Don’t Tell Trump, But The Atlanta Fed Just Slashed Q2 GDP

Just two days after Donald Trump Jr slammed “the experts” and crowed of expectations for a 4.5% Q2 GDP print, The Atlanta Fed took an ax to its forecast this morning following disappointing spending data…

The GDPNow model estimate for real GDP growth (seasonally adjusted annual rate) in the second quarter of 2018 is 3.8 percent on June 29, down from 4.5 percent on June 27. The nowcast of second-quarter real personal consumption expenditures growth declined from 3.7 percent to 2.7 percent after this morning’s personal income and outlays report from the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis.

Source: FRB Atlanta

Of course, as we noted previously, this should come as no surprise to anyone who has tracked GDPNOW over the last few years…

GDPNOW is notoriously over-optimistic and ubiquitously downgraded as the quarter goes on…
 

And Q1 was a doozy…(remember, Q1 GDP forecast began at 5.376%!! and ended at 2…)

Nobody tell the Trumps though…ssshhh.

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We’re Gonna Need A Bigger Bailout – Argentine Peso Plummets To New Record Low

The Argentine Peso collapsed again today – plummeting below last week’s record low to 29/USD.

Desk chatter suggests that no one turned up this morning as the central bank announced it would increase its daily spot auctions to USD150mn on Thursday and Friday.

Despite continued efforts by the BCRA to sell USD on behalf of the Treasury, this intervention is unlikely to revert the trend, as Citi notes that the central bank has been left with a weak balance sheet to fight-off a speculative attack.

Critically, as Daniel Lacalle recently wrote, the recent collapse of the Argentine Peso and other emerging currencies is more than a warning sign.

It could be the arrival of a “sudden stop”. As I explain in Escape from the Central Bank Trap (BEP, 2017), a sudden stop happens when the extraordinary and excessive flow of cheap US dollars into emerging markets suddenly reverses and funds return to the U.S. looking for safer assets. The central bank “carry trade” of low interest rates and abundant liquidity was used to buy “growth” and “inflation-linked” assets in emerging markets. As the evidence of a global slowdown adds to the rising rates in the U.S. and the Fed’s QT (quantitative tightening), emerging markets lose the tsunami of inflows and face massive outflows, because the bubble period was not used to strengthen those countries’ economies, but to perpetuate their imbalances.

The Argentine Peso, at the close of this article, lost 17% annualized is one of the most devalued currencies in 2018. More than the Lira of Turkey or the Ruble of Russia.

What explains this drop?

For some time now, many of us have warned of the mistake of massively increasing money supply and using high liquidity to avoid much-needed structural reforms. In Argentina, the government of Cristina Fernández de Kirchner left a monetary hole close to 20% of GDP and massive inflation after years of trying to cover structural imbalances with increases in the money supply greater than 30-35% per year.

Unfortunately, as in other emerging markets, the urgent reforms were abandoned, and an alternative formula was tried. Issue great quantities of debt and continue financing a growing public spending with central bank money printing expecting economic growth and cheap debt would offset the growing fiscal and monetary hole.

This wrongly-called “soft adjustment” was justified because of the enormous liquidity in international markets and appetite for emerging markets’ debt driven by consensus estimates of a continued weakening of the US dollar. Many Latin American and emerging market economies fell into the trap. Now, when it stops, and the US dollar recovers some of its weakness, it is devastating.

High fiscal and trade deficits financed by short-term dollar inflows become time bombs.

Argentina even issued a one-hundred-year bond at a spectacularly low rate (8.25%) with a very high demand, more than 3.5 times bid-to-cover. That $ 2.5 billion issuance seemed crazy. A one-hundred-year bond from a nation that has defaulted at least six times in the previous hundred years! Worse of all, those funds were used to finance current expenditure in local currency.

The extraordinary demand for bonds and other assets in Argentina or Turkey was justified by expectations of reforms and a change that, as time passed, simply did not happen. Countries failed to control inflation, deliver lower than expected growth and imbalances soared just as the U.S. started to see some inflation, rates started to rise. Suddenly, the yield spread between the U.S. 10-year bond and emerging markets debt was unattractive, and liquidity dried up faster than the speed of light even with a modest decrease of the Federal Reserve balance sheet. Liquidity disappears because of extremely leveraged bets on one single trade – a weaker dollar, higher global growth- unwind.

However, another problem exacerbates the reaction. An aggressive increase in the monetary base by the Argentine central bank made inflation rise above 23%.

With an increase in the monetary base of 28% per year, and seeking to finance excess spending by printing money and raising debt to “buy time”, the seeds of the disaster were planted. Excess liquidity and the US dollar weakness stopped. Local currencies and external funding face risk of collapse.

The Sudden Stop. When most of the emerging economies entered into twin deficits -trade and fiscal deficits- and consensus praised “synchronized growth”, they were sealing their destiny: When the US dollar regains some strength, US rates rise due to an increase in inflation, the flow of cheap money to emerging markets is reversed. Synchronized indebted growth created the risk of synchronized collapse.

The worrying thing about Argentina and many other economies is that they should have learned from this after decades of similar episodes. But investment bankers and policymakers always say “this time is different”. It was not.

Now Argentina has pushed interest rates to 40% to stop the bleeding. With rampant inflation and economic growth concerns, the Peso bounce is likely to be short-lived.

Massive money supply growth does not buy time or disguise structural problems. It simply destroys the purchasing power of the currency and reduces the country’s ability to attract investment and grow.

This is a warning, and administrations should take this episode as a serious signal before the scare turns into a widespread emerging market crisis.

Structural imbalances are not mitigated by carrying out the same monetary policies that led countries to crisis and discredit.

Over the next three years, the International Monetary Fund estimates that flows to emerging economies will fall by up to $60 billion per annum, equivalent to 25% of the flows received between 2010 and 2017.

This warning has started with the weakest currencies, those were monetary imbalances were largest. But others should not feel relieved. This warning should not be used to delay the inevitable reforms, but to accelerate them. Unfortunately, it looks like policymakers will prefer to blame any external factor except their disastrous monetary and fiscal policies.

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Sacre Bleu! France to Reinstate Mandatory National Service for 16-Year-Olds

In an effort to promote national pride and “social cohesion,” French President Emmanuel Macron is reinstating a mandatory national service program for all 16-year-olds.

Back in 2017, when he was running for president, Macron said he wanted all young adults in the country to experience military life. France conscripted young people into the military until the late 1990s, when it got rid of the draft.

Macron’s new program, which officially begins in 2019, does not bring back the draft. Rather, the only mandatory part of the program is a month-long placement focused on civic culture, during which 16-year-olds have the option of doing teaching or charity work, or military, police, or fire service training. Aside from that mandatory one month, participants can spend an optional three months to a year either volunteering or working in the defense or security fields.

The main goal of the program seems to be the promotion of nationalistic ideals. Macron apparently wants young French citizens, both boys and girls, to “value” their citizenship and feel like they are truly part of the French community.

The program’s official aim, according to a statement from the Elysee Palace, is to “encourage the participation and commitment of every young person in the life of the nation, to value citizenship and the feeling of belonging to a community gathered around its values, to strengthen social cohesion and boost the republican melting pot.”

“The [program] will be a time to meet others that will be useful and profitable for every young person, and a special opportunity to learn and receive, but also to give and engage, regardless of social background,” the statement continued.

However, the idea of this national service program has garnered mixed reviews from the French people.

A YouGov poll conducted in March revealed that 60 percent of French citizens support a mandatory national service program. But when the opinions of young people themselves were taken into account, the idea received less than 50 percent support. Moreover, even before the plan was announced, 14 youth organizations said they were unhappy that young people are not being given any choice in the matter.

It appears the opinions of those affected the most don’t seem to matter all that much.

The same line of thinking the late famed economist Milton Friedman used to argue against the draft and in favor of a volunteer army applies here. In Friedman’s book Two Lucky People: Memoirs, which he co-wrote with his wife Rose, he recalled a conversation he had with U.S. Army Gen. William Westmoreland about the draft.

“In the course of his [Westmoreland’s] testimony, he made the statement that he did not want to command an army of mercenaries. I [Milton Friedman] stopped him and said, ‘General, would you rather command an army of slaves?'” the passage reads.

France isn’t forcing young people into military service, but it is forcing nationalism down their throats. And the people whose lives will be affected by this program have no say in the matter.

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UMich ‘Hope’ Slides To 5-Month Lows As Inflation Fears Hit 4-Year Highs

While Current Conditions surged back near cycle highs, ‘hope’ for the future slid to its lowest since January according to June’s final University of Michigan sentiment survey, leaving the headline print very modestly higher.

Notably after a few months of high-income disappointment (and low-income exuberance), June saw things flip as sentiment for the richest rose and poorest fell…

Finally, we note that short-term inflation expectations surged to 3.00% – the highest since August 2014.

UMich also did a survey of Trade War expectations.

The potential impact of tariffs on the domestic economy was spontaneously cited by one-in-four consumers, with most expecting a negative impact on the domestic economy (21% out of 26%).

The primary concerns were a downshift in the future pace of economic growth and an uptick in inflation.

Among those who expressed negative views of the trade policies, the Expectations Index was 22.7 points below those who made no mention of tariffs and the expected inflation rate was three-tenths of a percentage point higher. A longstanding belief of consumers is that trade with other countries results in a broader range of available goods at lower prices. When asked in a recent survey about their views on international trade, two-thirds of consumers thought that more trade with other countries would be better for the domestic economy (see the chart above).

To be sure, consumers’ judgements about the impact of higher tariffs will not crystalize until they have experienced actual changes in product prices and heard about changes in employment. While tariffs may have a direct impact on only a very small portion of overall GDP, the negative impact could quickly generalize and produce a widespread decline in consumer confidence and optimism. The June survey offers a glimpse into the potential reactions of consumers to rising tariffs and suggests that the timing and size of the loss in confidence could be quick and substantial. 

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Protesters Greet First Lady With Balloon Of Trump In KKK Uniform

Anti-Trump protesters met First Lady Melania Trump in Phoenix on Thursday with a giant balloon depicting her husband in a KKK uniform.

Trump

The balloon was anchored across the street from the Southwest Key migrant holding facility that the First Lady was preparing to visit.

The demonstrators were reportedly inspired by reports of thousands of migrant children being separated from their parents because of Trump’s “zero-tolerance” immigration policy – which he undid last week with an executive order allowing minors to be held with their parents.

Of course, this is just the latest example of “civility” in political debate shown by an increasingly militant cohort of leftists who are vehemently opposed to Trump and anybody associated with his administration.

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The President Shouldn’t Act as an Arms Dealer to the Saudis: New at Reason

In May 2017, President Donald Trump visited Saudi Arabia to finalize a massive $110 billion sale of “American-made” weapons. The deal was part of his America First initiative. “That was a tremendous day,” Trump said. “Hundreds of billions of dollars of investments into the United States and jobs, jobs, jobs.”

The Trump administration hopes to expand this effort via arms export deregulation. “We want to see those guys, the commercial and military attachés, unfettered to be salesmen for this stuff, to be promoters,” a senior administration official told Reuters, writes Veronique de Rugy.

View this article.

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Chicago PMI Beats All Expectations As Stagflation Signals Flash Red

Having collapsed back to the not-so-ebullient reality of ‘hard’ macro data, ‘soft’ surveys have staged another rebound recently.

And today’s Chicago PMI did not disappoint – soaring to 64.1 (against expectations of a drop from May’s 62.7 to 60.0).

This print was above all expectations (forecast range 58 – 62.7 from 28 economists surveyed) and confirmed the 12th month in a row of business expansion.

Under the hood:

  • Prices paid rose at a faster pace, signaling expansion

  • New orders rose at a faster pace, signaling expansion

  • Employment rose at a faster pace, signaling expansion

  • Inventories rose at a slower pace, signaling expansion

  • Supplier deliveries rose at a faster pace, signaling expansion

  • Production rose at a slower pace, signaling expansion

  • Order backlogs rose at a faster pace, signaling expansion

Production growth slowing as prices accelerate – stagflation anyone?

So, dead cat bounce of hope? Or a new renaissance in the recovery?

All the time the yield curve is crushing new lows, we suspect the former, not the latter.

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Global Stocks Hit By 2nd Largest Weekly Outflow Ever

If it was Trump’s intention to finally spook the market into selling, he achieved his goal because according to the latest EPFR data quoted by Bank of America, the week ended June 27 saw a near record $29.7BN in equity outflows, offset by a modest $0.7BN in bond and $0.1BN in gold inflows. 

The weekly outflow in global equities, comprising of $21.2BN in ETF outflows, and $8.5BN in mutual fund redemptions, was the biggest in 20 weeks going back to the February VIXplosion, and the 2nd largest weekly outflow from equities ever.

Contrary to previous weeks, in which the US managed to decouple from global fund flows, this week U.S. equities led the redemptions with $24.2BN outflows after 7 straight weeks of inflows; Europe was a distant second $3.9BN in outflows, the 16th in a row; and EM equities saw continued withdrawals, totaling $3.1BN, with redemptions observed in 7 of the past 8 weeks. This was the 3rd largest outflow from US equities ever.

Commenting on the latest spike in outflows, BofA CIO Michael Hartnett said EM equity & debt outflows are accelerating as follows: +$68bn Jan-Apr, -$8bn May, -$18bn Jun, although he does not that redemptions still pale in comparison to 2008 & 2015, largely thanks to the record inflows in EMs prior to the latest rout .

Aside from EMs, two sub-sectors deserve focus: HY and tech:

  • HY bond outflows remain big and on course for record $90bn outflows in 2018.
  • Tech inflows continue ($19bn YTD vs. $9bn outflows all other sector funds).

And some more details, first by style:

  • Huge outflows US growth ($6.2bn),
  • US large cap ($17.2bn),
  • US small cap ($3.2n),
  • US value ($6.8bn)

Then by sector:

  • inflows tech ($0.8bn), consumer ($0.1bn),  utilities ($6mn);
  • outflows real estate ($0.2bn), energy ($0.3bn), materials ($0.3bn), healthcare ($0.4bn), financials ($1.1bn)Looking

Some details on the latest weekly fixed income flows from BofA:

  • Big IG bond fund inflows ($2.9bn)
  • HY bond outflows 8th consecutive week ($2.0bn)
  • 10th straight week of EM debt outflows ($3.2bn)
  • 8th straight week of muni fund inflows ($0.4bn)
  • Modest Govt/Tsy inflows ($0.9bn)
  • Modest TIPS inflows ($0.4bn)
  • Bank loan fund inflows 18 consecutive weeks ($0.3bn)

Finally, BofA notes that its high net worth clients are rushing into liquid, cash-equivalent safety, with T-bill holdings to 10-year high.

Source: BofA “The Flow Show”

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Capital Gazette Shooter Not Motivated by Milo or Maxine Waters, Had ‘Long-Standing Grudge Against the Paper’: Reason Roundup

Yesterday’s “targeted attack” on the Capital Gazette newspaper in Annapolis, Md., left five people dead and two others injured. The shooter was arrested and charged with five counts of first-degree murder. He was identified via facial recognition software as 38-year-old Jarrod W. Ramos.

His motive doesn’t seem related to any of the political agendas offered up in the immediate aftermath by hacks and provocateurs. The Gazette describes Ramos, of Laurel, Md., as a man “with a long-standing grudge against the paper.” He had sued the paper in 2012 for defamation for its coverage of a criminal harassment case against him, and a Twitter page in his name featured the columnist who had written about him as Ramos’ avatar. The account’s bio:

Dear reader: I created this page to defend myself. Now I’m suing the s— out of half of AA County and making corpses of corrupt careers and corporate entities.

From the earliest reports of the shooting on Thursday afternoon, people were quick to assign blame to their pet peeves du jour. Sean Hannity seemed to blame Maxine Waters’ recent calls to confront Trump officials. Many media and Twitter types credited Milo Yiannopoulos with inspiring the attack, after he said last week that he couldn’t “wait for the vigilante squads to start gunning journalists down on sight.”

On his radio show yesterday, Hannity commented: “I’ve been saying now for days that something horrible was going to happen because of the rhetoric. Really Maxine? You want people to create—Call your friends, get in their faces,’ and Obama said that, too. ‘Get in their faces, call them out, call your friends, get protesters, follow them into restaurants and shopping malls,’ and wherever else she said.”

Hannity later denied that these comments were meant to link Waters’ rhetoric to the shooting.

Baltimore Sun media critic David Zurawik condemned “the hypocrisy, the dishonesty, the willingness by Hannity to try and score partisan political points on the bodies of five dead journalists.”

“I would give anything for time to truly process my feelings before writing about the shooting that left five dead Thursday at The Sun‘s sister publication, the Capital Gazette,” wrote Zurawik at the Sun yesterday. “But Sean Hannity made that impossible with another one of his partisan culture-war, bomb-tossing comments.”

Yiannopolous responded with comparably more humanity than Hannity, although after noting that “like any normal person I am saddened to hear of needless death,” the bulk of his response was devoted to decrying the blame he was assigned in the first place:

You’re about to see a raft of news stories claiming that I am responsible for inspiring the deaths of journalists. The bodies are barely cold and left-wing journalists are already exploiting these deaths to score political points against me. It’s disgusting. … I made a private, offhand troll to two hostile reporters, who breathlessly publicized it and like vermin their fellow journalists swarmed to remind the world how much they hate Milo.

In the midst of all this, Gazette reporters have been trying to keep the focus on their experience and their fallen colleagues:

FREE MINDS

Conservatives perceive more social media censorship. A new poll from the Pew Research Center found 70 percent of Americans think popular social media platforms are actively censoring certain political views. Republicans and conservatives are more likely than liberal-leaning counterparts to believe they’re being censored.

“Eighty-five percent of Republicans and those who labeled themselves conservative independents said it’s likely that social media platforms censor political speech,” notes Bloomberg. “And 64 percent of Republicans think technology companies support the views of liberals over conservatives.”

Overall, 43 percent of Pew survey respondents said tech companies “support the views of liberals over conservatives.” Around a third of those surveyed said tech firms “support the views of men over women.”

QUICK HITS

  • “New Jersey is just days away from a government shutdown,” reports The Washington Post. “Unlike shutdowns of the federal government over partisan fights between the political parties in Congress, the fight in new Jersey pits Democrats against each other.”
  • The more you know: “The Earliest Mammals Kept Their Cool With Descended Testicles.”

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Why One Trader Is Raining On The ‘Market Bounce Optimism’ Parade

The cognitive dissonance continues with a blip market rebound into month- / quarter-end prompting remarks from many that the worst is over and it’s new highs (for the Dow or S&P) from here. Last night’s CCAR prompted more glad-handing (despite 6 banks being tapped on the shoulder) and while bank stocks are up at the open, they did not fare well the last time…

And while stocks rebound in early trading – the yield curve continues to collapse on its inexorable path to signaling slowing or no growth and the next recession (helped overnight by rumors of an ECB ‘Twist’).

But it is former fund manager Richard Breslow that sums up the glee into the July 4th week better than most – “you can still be happy… as I rain on your parade.”

Via Bloomberg,

It seems positively churlish to read all the happy news gracing the wires, marvel at the sea of equity green, share the relief of the beleaguered emerging-market countries, whose assets are having a bounce, and conclude it’s good, but not enough.

It’s admittedly early in the day, but despite some impressive moves you would be hard-pressed to find any asset that isn’t still in very familiar territory.

Had the markets concluded, or even just got excited at the prospect, that the world had changed, you would have expected these reversals to have caused a lot more pain to traders riding the recent trends. In a world fraught with anger and hostility, this all looks remarkably civilized. And I’ve yet to hear anyone complain to me that liquidity has been a challenge.

Even the Shanghai Composite, reacting to soothing words from PBOC-related sources rose over 2%, and it did so in a steady manner without gaps. Just a textbook example of a trend day. But it failed to end positive on the week nor best last Monday’s low.

Double bottom from today’s low, to be sure, but no one who has been short this thing was carried out on their shield.

And although the euro shot higher as EU leaders strode happily before the press to declare victory at the save-Angela-Merkel summit, it, too, is currently at a price we’ve experienced three other days this week.

Give it some credit though, 1.15 versus the dollar continues to grow as very significant support.

The dollar index is doing similar things in reverse with 95.50 looming formidably above. But we have still spent the day within Wednesday’s range. As have the DAX, S&P 500 futures, EuroStoxx 50 and CAC.

Perhaps most interesting, 10-year Treasuries, bunds and BTPs have not broken away from distressing, and distressed, levels.

I’ve no idea whether today is the pause that refreshes or the start of something new. We are ending the second quarter with markets rife with ambiguity. The most that can be concluded is breakouts to new territory just don’t seem to be in the cards on this summer Friday. For all the fundamental news, once again it has been the technicals directing price traffic. Or maybe people are realizing that the biggest mistake that keeps happening is when victory is declared prematurely.

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