Frontrunning: October 2

  • At least 50 dead in Las Vegas shooting (Reuters)
  • Spanish PM faces crisis after violent secession vote in Catalonia (Reuters)
  • Trump Rejects Dialogue With North Korea (WSJ)
  • HP Enterprise let Russia scrutinize cyberdefense system used by Pentagon (Reuters)
  • Automakers Plan Electric Car Blitz as Tesla Burns Billions (BBG)
  • Brent falls to below $56 on signs of higher output (Reuters)
  • The Man Who Exposed College Basketball (WSJ)
  • China’s bitcoin market alive and well as traders defy crackdown (Reuters)
  • Trump Plan Aims New Foreign Tax at Multinationals (BBG)
  • Two women deny murdering North Korean leader’s half-brother (Reuters)
  • Google Plans to Help News Publishers Increase Subscriptions (WSJ)
  • Russia’s central bank says lenders Otkritie and B&N Bank may merge: TASS (Reuters)
  • Monarch Files for Insolvency in U.K.’s Biggest Airline Failure (BBG)
  • Capitalism is the only way, UK finance minister says in challenge to Labour (Reuters)
  • At the Center of the Equifax Mess: Its Top Lawyer (WSJ)
  • Police questioned suspect in Marseille knife killings prior to attack (Reuters)
  • ISIS Reportedly Calls for Attacks on N.Y. Jewish Museum Over Kurdish Exhibit (Haaretz)
  • For some elderly Americans, mortgage rules herald harder struggle (Reuters)
  • Hall, Rosbash, Young Win Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (BBG)
  • How we tick: U.S. ‘body clock’ scientists win Nobel medicine prize (Reuters)
  • Would You Buy 7 Percent Bonds From This Guy? (BBG)
  • Britain will lobby U.S., Canada over Bombardier dispute: Hammond (Reuters)
  • Hudson River Trading Is Exploring Possible Deal to Buy Sun Trading (WSJ)

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

– Google Inc said it will end this week its decade-old “first click free” policy that required news websites to give readers free access to articles from Google’s search results. on.wsj.com/2hGUh4G

– Monarch Airlines announced it has entered into administration, saying that as of Oct. 2, all its flights have been canceled and it is no longer operating. on.wsj.com/2hGjOv0

– Rio Tinto Ltd said it had completed a pilot run spanning nearly 62 miles with trains operated by individuals in an air-conditioned control room hundreds of miles away. on.wsj.com/2hGo9hG

– Global Logistic Properties Ltd on Monday announced plans to acquire a portfolio of assets in Europe for 2.4 billion euros ($2.82 billion). on.wsj.com/2hGGew7

– Oracle Corp co-founder Larry Ellison took aim at Amazon Inc’s cloud-computing division, touting his company’s newest database technology that he claimed his rival can’t match. on.wsj.com/2hGycDx

 

FT

Prime Minister Theresa May’s attempt to showcase a new youth-friendly policy agenda at the Conservative party conference on Sunday was overshadowed by a row over Boris Johnson’s leadership ambitions and criticisms of her flagship housing scheme and tuition fee proposals.

Renters paid about 54 billion pounds ($72.30 billion) to buy-to-let investors across the UK over the 12 months to the end of June, more than double the amount of mortgage interest paid to banks by homeowners, according to new figures by the estate agency group Savills.

Legal action by BT Group Plc and Three threatens to derail Britain’s “golden opportunity” to take a lead in the race to launch 5G next-generation mobile services, chief executive of UK telecoms regulator Ofcom Sharon White wrote in the Financial Times on Sunday.

The Catalan government said more than 2 million people had cast a ballot in a banned referendum to leave Spain on Sunday and 90 percent of them had voted in favour of independence.

 

NYT

– Under intense scrutiny from federal investigators and the public, Facebook Inc said on Sunday that it planned to turn over more than 3,000 Russian-linked advertisements to congressional investigators on Monday. nyti.ms/2x9KL16

– S. I. Newhouse Jr., who as the owner of magazines like the New Yorker, Vogue, Vanity Fair and Architectural Digest wielded vast influence over American culture, fashion and social taste, died on Sunday at his home in Manhattan at the age of 89. nyti.ms/2xPR9cB

– U.S. President Donald Trump undercut his own secretary of state on Sunday, calling his effort to open lines of communication with North Korea a waste of time, and seeming to rule out a diplomatic resolution to the nuclear-edged confrontation with Pyongyang. nyti.ms/2g2g9UG

– The Chinese government has been clamping down on virtual currency activity at the same time that hundreds of thousands of Japanese have thrown themselves into Bitcoin trading, making Japan’s main Bitcoin exchange, bitFlyer, the largest in the world in recent weeks by some methods of counting. nyti.ms/2xRnfV7

– Alphabet Inc’s Google is working on new tools that could help news organizations bolster their subscription businesses. nyti.ms/2yhQaTN

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

** Sears Canada Inc will ask the Ontario Superior Court on Wednesday to approve a number of sales, including some that would result in 11 more stores closing and 1,200 more employees losing their jobs after the outlets are liquidated. tgam.ca/2fDeWCt

** SemGroup Corp, the U.S. company known for transporting, storage and processing oil and gas, could jettison its asphalt business in Mexico as it looks to expand its footprint in Alberta, British Columbia with a C$500 million ($400 million) investment. tgam.ca/2fDaMur

** Alberta and Ontario raised their mandatory minimum hourly wage over the weekend, pay increases aimed at reaching C$15 an hour. Alberta’s minimum rate went up by C$1.40 to C$13.60 on Sunday, while Ontario’s level rose by 20 cents to C$11.60. tgam.ca/2fDf4Sn

NATIONAL POST

** Loblaw Companies Ltd said that the company is exploring the possibility of offering grocery home delivery one day and has “engaged” a number of e-commerce innovators around the world, including Instacart. bit.ly/2fDa7Jt

** Housing affordability in Canada hit the worst level in 27 years in the second quarter of this year, according to a Royal Bank of Canada report. The Toronto area was the hardest hit, where RBC says affordability declined the most compared to the previous year. bit.ly/2fD9W0L

** Two men are dead after a shooting outside of a nightclub in downtown Toronto early Sunday morning. Police say they were called to the scene shortly after 3 am. bit.ly/2fCthiC

 

Britain

The Times

The Financial Reporting Council has come under renewed pressure over alleged conflicts of interest after it emerged that a former KPMG partner who works for the regulator had driven through a change in the rules that may later have helped to clear his erstwhile employer over the HBOS audit. bit.ly/2xIuwaC

Chancellor Philip Hammond should enhance tax breaks for investment to bolster confidence among businesses at a time when optimism about the future is falling, the Institute of Directors has claimed. bit.ly/2xIJ0aj

The Guardian

UK’s largest supplier of supermarket chicken 2 Sisters Food Group has suspended production at one of its main processing plants after undercover filming revealed poor hygiene standards and food safety records being altered. bit.ly/2xK2efY

Virgin Group founder Richard Branson will invest in a Red Sea project that aims to turn 50 Saudi Arabian islands into luxury tourism destinations, the Saudi government announced on Sunday. bit.ly/2xIIZn3

The Telegraph

The travel industry is braced for widespread chaos as the future of Monarch Airlines hangs in the balance. The Civil Aviation Authority refused to confirm whether it would grant the budget holiday provider a permanent tour operator licence as a temporary one neared expiry at midnight on ­Sunday. bit.ly/2xJq3V6

Two-thirds of consumers in UK say they won’t share their financial data with a third party, in a blow to the growing push towards so-called ‘open banking’, according to a survey of more than 2,000 people by consultant Accenture. bit.ly/2xIKXDF

Sky News

International Consolidated Airlines Group, parent company of British Airways, has expressed an interest in acquiring some of Monarch Airlines’ take-off and landing slots, fleet and crew – raising hopes that some jobs can be salvaged if UK’s fifth-biggest airline does collapse into administration. bit.ly/2xIyBM0

Ruth Davidson has dismissed suggestions Jeremy Corbyn is a dead cert to be the next Prime Minister, telling the Conservative party conference: “He hasn’t even won a raffle”. bit.ly/2xJvLGk

The Independent

Liam Fox has launched an outspoken attack on the European Union, saying it will risk harming its own people if it refuses to enter talks on a post-Brexit trade deal within weeks. ind.pn/2xJDapu

 

 

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Russia Gold Rush Sees Record Reserves For Putin Era

Russia Gold Rush Sees Record Reserves For Putin Era

by Yuliya Fedorinova of Bloomberg via Irish Indepedent

Vladimir Putin is doing his part to keep the upswing in gold alive.

Since the Russian president went on a geopolitical offensive in Ukraine in 2014, the haven asset had its first annual gain in four years in 2016 and is on track for another in 2017.

Click to enlarge. Russia added another 500,000 ounces of gold to it’s reserves in August. Source: Goldchartsrus.com

A beneficiary of economic and political perils from North Korea to Brexit, it’s among the top-performing commodities this year.

Meanwhile, the Bank of Russia has more than doubled the pace of gold purchases, bringing the share of bullion in its international reserves to the highest of Mr Putin’s 17 years in power, according to World Gold Council data.

In the second quarter alone, it accounted for 38pc of all gold purchased by central banks.

The gold rush is allowing the Bank of Russia to continue growing its reserves while abstaining from purchases of foreign currency for more than two years.

But what may matter most is that gold is as geopolitics-proof an investment as any in the age of sanctions and a deepening rift with the US.

“Gold is an asset that is independent of any government and, in effect, given what is usually held in reserves, any Western government,” said Matthew Turner, metals analyst at Macquarie Group in London. “This might appeal given Russia has faced financial sanctions.”

Besides being the largest official buyer of gold, Russia is also among the world’s three biggest producers, with the central bank purchasing from domestic miners through commercial banks and not in the open market.

Since starting to accelerate bullion purchases in 2007, Russia’s holdings have more than quadrupled to 1,556 tonnes at the end of June, just behind China and more than Turkey, India and Mexico combined, bringing its share in Russia’s $427bn (€361bn) reserves to near 17 percent.

If buying continues at a similar pace, the World Gold Council said the full-year increase in 2017 “could closely match” 2015 and 2016.

Source: Irish Independent

Related Content

Russia Sees Gold Reserves As “Additional Financial Cushion” In Face Of “External Uncertainties”

Russia Gold Buying Returns – Buys One Million Ounces In January

Putin Says Russia and China Must Secure Gold and FX Reserves

Russia Coordinating Gold Reserve Accumulation With Ex Soviet States?

 

News and Commentary

Gold drops to lowest in nearly 7 weeks; stronger dollar, equities weigh (Reuters.com)

Deutsche Bank in $190M currency-rigging settlement (Reuters.com)

U.S. Stocks Hit Records, Fed Talk Weighs on Bonds (Bloomberg.com)

Kevin Warsh is far from a lock to replace Janet Yellen as Fed chair (CNBC.com)

London house prices have fallen for the first time in eight years (CityAM.com)


Demand for gold in September surged with ETF holdings rising most since Feb 2017. Source: ZeroHedge

Gold Demand Surges As Price Suffers Worst Month Since November (ZeroHedge.com)

Trump’s “1500-Word Airball” Tax Plan (DailyReckoning.com)

Stock Market Is Seriously Overvalued Based On This Benchmark (GoldSeek.com)

Macquarie Lashes Out At Dimon: “Modern Finance”, Not Bitcoin, Is The Real Fraud (ZeroHedge.com)

Specter of Hyperinflation in Zimbabwe Triggers Panic Buying (ENCA.com)

Get your insurance while you can, not when you have to… (TheMacroTourist.com)

Gold Prices (LBMA AM)

02 Oct: USD 1,273.10, GBP 956.48 & EUR 1,084.55 per ounce
29 Sep: USD 1,286.95, GBP 963.15 & EUR 1,090.82 per ounce
28 Sep: USD 1,284.30, GBP 961.04 & EUR 1,091.40 per ounce
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

Silver Prices (LBMA)

02 Oct: USD 16.58, GBP 12.46 & EUR 14.12 per ounce
29 Sep: USD 16.86, GBP 12.60 & EUR 14.27 per ounce
28 Sep: USD 16.82, GBP 12.53 & EUR 14.28 per ounce
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


Recent Market Updates

– China Catalyst To Send Gold Over $10,000 Per Ounce?
– Gold Matches S&P 500 Performance In First 3 Quarters; Up 12% 2017 YTD
– Gold Standard Resulted In “Fewer Catastrophes” – FT
– Financial Advice From Man Who Made $1+ Billion in 1929 – Importance Of Being Patient and “Sitting”
– “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

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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Monarch Airlines Files For Insolvency: Britain’s Biggest-Ever Airline Collapse

U.K. leisure carrier Monarch Airlines filed for insolvency on Monday, the biggest ever failure of a British airline, stranding tens of thousands of travellers overseas and prompting the country’s biggest-ever peacetime repatriation effort, as the government has to find a way to to arrange the return of 110,000 tourists, and marking the third failure of a major European operator in five months. Monarch cancelled about 300,000 future bookings and apologized to customers and staff as it became the UK’s largest carrier to go into administration, according to Reuters.

Monarch CEO Andrew Swaffield said the carrier had fallen victim to “outside influences,” especially a flood of seating into its core Mediterranean markets after a spate of terrorist attacks prompted holiday companies to reduce their exposure to Egypt, Tunisia and Turkey. Attempts to sell the short-haul business prior to the insolvency filing failed, he added.

“I am so sorry that thousands now face a cancelled holiday or trip, possible delays getting home and huge inconvenience as a result of our failure,” Swaffield told employees in a message. “I am truly sorry that it has ended like this.”

According to a statement, the airline and Monarch Travel Group were placed under administration, leading to the suspension of the Luton, England-based company’s operating license. Future flights and holidays have been canceled and won’t be rescheduled, affecting a further 300,000 people. Monarch said its companies that entered into administration include Monarch Airlines, Monarch Holidays Ltd, First Aviation Ltd, Avro Ltd and Somewhere2stay Ltd.


A notice for Monarch staff is seen stuck to a door after the airline ceased trading,
at Luton airport in Britain, October 2, 2017

UK transport secretary Chris Grayling said the company fell victim to a price war over flights to the Mediterranean and told customers not to come to airports. “We are doing our best to make sure that those people who are stranded and can’t get back otherwise will be able to do so,” he told BBC television, adding that he expected many of Monarch’s more than 2,000 staff to get jobs elsewhere. The British government has asked the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) to charter more than 30 aircraft to bring back to the UK about 110,000 Monarch customers currently overseas, the CAA said.

As Bloomberg notes, the collapse of Monarch, which served more than 40 destinations from five U.K. bases, follows insolvency filings at Alitalia and Air Berlin as a glut in capacity prompted by the low oil price compels carriers to slash fares in a battle for market share. At the same time, the low-cost operator has seen margins squeezed by higher fuel costs, which are priced in dollars, following the pound’s decline in the wake of last year’s Brexit vote. Tough competition has been pressuring European airlines while driving consolidation and, well, bankruptcies.

Furthermore, the developments at Monarch, which employs 2,100 people, follow on the heels of 20,000 flight cancellations at low-cost rival Ryanair Holdings Plc due to pilot scheduling issues, which have disrupted travel for around 700,000 customers.

The airlines’ collapse will be a headache for some of the world’s largest leasing companies, which financed its current fleet of 36 mainly Airbus jets, and for Boeing, which has sold the airline 32 of its 737 MAX aircraft. None of the planes has yet been delivered. Although relatively small compared to Europe’s leading scheduled carriers, Monarch had been a regular hotspot in the global battle for market share between planemakers as it shifted its loyalties between Airbus and Boeing.

As Reuters adds, Boeing secured Monarch’s agreement to revert back to its jets in 2014 following a fierce contest against Airbus and Bombardier.

“We are working with the joint administrators and the CAA to do everything we possibly can to help minimise disruption where we can, but are under no illusion as to the problems this will cause,” Monarch’s Swaffield said. “And many suppliers will suffer hugely as a result of our insolvency – for which I am equally sorry.”

Flight tracking service Flightradar24 reported that at least 25 aircraft had been lined up to start repatriating passengers by 0600 GMT on Monday, including 10 from Qatar Airways already based in Europe on behalf of British Airways. An easyJet airplane and several charter aircraft were also part of the operation. Hungarian low-cost carrier Wizz Air meanwhile said it was offering to fly stranded Monarch passengers home from Tel Aviv for 119 pounds ($159) each.

* * *

Monarch, which was founded in 1968, has come close to collapse before, with the airline rescued by a 165 million-pound ($220 million) capital injection from Greybull Capital LLP last December, just hours before it faced grounding by the U.K. Civil Aviation Authority due to a lack of funds. Greybull had bought 90% of Monarch in 2014 via a 125 million-pound recapitalization that funded the final elements of a transformation from charter specialist to discount carrier. The private-equity firm said in a statement Monday it was “very sorry” that the three-year turnaround bid failed.

The latest airline banktupcy opens up opportunities for rival operators to expand into former Monarch routes or snap up the carrier’s assets. Cantor Research analyst Rob Byde said in a note that the failure is “another step in the consolidation of the European short-haul market” and that it views EasyJet Plc, Britain’s biggest discount carrier and also based at Luton, as a likely bidder, though a wholesale takeover is unlikely.  According to Bloomberg, British Airways owner International Consolidated Airlines Group SA has expressed interest in Monarch’s takeoff and landing slots, fleet and crew, Sky News reported over the weekend, without saying how it got the information. IAG has a growing discount arm of its own in Barcelona-based Vueling.

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North Korean Ship Carrying 30,000 Rocket Launchers Seized By Egypt

In a fascinating report that provides a glimpse into the shadowy North Korean black-market economy, the Washington Post has published a story about a 2016 incident in which Egyptian authorities intercepted a North Korean ship bearing a Cambodian flag after being alerted by US authorities. After searching the ship, Egyptian law enforcement discovered something unexpected: a trove of nearly 24,000 rocket launchers, and components for 6,000 more weapons, hidden below a large pile of loose iron ore.

But perhaps the biggest surprise for the Egyptian authorities emerged when they tried to determine for whom the weapons were intended, and discovered that they had been secretly purchased by the Egyptian military in violation of international sanctions against NK arms sales. Further compounding the irony, Egypt had recently joined the UN Security Council – the international body sponsoring said sanctions – before deciding to circumvent them and buy the weapons.

As has been widely reported in the US media, North Korea reaps profits from several illegal rackets, believed to include counterfeiting of US dollars to the sale and distribution of methamphetamine. Now, we can add to that list the clandestine sale of Soviet-area conventional weapons, of which the North retains a massive stockpile, though it also manufactures its own copies.

According to WaPo, North Korea continues to sell arms to a handful of countries, including Chad and the Congo, which have relied on North Korea to equip their armies for decades, largely because of one simple reason: North Korea is one of the few remaining manufacturers of Soviet-era arms and components. For military managers in smaller, cash strapped economies, being able to upgrade their existing weapons systems with North Korean arms instead of replacing their entire inventory.

The WaPo story, which appears to stem from a UN Security Council report about the incident that was shared with the reporter, details the backlash that Egypt faced – the incident was one reason why the Trump administration abruptly withheld nearly $300 million in development aid to Egypt over the summer, an announcement made during a trip by Jared Kushner to discuss terror-related matters with Egyptian officials.

But it’s unclear whether the US, which has struggled to strangle the North Korea economy for years, only to see the country continue making progress on its weapons program with the help of Ukrainian rocket-engine manufacturers and various conventional-arms clients.  

The incident highlights just how reluctant many of North Korea’s clients may be to give up their relationship with the isolated North for one simple reason: they can buy better weapons for lower prices.

But U.S. officials confirmed that delivery of the rockets was foiled only when U.S. intelligence agencies spotted the vessel and alerted Egyptian authorities through diplomatic channels – essentially forcing them to take action – said current and former U.S. officials and diplomats briefed on the events. The officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss U.S. and U.N. findings, said the Jie Shun episode was one of a series of clandestine deals that led the Trump administration to freeze or delay nearly $300 million in military aid to Egypt over the summer.

 

Whether North Korea was ever paid for the estimated $23 million rocket shipment is unclear. But the episode illustrates one of the key challenges faced by world leaders in seeking to change North Korea’s behavior through economic pressure. Even as the United States and its allies pile on the sanctions, Kim continues to quietly reap profits from selling cheap conventional weapons and military hardware to a list of customers and beneficiaries that has at times included Iran, Burma, Cuba, Syria, Eritrea and at least two terrorist groups, as well as key U.S. allies such as Egypt, analysts said.

 

Some customers have long-standing military ties with Pyongyang, while others have sought to take advantage of the unique market niche created by North Korea: a kind of global eBay for vintage and refurbished Cold War-era weapons, often at prices far lower than the prevailing rates.

And as international sanctions against the regime has tightened, North Korea has become adept as smuggling, relying on ships bearing “false flags” (like the Cambodian flag flown by the Jie Shun, the North Korean ship intercepted by North Korea authorities) and concealing illegal cargo.

Over time, the small-arms trade has emerged as a reliable source of cash for a regime with considerable expertise in the tactics of running contraband, including the use of “false flag” shipping and the clever concealment of illegal cargo in bulk shipments of legitimate goods such as sugar or — as in the case of the Jie Shun — a giant mound of loose iron ore.

 

“These cover materials not only act to obfuscate shipments, but really highlights the way that licit North Korean businesses are being used to facilitate North Korean illicit activity,” said David Thompson, a senior analyst and investigator of North Korean financial schemes for the Center for Advanced Defense Studies, a nonprofit research organization based in Washington. “It is this nesting which makes this illicit activity so hard to identify.”

The weapons discovered by the Egyptian authorities, which were headed to a shell company later revealed to be a front for the military, were North Korean copies of the Soviet-era PG-7, a variant of a weapon first built in the 1960s.

Asked about the boxes, the crew produced a bill of lading listing the contents, in awkward English, as “assembly parts of the underwater pump.” But after the last of the 79 crates was unloaded and opened at Egypt’s al-Adabiyah port, it was clear that this was a weapons shipment like none other: more than 24,000 rocket-propelled grenades, and completed components for 6,000 more. All were North Korean copies of a rocket warhead known as the PG-7, a variant of a Soviet munition first built in the 1960s.

 

A closer examination by U.N. experts would reveal yet another deception, this one apparently intended to fool the weapons’ Egyptian recipients: Each of the rockets bore a stamp with a manufacturing date of March 2016, just a few months before the Jie Shun sailed. But the label, like the manifest, was false.

 

“On-site analysis revealed that they were not of recent production,” the U.N. report said, “but rather had been stockpiled for some time.”

And despite the latest string of US sanctions, as well as the US’s attempt to make an example out of Egypt by cutting its aid, the North continues to do a brisk business with clients who can’t access, or can’t afford, weapons from other suppliers – clients that include the regime of Bashar al-Assad and groups like Hezbollah. The North has created something of a market niche for itself: selling replicas of Soviet arms no longer available in commercial markets. Even Libya's former dictator Gaddafi bought weapons from NK.

The sanctions stigma inevitably scared away some potential buyers, but the trading in the shadows remains brisk, intelligence officials and Western diplomats say. Some remaining clients are fellow pariah states such as Syria, whose recent purchases have included chemical-weapons protective gear. Other long-term customers are nonstate actors such as the militant group Hezbollah, which has acquired North Korean rockets and missiles from arms smugglers and sympathetic regimes. North Korean-made rifles have even been recovered from the bodies of Islamic State fighters in Iraq and Syria, although U.S. officials believe the guns were probably looted from stocks sold to the late Libyan leader Moammar Gaddafi years earlier.

 

Still other customers look to North Korea as one of the last suppliers of low-cost parts and ammunition for older weapons systems that are scarcely found in commercial markets. The list includes sub-Saharan African countries such as Uganda and Congo, which for decades relied on North Korea to train and equip their armies.

Even Egypt, a longtime US aid recipient and ally, has an arms-buying relationship with Pyongyang that stretches back to the 1970s. And as several experts quoted in the story claimed, these old habits are difficult to break.

The list also includes Egypt, a major U.S. aid recipient that still maintains diplomatic ties and has a history of military-to-military ties dating back to the 1970s with Pyongyang, said Berger, the Middlebury researcher. Although Cairo has publicly sworn off dealing with North Korea, she said, incidents such as the Jie Shun show how hard it is to break old habits, especially for military managers seeking to extend the life of costly weapons systems.

 

Egypt’s army today still has dozens of weapons systems that were originally of Soviet design. Among them are at least six types of antitank weapons, including the RPG-7, the 1960s-era grenade-launcher that uses the same PG-7 warhead as those discovered on the Jie Shun. The number of Egyptian RPG-7 tubes in active service has been estimated at nearly 180,000.

 

“Egypt was a consistent North Korean customer in the past,” Berger said. “I would call them a ‘resilient’ customer today.”

When the Egyptians were first confronted by the US and the UN about the military’s involvement in buying arms from North Korea, the country’s first move was to deny the claims, before moving to suppress an official UN report about the incident.

When Egyptian officials were first confronted about their country’s possible ties to the Jie Shun’s rockets, the response was denial, followed by obfuscation, Western diplomats said.

 

At the time of the discovery, Egypt was a newly elected nonpermanent member of the U.N. Security Council, and its delegation resisted including information in official reports linking Egyptian officials or businesses to illicit North Korean weapons, said U.S. officials and diplomats familiar with the discussions. The embassy statement said Egyptian officials sought only minor delays to ensure that their views on the events were properly reflected. It noted that Security Council officials had “recognized and praised Egypt’s role” in assisting the investigation.

 

In any case, the February U.N. report on the incident sidesteps the question of who was meant to receive the rockets, saying only that the munitions were destroyed by Egypt under U.N. supervision, and that “the destination and end user of the equipment was investigated by the Egyptian general prosecutor.”

So, for anybody wondering how Kim Jong Un manages to afford all that caviar and expensive whiskey, not to mention ballistic missiles, this should provide some insight. And as the US seeks to strangle the North Korean economy in hopes of forcing them to the negotiating table (if that is still the plan; recent comments from President Trump has suggested otherwise) North Korea’s longstanding black-market ties might prove too difficult to sever.

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Chilling Warning Before Shooting Attack: “You Are All Going To Die”

45 minutes before 64-year-old Stephen Paddock opened fire on unsuspecting concert goers on the Las Vegas strip, killing at least 50 and wounding more than 200, in what the AP described as the deadliest mass shooting in modern US history, an unknown female reportedly made a chilling warning. According to The Express, one woman who was at the Route 91 music event, claimed an unidentified woman had told other concert-goers they were “all going to die” after pushing her way to the front of the venue.

The witness, 21, told local news: “She had been messing with a lady in front of her and telling her she was going to die, that we were all going to die.

“They escorted her out to make her stop messing around with all the other people, but none of us knew it was going to be serious.”

She described the lady as Hispanic and was escorted from the venue along with a man. The unnamed witness, who was attending the event on her 21st birthday, described the pair as short, both around 5 ft 5ins to 5ft 6ins tall, and looked like “everyday people”.

She added she and her friends had just made it back to their hotel room when the gunfire started. Marilou Danley, who police are currently searching for as part of their investigation, is said to be an Asian woman and approximately 4ft 11ins in height. Mr Lombardo said: “We have not located her at this time ad we are invested in talking to her for follow-up.”

Police are also looking for two cars, a Hyundai Tuscon B40 with Nevada plate 114B40 and a Chrysler Pacific Touring with the licence plate 19D401. Both vehicles are registered to the suspect located the Las Vegas hotel.

Chilling video emerged earlier showing the moment gunshots ring out during the busy music festival, cutting short Jason Aldean’s appearance as the packed out audience escaped the shooter in terror.

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Spanish Stocks, Bonds, Euro Sink After Catalan Referendum Fiasco; S&P Futures Rise

While S&P futures were modestly higher, rising 0.1% in a quiet session in which China, South Korea, India and Hong Kong were closed for holidays, the Euro, Spanish stocks and bonds were broadly lower as Spain faces its worst constitutional crisis in years following a dramatic, violent crackdown on Sunday’s Catalan independence referendum in which 89% of the voters wanted to secede from Spain.

Spain’s IBEX benchmark index IBEX fell as much as 1.3% (down -1.0% latest), vs a 0.3% gain for Stoxx 600, after Catalan separatist leaders signaled they may be moving toward a unilateral declaration of independence as early as this week. Spanish banks were among the biggest fallers, especially the regionally focused Banco de Sabadell, CaixaBank, and Bankinter.

The Euro was one of the worst performers among major currency peers after a the violence-marred vote in Catalonia spurred the regional government to press toward a unilateral declaration of independence.

The tensions also had a clear impact in the bond market, with Spanish premiums climbing over comparable German debt. In addition to hitting Spain’s IBEX index, Catalonia’s independence vote over the weekend amid scenes of unrest and violence has pressured the bonds of Spain and its restive province. Catalonia’s 4.95% of 11/2020 dropped 0.35% Monday morning to 104.747 bid according to Bloomberg, its lowest since Aug. 2016. Spanish government bonds also selling off; 10Y yield has spiked 7bps to 1.68%, off initial high of 1.697%, the highest since July 14. The Bund/bono spread was wider by as much as 8bps.

The tension in Spain “is not a game-changer for the euro, but it is likely to weigh — shifting the narrative away from the political optimism that followed Macron’s victory,” wrote RBC Capital Markets strategists led by Sue Trinh in Hong Kong, referring to President Emmanuel Macron’s victory in the French election earlier this year.

Elsewhere, European equities opened modestly higher after a mixed session for holiday-hit Asian markets, supported by mining sector following a stronger than expected official Chinese PMI and healthcare stocks; the DAX outperforms. Core fixed-income markets rally from lows with large block trade noted in 10y USTs.  The pound dropped against the dollar for the sixth time in seven days amid concerns about the stability of U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May’s government.

Asian stocks were mixed as China, Hong Kong, India and South Korean markets closed for public holidays. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index rose less than 0.1% to 161.20. BHP Billiton Ltd. and miners gained after China reported better-than-expected manufacturing activity. Nissan Motor Co. slumped after suspending car registrations in Japan. Australia’s equity benchmark headed for its biggest daily gain since July after China, its top trading partner, reported an unexpectedly strong mfg PMI print, which rose to a 5 year high, and announced plans to cut the amount of required reserves banks must hold as reserves for certain loans. Nissan dropped as much as 5.4 percent, leading the decline in Japanese carmakers.

“A stronger dollar may spur some fund outflows from the region, dampening any further rally in their equities,” Komsorn Prakobphol, an investment strategist at Tisco Financial Group Pcl, said by phone. “Market activities in the region will be very slow this week with the closure of some major markets, especially in China.”

Elsewhere, the Eurodollar curve steepened and the dollar held an overnight bid as market continues to react to possibility of hawkish Fed appointment of Kevin Warsh. As Bloomberg notes, the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index started off the last quarter of the year on a strong footing as the market focused on tax reforms in the U.S. and the possibility that the next Federal Reserve Chair comes from the hawkish camp.  As bets rise on Kevin Warsh becoming the next Chair, traders discussed a July article in which he praised President Donald Trump’s policies in being able to “significantly improve the economy’s growth prospects”. In January, Warsh, a former Federal Reserve governor, argued that policy makers were too short-term focused and missed opportunities to raise rates by pursuing what he called a “ride-the-wind” policy.” Even if a hawkish Fed would come as a burden to Trump’s efforts to significantly boost economic growth, optimism among dollar bulls that his administration will finally deliver upon electoral pledges on tax reforms supported the greenback. The dollar gained versus all of its Group-of-10 peers while the index headed for a move above September highs (see chart). The euro was among the main underperformers, though traders discounted unrest in Catalonia as the key factor.

Gold fell and West Texas oil halted gains above $51 a barrel after Baker Hughes data showed the U.S. rig count climbing to 750 last week. The pound dropped against the dollar for the sixth time in seven days amid concerns about the stability of U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May’s government.

Investors await U.S. manufacturing data for clues on the speed of economic recovery. “September manufacturing PMI data will draw the market’s attention today,” Rabobank strategist Jane Foley said in a note. “scheduled remarks from the Fed’s Kaplan could provide further clues as to the central bank’s thinking. At the end of the week attention will be drawn to the release of the September U.S. labor report.”

Bulletin Headline Summary from RanSquawk

  • European equities trade relatively flat. IBEX the notable underperformer following the fallout of this weekend’s Catalonian referendum
  • The USD continues to broadly out-muscle its major counterparts amid speculation of potential successors to current chair Yellen
  • Looking ahead, highlights include US ISM Manufacturing, ECB’s Praet and Fed’s Kaplan

Market Snapshot

  • S&P 500 futures up 0.14% to 2,519.50
  • VIX Index increases 1% after four days of declines
  • STOXX Europe 600 up 0.3% to 389.06
  • MSCI Asia down 0.05% to 161.09
  • MSCI Asia ex Japan up 0.2% to 530.57
  • Nikkei up 0.2% to 20,400.78
  • Topix down 0.07% to 1,673.62
  • Hang Seng Index up 0.5% to 27,554.30
  • Shanghai Composite up 0.3% to 3,348.94
  • Sensex unchanged at 31,283.72
  • Australia S&P/ASX 200 up 0.8% to 5,729.33
  • Kospi up 0.9% to 2,394.47
  • German 10Y yield rose 1.6 bps to 0.48%
  • Euro down 0.6% to $1.1741
  • Brent Futures down 0.3% to $56.63/bbl
  • Italian 10Y yield fell 1.1 bps to 1.818%
  • Spanish 10Y yield rose 6.6 bps to 1.67%
  • WTI crude down 0.5% to $51.42, Brent retreats 1.7% to $56.58
  • Gold spot down 0.5% to $1,273.35
  • U.S. Dollar Index up 0.6% to 93.59

Top Headline News:

  • A lone gunman opened fire on the Las Vegas strip, killing at least 20 and wounding 100
  • Catalans Signal They May Declare Independence Within a Week; Rajoy Says Catalan Ballot Is Void, Defending Police Crackdown
  • President Donald Trump’s admonishment of Secretary of State Rex Tillerson for “wasting his time’’ in seeking negotiations with North Korea further highlighted differences within the administration on how best to get Kim Jong Un to halt his nuclear weapons program
  • On the last page of a nine-page tax plan that calls for slashing business rates, President Trump and congressional Republicans proposed a little-noticed, brand-new tax that may hit companies like Apple Inc.and Pfizer Inc
  • On the verge of his scheduled visit to the hurricane-devastated U.S. territory of Puerto Rico, Trump suggested islanders struggling without basic services were lazy, and that the mayor of its largest city was a poor leader and a politically-motivated “ingrate”
  • U.S. manufacturing probably expanded solidly in September after the fastest growth in six years, as steady consumer spending and business investment fuel the nation’s factories. The Institute for Supply Management will issue the data today as well
  • Other American data this week include trade, durable goods and Friday’s September non-farm payrolls report, which may have less predictive power than usual for the economic outlook due to likely distortions from hurricanes that hit from late August
  • After a two-day pause the dollar is adding to gains from last week, when it benefited from speculation President Donald Trump could opt for a Fed boss who might pursue more aggressive policy tightening, not to mention details of the administration’s tax plans
  • Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan speaks in El Paso

Asia-Pac equity markets were mostly higher on what was a holiday quietened day with China, Hong Kong South Korea and India all shut for holiday. Nonetheless, the positive momentum from last Friday’s US session where the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite ended Q3 at fresh record levels rolled over to the region with ASX 200 (+0.8%) outperforming on broad based gains, while a PBoC announcement of targeted RRR cuts from 2018 and Chinese Official Manufacturing PMI at its highest since 2012 added to the optimism due to Australia’s heavy exposure. Nikkei 225 (+0.2%) was also positive, albeit to a  lesser extent as participants digested the latest Tankan survey in which most components beat estimates including a decade-high headline Large Manufacturing Index, although Large All Industry Capex disappointed. 10yr JGBs were lower as they tracked the declines in USTs, while prices were also pressured alongside a positive risk tone and the absence of the BoJ in the market today. Chinese Official Manufacturing PMI (Sep) 52.4 vs. Exp. 51.5 (Prev. 51.7) Highest since 2012. Chinese Non-Manufacturing PMI (Sep) 55.4 (Prev. 53.4) Chinese Caixin Manufacturing PMI (Sep) 51.0 vs. Exp. 51.5 (Prev. 51.6)

PBoC announced it would cut RRR for some banks that meet certain requirements for lending to small business and the agricultural sector beginning in 2018. The PBoC said that a wide majority of China’s banks would be eligible for at least a 50bps cut but reiterated that it will implement a prudent and neutral monetary policy while keeping liquidity basically stable and that the announcement was a structural adjustment and not a shift in monetary policy. The Japanese Tankan Large Manufacturing Index (Q3) printed at 22 vs. Exp. 18 (Prev. 17). Highest since 2007.

Top Asia News

  • Trump Tells Tillerson North Korea Outreach a Waste of Time
  • GLP to Buy Gazeley for Approximately 2.4B Euros
  • Greenko Makes $2.1b Bid for Reliance’s Mumbai Power Business: ET
  • Capital to Buy $200m Stake in India’s InterGlobe Technology: ET
  • Indonesia Open to Extending Freeport’s IUPK Beyond October
  • TSMC Chairman Chang to Retire and Hand Reins to Co-CEOs in June
  • Noble Group Is Said to Get $400 Million Financing From Mercuria
  • Singapore REITs Heat Up as OCBC Taps Stock-Alternative Demand

European equities initially traded marginally higher across the boar . The main outlier has been the Spanish IBEX (-1.0%) amid the growing concerns across Spain and the Catalonia region.
Housing names outperform in the FTSE, as PM May has stated that the government will find an extra GBP 10bln for the help to buy
scheme. Barratt Homes trades up around 4% and leads the UK index, closely followed by easyJet and Ryanair, both benefiting
amid the pending administration from competitor, Monarch Airlines. Spanish bonds underperform amid the aforementioned political unrest across Spain. The Spanish 10y yield gapped up to trade through September’s highs, with 1.75% the next touted resistance, previously rejected in April and June. Bonds trade lower across the board, with the German 10y witnessing a similar upside gap, but finding continued resistance at 0.50%.

Top European News

  • Banks’ Brexit Moving Costs Are Seen Topping $500 Million Each
  • Portuguese Premier Costa Boosted by Gains in Municipal Elections
  • ECB’s Georghadji Says It’s Too Soon to Declare Stimulus Success
  • JPMorgan’s Pinto to Hand Over Leadership of EMEA Operation: FT
  • CaixaBank, Sabadell Most Exposed on Catalan Instability: MS
  • Sampo Agrees to Buy 19.9% of Saxo Bank for EU265 Mln
  • Luxury Sector Expected to See Further M&A Deals, HSBC Says
  • Why Austria May Elect the World’s Youngest Leader: QuickTake Q&A
  • Euro Factories Add Jobs in Struggle to Keep Up With Order Boom

In currencies, the EUR saw selling pressure amid the political unrest seen in Catalonia over the weekend. Further weight has been put on EUR, with US rates now gaining significantly vs. Germany. Despite the bearish concerns for EUR/USD, last week’s lows have not been tested, with Asian trade limited amid various holidays. EUR/USD longs continue to get squeezed, with the pair trading through the long-term trendline support. A break of the August 1.1660 low could further trigger stops, aiding the bearish pressure. The DXY has seen a bid through the session, reacting to the shortlist for the pending Fed Chair position being all but declared. Yellen, Powell, Cohn and Warsh have all been interviewed, with markets indicating that President Trump could sway toward a more hawkish head. A slowdown ahead of September’s highs has seen the current bullish momentum run out of steam, with a break through 93.66 set to be the next target for greenback bulls. Elsewhere, GBP has seen some selling pressure this morning amid an uncertain political backdrop and disappointing data. More specifically, UK manufacturing PMI printed at 55.9 below the expected 56.4 which added to the downbeat sentiment amid weekend reports suggesting a lack of unity in PM May’s Cabinet. This has subsequently lead to some supporters of May calling for her to dismiss Foreign Secretary Johnson. Furthermore, this also comes ahead of this week’s Conservative Party conference which could also help to highlight the divisions in the party.

In commodities, price action has been subdued, finding a slow start to the week as a result of the lack of Asian trade. Forecasts for US shale oil growth and uncertainty around China’s crude imports could possibly add to the recent bullish pressure that has been witnessed across oil markets. Precious Metals continue to be led by the unwind in Gold, as markets are seemingly unwinding geopolitical concerns. Gold trades back inside the March – August range, as silver looks to break through 16.50. Iraq says oil exports average for September was 3.24mln bpd. Libya’s Sharara Oil Field has been closed since late yesterday, according to engineers. Libya’s NOC say that they are making efforts to restore production at their Sharara Oil Field and that there are currently no plans to declare a force majeure at the site.

Looking at the day ahead, we’ve got the September ISM manufacturing print as well as the final September manufacturing PMI and August construction spending readings.

US Event Calendar

  • 9:45am: Markit US Manufacturing PMI, est. 53, prior 53
  • 10am: ISM Manufacturing, est. 58, prior 58.8; Prices Paid, est. 63.5, prior 62; New Orders, prior 60.3; Employment, prior 59.9
  • 10am: Construction Spending MoM, est. 0.4%, prior -0.6%
  • 2pm: Fed’s Kaplan Speaks in El Paso

DB’s Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

Welcome to October and Q4. It’s another busy week ahead with Payrolls to look forward to on Friday, although the report is likely to be blown apart by the recent two hurricanes. Continuing to work backwards on the main highlights of the week, Thursday sees the latest ECB minutes and Wednesday the services PMIs/ISM. We also have the UK Conservative Party conference over the next few days which will likely have lots of conflicting headlines on Brexit. Don’t forget that the US budget discussion headlines will never be too far away from your screens. Today sees the crucial manufacturing PMIs/ISMs across the globe. Given how correlated they’ve been to equity performance they are a vital report for the immediate direction of markets. Over the weekend China has already seen a stronger than expected official manufacturing PMI (52.4 vs 51.6 expected and 51.7 last month). This is one of the lower readings in the world at the moment but is still at 5 and a half year highs. The private Caixin equivalent was lower though (51 vs 51.5 expected) with this report having a bias towards smaller companies and exporters. The official non-manufacturing PMI was higher though (55.4 vs 53.4 last month). Staying with China, the PBoC have also announced a targeted RRR cut for some banks in 2018. DB’s Zhiwei Zhang thinks this is as much to offset tightening from macro prudential regulation. China is on holidays this week alongside a few other Asian markets so there is no immediate local reaction, although the Aussie ASX is +0.91% higher seemingly on the China news. Elsewhere the Nikkei is +0.14%, the Euro is -0.34% (see below on Catalonia) and 10 year JGBs and USTs are up 1.5bp and 2bps respectively following on from the sell-off in the latter half of Friday on the Warsh news.

The big news over the weekend was probably the strange and disturbing images in Spain as the “illegal” independence referendum took place to chaotic and sometimes violent scenes. The wires are reporting yesterday’s events as a PR disaster for Spanish PM Rajoy so how he responds will be important. The Catalan government spokesman Jordon Turull has said that around 2 million out of 2.3 million voted for independence (around 5 million eligible to vote). It seems there is a good chance they will declare independence over the next few days which in turn could force Mr Rajoy to use constitutional laws and revoke Catalonia’s autonomy. As a minimum Mr Rajoy’s minority government is going to be severely tested by this constitutional nightmare. The realistic end game is talks, compromise and perhaps more money transferred between Madrid and the Catalonians. However such talks are bound to be more fraught now.

While its hard to see what the immediate macro spill overs could be, its another example that politics is getting more extreme across the world. Even in a year where the edge has been taken off populism by strong growth, we’ve still seen the establishment defeated in France, the AfD do better than expected in Germany, the meteoric rise of the hard left Jeremy Corbyn from the political ashes in the UK, the S5M still neck and neck in the Italian polls and now all the passions behind this vote in Spain. Extreme politics continues to bubble under the surface. Weaker economic times ahead might tip it back into the mainstream at some point.

Talking of politics, before this the big story on Friday was news that Mr Trump and Treasury Secretary Mnuchin had met with former Fed Governor Kevin Warsh (amongst others – see below) to discuss nominating him as the next Fed Chair. The President himself then suggesting late on Friday that a decision could be made in the next 2-3 weeks which is accelerated relative to previous expectations. Warsh is now seemingly one of four front-running candidates (including Yellen, Powell and Cohn) and he would likely be the most market moving as he has been subtly critical of the Fed in recent times. As DB’s Peter Hooper pointed out on Friday, one thread of his criticism has been over the size of the Fed’s balance sheet, suggesting that it poses risk of “fiscal dominance” – potential for fiscal policy to drive monetary policy decisions. Peter also reminds us that one of his clearest comments on monetary policy came in a January article in the WSJ , where he said: “..the Fed should establish an inflation objective of around 1% to 2%, with a band of acceptable outcomes. The current 2.0% inflation target offers false precision.” So with inflation currently in the middle of this range, there is more reason to continue raising rates on this line of thinking. Whether he would be more mainstream if brought into this role is open to conjecture but by him being in the race the prospect of more hawkish policy increases. He would also be expected to be more dovish on financial regulation and it was therefore understandable that higher yields and looser regulation led to Banks being one of the better performers in the US on Friday. Our take is that he is the favourite if Mr Trump sees deregulation as the most important criteria and maybe him being hawkish on rates might take the pressure of the credibility issue of Mr Trump appointing someone who will be seen as someone who would keep rates too low for too long on a political whim.

Before Warsh turned the session round, bonds were enjoying some respite from the recent sell-off after the US PCE miss (0.1% vs 0.2% MoM expected). 10 year Treasuries were trading at around 2.30% after PCE, a bps or so lower on the day and 6bps off the post-tax reform euphoria highs. However we closed at 2.334% after the Warsh news and this morning in Asia we’re trading at 2.353% as we type. This followed a risk-on end to the quarter with the S&P 500 climbing +0.37% on Friday, the Dax +0.98%, and the FTSE and CAC both +0.68%. The peripherals mildly underperformed. 10 years Bunds were down -1.5bps mostly following the inflation miss rather than the Warsh news. All other European 10yrs Govvies were around 1-3bps lower.

Over the course of the week it did feel like some of the momentum was back for the bond bears with the Warsh news coming in the week of more information than perhaps expected on the Republican’s tax plans. The view of our rates strategists are that the chance of unfunded tax cuts has risen after last week and as such their should be some justifiable move to higher yields. On the tax plan, DB’s Luzzetti, Ryan & Weidner published a detailed piece late on Friday (Link) explaining their current thoughts and going into detail on the plans as we know them so far and the legislative challenges ahead. Despite the high level of uncertainly, they use the Fed’s model of the US economy to assess the macroeconomic implications of the Republican tax plan. Assuming tax cuts are enacted in Q1 2018, the full tax plan would lift growth by about 0.4pp by end-2018 and cause the Fed to undertake nearly two additional rate hikes by end-2019. A more modest tax plan in line with our expectations would lift 2018 growth by 0.2pp and cause the Fed to undertake almost one additional rate hike by end-2019. Note that the overall profile of hikes on this model are way above current market expectations.

Before the performance review we move on to this week’s full calendar now. 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.

via http://ift.tt/2xJW6nO Tyler Durden

Shooter At Las Vegas Concert Kills 20, Injures Over 100

At least 20 people were killed and more than 100 wounded after a gunman on the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay casino opened fire on an outdoor music festival on the Las Vegas Strip late Sunday, according to the WSJ.  Police said they were first alerted to reports of an incident at 10:08 p.m. and then determined there was a shooter on the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay Hotel and Casino who was targeting the nearby Route 91 Harvest Festival.

Officers confronted the suspect at the Mandalay Bay Hotel and Casino across the street from the concert, Clark County Sheriff Joseph Lombardo said.

Authorities say the man died. Police did not release the suspect’s name but said he was a local resident.

Lombardo said they believe this was a “lone wolf” attack but said they were looking for a roommate of the dead suspect as a person of interest. The two slain off-duty officers were attending the concert, Lombardo said. An on-duty officer was in critical condition and another was wounded, Lombardo said.

Concertgoers reported seeing muzzle flashes from the 32 floor of the Mandalay Bay across Las Vegas Boulevard from the country music festival and the sound of what they described as automatic gunfire.

Video footage captured the moment an active shooter opened fire at the concert on the Las Vegas strip.

Witnesses said they saw multiple victims as they fled the gunfire raining down on the concert venue. Some later huddled in the basement of the nearby Tropicana hotel-casino.

Joseph Lombardo of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department said in a briefing that officers responded and shot dead the suspect. He said the suspect was a local resident but declined to identify him, citing the ongoing investigation.

Police are also trying to locate a female companion, who they named as Marilou Danley, who was traveling with the suspect.

“We are comfortable that the primary aggressor in this event has expired, or passed away, and is no longer a threat,” Sheriff Lombardo said. “We are pretty confident there is no longer a threat.”

In a statement, the Mandalay Bay said that “law enforcement requested that we put hotels in the vicinity on lockdown to ensure guest safety.”

University Medical Center of Southern Nevada spokeswomna Danita Cohen said that her hospital had received approximately 50 patients from the scene, two of whom had died, and “several” were in critical condition. Local television news reports showed crowds of people in Las Vegas ducking for cover as the sound of rapid gunshots rang out, while dozens of patrol vehicles descended on the Strip.

The Mandalay Bay is at the far southern end of the Las Vegas Strip, the four-mile-long bustling tourist corridor lined with casinos, restaurants and other attractions. The resort and surrounding area is adjacent to McCarran International Airport. The airport temporarily suspended all flights because of the incident before partially reopening, it said in posts on its verified Twitter account.

Jose Baggett, 31, a Las Vegas resident, said he and a friend were in the lobby of the Luxor hotel-casino — directly north of the festival — when people began running. He said people were crying and as he and his friend walked away, they encountered police checkpoints where officers were carrying shotguns and assault rifles.

“There were armored personnel vehicles, SWAT vehicles, ambulances, and at least a half-mile of police cars,” Baggett said.

Some officers took cover behind their vehicles while others carrying assault rifles ran into the Mandalay Bay Hotel and Casino. Authorities shut down part of the Las Vegas Strip and Interstate 15.

Witnesses say country singer Jason Aldean was playing near the end of the concert when gunfire rang out. Hours after the shooting, Aldean posted on Instagram that he and his crew were safe and said the shooting was “beyond horrific.”

Several officers from California were attending the music festival. A Bakersfield police officer was shot and taken to the hospital with non-life threatening injuries.

Kodiak Yazzie, 36, said he and his girlfriend were watching Aldean’s performance when he heard what sounded like fireworks. The music stopped temporarily and started up again before another round of pops sent the performers ducking for cover and fleeing the stage. Thousands fled as bursts of gunfire could be heard for more than five minutes, Yazzie said.

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

The FT Defends Soros Against Conspiracy-Theory-Peddling Propagandists

For a new generation of nationalists (by which they clearly imply tin-foil-hat wearing, nazi-sympathizing, probably-drug-taking, conspiracy-theory-loving wonks), The FT's Gideon Rachman explains – for those not willing to think for themselves, or follow the money, that the billionaire investor has become the perfect villain

George Soros, the billionaire investor and philanthropist, has had a busy year.

Since the beginning of 2017, he has faked a chemical attack in Syria, funded anti-Trump marches in Washington, come up with the “Soros plan” to flood Hungary with refugees, forced a change of government in Macedonia, undermined the Israeli prime minister and got several key White House aides sacked.

Not bad for a man of 87.

All of the above are, of course, conspiracy theories. But the fact that they have surfaced this year — and all feature the name of Mr Soros — is not just a curiosity. It says something important and worrying about global politics.

In the 1990s, Mr Soros was in tune with the spirit of the age, as he used the billions he had made in finance to support the transition to democracy in post-communist Europe and elsewhere. But now the global political climate has changed and liberal ideas are in retreat. For a new generation of nationalists — from the US to Russia and Hungary — Mr Soros has become the perfect villain. He is an internationalist in an age of nationalism. He is a supporter of individual rights, not group rights. He is the 29th-richest man in the world, according to the Forbes rich list. And he is also Jewish, so is easily cast in the role of the shadowy and manipulative international financier, once reserved for the Rothschilds.

One of the nastier bits of anti-Soros propaganda this year explicitly linked him to the old slurs against the Rothschilds. When America First nationalists became worried that HR McMaster, national security adviser to President Donald Trump, was purging their allies in the White House, they set up a website called “McMaster leaks” which featured a cartoon of Mr McMaster being manipulated by puppetmasters labelled “Soros” and “Rothschilds”.

In 1989, one of the beneficiaries of a Soros scholarship to study at Oxford was a young Hungarian activist named Viktor Orban. Today, the same Mr Orban is prime minister of Hungary and demonises his one-time benefactor. The Hungarian leader has made denunciation of an alleged “Soros plan” to flood Hungary with Muslims central to his re-election campaign. There is no such plan. What is true is that Mr Soros is a generous backer of refugee charities and has also supported the EU’s plan to resettle Syrian refugees across the bloc, including in Hungary. That was excuse enough for Mr Orban to plaster the country with posters featuring a grinning Mr Soros, and urging: “Don’t let Soros have the last laugh.”

The demonisation of Mr Soros in Hungary, where he was born, is not an isolated case. In the past year, he has been denounced by political leaders in Macedonia, Poland, Romania and Turkey, all of whom claim he is plotting against them.

The paranoid right in America also churns out anti-Soros material. As long ago as 2007, Mr Soros was denounced on Fox News as the “Dr Evil of the whole world of leftwing foundations”. The origins of Soros-hatred in the US may date back to his opposition to the Iraq war. His support of liberal causes in the US, as well as of international institutions such as the UN, has kept the farright pot boiling.

There is clearly an echo-chamber element to the anti-Soros campaigns around the world, as far-right groups pick up on the same conspiracy theories.

But some strongman leaders have more concrete reasons to fear Mr Soros’s Open Society Foundation, which funds civil society organisations that promote education, a free press, minority rights and anti-corruption initiatives. In 2015, Vladimir Putin’s government chucked the Open Society Foundation out of Russia since it was no longer willing to tolerate the latter’s support for organisations such as Memorial, which promoted research into the Soviet terror.

Mr Soros’s activities have even made him a target in Israel. The obvious anti-Semitism in many of the anti-Soros campaigns around the world evidently matters less to the Netanyahu government than Mr Soros’s support for Palestinian rights and other causes unpopular on the Israeli right.

There is also a personal element in prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s anti-Soros ire. As an anti-corruption probe has got closer and closer to Israel’s first family, so they have lashed out against Mr Soros. Yair Netanyahu, the prime minister’s son, complained recently that the “Fund for the Destruction of Israel, funded by Soros and the European Union, is threatening me”. He even republished a cartoon of Mr Soros dangling the world in front of a reptilian creature, the kind of image that his father would routinely denounce as anti-Semitic if it had been published by another source.

Conspiracy theorists have an explanation for everything. So the fact that the FT should publish a column defending Mr Soros will simply be taken as further evidence of his nefarious influence. For the record, I have had precisely two conversations with Mr Soros. On both occasions, we were on the same public panel at seminars organised by the European Council on Foreign Relations, a think-tank that he partially funds.

We have never had a private conversation and I certainly would not claim him as a friend. But I have no hesitation in applauding his philanthropy.

The fact that it even needs to be defended says something sad about the times we are living in.

*  *  *

So there you have it – The FT defending Soros is proof that conspiracy theorists are crazy and preempts the conspiracy theories about The FT being part of the same group.

Of course, "this message was approved" by none other than George Soros himself…

But then again , he would, wouldn't he…

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After Quietest September Ever, Stocks Face Ominous ‘Curse Of 7’ In Q4

After the quietest September in history for U.S. stocks…

Things may about to get a little more exciting – entering the final months of 2017, that last digit doesn’t bode well, if history is any indication.

As Bloomberg reports, some of the biggest fourth-quarter declines in the Dow Jones Industrial Average have occurred in years ending in seven, the worst being in a Black-Monday plagued 1987.

This year’s risks include a proposed tax overhaul in the U.S., expected policy shifts from central banks around the world and China’s twice-a-decade party congress.

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Brickbat: No Good Deed

Child shopping cartPolice in Halifax say that after an investigation that have determined that a man reported by a woman for suspicious behavior as actually a good Samaritan. The woman reported she was putting her groceries in her car when she turned around and saw a man holding her two-year-old son. He handed the boy to her and left. Police say the boy was standing in the cart’s seat. The man feared he might fall, so he grabbed him and handed him to the mother.

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