America Is The Most Attractive Country For The World’s Workers

Given that politicians on the left continue to out-outrage one another by proclaiming that “America was never great,” it may be worth asking the rest of the world why they see the United States as the best place to work in the world?

However, as Statista’s Niall McCarthy notes, around the world, the desire to move between countries for work reasons is becoming less desirable.

The Boston Consulting Group conducted a major survey of 366,000 people across 197 countries about labor trends and work preferences.  57 percent of those polled said they would move abroad for work, a decline on 2014’s 64 percent when the question was last asked.

The developing world had the highest desire for a relocation abroad with 90 percent of India’s repondents and 70 percent of people in Brazil saying they would be willing to move to another country for the right job.

In 2014, the U.S. was named the most popular work destination worldwide and it remains in top-position this year. 34 percent of the survey’s respondents said they would be willing to move to the U.S. for work reasons.

Infographic: The Most Attractive Countries For The World's Workers | Statista

You will find more infographics at Statista

In Europe, the UK was the most popular destination for foreign workers in 2014 but due to Brexit, it has now slipped down the ranking to fifth place overall. The UK has been replaced by Germany which comes second in the ranking with 26 percent of foreign workers considering it their most attractive potential destination.

Given its meteoric economic rise, China is conspicuous by its absence from the list and the only Asian entry is Japan in tenth place.

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Nikki Haley: “US Will Not Remain A Passive Observer As Nicaragua Becomes Another Venezuela Or Syria”

The US Ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley warned the UN Security Council on Wednesday that Nicaragua is heading down the path that led to conflict in Syria and an economic collapse in Venezuela.

“With each passing day, Nicaragua travels further down a familiar path,” Haley told a meeting of the UN Security Council on the deteriorating environment in the Central American country. “It is a path that Syria has taken. It is a path that Venezuela has taken.”

The warning took place during the first Security Council meeting called by Ambassador Haley, the current council president, to address what the UN says Nicaragua’s government has participated in violent acts of repression toward students and opposition groups that have led to over 300 deaths since mid-April.

Haley said the Security Council could not remain a “passive observer” as Nicaragua descended into chaos “because we know where this path leads.”

She said Nicaragua’s President Daniel Ortega and Venezuela’s President Nicolas Maduro “are cut from the same corrupt cloth … And they are both dictators who live in fear of their own people.”

“The Syrian exodus has produced millions of refugees, sowing instability throughout the Middle East and Europe,” Haley said. “The Venezuelan exodus has become the largest displacement of people in the history of Latin America. A Nicaraguan exodus would overwhelm its neighbors and create a surge of migrants and asylum-seekers in Central America.”

Costa Rican Ambassador Rodrigo Carazo told the council that his government received 400 asylum applications from Nicaraguan citizens in the first quarter, that was before the crisis started. Last month, Ambassador Carazo said that number inflated to over 4,000. Year to date, the Costa Rican government has received nearly 13,000 asylum applications from Nicaraguans, he added.

“The deepening of the political, social and economic crisis, the repression, and the failure to respect fundamental freedoms and human rights shown by the authorities has the potential of an unbridled worsening of the crisis,” Carazo warned. “And this can have a direct impact on the stability and the future of development in Central America.”

According to Voice of America (VOA), human rights groups have reported abuses by law enforcement and military groups, including temporary detentions, torture, sexual violence, harassment, and intimidation. Nicaraguan civil society leader Felix Maradiaga told council members, “Nicaragua has become a huge prison which seems to be without any controls…every day, we see a climate of terror and indiscriminate persecution.”

Maradiaga warned the political crisis was at risk of developing into a collapse. “Today, there is a time bomb in Nicaragua,” he said. “Crimes against humanity are creating an atmosphere conducive to internal conflict that can only grow in size.”

A special report published last week by the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights documented the four months of social unrest in the country.

The human rights office called on the government to stop the arrest of protesters and disarm the masked groups that have been responsible for many killings. Then, late last week, the government expelled the human rights group from the country.

The Organization of American States (OAS) has also condemned the violence and urged protestors and government to particpate in a peaceful dialogue. The OAS has called for 2021 elections to be brought foward as soon as possible to usher in a new government.

When tensions like this are so high, and violence takes place in such a way in a society that leaves more than 300 people dead, you need to give the power back to the people to decide,” OAS Chief of Staff Gonzalo Koncke told reporters.

Nicaraguan Foreign Minister Denis Moncada spoke at the Security Council Wednesday, explaining to officials his country is “a model” in the fight against terrorism, organized crime and drug trafficking in the region, and has a booming economy.

Moncada criticized the US for its past interventions in Nicaragua in the 1980s and urged Washington to “cease any type of aggression or intervention,” which leaves us with thought that the Trump administration could soon be nation-building in Central America.

Meanwhile, the official Twitter feed of the Russian Mission to the UN “urges Washington to abandon the colonial-style attempts to influence the situation in Nicaragua such as the NICAAct, visa and other restrictions against Nicaraguan officials, and the abolition of the “temporary protection status” for migrants from this country.”

It seems that Central America is about to become a hot… again.

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Everybody Gets A ‘AAA’: Why S&P Is Adopting “Custom Credit Ratings” For Chinese Debt

S&P is reportedly working on developing a custom credit rating scale for China, but some investors are worried that it could do more harm than good. Unlike S&P’s custom ratings scale for emerging markets like Argentina, Israel and Taiwan, the coming Chinese rating scale will not include the recalibrated “mapping specifications” that indicate how the ratings relate to the rest of S&P’s global ratings.

Instead, the ratings will reportedly stand alone, meaning that when an A+ is issued in China, it is to be thought of as an A+ rating issued anywhere else globally.

China

S&P is reportedly working on setting up an independent business in China where it will compete not only with the local ratings firms, but also Moody’s and Fitch, who are also applying for licenses to open up shop in China. And since American companies typically lack the guanxi necessary to thrive in the Chinese market, S&P is aiming to tailor its bond rating system to all types of issuers, including governments and corporations, in a way that will “fit the local situation” (and presumably placate the Communist Party).

“We believe that considering the size, dimensions and extent of diversification of China’s domestic capital market, there needs to be a set of special rating standards and rating methodology that fit the local situation,” S&P said in a document translated by the Wall Street Journal

Unsurprisingly, debt investors aren’t buying it.

That’s because ratings in China won’t necessarily correspond to global ratings, and it appears there will be no widely available way to convert these ratings to global rating grades.

Prashant Singh, an emerging-markets debt manager at Neuberger Berman told the WSJ: “If the ratings show little credit differentiation and do not reflect true credit risks, then investors will not give much credence to them.”

As WSJ points out, only two American non-financial corporations have the AAA, S&P’s highest rating: Microsoft and Johnson & Johnson. Meanwhile, the US government gets only a double A+ rating from S&P. That a US ratings firm would hand out AAA ratings to barely solvent Chinese industrial firms is a bitter irony, indeed.

“It is almost like being in a classroom where everyone is getting a (top grade), but in reality, not everyone is that good,” a sovereign analyst with BNY Mellon Investment Management told the WSJ.

If S&P follows in the footsteps of local Chinese rating agencies, they could wind up posting AAA ratings for companies that are clearly distressed, like HNA Group Co., which reportedly has a triple-A rating from Shanghai Brilliance Credit Rating & Investors Service Co despite the fact that the company is selling assets to meet its debt obligations and that it paid nearly 9% to borrow money last year over a term of one year.

China

Everybody knows that in this business, money talks and bullshit walks. Ergo, there’s only one way that S&P will be able to persuade bond issuers to pay for their ratings – and that’s to tell the Chinese firms what they want to hear to stay “competitive” with the domestic ratings agencies. The economic environment in China, where some asset managers and many institutions are restricted from buying lower rated bonds, naturally tends to help inflate the entire ratings industry.

Out of the 300 Chinese companies that have issued debt outside the mainland, S&P hasn’t offered any of them a higher than A+ rating – that’s five notches below AAA. China’s sovereign rating is also a A+. But perhaps once S&P opens its domestic subsidiary, it will have reason to reevaluate.

But without mapping specifications like those that S&P has implemented in other emerging markets, there is no way for foreign investors to interpret credit ratings in the world’s most opaque major economy.

Just like they did during the run-up to the financial crisis in the US, S&P appears to be hurting, not helping, the situation in China.

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Australia’s Big Banks Raise Mortgage Rates, Sparking Housing Market Fears

For decades, the housing market in Australia – which has not seen a recession in 27 years – appeared immune to any external or internal shocks, as prices kept rising gingerly year after year. That all changed in the past year, when according to Core Logic, home prices across Australia’s 5 top cities peaked in October of 2017 and have since declined by 3.5% on average.

That decline is now set to accelerate because overnight, two of Australia’s biggest banks, Commonwealth Bank of Australia and Australia and New Zealand Banking Group, announced within minutes of each other that they are raising mortgage rates citing higher funding costs, cutting chances of an official rate hike and risking a political backlash.

The rate increases followed one week after Australia’s second largest bank, Westpac, became the first of the so-called “Big Four” to raise rates. That prompted fierce criticism from Prime Minister Scott Morrison. The former Treasurer demanded the bank explain itself and suggested unhappy borrowers should shop around.

“They have to justify, in this environment when people are really feeling it, why they believe they need to clip that ticket a little harder when people in Australia and their customers I think are doing it tough,” he told reporters.

Fourth-ranked National Australia Bank Ltd is the only one of the majors not to deliver an out-of-cycle rate rise.

CommBank will increase all variable home loan rates by 15 basis points from October 4, while ANZ will hit all borrowers with a 16 basis point increase from September 27. The change means a customer with a $400,000 loan from CommBank will pay an extra $37 a month, or $447 a year. An ANZ customer with the same loan will pay an extra $40 a month, or $476 a year.

“We have made this decision after careful consideration,” CommBank group executive retail banking services Angus Sullivan said in a statement.

“We are very conscious of the impact that increasing interest rates will have on our customers, however it is important that we price our home loan products in a way that reflects underlying costs.”

The move comes two days after the Reserve Bank again left the official cash rate on hold at its record low of 1.5%, extending the country’s longest ever period without an official rate move to more than two years. Despite the low-rate environment locally, banks have faced rising costs in overseas wholesale markets, forcing many of the smaller lenders to gradually raise rates over the past 12 months.

The hikes also reverse moves from just a month ago when some banks cut rates as a downturn in the country’s red-hot housing market heightened competition to write new loans. More notably, the rate increases come even as the Reserve Bank of Australia has held its official cash rate at a record low of 1.50% since 2016 while signaling a steady path for some time.

News of the rate increases pressured the Australian dollar, which dropped near a two year low on concern that higher mortgage rates at three of the big-four banks will sap consumer spending. Short-end bonds gained on similar concern, while the local ASX/S&P index added to morning losses, down 1.1% by the close, as investors digested the prospect that rising rates would hurt home prices further, stifling spending.

According to Michael McCarthy, Chief strategist at CMC Markets and Stockbroking, the news was both goods in that “It’s a small negative for housing prices but part of a much larger trend towards the normalisation of interest rates”… and bad “that of course is likely to continue to keep pressure on housing prices.”

The four banks combined control about 80% of the country’s deposit and home loan market, Reuters reported. The banks have come under intense scrutiny, wiping tens of billions of dollars from their market capitalisations, from a public inquiry which has aired continuous allegations of misconduct within the sector.

As a result, with the central bank seemingly unable to make up its mind and raise rates, the banks decided to take matters into their own hands, and according to a UBS note, “today’s announcements demonstrate the oligopolistic nature of the Australian banks and their ability to pass on additional funding costs and more to their customers.”

“Given the additional focus from both sides of politics (on the banking sector) there is a risk the government or opposition may look to raise the bank levy,” UBS added.

A spokeswoman for NAB, the only lender not to lift rates on Thursday, said in an email the bank continually assessed interest rates and tried to “achieve the right balance for our customers and our shareholders, and to ensure we remain competitive”.

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Trump Does 180 Shift On Syria: Regime Change Back On The Table

Will the war in Syria never end? Will the international proxy war and stand-off between Russia, the United States, Iran, and Israel simply continue to drift on, fueling Syria’s fires for yet more years to come?  It appears so according to an exclusive Washington Post report which says that President Trump has expressed a desire for complete 180 policy shift on Syria

Only months ago the president expressed a desire “to get out” and pull the over 2,000 publicly acknowledged American military personnel from the country; but now, the new report finds, Trump has approved “an indefinite military and diplomatic effort in Syria”.

The radical departure from Trump’s prior outspokenness against militarily pursuing Syrian regime change, both on the campaign trail and during his first year in the White House, reportedly involves “a new strategy for an indefinitely extended military, diplomatic and economic effort there, according to senior State Department officials”.

This even though one of the Pentagon’s main justifications for being on Syrian soil in the first place the destruction of ISIS has already essentially happened as the terror group now holds no significant territory and has been driven completely underground. 

But most worrisome about the Post report is that sources said to be close to White House policy planning on Syria suggest that Trump has made a commitment to pursuing regime change as a final goal.

Crucially, the report describes that “the administration has redefined its goals to include the exit of all Iranian military and proxy forces from Syria, and establishment of a stable, nonthreatening government acceptable to all Syrians and the international community.”

Of course, there’s the glaringly obvious issue of the fact that the most powerful top competing “alternatives” to the current government in Damascus include groups like Hay’at Tahrir al-Sham, which currently holds Idlib and is under direct allegiance to al-Qaeda chief Ayman al Zawahiri (as recently confirmed in the US State Department’s own words).

The shift stems from the White House’s re-prioritizing the long held US desire for the complete removal of Iranian forces from Syria. There’s reportedly increased frustration that Russia is not actually interested in seeing Iran withdraw, despite prior pledges as part of US-Russia largely back channel diplomacy on Syria. 

However, the Post report quotes a top Pompeo-appointed official, James Jeffrey, who is currently “representative for Syria engagement” at the State Department, to say that U.S. policy is not that “Assad must go” but that immense pressure will be brought to bear, and in terms of future US troop exit, “we are not in a hurry”.

“The new policy is we’re no longer pulling out by the end of the year,” Jeffrey said while noting the mission would largely shirt ensuring Iranian departure. He also indicated to that Trump is likely “on board” on signing off on “a more active approach” should there be direct confrontation with either Iran or Russia. 

It goes without saying that such a significant policy shift makes the possibilities of just such a confrontation — or perhaps “provocation” — over Idlib all the more dangerous considering it now appears Trump may now be looking for an excuse to act, which would provide the usual convenient distraction from problems at home

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Apocalypse ‘Now’, Or Not?

Authored by Alasdair Macleod via GoldMoney.com,

Members of the American libertarian movement, particularly extremist preppers, are often associated with a belief that a complete breakdown in society is the only outcome from government economic policies and will lead to complete social disintegration. At the centre of their concerns is monetary destruction, with other issues, such as the erosion of personal freedom and the right to bear arms, important but peripheral. They cite history, particularly the hyperinflationary collapses, from Rome to Zimbabwe, and now Venezuela. They draw on Austrian economic theory, which fans their dislike of government and their expectation of total chaos.

Properly reasoned economic theory certainly reduces the science to one of black and white conclusions, which suits conclusion-jumpers. But the whole point of it is to explain society’s errors, so that they may be corrected. It is only by understanding the errors of state intervention and socialism, both communistic and fascist, that solutions can be found. Solutions then need to be applied, not taken into a mountain or forest retreat never to be implemented.

The real world does not work on black and white economic theories. It progresses along a muddled course, torn between statist mistakes and society’s unending patience with government intervention. Governments are the source of all wars and wealth destruction, but societies tolerate them. Philosophers have argued over this from Plato versus Aristotle onwards, and we are still here, two and a half millennia later, chewing over the same bones.

History records our philosophical chewing, and Man’s continuing conflict with and tolerances of the state. It records the rise and fall of kings, emperors, dictators and governments. Hermits and other preppers come and go, either unrecorded or, like Saint Simeon Stylites, noted as little more than historical footnotes. To future generations, prepping will almost certainly be a bygone curiosity, and humanity will continue despite government suppression.

This article is an attempt to rationalise an apparently apocalyptic future into how it is likely to evolve over the coming years. In the absence of a nuclear Armageddon, what we fear, more than anything else, is actually uncertainty and change.

Out with the old

Uncertainty and change are with us all the time. In a truly free market economy we embrace it because they are driven by our personal economic interests, and it is a continual process. But the desire for change is driven by us only in our role as consumers; as workers or businessmen facing competition for our existing labour and skills we tend to resist it. It is that side of us that a government taps into.

Modern governments, except where they are overtly mercantilist, don’t do change. Their support, indeed their reason for being, is based on anti-progressive lobbying from both establishment businesses and socialistic pressure groups. Government economists do not recognise progress, living in a stagnant world of historical statistics. Progressive change interferes with their certainties and is therefore never properly considered.

This is what the welfare states in the West have become, societies managed by anti-progressive governments, nominally responsible to their electorates, but in fact with a life of their own. The interests of governments have long since departed from those of consumers and increasingly conflict with their needs and wants. It is a process that has evolved to the current position over the last hundred years, when governments had understood their role should be strictly limited to identifiable national interests, when government employees deferred to the general public as their civil servants, and importantly, when the national currency was based on money chosen collectively by individuals.

It is therefore a much larger issue than just money. It is about the direction of political travel. For individuals it has become a prolonged road to serfdom, where power and personal freedom have been sequestered by the government from the consumer. The consumer has lost the right to keep his own income, and his preferences are now regarded by the state as subject to its control, to plan and dispose of as it sees fit.

The so-called free world was first ruled by the British and then by the Americans. The roots of both regimes were trade, protected by a government enforcing the rules of property ownership, the certainties of contract law and laws that protected individuals in their interpersonal relationships. As law-makers, governments now legislate to extend control over their peoples. And now the American government, in the name of American business, is even directing its own citizens not to buy from foreigners and is taxing them if they do so.

It is not the first time the state has interfered with our preferences in this way. The lurch into protectionism that led to the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930 was one example, and the nationalisation policies of Britain’s post-war government another. These were errors from which a retreat proved possible. Today, the West’s democratic system has reached a point from which no ordered retreat back to free markets, to personal freedom and to governments which serve the people and not themselves, seems possible. Change will only come from the ultimate collapse of a system that promotes interests over freedom.

Transiting to the new

Western doomsters, seeing the contradictions around them and armed with little more than libertarian ideals, believe the world is coming to an impasse. They know it will end badly, and America’s resistance to decline by retreating into yet greater suppression of freedom confirms this view. The mistake is to assume nothing will replace the disintegration of the American state.

Money is the talisman for the doomsters’ vision. The destruction of paper currencies is inevitable, they say. Given these dissenters are very much American-based, their approbation is reserved for the dollar. But we should all take notice because the dollar is the reserve currency. That is to say, we measure our own currencies primarily against the dollar, and we use the dollar to settle our international trade. Our central banks tend to the view that they should generally manage their currencies in dollar terms. Therefore, if the dollar falls, we should all fall with it.

After a temporary bout of strength, concerns that the dollar will enter a terminal decline are spreading in some quarters. There are those who point to the seemingly limitless accumulation of unproductive debt, and the fact that the lessons from succeeding credit crises are always ignored. Today, the chatter is of a global monetary reset, with proposed solutions incorporating debt write-offs, the mobilisation of super-monies such as SDRs, and monetary applications of blockchain technology. The libertarians talk of total monetary failure and of gold, somehow rising from the ashes of the dollar’s immolation. All these solutions ignore wider issues. For the fact of the matter is we face the end of an empire. The American global empire is being superseded by an Asian phoenix.

The loss of influence to rivals is always painful. America’s geopolitical strategists feel acutely threatened by the Russian-Chinese partnership. America’s backing for Georgia in 2008, stimulating colour revolutions in Ukraine, and a proxy war over Syria have all failed to destabilise Russia. Afghanistan and Iran are works in progress, or rather non-progress. In the past, America could rely on unwavering support from her NATO allies. One of them, Turkey, has now all but defected, and the Europeans are breaking ranks on sanctions over Iran and Russian energy imports.

American trade tariffs against China must also be regarded in this light. Recent moves to retain influence in key African nations as well are too late. China is already the largest infrastructure provider to sub-Saharan Africa by far, and she is not making the mistake of just giving money to African politicians. The politicians get their money from extended aid and new donations dressed up as trade deals from America and Britain, as they always have. The West cannot even buy respect, let alone influence, because the Chinese are doing the real work.

America never had very much influence in sub-Saharan Africa anyway. Instead, she focused on North Africa and the Middle East. Regimes from Iraq to Libya have been changed at America’s behest.

It was the agreement with Saudi Arabia in 1974 that oil would be sold exclusively for dollars that legitimised the dollar as the global trade and pricing currency. When Iraq proposed to sell oil for euros, it was invaded, and Saddam Hussein deposed and executed. When Libya proposed a new central African currency based on gold, civil war suddenly broke out and Ghadaffy was hounded and shot by a mob. The message was simple: don’t mess with America and the dollar.

This has now changed. China is buying oil for yuan, and there’s nothing America can do about it. America has tried to destabilise Russia with dollar sanctions, unsuccessfully. President Trump has leant on Angela Merkle not to do business with Russia and Iran. He has also threatened this NATO ally with trade tariffs. The message to Germany is clear, the alliance with America no longer applies. Consequently, Germany is quietly turning her back on America and continuing to trade with Russia. The old threats just don’t work anymore.

China and Russia have long planned to jointly lead Asia and Eastern Europe into a new economic bloc. The Shanghai Cooperation Organisation was set up firstly to coordinate security and anti-terrorist activities, but this morphed into unifying Asian trade. China is building the infrastructure to make the Asian continent the most powerful economic unit ever seen. No doubt she will rebuild Syria when the Americans have left. No wonder America’s strategic planners are worried.

Post-apocalypse currencies

In 1983, China enacted the Regulations of the PRC on the Control of Gold and Silver, giving the People’s Bank of China the responsibility for all the nation’s gold and silver resources under Article 4 of those regulations. In 2002, the Shanghai Gold Exchange was launched by the PBOC and private individuals were permitted to own gold. It is clear that the PBOC over two decades had accumulated sufficient gold to then allow ordinary citizens to do the same. China even advertised the merits of gold ownership, encouraging individuals to accumulate gold. We have no knowing how much gold the Chinese state had accumulated, but given contemporary gold prices, inward dollar flows in the 1980s and trade surpluses thereafter, China could easily have accumulated a strategic reserve of 20,000 tonnes before the public was authorised to acquire gold. We may never know the true figure. We do know that in addition to the state’s accumulation, some 17,000 tonnes have been withdrawn from SGE vaults by the general public.

The Russian government has belatedly begun to accumulate gold reserves, and has now declared reserves of 2,170 tonnes, and importantly, has reduced its dollar reserves substantially to do so. Even India, a staunchly Keynesian state, has finally started accumulating additional gold reserves, having repeatedly tried and failed to encourage its own people to transfer gold to the government. Its nationals have probably accumulated over 10,000 tonnes since the Gold Control Act was repealed in 1990. Other Asian states from Turkey to Mongolia have all been building official gold reserves as well.

There can be no doubt that Asians and their governments not only hold the traditional view that gold is the ultimate money, but their coordinated physical accumulation is strong circumstantial evidence that gold will have an official monetary role in future. In this context, even Germany’s gold policy is interesting. We know the Bundesbank traditionally retains a strong anti-inflation bias and is unlikely to view the ECB’s management of the euro with favour. Furthermore, Germany decided to repatriate some of her gold reserves held at the New York Fed. After an embarrassing row with the US authorities, the gold sought was eventually returned. Various motives were ascribed to this move by Germany, but perhaps the most interesting possibility – which was never reported – is that Germany’s deep state was looking to the East.

Other European nations, particularly France and Italy, retain substantial gold reserves, which places them in a good position to adapt to a Eurasian world without the dollar. We can see that a future without it, and without other fiat currencies backed by nothing other than dollar reserves is certainly possible. It will involve enormous challenges, not least for governments relying on inflationary financing. To secure sound money, governments will be forced to discard socialism and embrace freer markets to bring their own financial demands under control. Those that don’t could rapidly descend into an Argentinian or even a Venezuelan monetary hell.

The US, which still records the largest official reserves, can also stabilise the dollar by offering gold backing and convertibility. To do so would require a significantly higher gold price, as indeed would be the situation for China’s yuan. But it also requires an enormous leap in official imagination, not only concerning gold’s reintroduction as backing for the dollar, but over America’s imperial role. It requires an acceptance that America can never win the geopolitical war with China and Russia, and must accept a diminished global status, just as Britain did when she rapidly shed her colonies in the 1960s.

It is hard to see America giving up her hegemony willingly, and therefore it will be down to events. America and other welfare states also face a transition into more free-market oriented economies with considerably less state intervention. That will not be easy either. Furthermore, there is no guarantee Russia and China will take on the mantle of world domination successfully, but we can be reasonably certain they have planned for this eventuality for a long time.

In the absence of a transformation towards sound money, the loss of purchasing power for pure fiat money will not be a smooth process. The next credit crisis, itself an event of which we can be sure, will almost certainly be met with lower interest rates and more quantitative easing, designed to support the banks with new money and to finance rocketing government deficits. State-issued currencies are bound to accelerate in their decline following this renewed inflation of supply, but for currencies to really collapse requires the public to change its preferences in favour of goods and totally against fiat money. In practice, the public tends to hold onto their belief in state money longer than might seem reasonable, in the hope that its purchasing power will stabilise.

It will be at the next credit crisis, if not before, that China and Russia will reveal their plans to protect their currencies from a financial and currency collapse in the West.

Conclusion

The prospects for fiat currencies and welfare states are not good, but it is a mistake to think homo economicus will sink with them. The views of the super-bears appear to be fundamentally parochial, particularly among the preppers in America. Instead of society’s destruction, we face a period of seismic change, notably the rise of Asia as the centre for global economic power.

Asia’s two major currencies, the yuan and the rouble, will not survive in their current form. They will have to be backed by gold, but fortunately for the world this has long been China’s backstop plan, and Russia is now belatedly acquiring the gold necessary to back the rouble as well. Depending how China and Russia go about it, this could easily be achieved with current levels of gold backing and a somewhat higher gold price.

America could save the dollar by following suit. She probably has sufficient gold reserves, but to do so requires her to abandon almost everything the government and the Fed currently believe in and is therefore only likely to happen under duress.

But our central conclusion is that we will survive, and to retreat into mountain and jungle hideaways to escape an apocalypse is a mistake. We do not face a new Dark Age. What we do face are some home truths about unsound money, bringing with them considerable uncertainty and change.

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Ben Hunt: “When Fundamentals Don’t Matter, The Central Bank Narrative Takes Hold”

From his farm in rural Connecticut, Dr. Ben Hunt, the author of the popular investing newsletter Epsilon Theory, has whiled away countless hours pondering how abstract concepts like media and market narratives – and other similarly “unstructured” data – can be broken down and modeled so that they can be more easily understood by investors and traders.

Given Hunt’s diverse interests, it’s hardly a surprise that Grant Williams and Hunt covered topics as diverse as Game Theory and ant biology during the latest interview in RealVision’s investor series. The interview began with Hunt recounting the details of his childhood in rural Alabama, and how he first developed an interest in probability and games after reading Ed Thorpe’s landmark book on card counting, “Beat the Dealer.”

Hunt

Hunt was a latecomer to finance. He developed an interest in capital markets at the age of 40 after earning a PhD from Harvard and launching a successful software company. For Hunt, the attraction to markets wasn’t the financial reward, but rather the challenge of working on one of the most complex and challenging puzzles of our society. And for a while, Hunt believed he had it figured out. While rival funds were sinking in 2008, his fund outperformed. However, Hunt struggled during the early years of the recovery, eventually deciding to return his clients’ money and instead focus solely on discerning the forces driving markets in this new paradigm. For Hunt, the first breakthrough came back in 2012 following Mario Draghi’s infamous declaration that the ECB would do “whatever it takes” (within its mandate) to save the euro. The market’s reaction to Draghi and the ensuing rhetoric from central bankers on both sides of the Atlantic helped Hunt to understand the new dynamics. In place of market “fundamentals” like economic growth, inflation and real interest rates, the narrative being propagated by the central banks (and their seemingly unceasing asset purchases) had become paramount in the market’s psyche.

And it was really trying to figure out, well, how do you invest in this different world because something has changed? Something has changed. How do you make money? And that’s what I’ve been wrestling with was not knowing. The game, which I thought I had kind of figured out– and we’ve done really well. I mean, you know I had a career year in ’08. The solutions I had found– it wasn’t working. There was something else at work. And it was really, I think, the summer of 2012, where it first really hit me what that other thing was. This was the summer where Draghi have his Whatever it Takes” speech. And I thought I knew the politics. I thought I understood the dynamics and set up the trade that would play for this. And I was wrong. I was wrong. And it set it up with a very asymmetry, so it wasn’t a big hit financially. But it was a big hit in terms of, what’s really going on here? And that’s when I started really trying to think about this to solve this puzzle. And how can words– again, the unstructured data. Forget about the econometric data and other stuff we can see. And forget about understanding how you know political coalition’s work and all like that. What is this with just these words making such a difference?

And unfortunately for market skeptics, the damage done to the natural process of price discovery thanks to this unprecedented central bank intervention cannot be easily undone. “You can’t unring this bell,” Hunt said.

How is the world different today than it was before the central banks started buying stuff? My answer is, well, look. You can’t unring this bell. You’ve got $20 trillion worth of stuff. It may go down, but it can also go up again. You don’t uninvent these things. So this is a new permanent feature of our investing environment. The other new, and permanent, feature is the extensive use of our words and the conscious creation of narrative to try to drive investor behavior.

There’s nothing new about this. What is new– two things. One, central bankers finally figured this out. And that’s why we have– every day, you trip over yourself finding another Fed governor giving a speech or the like. It’s a very conscious policy. It is absolutely part of this. That’s where narrative comes from. It really is hardwired in us. We are trained to respond to this stuff. It makes us very successful. I wouldn’t take it away for the world because just like the ant, and the bee, and the termite, our ability to communicate, and our puppet strings, because the communication, is how and why we build cathedrals, and go to the moon, and do all the great stuff that we do as a crowd.

Right now, the two most important figures responsible for shaping the dominant market narrative are Mario Draghi and Jerome Powell…their influence far outweighs even world leaders like President Trump.

As you’d expect, the two most powerful missionaries in the world are whoever is the Chairman of the Federal Reserve and whoever is the president of the ECB. So right now, Powell and Draghi are, by far, by an order of magnitude, more influential in shaping, creating these narratives than any one else–like, 1/10 the influence of a Powell or a Draghi is going to be a Trump or a Merkel. Well, the story we believed in– value investing or quality investing– it’s not that it went away– this is the point of the three-body problem– it just doesn’t matter as much anymore.

It’s not that it’s not that value doesn’t exist anymore or value doesn’t work anymore. It’s that it’s going to work differently. What do I mean by that? What I mean by that is that the impact of central bank buying– the mechanistic $20 trillion, and the impact of everybody is now in on the act of creating narratives and doing it in a very effective way– what I think that means is these things create what I call, “meta stability.” And what I mean by that is that the period of time where value doesn’t work is going to, I think, last a lot longer than it has in the past. And that’s so difficult for people in our business.

And while there’s no escaping the all-encompassing market narrative being propagated by central bankers, investors can still find ways to insulate themselves by questioning every piece of news and information they receive about markets.

Well, you’re never going to isolate yourself from these folks. And you wouldn’t want to. But you can insulate yourself. And I think the most important way to do this– and this is something everyone can do– is not to read more or read less. Read differently. Read differently. And what I try to do whenever I read an article in the journal, or I’m listening to CNBC, ask yourself, why? Why now? It’s so rare that it’s actually a breaking piece of news. And what is rampant today is what I call Fiat news. It’s a Fiat currency. We’re creating currency, money, out of our imaginations. Fiat news is really the creation. We’re going to call it news, but it’s really opinion.

When politicians, central bankers and pundits try to bundle their information with an angle that instructs the reader how to think, it’s up to the reader to not take the bit, Hunt said.

And this is what everyone tries to do. Again, I don’t mean this as a bad thing. But this is what politicians, or bankers, or investors, or anyone who gets in front of a camera– it’s what we’re doing right now– we’re not just shaking our finger at people, we’re not just telling them what, we’re not just telling them the facts. We’re trying to tell them how to think about those facts. And when it’s presented as fact, as news, that’s what we are bombarded with. So this is my first line of defense– to ask, why? Why now?

Of course, market narratives are nothing new. Analysts have sought to spread opposing narratives of individual stocks since the birth of modern markets. The difference now largely comes down to scale: It’s the birth of the meta-narrative. Fortunately, Hunt believes that this narrative can be broken down, analyzed and understood using contemporary technology like Natural Language Processing.

And so I’ll say that thinking about value, and growth, and quality as stories is kind of the PhD topic– that’s kind of the advanced study– so if we’re kind of thinking of a continuum of these things, it’s stories about companies. Like, what’s the story about Tesla? Or what’s the story about IBM? Everyone can kind of, OK, yeah, I’m familiar with that. On the far end, what I’d like to convince everyone is that things like, growth and value– those are stories too. In the middle here is things like the story around inflation and the story around trade. So let’s start with those. And what you can do, I think, today, is with these technologies that are based around what’s called “Natural Language Processing,” NLP– it’s a branch of artificial intelligence. The thing is very powerful. It’s a way to apply the massive processing power that drives big data and AI– but to do it in a very specific way. And the very specific way is to read—read all the articles, all the transcripts, all the recordings, of the transcripts of every CNBC episode, and the like– not as a human does, where we’re doing serially and very selectively, and read this article or that article– but to read them all, and then to compare them all with each other so that we can really, again, visualize.

The power of these narratives cannot be understated, Hunt said. After all, central bankers’ willingness to intervene may have saved capitalism from an all-out collapse during the financial crisis.

And in a lot of ways, the great financial crisis and then the willingness, and the ability of central banks to come in and prop the entire system up– I think it saved the world in March of ’09. I really do. But we’ve seen this in other periods of enormous debt– the 1870s, the 1930s, where emergency government action becomes permanent government policy. And I’m not saying that’s good or that’s bad. I’m just saying it is.

But the risks haven’t disappeared – they’ve just been repressed for a time. We’ve seen this before, Hunt said. But the real question is: How long can this permanent government intervention hold the system together?

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Big Wall Street Landlords Are Being Sued By Tenants

Via RentalHousingJournal.com,

The largest owner and landlord of single-family rental homes in the United States is fighting a class-action lawsuit filed in California that alleges illegal and overly punitive late fees in Arizona, Oregon, California, Washington, Colorado, Utah, Texas and five other states in which it operates.

Invitation Homes, which owns nearly 7,500 properties in Arizona and more than 82,500 properties nationwide, is one of a group of real-estate investment companies that went public and, plaintiffs say, have allowed stockholder demands to unfairly affect how the companies are run. The growth of Wall-Street-owned single-family landlords came after the 2008 financial crisis, when equity companies and institutional investors bought foreclosed homes in bulk.

The plaintiff in the class-action lawsuit is Jose Rivera, a tenant in a home owned by Invitation Homes in Sylmar, Calif., a community of about 100,000 in the San Fernando Valley area of Los Angeles County.  His lease said that a fee of $95 would be charged if rent was late by even a minute.

It was Rivera’s routine to pay his rent through the company’s online web portal. Occasionally, however, the portal would be down.

“For example, once, in February of 2017, Mr. Rivera tried to pay his rent online but the portal was not working,” the lawsuit states. “He called Defendant (Invitation Homes) and Defendant told him to not ‘worry about it’ and to just ‘keep trying.’ Mr. Rivera tried multiple times to pay online, but the online portal would not work. Eventually Mr. Rivera just mailed in his rent payment. It was technically ‘late,’ although through no fault of Mr. Rivera.

To his surprise, Defendant returned Mr. Rivera’s rent check back to him in the mail. Defendant had refused to accept the check because Mr. Rivera had not also included additional fees and penalties for the rent being ‘late.’ ”

Because Invitation Homes had a policy of not accepting partial rent payments, it had determined that because Rivera had not added the late fee, his payment was a partial payment.

Landlord threatened eviction

Invitation Homes threatened to evict Rivera for not paying the added fees, saying it had already begun eviction proceedings. According to the lawsuit, Rivera, who thought he might lose the home he had lived in for years, paid the $95 late fee and an additional $895 in “legal fees,” which the company said were required.

The lawsuit alleges that the late fee and the “legal” fees function as “illegal penalties,” which are against the law in all 12 of the states in which Invitation Homes does business. In those states, landlords must show actual harm and must illustrate how fees for damages are calculated. In the case of Invitation Homes, the lawsuit states, rent that is only a few hours or days late causes no actual damage. And the fact that the late fee is uniformly $95 – regardless of whether the rent is $1,000 a month or $3,000 a month – shows that no attempt to determine actual harm is being made.

The lawsuit also singles out Invitation Homes’ practice of “stacking penalties upon penalties.

“Defendant imposes the $95 penalty. Defendant then systematically imposes a ‘legal’ fee. Then, separately and month after month, Defendant stacks another $95 fee on top even when a tenant is carrying a minimal balance, and even if the tenant has paid the base rent for that month.”

Invitation Homes classifies past late fees as “rent,” which means a tenant’s record shows that they are late on rent, not late on a late fee. In subsequent months, any current rent the tenant pays is applied to the late fees first, which then makes that month’s rent late as well, incurring yet another late payment.

“Some people have been evicted purely as a result of this late rent penalty and, in particular, this penalty stacking practice,” the lawsuit says.

The lawsuit was filed at the end of May. Invitation Homes subsequently filed a motion to dismiss, saying that the lawsuit failed to specify how its business practices are “unfair,” failed to state specific claims upon which relief could be granted, failed to identify the state laws that allegedly were violated, and that Rivera does not have the standing necessary to represent out-of-state residents. 

In August, Rivera’s lawyers filed an amended claim, clarifying the civil codes and laws violated, comparing the “pyramiding” of late fees to illegal banking schemes, and asserting why the case has correct legal standing in each of the 12 states (Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Minnesota, Nevada, North Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and Washington).

Wall Street landlords crowd out mom and pop landlords

In January 2018, a report researched by MIT graduate Maya Abood and co-sponsored by the Alliance of Californians for Community Empowerment Institute (ACCE), Americans for Financial Reform (AFR), and Public Advocates titled “Wall Street Landlords turn American Dream into a Nightmare” illustrates how the foreclosure crisis transformed large slices of American home-ownership into a home-rental industry dominated by a group of Wall Street corporations, the largest of which is Invitation Homes.

Some of the report’s conclusions:

  • Prospective homeowners and “mom and pop” landlords are crowded out of the home-buying market by cash-heavy investors who want to convert homes to rentals;

  • Wall Street landlords must steadily increase their profits and answer to their investors, which puts extra pressure on landlords to set higher rents, collect late fees and evict tenants quickly;

  • Low- and moderate-income families and people of color feel disproportionate impact;

  • The federal government ends up subsidizing these corporations, because many of them receive substantial tax breaks due to their status as Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs).

This last point reflects the path of Invitation Homes. In 2014, Waypoint Homes joined with Starwood Property Trust, an international REIT. The new company, Starwood Waypoint Residential Trust, merged with Colony American Homes, becoming Colony Starwood Homes. In 2017, Colony Starwood merged with Invitation Homes, which was controlled by The Blackstone Group, a major player in private-equity.  The combined company, Starwood Waypoint, owns more than 82,000 homes across the country.

“Single-family home rental used to be a small-scale and local business, built around direct ties between landlords and tenants,” the report says.

“In the new Wall Street rental empires, the relationships are impersonal, property managers come and go, and the executives who call the shots often have trouble hearing the voices of their tenants over the clamor of their investors.”

Wall Street landlords evict at higher rate

Wall Street landlords often evict tenants at astonishingly higher rates than other single-family landlords: in the Atlanta area, nearly one-third of all Starwood Waypoint tenants received eviction notices in 2015,” the report says. “Rent increases follow the same trend – with tenants facing as much as $1000/month increases.

“Across the nation, single-family homes are currently exempt from local rent-control laws, which is a big part of the market’s appeal to Wall Street. Investor pressure has also led to fee-gouging of a kind previously associated with credit cards and payday loans.

“These companies create extra revenue streams of excessive late charges and maintenance fees that shift the costs and responsibilities of traditional landlords onto tenants to an unprecedented extent,” the report concludes.

In addition, rental companies who value Wall Street needs over their tenants’ needs have less motivation to keep their tenants happy. The Better Business Bureau’s complaints log reports 604 complaints about Invitation Homes in the last three years, with 530 of those in the area of “Problems with Products and Services.”  The Arizona Republic recently did a story on tenants of Invitation Homes who could not get maintenance requests answered or needs met.

Kathy and Kim Suszczewicz’s family moved into one such home in 2016. Two years in, they say they regret leasing the home.

“If anybody is talking about finding a rental, I always say, ‘Stay away (from Invitation Homes). Don’t even bother with it,’ ” Suszczewicz told The Republic.

During the two years, the family has had problems with the electric front-door lock randomly locking and unlocking; with one inoperable toilet and another one leaking; and with a shower that was not able to run hot water. They also were unable to use their swimming pool for a year – even though they were paying $95 more per month for it – until the landlord approved the expense for a new pool filter. 

The company admitted that there had been delays and issues with the property the Suszczewiczes were renting, and said it regretted any inconvenience the family experienced. Shortly after the story ran in the Republic, the family received a phone call from the vice president of operations in Nevada and Arizona and an $850 refund of the pool fees they’d paid while it was unusable.

*  *  *

The lawsuit: https://www.scribd.com/document/382340052/Class-Action-v-Invitation-Homes

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Kerri Evelyn Harris, Delaware’s Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Loses Her Senate Race

|||https://www.kerrievelynharris.com/Since Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez beat 10-year incumbent Rep. Joe Crowley (D–N.Y.), election watchers have been on alert for upsets in other states by similarly progressive and Democratic socialist candidates. Thursday, an Ocasio-Cortez–style candidate failed to clear a primary hurdle in Delaware.

The Senate race between Sen. Tom Carper (D–Del.) and Kerri Evelyn Harris, an Air Force veteran who is also black and gay, ended in a defeat for Harris. As FiveThirtyEight notes, the fight for Delaware’s next senator mirrors Ocasio-Cortez’s race. Carper, who has never lost an election, spent 42 years serving as the state’s sole congressman, governor, and finally, as a senator. Harris was not even born when Carper was first elected to statewide office.

There are other similarities as well, including the fact that Harris is much more progressive than her challenger. Carper is considered the sixth-most conservative Democrat in the Senate. According to Harris’ campaign website, she supports legislation such as Medicare for all, raising the minimum wage to $15 an hour, stronger gun control measures, and a tax on large corporations for employees who use government assistance programs. Similarly, Harris was greatly outspent by Carper—$3.3 million to her $69,000.

Delaware’s senate race shed light on an ideological divide in the Democratic party. Harris received endorsements from Ocasio-Cortez and and the Our Revolution PAC, which is associated with Sen. Bernie Sanders (I–Vt.). The group that worked on Ocasio-Cortez’s campaign also backed Harris. Conversely, former Vice President Joe Biden recorded a robocall in support of Carper.

Prior to Harris’ loss, Ayanna Pressley managed to pull off an upset against Rep. Michael Capuano (D–Mass.) in the Bay State’s 7th Congressional District. Capuano was first elected into office in 1998. Pressley was no stranger to political office (she worked 16 years as a congressional aide and served nine years as a Boston city councilor) and her opponent had a strong progressive streak. Still, Pressley enjoyed an endorsement from Ocasio-Cortez on Twitter.

Harris joins several other Democratic socialist candidates lost their races so far this year.

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August Nonfarm Payrolls Preview: Prepare For A Downside Surprise

Tomorrow at 8:30am ET, the BLS will release the August jobs report: payrolls are expected to rebound to 198k from 157K after printing above 200k in the prior two months. However with record low unemployment and a bubbly labor market fueled by Trump’s stimulus, where labor shortages are said to be the biggest concern to companies, absent some “force majeure” in the words of Elon Musk, markets will ignore the payrolls print focus squarely on average hourly earnings to gauge if inflationary pressures are finally seeping into wages (according to Cheesecake Factory the answer is a resounding yes).

Here are Wall Street’s consensus expectations:

  • Non-farm Payrolls: Exp. 198k, Prev. 157k
  • Unemployment Rate: Exp. 3.8%, Prev. 3.9% (NOTE: the FOMC projects unemployment will stand at 3.6% at the end of 2018)
  • Average Earnings Y/Y: Exp. 2.7%, Prev. 2.7%
  • Average Earnings M/M: Exp. 0.2%, Prev. 0.3%
  • Average Work Week Hours: Exp. 34.5hrs, Prev. 34.5hrs
  • U6 Unemployment Rate: Prev. 7.5%
  • Labour Force Participation: Prev. 62.9%

While most commentators are optimistic, one bank that stands out with its muted outlook is Goldman, which expects that payrolls increased 175k in August, below the consensus of 195k. Goldman cautions that while continued strength in employment surveys and jobless claims data suggest underlying labor demand remains solid, it expects a drag of around 40k from negative residual seasonality. The result has been August payroll growth that has been below consensus in each of the last seven years and below the three-month average in each of the last eight (see chart below).

Another potential risk-factor: uncertainty following the imposition of July tariffs may have delayed hiring activity, and ADP private payroll growth unexpectedly slowed to a 10-month low.

More details on what to expect tomorrow, courtesy of RanSquawk:

  • LABOR MARKET TRENDS: A three-month moving average of monthly payrolls data has been ticking up over the last few months, with that rate running at around 224k in July, the highest since February 2018. The six-month moving average is running at 221k, the fifth straight month where the metric was above 200k. Finally, over the last three months, the 12-month moving average has been knocking between 200-203k.
  • WAGE GROWTH: In July’s Employment Situation Report, average hourly earnings ticked up by 0.26% MM, largely driven by supervisory workers, with non-supervisory workers hourly pay growth lagging with a rise of 0.13%. UBS notes that wage growth is still falling short of the pace of the rebound in inflation. “Last year’s real wage gains of about 0.5% have transformed to real wage losses over the past 12 months. We expect that real wage growth will pick up over the next six months driven as headline inflation slows following an energy-induced surge earlier this year.” UBS expects MM wage gains of 0.24% in August, and projects AHE YY will rise to 2.9% this year (vs 2.7% in 2017), and then rise at a clip of 3.2% in 2019 as the jobless rate falls to 3.5% by the end of next year and inflation rises. “The projected wage increases are a step up from the pace of wage growth that we have seen in recent years,” UBS says, noting still that “wage inflation remains well below the peaks experienced in past cycles.”
  • ADP PAYROLLS: Missed expectations of 188k in August, printing 163k, and the prior was revised down by 2k to 217k. “Although we saw a small slowdown in job growth the market remains incredibly dynamic,” ADP commented. “Midsized businesses continue to be the engine of growth, adding nearly 70 percent of all jobs this month, and remain resilient in the current economic climate.” Moody’s Analytics’ Zandi, was more optimistic: “The job market is hot. Employers are aggressively competing to hold onto their existing workers and to find new ones. Small businesses are struggling the most in this competition, as they increasingly can’t fill open positions.”
  • LAY-OFFS: Challenger reported that August’s announced downsizing rose to the third highest total in 2018 at 38,427, the highest since March (where 60,357 was printed), and the third time this year that announced job cuts exceeded the corresponding month for the previous year. “August job cut announcements seem to indicate the summer lull is over. Companies are assessing global market conditions and adjusting staffing levels accordingly.” Commenting on tariffs, Challenger also added that “last month saw an increase in companies attributing job cuts to tariffs, specifically tariffs on imported steel, which are ongoing, and newsprint, which have recently been overturned.” Looking ahead, Challenger said hiring announcements were up in August to 17,274, the highest total since February.
  • UNEMPLOYMENT CLAIMS: In the survey week for August (week ending August 18), initial jobless claims ticked down to 210k, with the four-week moving average at 213,750 (versus the 208k, and 220,750k four-week moving average in the previous survey window); Morgan Stanley’s analysts say this signals that firing flows remain low and should remain supportive of net job growth.
  • BUSINESS SURVEYS: The ISM’s reports on business have painted a healthy picture for the labour market. The manufacturing ISM’s employment sub-component rose by 2 points in August to 58.5, the 23rd straight month the sub-index has been in expansion territory. “Employment continued to expand, supporting production growth during the month,” ISM said, and “respondents continued to note labor-market issues as a constraint to their production and their suppliers’ production capability.” In the services sector, the employment sub-component rose by 0.6 points to 56.7; ISM, citing respondents, noted that “employee retention is getting much more challenging” and “losing people to attrition [and] having trouble replacing [them] in the current market.”

Meanwhile, back to Goldman, the bank lists several factors arguing for a weaker August job report:

  • Residual seasonality. Payrolls have exhibited a tendency toward weak readings in August, which may reflect a recurring seasonal bias in the first vintages of the data. In Exhibit 1, we show first-print payroll growth in August relative to consensus estimates and relative to the previously published three-month moving average (i.e. the average in May, June, and July, as published in the July employment report). August payroll growth has been below consensus in each of the last seven years and below the three-month average in each of the last eight (consensus for tomorrow’s report is 195k and the 3-month average is currently 224k). This August weakness has also tended to occur in many of the same industries—including manufacturing, professional services, retail, and information—and we estimate that residual seasonality could weigh on headline payroll growth in tomorrow’s report by 40k or even more.

  • ADP. The payroll-processing firm ADP reported a 163k increase in August private payroll employment—37k below consensus and the slowest pace in 10 months. While some of the sequential weakness may have reflected the July stepdown in the BLS measure—an input to the ADP model—the report nonetheless suggests that the pace of hiring may have moderated somewhat. We also note that the negative residual seasonality we expect in tomorrow’s nonfarm payroll report is not visible in the ADP measure.
  • Tariff uncertainty. Trade tensions escalated just before the start of the August payroll month (the five weeks ended August 18th), as the White House imposed a 25% tariff on $34bn worth of Chinese imports on July 6th and released a list of another $200bn worth of Chinese goods potentially subject to tariff on July 10th. While jobless claims suggest layoff rates remained very low in the wake of these developments, tariff-related uncertainty may have weighed on hiring activity in industries exposed to the risk of retaliation (or whose supply chains rely upon these imports).
  • Job cuts. Announced layoffs reported by Challenger, Gray & Christmas rebounded by 13k in August to 42k (SA by GS). On a year-over-year basis, announced job cuts rose 5k.

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