Goldman’s Bear Market Indicator Shows Crash Dead Ahead, Asks “Should We Be Worried?”

One year ago, we reported that in its attempt to calculate the likelihood, and timing, of the next bear market, Goldman Sachs created a proprietary “Bear Market Risk Indicator” which at the time had shot up to 67% – a level last seen just before the 2000 and 2007 crashes – prompting Goldman to ask, rhetorically, “should we be worried now?”

While Goldman’s answer was a muted yes, nothing dramatic happened in the months that followed – the result of Trump’s $1.5 trillion fiscal stimulus which pushed the US economy into overdrive – aside from the near correction in February which was promptly digested by the market on its path to new all time highs (here one has to exclude the rolling bear markets that have hit everything from emerging markets, to China, to commodities to European banks).

At the time, Goldman wrote that it examined over 40 data variables (among macro, market and technical data) and looked at their behaviour around major market turning points (bull and bear markets). Most, individually, did not work as leading indicators on a consistent basis, or they provided too many false positives to be useful predictors. So the bank developed a Bear Market Risk Indicator based on five factors, in combination, that do provide a reasonable guide to bear market risk – or at least the risk of low returns: valuation, ISM (growth momentum), unemployment, inflation and the yield curve.

And, as Goldman’s Peter Oppenheimer explained, while no single indicator is reliable on its own, the combination of these five seems to provide a reasonable signal for future bear market risk.

All of these variables are related. Tight labour markets are typically associated with higher inflation expectations. These, in turn, tend to tighten policy and weaken expectations of future growth. High valuations, at the same time, leave equities vulnerable to de-rating if growth expectations deteriorate or the discount rate rises, or, worse still, both of these occur together.

To aggregate these variables in a signal indicator, we took each variable and calculated
its percentile relative to its history since 1948. For the yield curve and unemployment
we took the lowest percentiles relative to history, while for the other indicators we took
the highest. We then took the average of these.

Fast forward to today, when one year later Goldman has redone the analysis (and after what may have been some prodding from clients and/or compliance, renamed its “Bear Market Risk Indicator” to “Bull/Bear Market Risk Indicator”) where it finds that the risk of a bear market – based on its indicator – is now not only nearly 10% higher than a year ago, but well above where it was just before the last two market crashes, putting the subjective odds of a crash at roughly 75%, well in the “red line” zone, and just shy of all time highs.

Or as Goldman puts it, “Our Bull/Bear market indicator is flashing red.

While one can argue with the subjective interpretation of this heuristic, a tangential analysis shows that Goldman’s indicator is inversely correlated with future returns, and as of this moment, Goldman is effectively forecasting a negative return from now until 2023.

Here even Goldman’s Oppenheimer admits that “the indicator is at levels which have historically preceded a bear market. Should we take this seriously? It’s always risky to argue that this time is different but there are two most likely scenarios when we think of equity returns over the next 3-5 years.”

Or, in other words, “how worried should we be about a bear market?”

Goldman’s answer is two-fold, laying out two possible outcomes from here, either a sharp, “cathartic” bear market, or just a period of slower, grinding low returns for the foreseeable future. Naturally, Goldman is more inclined to believe in the latter:

  1. A cathartic bear market across financial markets. This has been the typical pattern when this indicator has reached such lofty levels in the past. It would be most likely triggered by rising interest rates (and higher inflation), reversing the common factor that has fuelled financial asset valuations and returns over recent years or a sharper than expected decline in growth. Such a bear market could then ‘re-base’ valuations to a level where a new strong recovery cycle can emerge.
  2. A long period of relatively low returns across financial assets. This would imply a period of low returns without a clear trend in the market.

With retail investors still rushing to buy whatever institutional investors have left of offload in the very late innings of the longest bull market in history (and with Fidelity’s zero cost ETFs making it especially easy to do that), Goldman does not want to spook its clients into selling, and writes that “several factors suggest that a flatter return for longer may be more likely.” They are as follows:

i) Valuation is currently the most stretched of the factors in the Indicator – other factors such as inflation appear more reasonable. This is largely a function of very loose monetary policy and bond yields (see Exhibit 45).”

 

ii) Inflation and, therefore, interest rate rises have played an important part in rising bear market risks in past cycles. Structural factors may be keeping inflation lower than in the past, and central bank forward guidance is reducing interest rate volatility and the term premium. Without monetary policy tightening much, concerns about a looming recession – and therefore risks of a ‘cyclical’ bear market – are lower. So long as the Phillips curve remains as flat as it is now, strong labour markets can continue without the risk of a recession triggered by a tightening of interest rates. While this has not happened before in the US (and hence the economic cycle has not lasted more than 10 years), there have been examples of other economies experiencing very long economic cycles where the unemployment rate moved roughly sideways for many years.

Our economists have shown that there are good examples of long expansions, such as in Australia from 1992 to the present, the UK from 1992 to 2008, Canada from 1992 to 2008 and Japan from 1975 to 1992. Typically they find that a flatter Phillips curve, stronger financial regulation and a lack of financial imbalances are all good indicators that a long cycle is more likely.  On this later point, the signs are quite positive.

 

In the case of the US, our economists point out that a passive fiscal tightening, tighter financial conditions and supply constraints are likely to leave growth at 1.6% in 2020, below potential, leaving a greater risk of at least a technical recession in 2020-2021. But this is not their base case and their model (which uses economic and financial data from 20 advanced economies to estimate recession odds) puts the probability of a US recession at under 10% over the next year and just over 20% over the next two years, below the historical average.

iii) Aligned to this point, we can see that inflation targeting and independent central banks have both contributed to lower macro volatility and longer expansion phases in economic cycles since the 1980s.

So on the surface, while admitting we are overdue for a crash, Goldman spins the narrative into positioning what happens next not as a crash, but as a period of lower returns, adding that a sharp bear market in the absence of a recession is unlikely, and that generally equities rise when economic growth is positive:

… using US equity market data, the probability of negative annual equity returns falls dramatically as real GDP (lagged by 2Q) rises. So, for example, the probability of negative year-on-year returns when real GDP is between 1% and 2.5% is just 31%.

 

Or, in other words, “the absence of a trigger for a sharp economic downturn suggests that, while this cycle may have been the weakest in the post-war period, it is likely to be the longest. This, together with lower private sector imbalances, may reduce the prospect of a sharp bear market anytime soon.”

That’s the good news. The not so good news, is that as Goldman admits, with monetary and fiscal policy having thrown everything at the 2008 global financial crisis, “even if the next economic downturn turns out to be mild, it may prove difficult to reverse.” As a result, we may go back to an environment dominated by concerns over secular stagnation, for which Goldman lists two reasons:

  1. The US has already expanded fiscal policy and its debt levels and budget deficit are rising, which could make it difficult to find room for significant easing. The federal deficit will increase from $825bn (4.1% of GDP) to $1,250bn (5.5% of GDP) by 2021. By 2028, it is expected to rise to $2.05 trillion (7.0% of GDP). This would leave federal debt at 105% of GDP in ten years, 9pp higher than CBO’s latest projections.
  2. There may be room for US interest rates to be cut in the next downturn but less so than in other downturns. Also, European interest rates may still be at or close to zero when the next US downturn hits. The same would be true for Japan.

In other words, while Goldman’s indicators suggest a crash is imminent, the bank redirects the discussion to a period of low returns and secular stagnation, which while eliminating the threat of an imminent collapse presents even greater concerns about investing in the current market.

Most ominously, the bank admits that “the combination of constrained fiscal policy headroom in the US and limited room to cut interest rates in Japan and Europe may well dampen the ability to generate a strong coordinated policy response to any downturn, and also make it harder to get out of such a downturn.”

Said otherwise, whether the next crash is sharp and “cathartic” or slow and extended, the problem is what happens next, because as even Goldman now admits, the ammo to kickstart the US and global economy has already been used up.

via RSS https://ift.tt/2wGVrBZ Tyler Durden

Stocks Slammed After Tech-Regulation Looms From Congress

Emerging Market turmoil and contagion? No problem.

Tumbling ‘hard’ US economic data? Meh.

Tightening global central bank policies? Ha.

Admit 10s of million of “ad viewers” are robots:

…and this happens…Twitter tumbles.

And fears over regulatory talk from the hearings in Congress are not going over well with investors…

Senator Mark Warner: “Congress will have to set social media regulations.”

via RSS https://ift.tt/2wIw3ed Tyler Durden

Trump Claims He’s ‘Never’ Called Anyone ‘Mentally Retarded.’ Wrong.

President Donald Trump claimed yesterday that he’s “never used” the term “mentally retarded” to describe anyone, including embattled Attorney General Jeff Sessions.

Trump was responding to one the many claims in Fear, Bob Woodward’s upcoming book about the administration. According to excerpts published in The Washington Post, Trump said of Sessions: “This guy is mentally retarded. He’s this dumb Southerner….He couldn’t even be a one-person country lawyer down in Alabama.”

In a tweet yesterday, Trump fired back, claiming among other things he has “never” called anyone “mentally retarded”:

But that’s not true. As the Toronto Star‘s Daniel Dale points out, Trump called a magazine writer “retarded” in an April 2004 interview with radio host Howard Stern. The writer had called Trump’s business acumen into question.

Sticklers might object that he left out the word “mentally.” OK: In September 2004, Trump was back on Stern’s show. This time, he said a golf instructor was “mentally retarded— I mean, he’s really not a smart guy.”

Those instances don’t appear to be outliers. The Daily Beast reported in October 2016 that Trump used to regularly insult deaf actress Marlee Matlin, either suggesting she had a mental disability or outright calling her retarded.

Trump may not be telling the truth regarding his comments about Sessions either, according to Axios‘s Jonathan Swan:

It’s no secret that Trump has a history of this kind of behavior. He might as well stop lying about it.

from Hit & Run https://ift.tt/2wN6WrH
via IFTTT

The 10 most important lessons in finance from a legend in the field

[Editor’s note: Yesterday, we published a podcast we recorded with the legendary financial commentator, Jim Grant.

Jim is the editor of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer – one of the most-respected and followed financial publications in the world. In his 35 years writing Grant’s, Jim has seen a financial cycle or two.

And he’s amassed a network of many of the most important people on Wall Street (who often share their insights in his publication).

We’re excited to share a special piece from Jim in Notes today about the 10 most important lessons he’s learned in his 35 years in financial markets.

It’s a bit long, so we’ll publish the first half today and the rest tomorrow.

We’ve also arranged a special deal with Jim for Sovereign Man readers, which you’ll see below.]

From Jim Grant:

I’ve published over 800 issues of Grant’s Interest Rate Observer to date… That’s more than    four million words of market analysis.

I’ve made some good calls in that time (and, yes, some bad ones).  I’ve even gained some fame – at least in certain circles – for my more accurate predictions.

But, more importantly, I like to think that I’ve become a knowledgeable student of Mr. Market. I’ve lived through and analyzed manias and crashes.  I’ve seen interest rates fall from 20% to zero – and below… I’ve seen the stock market sawed in half and I’ve seen stocks rise far above any sane measure of valuation.

And through it all, every two weeks, I’ve shared my thoughts with a select group of readers.  Many of them have been with Grant’s since day one.

With that in mind, here are the 10 most important lessons I’ve learned in finance…

1. The key to successful investing is having everyone agree with you — LATER. The most popular investment of the day is rarely the best investment. If you want to know what’s popular, look no further than the front page of your favored business journal… Or just tune in at your next cocktail party.

At Grant’s, we seek profits where no one else is looking. We’re happy to wait for the consensus to come to us.

We’ve been contrarian since day one. In our minds, there’s no better lens through which to view the market.

2. You aren’t good with money. Because humans aren’t good with money. We buy high and sell low because it’s what comes naturally. It’s difficult to control emotions. It’s more difficult when money is involved.

But with detailed security analysis and an expert understanding of market cycles, you can minimize emotions when it comes to your portfolio.

 3. Everything about investing is cyclical… prices, valuations, enthusiasms. And this will never The greatest investors develop a sense of when markets have reached euphoric levels. And of when fear is crippling reason.

 Where do you think we stand on that scale today?

4. You can’t predict the future. Nor can the guy who claims he can.

You can, however, see how the crowd is handicapping the future. Observing the odds, you can make better choices.

You can recognize the rhythms of market cycles (see lesson 3). And with enough practice, you can profit from those cycles – or at least avoid disaster. As when we warned Grant’s readers in our September 8, 2006 issue about a bubble in subprime mortgage debt – 11 months before the crisis began. And three years later, when we advised going long bank stocks before they rallied 250%.

5. Every good idea gets driven into the ground like a tomato stake. Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) were a great idea. They allowed investors diversified exposure to a number of markets for minimal fees.

 Today, ETFs account for more than 23% of all U.S. trading volume with a total market value over $3 trillion. And the ETF market is forecasted to hit $25 trillion globally by 2025.

Yes, ETFs allow investors to diversify into lots of markets for a little bit of money. But ETFs allocate money without consideration of value.

And what happens when everyone rushes for the exits?

Source

from Sovereign Man https://ift.tt/2CmRszF
via IFTTT

Counter-Terror Unit “Monitoring” Quarantined Emirates Flight In New York After 100 Passengers Get Sick

An Emirates plane that landed at JFK Wednesday morning has been quarantined after more than 100 of the 500 passengers on board fell ill, according to NBC 4 New York.

Emirates flight 203 from Dubai was headed to New York when at least 100 of the 500 passengers on board reported feeling ill.

The flight landed at JFK Wednesday morning about 9:10 a.m. where Port Authority Police and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention were waiting  to check passengers in a staging area.

NYC Mayor Bill de Blasio’s office confirmed that the passengers had been quarantined.

One passenger posted a photo showing more roughly a dozen emergency response vehicles waiting on the runway. The passenger, Larry Coben, said passengers were warned that some people on the flight had become sick, but he said he hadn’t seen any sick passengers. However, he noted that the plane contained two levels of seats.

NYPD’s Counter-Terrorism unit is “monitoring” the situation…

Reports of the mysterious illness surfaced after a flight from New York to Florida earlier this year had to be diverted after passengers reported burning throats after being exposed to an unknown substance that reportedly smelled like “dirty socks.” The plane, and its passengers, have been taken to a staging area in NYC where they await further inspection.

via RSS https://ift.tt/2oJ8Dlg Tyler Durden

‘Judge Kavanaugh Was Not Responsible for the Parkland School Shooting’

The father of a victim in the Parkland school shooting unexpectedly made news at the Supreme Court nomination hearings for Brett Kavanaugh yesterday.

The reasons Kavanaugh didn’t shake hands aren’t immediately clear, but reading the worst possible motive into it is tendentious to say the least. Guttenberg’s tweet predictably sparked angry responses from critics of the Republican Party, Donald Trump, gun rights, and Kavanaugh. Perhaps most notably, it called forth this response from Sen. Kamala Harris (D-Calif.), who has already made clear she intends to vote no on the nominee and who interrupted the opening of the hearings to call for a postponement.

Guttenberg’s tweet also called out this response from another parent of a Parkland victim:

I agree with Pollack both that Kavanaugh is in no way responsible for the Parkland shooting and that the mayhem there is best understood as a systematic breakdown among the authorities. (Robert Runcie is the school superintendent of Parkland.) It wasn’t just on-the-scene law enforcement and school bureaucrats who failed there either; mental health and child protective services officials also had interactions with Cruz that should have served as warnings. [OK?] Pollack now heads Americans for Children’s Lives and School Safety, a group committed to promoting school safety without increasing gun control restrictions. It’s worth noting that even as he (rightly, in my view) says we shouldn’t politicize school shootings, it’s far from clear what his qualifications are to urge that Kavanaugh be confirmed.

Legal blogger and Reason contributor Ken “Popehat” White is in a better position to make that sort of call. Here’s what he wrote after Guttenberg’s tweet made the rounds:

It’s quite possible that Supreme Court nomination hearings, at least since Robert Bork’s in the 1980s, bring out the absolute worst in legislators and citizens alike. Despite the intense competition to become a member of the Court, the qualifications for the job are easily met by most candidates who actually get to sit in front of the Senate for confirmation. (Of course, no one is allowed to get that far if he or she is unlikely to win a majority vote.) But the symbolic values that get projected onto prospective justices often have little to do with the individual and more to do with the particular moment the nomination happens to arrive. Pity poor Merrick Garland, who would have been terrible from a libertarian perspective, but clearly got rooked out of a hearing by the GOP majority because his chance came too late in Barack Obama’s presidency. Pity libertarian Douglas Ginsburg, too, who was nominated after Bork but forced to withdraw his nomination because he admitted to smoking weed (this was 1987, folks).

According to most of the scholars Reason has talked with, Kavanaugh is, on balance, pretty good if you believe in limited government. Which isn’t to say that even someone as rotten as Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), who has a long track record of supporting surveillance, military interventions, and all manners of incursions into basic economic and civil liberties, isn’t right when she tweets:

We won’t get all of those records, of course, and in many ways I’m more interested in Feinstein’s own papers on these topics. The Senate and House, after all, are far more consequential (or should be) in making law and setting policy that the Supreme Court, which is best understood as a validator of social and political change rather than its initiator.

Here’s a recent discussion I had with Ken White about Kavanaugh and a ton of other legal issues. Watch below, listen via SoundCloud, or subscribe to the Reason Podcast at iTunes.

from Hit & Run https://ift.tt/2NNhvkM
via IFTTT

Trump Defies Republicans And Democrats With Shutdown Threats

With the end of the federal government’s fiscal year looming, President Trump is once again wielding threats of a “good” government shutdown as a cudgel to batter intransigent Democrats and Republicans who are standing in the way of his plans to build his promised wall along the US’s southern border.

Of course, this isn’t the first time Trump has threatened a shutdown – and at this point in the game, with the outrageous allegation from Bob Woodward’s tell-all vying for dominance in the news cycle and Trump’s trade war contributing to the stress in emerging markets – the president might view a shutdown fight as an advantageous distraction ahead of the Nov. 6 midterm vote.

Republicans

But there’s also reason to believe the president could be sincere about this threat. After all, even his Republican allies in Congress have done seemingly everything in their power to avoid the issue of funding for the border wall.

Here’s Bloomberg:

“On the wall, the House spending panel has backed spending $5 billion next year while the Senate has backed $1.6 billion. The House proposal, worked out in talks with the White House budget office, falls short of the total $23 billion Trump has sought.”

While Congressional leaders have been lobbying Trump for months to pass a half-dozen or so spending bills before the Oct. 1 deadline, immigration hardliners in the West Wing have been encouraging Trump to stand his ground, according to Politico. The reasoning, according to the hardliners, is that funding for the wall will be effectively dead in the water if Democrats wrestle back control of Congress after the midterms – so why not press the advantage now?

For months, GOP leaders have been laying the groundwork to avoid a shutdown on Sept. 30, the end of the fiscal year and just five weeks before Election Day. Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) and even Vice President Mike Pence are already quietly lobbying Trump to postpone a shutdown fight over his border wall with Mexico until after the election, Hill and Trump administration sources say.

But any carefully laid plans could be for naught, as Trump receives contradictory advice from rival factions in the West Wing. Some White House officials are confident that Trump will sign spending bills keeping the government open.

A smaller subset of immigration hard-liners inside the White House, however, are encouraging Trump to fight on the border wall issue now, while Republicans still control Congress. These officials think the House majority is already gone — and they have encouraged Trump to hold the line for his border wall and secure a win while he can, according to multiple sources on Capitol Hill and in the administration.

Trump, along with Republican congressional leaders, is trying to set up a meeting with the Democrats next week to try and hash out some of these issues. But it’s unclear how successful that might be. According to Politico, forcing a shut down would “almost certainly” cost Republicans their majority in the House. However, that analysis is based on the polling data – and as we learned in 2016, polls are sometimes wrong.

But a shutdown now would almost certainly cost Republicans their House majority. Democrats are currently favored to win the lower chamber. And GOP lawmakers are already being dragged down by Trump’s abysmal approval ratings and the criminal cases involving Paul Manafort and Michael Cohen. There’s a sense that a shutdown would be the final nail in the coffin for House Republicans.

“A shutdown’s not good for anybody, whether Republicans or Democrats,” Senate Appropriations Chairman Richard Shelby (R-Ala.) said. “I want to do everything I can to avoid a shutdown.”

Given Trump’s unpredictability GOP leaders have been preparing for the worst-case scenario: That Trump puts his foot down and insists on the shutdown. If he does, lawmakers will have little recourse – unless they could muster the votes to override a presidential veto.

Finally we note that the spread between pre-fiscal-year-end and post-fiscal-year-end Treasury Bill yields is spiking signaling the market is starting to price in some anxiety across that crucial dateline…

via RSS https://ift.tt/2wKqXON Tyler Durden

Kavanaugh Hysteria Enters Day Two: Reason Roundup

Brett Kavanaugh confirmation hearings enter their second day. If they’re anything like the first, we can expect some substantive material mixed in with a lot of weirdness, theatrics, and projection.

Sen. Ben Sasse gave the best speech of the day yesterday, decrying the “fundamental misunderstanding of the role of the Supreme Court in American life now.” Sasse lamented that our “political commentary talks about the Supreme Court like they are people wearing red and blue jerseys. That’s a really dangerous thing.” He was of course pilloried by progressives for using the word hysteria in his speech. (Watch the whole thing here.) But hysteria is exactly the right word.

The hearings were flanked by protesters, including some dressed in the (now de riguer for the fashionable female demonstrator) red Handmaid’s Tale cloaks. Josh Nelson—head of the group CREDO Action, which has also been driving anti-Kavanaugh billboard trucks around Capitol Hill for eight hours a day—was allegedly “dragged” out after shouting that the public questioning of a Supreme Court nominee by elected officials was “an attack on democracy” that needed to be shut down.

He was far from the only one to interrupt the hearings with shouty and often incoherent complaints. (Actress Piper Perabo was also among those ushered out.)

Meanwhile, the way the woman behind Kavanaugh was resting her hand became fodder for some truly ridiculous fearmongering. The woman—Kavanaugh assistant Zina Bash, who is half Mexican and whose Polish grandparents survived the Holocaust—was accused by prominent activists, academics, and media of secretly signaling that she stood for white supremacy, by making what was once perceived as an “OK” hand gesture until 4chan trolls convinced certain folks that it was really code for white nationalism.

Whether Bash was secretly signalling Kavanaugh’s true colors (she wasn’t) became a major focus of coverage and conversation around the first day of the confirmation hearings.

Read more about the meat of yesterday’s hearings in recent Reason posts from Damon Root (“Jeff Flake Says He’ll Ask Brett Kavanaugh About Donald Trump’s Constitutional Flaws” and “Brett Kavanaugh Praises Anthony Kennedy’s ‘Legacy of Liberty'”), John Stossel (“Libertarians should be happy about Trump’s SCOTUS pick“), and Volokh Conspiracy bloggers Ilya Somin (“Kavanaugh Is Well Within the ‘Mainstream’—but ‘Mainstream’ Isn’t Always Good“) and Gail Heriot (“Sen. Durbin’s Attack on the Federalist Society at the Kavanaugh Hearing Is Silly“).

FREE MINDS

Twitter and Facebook executives are being summoned before Congress, this time to testify on foreign election ads and influence (again) and alleged bias by Twitter against conservatives.

Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.)—the one recently circulating inane internet regulation proposals—said that it “will be a successful hearing [before the committee] if coming out of this are three or four notions on how we’re going to be better prepared. What are the guardrails that should or could be put in place to make sure that Americans may think twice before they believe the validity of a post?”

FREE MARKETS

“China doesn’t need U.S. soybeans.” That is Beijing’s message for us as Trump’s trade war rages, and U.S. farmers starting to freak out, reports Time.

“If the trade tensions cannot be resolved quickly, the decrease in purchasing volumes of American soybeans will continue,” said Mu Yan Kui, a grain-company exec and vice chairman of China National Association of Grain Economy. “Many people have underestimated the Chinese people.”

QUITK HITS

• “Prosecuting homeless people for sleeping on public property when they have no access to shelter violates the Constitution’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment,” the Los Angeles Times reports of a new federal appeals court decision.

• A sexual assault charge against Kevin Spacey has been dropped.

from Hit & Run https://ift.tt/2NOrGFH
via IFTTT

Over Half Of America Suffering Drought As Lake Powell, Lake Mead Drop To “Dangerous” Low Levels

Authored by Michael Snyder via The American Dream blog,

The worst drought in years in the western half of the United States has sparked hundreds of wildfires, has crippled thousands of farms, and has produced what could ultimately be the worst water crisis in modern American history.

As you will see below, Lake Powell and Lake Mead have both dropped to dangerously low levels, and officials are warning that we may soon be looking at a substantial shortfall which would require rationing.  Unfortunately, many in the eastern half of the country don’t even realize that this is happening.  The mighty Colorado River once seemed to be virtually invulnerable, but now it doesn’t even run all the way to the ocean any longer.  Demand for water is continually increasing as major cities in the Southwest continue to grow, and this is happening at a time when that entire region just keeps getting drier and drier.  To say that we are facing a “water crisis” would be a major understatement.

I have written quite a bit about the drought in the Southwest in recent months, and it just keeps getting worse.  According to Forbes, more than half the nation is now experiencing some level of drought…

Drought conditions across the United States have worsened throughout the summer, culminating in more than half the country experiencing abnormally dry or drought conditions by the end of August.

The latest update of the United States Drought Monitor shows that more than half of the country—nearly 56 percent—is abnormally dry or mired in a full-on drought. More than a third of the country is experiencing drought conditions, and almost eight percent is in an extreme or exceptional drought.

Of course most Americans don’t really care as long as water keeps coming out of the taps.  And for the moment, nobody is going without water.

But that could change if this drought continues to intensify.

According to the Denver Post, Lake Powell and Lake Mead have both dropped “to dangerous levels”…

Water levels at Lake Mead and Lake Powell are dropping to dangerous levels, reflecting the Colorado River’s worsening “structural deficit,” scientists said.

A “structural deficit” is simply a very fancy way of saying that we are using water faster than it is being replenished.

Lake Powell is being steadily drained to support Lake Mead, and at this point the water levels in both lakes have fallen to levels that are unprecedented

“I want people to know that what’s going on at Lake Mead is very, very closely tied to what’s going on Lake Powell,” Doug Kenney said, the group’s chair and a professor at the University of Colorado. “We’re draining Lake Powell to prop it up.”

Lake Powell is about 48 percent full, and Lake Mead is about 38 percent full. By the end of the year, Powell’s levels are projected to fall 94 feet (29 meters) below where the reservoir stood in 2000 when it was nearly full.

Many Americans don’t realize how exceedingly important these two lakes are.

Approximately 40 million people in Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah, Wyoming and northwestern Mexico rely on water from the Colorado River basin, and it has been steadily drying out for about 20 years

The Colorado River basin, which feeds the two reservoirs, has been drying out over the last two decades, scientists said. With the demands from farms and cities exceeding the available the water supply, the strains on the river and reservoirs are being compounded by growing population, drought and climate change.

The Colorado River and its tributaries support about 40 million people and more than 7,800 square miles (20,200 square kilometers) of farmland.

If things don’t change, and there is no reason to believe that they will, we will soon have a shortfall.

What that means is that certain areas would have their water allocations reduced, and Arizona and Nevada would be at the top of that list

The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation said the chances of a shortfall in Lake Mead, the river’s biggest reservoir, are now 57 percent, up from the 52 percent projected in May.

If the surface of Lake Mead drops below 1,075 feet (330 meters) above sea level, some deliveries would be cut under agreements governing the system.

Arizona, Nevada and Mexico would have their shares reduced first in a shortage.

Are you starting to understand how serious this is?

Scientists tell us that the 20th century was an unusually wet period of time for the southwestern United States.  For most of human history, a bleak and barren desert dominated most of the region, and it appears that we may be headed back in that direction.

During the Dust Bowl days of the 1930s, vast numbers of Americans migrated to other areas due to heat, drought, massive dust storms and a lack of water.

Now Dust Bowl conditions are returning, and it is entirely possible that we could see a new wave of migration in the years ahead.

Despite all of our advanced technology, we haven’t discovered a way to defeat drought, and the devastating drought that is currently gripping the Southwest seems to be getting worse with each passing day.

via RSS https://ift.tt/2oF7WJU Tyler Durden

Watch Live: Twitter and Facebook Execs Appear Before Congress; Alex Jones In Attendance

Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey and Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg are set to tell lawmakers Wednesday that their companies have taken measures to combat foreign interference in future elections. 

At 9:30AM EST, Sandberg and Dorsey will appear together in front of the Senate Intelligence Committee, while Dorsey will sit down with the House Energy and Commerce Committee at 1:30PM ET. 

“Our adversaries are determined, creative and well-funded,” Sandberg plans to say, according to her prepared remarks. “But we are even more determined — and we will continue to fight back.”

Dorsey said in tweets ahead of the hearing: “We realize Twitter is used by many as a public square, and our singular objective as a company is to help increase the health and integrity of conversations found within.”

 

Dorsey’s second congressional hearing will seek to address allegations by Republican lawmakers that Twitter is unfairly targeting conservative-leaning users, charges echoed by President Trump. 

Alex Jones? 

Also in attendance will be Infowars founder and host Alex Jones, who is in Washington D.C. to “face his accusers.” 

Jones said he was attending the hearings to face his accusers, who have charged him with being everything from a Russian agent to a racist.

Jones has reportedly obtained a front row seat at the hearings and has vowed to challenge the media on how they misreported the reasons he was banned by Big Tech.

He will also hold a special press conference while in DC. –Infowars

 We’re gonna need a bigger popcorn bowl… 

via RSS https://ift.tt/2Q1susm Tyler Durden