and minority children that are often—not always, mind you, but often—better than the alternative. Charter schools are despised by the left because they threaten one of the Democratic Party’s most influential bases of power: teachers unions.

“White supremacist” is an even more absurd smear when one considers how the secretary’s revisions to federal Title IX enforcement are likely to impact students of color. As The Atlantic‘s Emily Yoffe noted in her extensive coverage of the problems with campus Title IX proceedings, the existing guidance occupied center stage in the widespread deprivation of due process rights for accused students. As far as we can tell, these students are much more likely to be male students of color, or immigrants.

And yet, according to the Harvard Crimson:

During the hour-long event, the President Donald Trump appointee gave a brief talk and answered questions from the roughly 100 attendees, most of them Harvard students.

She faced repeated interruptions. With shouts from the hundreds-strong crowd outside—”Education is a right, not just for the rich and white!”—echoing in the brightly lit John F. Kennedy Jr. Forum, protesters in the audience periodically stood and silently unveiled large posters.

“WHITE SUPREMACIST,” read one, drawn in red paint on white linen.

Three other students, representing Harvard’s Graduate School of Education Students for Education Justice, Graduate Students Union-UAW Organizing Committee, and the Harassment/Assault Law-Student Team, submitted an op-ed to The Crimson condemning Harvard’s “complicity” in white supremacy for allowing DeVos to speak. Given the current levels of tolerance for non-leftist ideals at elite university campuses, it’s no small wonder the students allowed DeVos to speak her mind at all.

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Key Events In The Coming Week: A Negative Payrolls Number And Non-stop Fed Speakers

While central banks step away from the spotlight, as does Asian data and markets with China and South Korea both taking a weeklong break, there will be a bevy of central bank speakers to “explain” what is going on while it will be a busy week data wise, with the US employment trade balance report due this week, PMI and retail sales in Euro area, as well as PMI and house prices in UK. The key central bank events include the Australia RBA board meeting, ECB minutes,Yellen and Fed member speeches. In Emerging Markets, there are monetary policy meetings in India, Poland and Romania.

Key focus: the busy calendar ahead for US

Next week attention will be on the US employment report, trade balance and durable goods orders. Forecasts for nonfarm payrolls (due Friday) are scattered with many expecting a big drop – many predict an outright negative payrolls print – as Hurricane Irma hit right at the start of the survey week. Otherwise, incoming data remains supportive of job gains. ADP (Wed) will likely report private payrolls increased by 73k. The ISM manufacturing index (Mon) is expected to dip to 58.0 from 58.8, supported by better-than-expected readings from regional surveys and ISM non-manufacturing to rise to 55.5 in September from 55.3.

Looking aroudn the world, focus will fall on the RBA meeting, ECB minutes and Fed speakers

The RBA board meets on Tuesday and we are not expecting any major evolution of wording despite a more upbeat tone from recent RBA communication. While policy normalization is on the agenda for next year, the Bank continues to stress patience in shifting from a neutral stance. We also have ECB board minutes from its September meeting on Thursday. The expected path for monetary policy is a key driver for the euro dollar and this constraints the ECB’s policy options. In US, Chair Yellen speaks at St. Louis Fed conference on Community Banking on Wednesday.

Also of note, according to press reports, the ruling LDP party in Japan plans to move ahead with raising the consumption tax from 8% to 10% in October 2019. This would be the third time Japan has undercut efforts to create normal 2% inflation by raising the consumption tax. As we saw in 1997, timing is critical. Setting a fixed date risks shocking the economy at a time of vulnerability. As we saw in 2014, the tax increase is unlikely to be offset by enough spending increases to prevent a sharp shock to growth.

DB’s Jim Reid breaks down the key events on a daily basis:

  • In terms of data, the focus this morning in Europe will be on the final revisions to the September manufacturing PMIs which will also include a first look at the data for the periphery and UK. Also due out is the August unemployment rate for the Euro area. Over in the US this afternoon we’ve got the September ISM manufacturing print as well as the final September manufacturing PMI and August construction spending readings.
  • Tuesday looks to be a fairly quiet day for data with Japan consumer confidence, Euro area PPI and US vehicle sales data the only releases of note.
  • Wednesday kicks off in Japan with the September Nikkei services and composite PMIs. In Europe we’ll receive the remaining September PMIs (services and composite) along with the latest retail sales data for the Euro area. The focus in the US on Wednesday will likely be on the September ADP employment print and ISM non-manufacturing. The final services and composite PMIs are also due.
  • Turning to Thursday, with no data of note in Europe the focus across the pond in the US will be on the latest weekly initial jobless claims print, August trade balance, August factory orders and the final durable and capital goods order revisions for August.
  • We finish the week in Europe on Friday with factory orders data in Germany, trade data in France and house prices data in the UK. The big focus on Friday however will be in the US with the September employment report due out including nonfarm payrolls, average hourly earnings and the unemployment rate. Wholesale inventories and consumer credit data for August round out the releases.

Onto other events:

  • Today sees the UK’s Chancellor of the Exchequer Hammond will address the Conservative Party Conference. In Japan, the BOJ’s quarterly Tankan survey of large manufacturers will be out. In the US, the Fed’s Kaplan will speak.
  • Then onto Tuesday, there will be numerous speakers at the Conservative Party conference, including: UK home secretary Rudd, Trade secretary Fox, Brexit secretary Davis and Foreign secretary Johnson. Then the BOE will publish its record of the Financial policy committee. Over in the US, the Fed’s Powell will speak on regulatory reform.
  • Turning to Wednesday, the EU parliament will vote on a non-binding Brexit resolution, while Mrs Yellen will give opening remarks at a Community banking conference in the US.
  • Then onto Thursday, the ECB’s Praet and Coeure chairs a panel in Frankfurt and the ECB’s governing council members Liikanen and Jazbec will speak. Following on, the ECB will also publish accounts of its September meeting. In the UK, BOE’s Chief economist Haldane will speak on “Central banks engagement with society”. Over in the US, there are four Fed speakers, including: Williams, Harker, Powell and George.
  • Finally, on Friday, BOE’s Chief economist Haldane speaks on “Trust in institutions”. In the US, we round out the week with three more Fed speakers, including: Bostic, Dudley and Kaplan.

Finally, here is Goldman’s Jan Hatzius with a focus only on the US alongside consensus expectations:

The key economic releases this week are the ISM manufacturing index on Monday, the ISM non-manufacturing index on Wednesday, and the employment report on Friday. There are several speaking engagements by Fed officials this week, including a speech on financial regulatory reform by Fed Governor Powell on Tuesday.

Monday, October 2

  • 09:45 AM Markit US Manufacturing PMI, September (consensus 53.0, last 53.0)
  • 10:00 AM ISM manufacturing index, September (GS 59.0, consensus 58.0, last 58.8): Regional manufacturing surveys strengthened on net in September, with notable gains in the Richmond Fed, Philly Fed, Dallas Fed, and Chicago PMI surveys. Our manufacturing survey tracker moved up 1.3pt to 59.4 in September. We expect the ISM manufacturing index to edge up 0.2pt to 59.0, reflecting firmer manufacturing sector activity, partly offset by disruptions from the recent hurricanes.
  • 10:00 AM Construction spending, August (GS +0.5%, consensus +0.4%, last -0.6%): We expect construction spending to strengthen 0.5% in August following a 0.6% decline in the July report, reflecting an expected rebound in single-family construction.
  • 02:00 PM Dallas Fed President Kaplan (FOMC voter) speaks: Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan will speak in a moderated Q&A session in El Paso, Texas. Audience Q&A is expected.

Tuesday, October 3

  • 08:30 AM Fed Governor Powell (FOMC voter) speaks: Federal Reserve Governor Jerome Powell will give a speech on regulatory reform at the George Washington University. Audience Q&A is not expected.
  • 4:00 PM Total vehicle sales, September (GS 17.2mn, consensus 17.0mn, last 16.0mn): Domestic vehicle sales, September (GS 13.8, consensus 12.7mn, last 12.5mn)

Wednesday, October 4

  • 8:15 AM ADP employment report, September (GS +130k, consensus +143k, last +237k): We expect a 130k increase in ADP payroll employment in September, reflecting a drag from the various financial and economic indicators used in ADP’s model. However, we do not expect the hurricanes to meaningfully impact the report. While we believe the ADP employment report holds limited value for forecasting the BLS’s nonfarm payrolls report, we find that large ADP surprises vs. consensus forecasts are directionally correlated with nonfarm payroll surprises.
  • 09:45 AM: Markit US Services PMI, September (consensus 55.1, last 55.1)
  • 10:00 AM ISM non-manufacturing index, September (GS 55.7, consensus 55.5, last 55.3): We expect the ISM non-manufacturing index to rebound 0.4pt to 55.7, despite a modest drag from hurricane effects. Regional non-manufacturing surveys were mixed in September, with deterioration in the NY Fed and Dallas Fed surveys, a flat Richmond Fed reading, and a moderate gain in the Philly Fed survey. Overall, our non-manufacturing survey tracker ticked down 0.1pt to 56.5 in September.
  • 03:00 PM St Louis Fed President Bullard (FOMC non-voter) speaks: St. Louis Fed President Bullard will give welcoming remarks at a conference on community banking at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Audience Q&A is not expected.
  • 03:15 PM Fed Chair Yellen (FOMC voter) speaks: Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen will give brief welcoming remarks at a conference on community banking at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Audience Q&A is not expected.

Thursday, October 5

  • 08:30 AM Initial jobless claims, week ended September 30 (GS 265k, consensus 263k, last 272k): Continuing jobless claims, week ended September 23 (consensus 1,949k, last 1,934k)
  • 08:30 AM Trade balance, August (GS -$43.0bn, consensus -$42.7bn, last -$43.7bn): We estimate the trade deficit narrowed by $0.7bn in August. The Advance Economic Indicators report last week showed a smaller goods trade deficit, but we expect this to be offset by a modest deterioration in the services trade balance.
  • 09:10 AM Fed Governor Powell (FOMC voter) speaks: Federal Reserve Governor Powell will give a speech on treasury markets at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Audience Q&A is expected.

    09:15 AM San Francisco Fed President Williams (FOMC non-voter) speaks: San Francisco Fed President John Williams will give the keynote speech at a conference on community banking at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.

  • 09:30 AM Philadelphia Fed President Harker (FOMC voter) speaks: Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker will give a speech at the Investing in America’s Workforce Capstone Conference in Austin. Audience Q&A is expected.
  • 10:00 AM Factory orders, August (GS +1.1%, consensus +1.0%, last -3.3%); Durable goods orders, August final (last +1.7%); Durable goods orders ex transportation, August final (last +0.2%); Core capital goods orders, August final (last +0.9%); Core capital goods shipments, August final (last +0.7%): We estimate factory orders increased 1.1% in August following a 3.3 % decline in July. Core measures in the August durable goods report were strong, with solid growth in core capital goods orders and shipments.
  • 04:30 PM Kansas City President George (FOMC non-voter) speaks: Kansas City Fed President Esther George will give a speech at the Investing in America’s Workforce Capstone Conference in Austin.

Friday, October 6

  • 08:30 AM Nonfarm payroll employment, September (GS +50k, consensus +85k, last +156k); Private payroll employment, September (GS +40k, consensus +73k, last +165k); Average hourly earnings (mom), September (GS +0.4%, consensus +0.3%, last +0.1%); Average hourly earnings (yoy), September (GS +2.7%, consensus +2.5%, last +2.5%); Unemployment rate, September (GS 4.5%, consensus 4.4%, last 4.4%): We estimate nonfarm payrolls rose 50k in September, following a 156k increase in August and compared to three- and six-month moving averages of 185k and 160k, respectively. Our forecast reflects a large drag from Hurricanes Harvey and Irma, which we estimate could temporarily reduce the level of payroll employment by 125k. FEMA major disaster declarations for these storms covered over 10% of the US population, and over 6.5 million Floridians were without power in the middle of the payroll survey week. Additionally, the Bureau of Labor Statistics anticipates that the hurricanes will have both direct and indirect effects on employment. However, we believe the underlying pace of job growth remains firm, as jobless claims remain very low outside of hurricane-affected regions. We estimate the unemployment rate rose a tenth to 4.5%, reflecting temporary hurricane effects. The August unemployment rate barely rounded down (at 4.442%), and in the month after Hurricane Katrina, there was a sharp increase in Louisiana unemployment. Finally, we expect average hourly earnings to increase 0.4% month over month and 2.7% year over year, reflecting positive calendar effects.
  • 09:15 Atlanta Fed President Bostic (FOMC non-voter) speaks: Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic will give a speech at the Investing in America’s Workforce Capstone Conference in Austin.
  • 10:00 AM Wholesale inventories, August final (consensus 1.0%, last 1.0%)
  • 11:45 AM Boston Fed President Rosengren (FOMC non-voter) speaks: Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren will give a speech at the International Economic Conference in Montreal.
  • 12:15 PM New York Fed President Dudley (FOMC voter) speaks: New York Fed President William Dudley will give a speech at an event organized by the Council for Economic Education. Audience Q&A is expected.
  • 12:45 PM Dallas Fed President Kaplan (FOMC voter) speaks: Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan will give a speech at the Investing in America’s Workforce Capstone Conference in Austin.
  • 01:50 PM St Louis Fed President Bullard (FOMC non-voter) speaks: St Louis Fed President James Bullard will give a speech titled “Standard of Living Across US Metropolitan Statistical Areas” at the Bi-State Development Annual Luncheon in St. Louis.
  • 03:00 PM Consumer credit, August (consensus $15.5bn, last $18.5bn)

Source: BofA, DB, Goldman

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Is That a Feature or a Bug? Gold & Silver Report 1 Oct 2017

We have covered many reasons why bitcoin is unsound and not money. It’s a ledger of unbacked liabilities. It is designed to have finite quantity but therefore indeterminate and hence volatile value. This makes it unusable for borrowing or lending and hence savings, but a great a vehicle for conversion of one person’s wealth into another’s income. It is not a commodity—discussion of the usefulness of the network notwithstanding—nor is it backed by a commodity or any asset. It is a perfect, cryptographically secure record—of itself. People use it to get rich quick. In other words, it’s the very model of a (post)modern monetary marvel (OK, Keith is not the next Gilbert and Sullivan).

And bitcoin has a questionable feature. Transactions are irreversible.

First it should be addressed that irreversible transactions have an appeal to merchants. Everyone who sells on eBay knows the frustration of shipping merchandise to a customer only to have the customer claim it was never received. Merchants would surely love the idea that once payment is made, it cannot be unmade.

However, there are good reasons why our payments system was designed as it is. Sometimes there is a clear mistake. No one has an interest in allowing the payee to keep $100,000 when $10,000 was the purchase price of the used car. No one wants to see Jon Schmidt get the money that was intended for John Smith. There is also the occasional case of fraud. If someone breaks into your account, you want recourse to recover the lost funds. Irreversible transactions are not a dream come true for consumers who are defrauded by merchants.

Consider that bitcoin’s designer, Satoshi, built the system so that transactions cannot be reversed. Is this a merchant’s dream come true? Or a criminal’s? Qui bono (who benefits?) It is hard to even think of a good legitimate case for this.

Now also consider that bitcoin was designed so payments can be sent and received anonymously. You not only cannot reverse a transaction, but you don’t even know who got it, so there is no way to know who to sue in court. Your money (well your bitcoin) is irretrievably lost.

The combination of irreversible and anonymous may still seem to have some legitimate appeal, but let’s acknowledge the elephant in the room. It’s perfect for criminals. Anyone who sells fake driver’s licenses or murder for hire would love it.

As an aside, bitcoin’s anonymity is not perfect. The ledger shows every transaction, which means that if your identity is ever discovered, anyone can go through the history of what you have done. For example, if you sell bitcoins in an account at an exchange, and wire the dollars to your bank account.

To address this problem, there is the bitcoin mixer. It is designed to mix up your bitcoins with the bitcoins of others who also want to hide the identity of their coins and their origin. It seems almost as if it is designed for money laundering. While irreversible transactions may have some legitimate use cases, this is a whole ‘nother beast. If you steal millions of dollars of bitcoin from an exchange, hack a DAO, sell rocket launchers to terrorists, or even infect companies with ransomware, the mixer is great. You need a way to get paid, without anyone being able trace your loot.

It’s just like bags of cash left in the phone booth at 2am across the street from the all-night diner (as we recall from detective shows in the 1970’s), only better. In those shows, the bad guy always demanded “unmarked” bills, but no one ever clearly showed what “marked” vs. “unmarked” looked like. Well (we assume) bitcoins that have been tumbled are unmarked.

Irreversibility, anonymity, and untraceable unmarked bills. That may still sound attractive to a consumer, an end user of the system. However, that is not the main question, which is: are these desirable features for businesses who sell you things? Are they appropriate features for financial businesses who ask you to trust them with your life savings?

If no trust is possible, if civil society ever breaks down so far that no one can trust anyone else, that transactions are conducted between two armed groups with cash exchanged for goods under cover of more armed men with rifles, then we will have arrived in Keynes’ long run—a dark age. This has not happened just yet. So let’s continue with our inquiry into the nature of anonymity, irreversibility, and untraceability.

It takes us now to the concept of transparency. Let’s look at some examples outside finance. A grocer sells tomatoes labeled “locally grown”. Consumers want to be able to trust the label, and not have to be suspicious that they were really grown in Venezuela. If E Coli breaks out, everyone has an interest in tracing the tainted produce back to the packaging plant or farm which introduced the bacteria.

If a solar panel company tells you that its panels generate 15 watts per square foot, you want to trust that it is not only telling the truth but the whole truth. Is this figure for residents of a high altitude southern desert like Albuquerque or is it for a northern city like Oslo?

If an electric car company claims that its HEPA air filter is good enough to block biological warfare agents, buyers want to know if this has been validated by a credible third party.

It’s one thing if such marketing claims are mere puffery. We don’t know if any Tesla buyers are planning to drive through war zones where anthrax bacteria are in the air. We assume it is more about so called bragging rights:

“Oh yeah, your 911 turbo S can out-accelerate my Tesla in super-duper ludicrous insane mode?! Well can it do it under conditions of biological warfare??”

It is quite another when a company custodies client assets, or brokers or conducts financial transactions. A responsible financial business thinks constantly about—and establishes systems and controls for—conflicts of interest, unsustainable structures, shady transactions, and all factors which affect pricing or execution for its clients. For example, Monetary Metals publishes graphs of the offers that set the gold interest rate in its lease auctions.

You would expect disclosure statements, documented processes, guidance from a credible law firm, and an auditor—not to mention due diligence. Conversely, if a firm seems optimized to avoid government scrutiny, if there is no way to discover who owns it much less its liabilities, then it may not be seeking to build a great business for the long term.

Like it or not, we live in a world which is demanding more transparency from the companies we trust. And consumers and savers should like it.

In this light, let’s look at two interesting promises of the blockchain, One, there is no need to trust in a counterparty. Two, it enables realtime audit and verification.

The reality is any coalition of miners that controls a majority of the mining power can do whatever they want. For example, they can fork to undo a transaction. Whether you realize it or not, you are giving your trust to them—whomever they are. As the capital investment required to be a serious player in bitcoin mining has increased, mining power has consolidated. As the electricity consumption of serious mining power increased, miners consolidated in regions with subsidized electricity prices.

We do not believe that most people understand or appreciate that bitcoin governance is political.

As to realtime audit, how many cryptocurrency financial firms show even just their assets on the blockchain? (This would be of limited value without the liabilities also). It is telling that MtGox, before it collapsed, was a leading (if not the leading) bitcoin exchange and account provider. Serious allegations have emerged that MtGox was operating in a state of insolvency for years. A leading firm in the space. It was insolvent for years. A leading firm. Think about that. Take as long as you need.

The hype-reality spread is wide indeed.

Finally, we get to the so called Initial Coin Offering, or ICO. Raising capital is difficult and expensive under securities regulations. Many regulations serve to protect incumbents (see this article by Keith). It would seem to be a good thing to bypass all this, and sell a newfangled thing that is not called a security but a token.

However, it must be said that early-stage companies are risky. Regulation or no regulation, a responsible entrepreneur does not raise capital from people who don’t understand the risks and/or cannot afford to bear them. Yes, that means retirees living on a fixed pension. Responsible entrepreneurs do not promote their offerings with unrealistic promises of huge gains, while omitting a discussion of risks. They certainly do not use the proceeds to speculate on asset prices or plow them into the next startup’s hot deal (said next startup having an undisclosed relationship with management, of course).

For that matter, and this also needs to be said, no good comes of raising too much money too early in a company’s development. In a sane world, investors do not inject $30,000,000 into a company with a white paper and a partial management team. So what does that make the ICO world?

As the bitcoin mixer is designed to help criminals evade law enforcement, the ICO is designed to help businesses raise money that they have no business raising.

We are not lawyers, however one thing seems clear enough. The tokens sold in ICOs are securities. Sooner or later, regulators will crack down on issuers. And if innocent investors are bilked of their savings, the crackdown will be sooner.

This discussion brings us full circle. Bitcoin proponents will tell you that bitcoin is going to a million dollars. That may be, but it helps make our point that while the price is going up everyone is happy and fraud often goes undiscovered. Bernie Madoff was not caught until December 2008, when stocks crashed in the global financial crisis. If the Fed had kept the boom going for another 5 years, it’s likely that Madoff would have gotten away with it until 2013.

We are not, by the way, big fans of prior restraint regulation. In practice, regulatory compliance—whatever its stated intent—often means guilty until proven innocent. It demands that you constantly prove your innocence, at your own expense, under threat of being convicted of the crime of not complying.

However, we firmly believe that if a crime is committed then law enforcement should obtain a warrant and ask financial intermediaries for documentation related to the suspicious transactions and persons of interest. And we believe that responsible businesses keep records of transactions and clients for a number of reasons, including that they want to assist law enforcement catch criminals. No honest person benefits from aiding and abetting criminals.

A responsible financial business makes money by making money for its clients. It does so whether it operates in a free market or in a severe regulatory environment. Conversely, regulation does not stop the bad actors. Witness Bernie Madoff, who stole tens of billions, in a Ponzi scheme that endured perhaps 30 years (the start of the great boom fueled by falling interest rates since 1981).

Regulation, or not, a responsible business does not tout incredible gains, cherry pick performance numbers, conceal the source of funds, obscure its activities, ignore its liabilities, or understate or deny the risks while hyping the possible gains.

Of course, most businesses involved in bitcoin are not dishonest, the same as people elsewhere. However, it cannot be ignored that the bitcoin ecosystem has features which seem tailor-made for criminal activity.

Our final caveat is that law enforcement may allow things to proceed for years. When it enters a new technology arena, law enforcement can be like a steamroller. It doesn’t move forward quickly. However, once it grabs a toe, it will keep rolling right over the body, until it is made one with the pavement.


The prices of the metals dropped $17 and $0.35, and the gold-silver ratio rose to 77.

A look at the chart of either metal shows that a downtrend in prices (i.e. uptrend in the dollar) that began in mid-April reversed in mid-July. Then the prices began rising (i.e. dollar began falling). But that move ended Sep 8.

One way to think of these moves is as the addition of energy into the market. Like tossing a pebble into a still pond (not quantity of water, but energy that perturbs it). Once the speculators get the idea that gold and especially silver should go up, well it becomes self-fulfilling. Statements by the Fed, the ECB, or even the fatboy who rules North Korea can all have an effect.

Buying begets buying, as the chart shows signs of a breakout. But then, especially in this moribund market, the energy of new speculation is depleted. And the price subsides, until new energy is added by the next event. We are in that mode right now.

We will look at an updated picture of the fundamentals of supply and demand of both metals. But first, here are the charts of the prices of gold and silver, 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. The ratio rose.

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.

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 intraday gold graph showing Friday’s action (you can see the regular 3-month gold basis chart).

This is interesting. From a bit after 6am (GMT) the price of gold is rising but the basis is falling. That means the buying was fundamental, i.e. gold metal was bought. This lasted until a bit after 7am. At around 10:30am, something different occurred. Speculators started buying futures. They drove the price up from $1,288 to $1,290, but this took the basis up from 0.8% to 0.83%. After that, the basis tracked the price. That is, when price was falling basis was falling (i.e. futures were being sold) and when price was rising basis rose with it (i.e. futures were bought). By the way, don’t pay too much attention to the end of the day, as particularly on a Friday liquidity is dried up and the signal can be spurious.

Our calculated Monetary Metals gold fundamental price fell $30 to $1,348.

Now let’s look at silver intraday (here is the regular daily silver basis chart).

Interestingly again, we see the same fundamental buying of silver after 6am from $16.80 to $16.86 while the basis drops from 0.5% to 0.47%. After that, like gold, the price action was driven by speculators in the futures markets.

Our calculated Monetary Metals silver fundamental price fell $0.25 to $17.05.

 

© 2017 Monetary Metals

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Spanish Bond Yields Spike As EU Washes Its Hands Of Catalonia, Puigdemont Demands Spanish Police Withdraw

After an unprecedented 2 million Catalans voted for independence during Sunday’s referendum, larger than the number who voted for independence during a prior independence referendum in November 2014, the will of Catalan people has been made abundantly clear: The regional government of Carles Puigdemont has an overwhelming popular mandate for independence. And in spite of the Madrid government’s brutality, the government in Barcelona hasn’t backed down.

After delivering a rousing speech last night where he called on the EU to intercede with the Spanish government to try and stop the violence being committed by the Civil Guard and the National Police, Puigdemont on Monday demanded that the national police withdraw from the region as his government prepares to declare independence. Puigdemont asserted that the result of the vote is legally binding – despite a Madrid court’s declaration that the referendum was illegal. The regional government is still verifying the final results of the ballot, but according to a preliminary count released early Monday local time, 89% of the 2.3 million Catalans who voted chose independence.

While the government in Barcelona initially said it would declare independence within 48 hours of the ‘yes’ vote being certified by the regional Parliament, Bloomberg is reporting that Puigdemont’s time frame could see him announce the formation of a Catalan republic on Oct. 6, exactly 83 years since his predecessor as regional president, Lluis Companys, declared independence. Companys was eventually executed by the dictatorship of Francisco Franco.

Puigdemont has said the vote will be sent to the Parliament for final ratification shortly.  

However, in a sign that the international community is backing away from the secessionist region even as a potentially bloody conflict looms, the European Commission officially washed its hands of the constitutional crisis, saying in a statement released Monday that the issue “is an internal matter for Spain that has to be dealt with in line with the constitutional order of Spain.” In doing so, it ignored the Catalan government's pleas for recognition.

In the latest suggestion that it unequivocally backs Rajoy, the Commission clarified that, should Catalonia leave Spain, it would also “find itself outside of the European Union.”

Read the EC’s full statement below:

Under the Spanish Constitution, yesterday's vote in Catalonia was not legal.

For the European Commission, as President Juncker has reiterated repeatedly, this is an internal matter for Spain that has to be dealt with in line with the constitutional order of Spain.

 

We also reiterate the legal position held by this Commission as well as by its predecessors. If a referendum were to be organised in line with the Spanish Constitution it would mean that the territory leaving would find itself outside of the European Union.

 

Beyond the purely legal aspects of this matter, the Commission believes that these are times for unity and stability, not divisiveness and fragmentation.

 

We call on all relevant players to now move very swiftly from confrontation to dialogue. Violence can never be an instrument in politics. We trust the leadership of Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy to manage this difficult process in full respect of the Spanish Constitution and of the fundamental rights of citizens enshrined therein.

Indeed, while opposition figures like Jeremy Corbyn and Nicola Sturgeon (who may look to the Catalans to inspire another Scottish independence referendum) have called on Spain to end the violence, most of the European establishment unsurprisingly has sided with Rajoy.

Add to that list US President Donald Trump, who said he felt Catalonia should remain part of Spain during a press conference with Rajoy last week.

Meanwhile, a Spanish opposition party has called on Rajoy to implement article 155 of the country’s constitution in Catalonia, which allows Madrid to impose direct rule over the formerly autonomous region, according to the Independent.

Albert Rivera, head of the business-friendly Ciudadanos party, which considered Sunday’s referendum to be illegal, told various Spanish media channels on Monday that he believes suspending home rule for Catalonia was necessary to block a possible unilateral declaration of independence and to enable fresh regional elections to be called in Catalonia.

Article 155 of the Spanish constitution describes itself in the legislation as being “for exceptional cases only” such as when a region’s failure to obey laws “gravely damage Spain’s general interest.” It has never been invoked before.

Rivera said the article should be invoked to call for another referendum allowing all Catalans to vote. Given the police crackdown on a small percentage of polling stations – as well as efforts by the Madrid government to suppress the vote that included arresting local politicians, shuttering electronic voting infrastructure, and destroying ballots – only about half of Catalans 5 million eligible voters cast ballots.

“Applying article 155, even if it is only for a few hours, to call elections is the most straightforward and most democratic solution,” Rivera – who was born in Barcelona – said. “That way all the Catalans would get to vote, not just a part.”

The Independent reports that until now, Rajoy and the ruling Partido Popular PP have not discussed article 155 publicly. But that could change this week as Spain attempts to assert its dominance over the prosperous autonomous region, which has its own language and culture – not to mention a larger economy than neighboring Portugal.

Spain’s justice minister has said it will use all means at its disposal to uphold the law in Catalonia, before praising the police for their “exemplary” action in defense of the constitution.

“We have always said that we would use all the force of the law and all the mechanisms that the constitution and laws grant to the government,” Rafael Catala told broadcaster TVE in an interview. While images of police violence provoked alarmed reactions from some European government officials, Catala praised the security force for their “measured” response.

The market reaction is downbeat – in Europe – with Spanish bond yields blowing out to 3-month highs…

 

And Spanish sovereign default risk has spiked…

 

Which brings to mind the biggest question, what would happen to Spain in case of Catalonia’s secession?

As GEFIRA explains, in terms of the debt sustainability parameters laid down by the Treaty of Maastricht, it’d be the Eurozone debt crisis 2.0.

As Spain now maintains the second year of 3% GDP growth, an even bigger, immediate fiscal threat is looming. After multiple ineffective referendums in the previous years, this time the Catalan government is likely to finally assert independence. What will it look like against the background of the Maastricht financial requirements?

Debt to GDP ratio

The Treaty of Maastricht says it should be 60%. Spain’s debt to GDP ratio was 39% in 2007, but after the financial crisis it gradually rose to 99.4% today. Should Catalonia leave, there are two possible scenarios:

1. Catalonia agrees to take a share of the Spanish total debt, as a “divorce bill”, because after all it benefited from the government spending in Catalonia itself;

 

or

 

2. Catalonia leaves without taking any share of the total Spanish debt.

In the first case, nothing would change, assuming Catalonia would agree to take the share of Spanish debt equal to its share in Spain’s total GDP. In that case, Catalonia accounts roughly for 20% of the Spanish GDP, which means it would take 20% of the Spanish debt. Given that the Spanish debt is right now almost the same size as the Spanish GDP, calculations are rather simple.

Source: Statista.

The second option is rather dramatic. Without Catalonia, Spanish GDP would automatically shrink by 20%, while having to service the entirety of the debt. The debt to GDP percentage ratio would go from 99.4% to 124% overnight.

Deficit to GDP percentage ratio

The Treaty of Maastricht says it should be 3%. Spain has been way outside it since the financial crisis, with a peak at 11% in 2011. For 2016 it was 4.5%.

Here the problem is understanding how much more tax revenue Spain gets from Catalonia than it gives. Catalonia says 11.1€ billion, Spain says 8.5€.

Either way, as the deficit is calculated as expenditure minus revenue, it would be a hole in the revenue of the Spanish government of 8.5 to 11.1€ billion. Last year the deficit/GDP ratio was 4.5%, corresponding to approximately 50€ billion. With the Catalan secession, assuming a 10€ billion hole for simplicity between the estimates of the Spanish and Catalan governments, Spain’s deficit would go up to 60€ billion, while its GDP would shrink by 20%. Result? The deficit to GDP percentage ratio would be 6.7%, back to 2013.

Conclusion

The doomsday scenario would be Spain waking up with a debt equal to 124% of its GDP and growing, due to the 6.7% deficit, which would take another 4-5 years to be contained. The EU’s response to the possibility of Spanish bankruptcy would be predictable: more austerity. It is important to note that while Spain has been growing for the past two years and unemployment is also decreasing, the recipe chosen by the Spanish government, flexibility of the labour market in the form of temporary jobs, has exacerbated income inequality: as the OECD points out that temporary jobs are low-productivity and thus earn low wages; the precariousness of the job prevents improvements in productivity, thus improvement in wages. The poor remains poor, while the rich gets richer and the gap widens.4)

Boosting GDP and employment statistics with mini-jobs is thus masquerading an issue common to other Western countries: the collapse of the middle class.

Catalan independence could prove to be the last nail in the coffin: either Spain goes bankrupt or is forced to implement even more austerity at the risk of facing a revolution from the economically displaced.

*  *  *

And that's why Madrid doesn't want to lose Catalonia…

Once before, in October 1934, shortly before the Spanish Civil War (1936 to 1939) broke out, Catalonia had announced its independence from the rest of Spain. This prompted Madrid to sent the army to Barcelona.

*  *  *

We suspect The EU may get more involved if this risk premia blowout starts to spread.

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Las Vegas Mass Shooting Biggest in U.S. History, Gunman I.D.’ed as Stephen Paddock

At least 50 people were killed and 200 injured when Stephen Paddock opened fire with an apparent machine gun on an outdoor concert outside Las Vegas’ Mandalay Bay casino-hotel last night.

Paddock was killed by police and a woman who has been described as his companion has been taken into custody. No motive on the part of the killer has been discovered so far, but local police have said they didn’t have prior contact with the 64-year-old Vegas resident and no sources close to the investigation have suggested ideological, religious, or terroristic motivation. Public records indicate that Paddock had a hunting license, was a pilot, and had a lawsuit against a casino years ago.

Before last night, the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history was the 2016 shooting at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, which killed 49 people. Before that, it was the 2007 campus shooting at Virginia Tech, where 32 were killed.

Machine guns (which are fully automatic weapons) can be legally owned, but it is extremely difficult for private citizens to possess them legally, so it’s likely that if Paddock did use one to commit these murders, it was in violation of existing laws. Nevada has liberal gun-ownership laws, a reality that has already sparked calls for stricter gun control.

As is always the case in these sorts of situations, it’s best to treat early reports with a great deal of skepticism and to insist on depoliticized reporting, especially from the scene. When James Hodgkinson opened fire on Republican congressman earlier this year, seriously wounding Rep. Steve Scalise, The New York Times immediately (and erroneously) rushed to blame the shooting on a discredited link between Sarah Palin and the shooter of former Rep. Gabby Giffords (D-Ariz.). Beyond the grotesque urge to immediately transform all human tragedies into a political agenda, the plain fact is that most early reports contain massive errors of fact, even when they are being published in the best faith possible.

Reason’s previous coverage of mass shootings is archived here.

From 2011, Reason TV’s “Five Rules for Coping with Tragedy”:

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Was The Eight-Year Experiment In Maintaining The Status Quo A Success Or Failure?

Authored by Charles Hugh Smith via OfTwoMinds blog,

Clearly, the core strategy of maintaining the status quo is to borrow and spend trillions of additional dollars every year.

The Obama presidency was a grand experiment to test this thesis: the status quo of the U.S. is a self-correcting mechanism. Left to its own devices, it will automatically correct any socio-economic-political imbalances, given enough time.

The Grand Strategy of the post-Global Financial Crisis era was simple: maintain the status quo as is. The Obama administration's major policy initiative, ObamaCare, a.k.a. the Affordable Care Act, was nothing but the formalization of the existing status quo in healthcare, i.e. the taxpayers subsidize private-sector profiteering.

That is the Affordable Care Act in a nutshell. Costs have not declined, the health of Americans can hardly be said to have improved significantly, but garsh, did healthcare sector profits soar. Most importantly, the status quo was maintained: nothing actually changed in the insurance, pharmaceutical or hospital sectors.

The same can be said for every other sector of the economy: nothing really changed, just more of the same. Higher education: nothing changed, just more student loan debt was issued. The defense industry: more of the same. Global War on Terror, a.k.a. The National Security State–more billions sluiced into the shadows.

President Obama was a master of telling everyone what they wanted to hear while changing nothing in the basic structure of the Empire. The Imperial Imperative of destabilizing nations that didn't meet with Imperial approval continued unchanged. The murder-by-drone campaign expanded, the support of a hopelessly corrupt regime in Afghanistan continued unchanged, and so on.

There were two unstated assumptions in this eight-year experiment:

1. The status quo is perfectly fine and didn't need changing

2. The self-correcting mechanism of the status quo–the self-serving pursuit of maximizing private gain–naturally yielded up whatever policy tweaks were deemed beneficial/ necessary.

If there is any dividing line in America today, it's not political: it's the division between those who see the status quo arrangement as marvelously successful, and those who see the tiller lashed down tight as the great ship heads for shoals that will rip the hull to shreds.

Those in the first camp see no need to change anything beyond minor policy tweaks. Those in the second camp see an unsustainable status quo that kicked the can down the road for eight years rather than tackle the systemic problems that are undermining the nation.

It's too early to say if the eight year experiment is a success or a failure. There is precious little evidence that the relentless self-serving pursuit of maximizing private gain is magically self-correcting what's broken. Rather, it seems that existing extremes are simply being pushed to new extremes–for example, student loan debt:

Federal debt:

Consumer credit:

Bank credit:

Clearly, the core strategy of maintaining the status quo is to borrow and spend trillions of additional dollars every year. Fortunately for the status quo, near-zero interest rates have created the comforting illusion that debt doesn't matter because it's almost free.

Perhaps the eight-year experiment will appear successful until the ever-expanding debt loads finally start to matter.

*  *  *

If you found value in this content, please join me in seeking solutions by becoming a $1/month patron of my work via patreon.com. Check out both of my new books, Inequality and the Collapse of Privilege ($3.95 Kindle, $8.95 print) and Why Our Status Quo Failed and Is Beyond Reform ($3.95 Kindle, $8.95 print, $5.95 audiobook) For more, please visit the OTM essentials website.

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