Alabama Bans Publishing of Prostitution Mugshots, Allows Cops to Hold Suspected Sex Workers for 72 Hours

Under a little-heralded new Alabama rule, it’s illegal to publish the mugshots of people arrested for prostitution. Alabama law now stipulates that these mugshots are “not a public record and may not be published in any printed or electronic media or provided to any person” without special permission from a district judge. “We’re trying to look at these women less as criminals and more as victims, and we don’t want to see them be revictimized,” said Rep. Jack Williams (R-Birmingham), who sponsored the legislation.

I’ve railed many times against the journalistic practice of publishing the mugshots of people arrested for prostitution or solicitation of prostitution. Considering the stigma surrounding prostitution, I think any “public interest” served in seeing the faces of those merely arrested for this misdemeanor offense is generally outweighed by the long-term damage it could do—especially in the Internet era—to the the lives and reputations of these individuals. But the decision whether to publish prostitution mugshots, or any mugshots, should be matter of journalistic ethics, not government mandate.

If Alabama lawmakers really believe that all people selling sex are victims, perhaps they should repeal laws that make selling sex a crime. But as long as prostitution is a crime in Alabama, there’s no justifying a categorical ban on publishing prostitution-arrest mugshots. As Alabama Press Association lawyer Dennis Bailey said, “It’s a very blatant form of prior restraint,” which is unconstitutional.

What’s especially strange here is that law passed the state legislature in May and took effect August 1, but newspaper editors say they are just hearing about the measure now. This seems like a pretty big oversight on both the part of state officials and Alabama journalists, who covered the legislation that the mugshot-ban was part of but apparently failed to notice that particular part. Meanwhile, officials failed to specify what, if any, punishment could come from violating the ban.

The main focus of the legislation, known as the Alabama Human Trafficking Safe-Harbor Act, was allowing law-enforcement to decline criminal charges for minors engaged in prostitution, and instead refer them to social services or state custody. Alabama police arrested three minors for prostitution in 2015, according to the Anniston Star, which reviewed statewide arrest data. “It’s unclear whether any of the children were actually charged with the crime,” the paper reported, “or whether police knew they were underage at the time of the arrest.”

Not charging juveniles for selling sex, whether on their own or under force or coercion, is certainly a positive step. But the legislation contains a lot of language that suggests, arrest or no arrest, these young people aren’t simply being seen as victims. For instance: “Once the sexually exploited child is adjudicated, the juvenile court shall retain jurisdiction over the sexually exploited child and may enforce prior orders requiring payment of court-ordered monies.”

Beyond that, the “Safe Harbor Act” is packed with worrying components unrelated to minors, in addition to the mugshot ban. Most alarmingly, it allows adults arrested for prostitution to be held for up to 72 hours so law-enforcement can screen them for mental-health issues, financial status, living arrangements, and who knows what else, before deciding whether to bring charges or send them to a pre-trial diversion program. Here’s the relevant passage:

For the safety and well-being of a person arrested for the crime of prostitution under Division 2, Article 3, Chapter 12, Title 13A, Code of Alabama 1975, he or she may be held in custody for up to 72 hours. The person shall be brought before a court of competent jurisdiction as soon as possible within a 48-hour period to conduct an inquiry into the person’s access to resources, such as, but not limited to, health care, shelter, mental health counseling, or financial aid. The court may issue an order to assist the person in obtaining the services and resources needed pursuant to the court’s inquiry.

In addition, all prostitution cases must now be heard in district, rather than muncipal, courts. And law-enforcement can choose to

The new law also requires any “business engaging in an escort business of companionship” to register with the Alabama secretary of state’s office, and sets a criminal penalty for failing to do so. The office is urging people to report any unregistered escort-services they know of to the the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency. What’s dangerous here is it may relieve police of the need to prove prostitution of individuals advertising as “escorts” before making an arrest.

Rep. Williams has described the bill his efforts as a first step toward “plant[ing] a flag that says you are not going to rape a child in Alabama.” The measure passed both the Alabama House and Senate unanimously.

The last major sections of Williams’ bill focus on prostitution clients, and civil asset forfeiture. It stipulates that anyone found guilty of soliciting prostitution or promoting it, among a few related offenses, must be tried in district rather than municipal court and assessed a mandatory fine of $500, “notwithstanding any other fines, restitution, court costs, or docket fees,” with the fine rising 50 percent for second through fourth convictions. The money will go to a “court-certified therapeutic counseling entity that provides education, treatment, and prevention counseling to adult persons convicted of prostitution offenses.” And courts may order those convicted of solicitation to “attend counseling or an educational training program designed to reduce recidivism rates.”

Alabama cops were also granted more to seize the assets of anyone suspected of soliciting prostitution. “We’ve added wording so it’s plain that if a john pulls up to a car, solicits a female, puts her in that car and drives off—that car can be forfeited, just like a drug dealer’s,” said state prosecutor Barry Matson, deputy director of the Alabama District Attorneys Association, at an Alabama Human Trafficking Task Force meeting in February. He illustrated this detail by noting that, “Right now in Alabama if I pull up on the road and shoot a deer… I’m going to lose my car and my gun. So I think if we can protect deer in that way we darn sure can protect people.”

The forfeiture expansion goes beyond cars and “johns,” however. Under the Safe Harbor Act, “any property, proceeds, or instrumentality of every kind, used or intended for use in the course of, derived from, or realized through the commission” of any misdemeanor or felony prostitution offense, or “attempt or conspiracy to commit such offenses,” is subject to civil forfeiture. This makes prostitution offenses the only misdemeanor crimes subject to this sort of broad forfeiture potential in Alabama.

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Frontrunning: November 23

  • S&P 500 Futures Signal Rally Ebbing; Bonds Decline in Europe (BBG)
  • Oil prices capped by doubts OPEC-led cut will end glut (Reuters)
  • Fed Minutes to Be Parsed for Insight on Inflation, Jobs (WSJ)
  • Trump keeping ‘open mind’ on pulling out of climate deal (Reuters)
  • Trump Raises Prospect of Keeping Ties to His Firms (WSJ)
  • Obama’s not-so-secret admirer: Donald Trump (Reuters)
  • Facebook’s Fake News Crackdown: It’s Complicated (BBG)
  • Iran warns of retaliation if U.S. breaches nuclear deal (Reuters)
  • U.S. retailers push deals early as Black Friday loses focus (Reuters)
  • For Department Stores, the Big Lure on Black Friday: $19.99 Boots (WSJ)
  • How Apple Lost China to Two Unknown Local Smartphone Makers (BBG)
  • Automakers seek to cut inventories with Black Friday, holiday promotions (Reuters)
  • Xerox Overcharged Student Debtors, State Prosecutor Says (BBG)
  • Wall Street’s Youngest Workers Not Worried About Robots (BBG)
  • Brady Dougan Gets Back in the Game With $3 Billion Investment (WSJ)
  • North Sea Oil Glut to Get Short-Term Relief as Flows Go East (BBG)

 

Overnight media Digest

WSJ

– Donald Trump indicated that he was unlikely to disentangle himself from his business empire as fully as he previously suggested, raising questions about potential conflicts of interest while president. on.wsj.com/2fDEkpZ

– The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed above 19000 for the first time, extending a stretch of milestones for major U.S. stock indexes. on.wsj.com/2gdNXiR

– A handful of doctors, many with close ties to John Kapoor’s Insys Therapeutics, are responsible for outsize levels of prescriptions for Subsys, a form of the opioid fentanyl. Officials in more than 15 jurisdictions are investigating Insys’ business practices. on.wsj.com/2gismTL

– As department stores gear up for the holiday shopping frenzy that unofficially gets underway this week, behind the scenes they have been locked in a battle with some big-name suppliers over rampant discounting. on.wsj.com/2gGBmGg

– President-elect Donald Trump is leaning toward asking former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney to be his secretary of state, according to people familiar with the deliberations. on.wsj.com/2fCFDFI

– Former Credit Suisse Group AG Chief Executive Brady Dougan plans to launch a merchant bank in early 2017 and has lined up a $3 billion investment to seed the venture, according to people familiar with the matter. on.wsj.com/2f49ydK

– China is moving swiftly to capitalize in Asia on the apparent collapse of a landmark U.S.-backed Pacific trade agreement, saying it hopes now to conclude its own Asia-wide trade pact in a step to broaden its influence as priorities shift under a new administration in Washington. on.wsj.com/2gFYtkk

 

FT

* Britain’s finance minister will say on Wednesday that he is reducing a benefits squeeze for low-paid workers, but that fixing the public finances and improving productivity are the best ways to improve living standards.

* Companies would be given more breathing space to restructure their debts in times of crisis under a European Union draft law unveiled on Tuesday, inspired by U.S. insolvency rules and aimed at avoiding bankruptcies and saving jobs.

* Frank Field, the chair of the committee probing the collapse of BHS, has asked regulators whether it can see seize Philip Green’s assets including his yachts.

 

NYT

– President-elect Donald Trump said on Tuesday he had no intention of pressing for an investigation into Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server or the financial operations of her family’s foundation. http://nyti.ms/2gA67M8

– Facebook has developed software to suppress posts from appearing in people’s news feeds in specific geographic areas, according to three current and former Facebook employees. The feature was created to help Facebook get into China, a market where the social network has been blocked. http://nyti.ms/2gA3iut

– A federal judge in Texas issued a nationwide injunction on Tuesday against an Obama administration regulation expanding by millions the number of workers who would be eligible for time-and-a-half overtime pay. The regulation was scheduled to take effect on Dec. 1. It would raise the salary limit below which workers automatically qualified for overtime pay to $47,476 from $23,660. http://nyti.ms/2gA5AKd

– George Soros says he will commit $10 million from his personal foundation to combat a rise in hate crimes that he linked to the “incendiary rhetoric” of President-elect Donald Trump’s campaign. He said he was “deeply troubled” by hundreds of reports of possible hate crimes since the election. http://nyti.ms/2gA6TJ6

 

Britain

The Times

Belgian industrial equipment supplier TVH Group NV launched a hostile bid for Lavendon Group Plc after its initial takeover approaches were rebuffed by the British company’s largest shareholder. http://bit.ly/2fPAL3c

There is “zero chance” of British Airways operating any new domestic flights from an expanded Heathrow, said the head of the airline’s parent company, International Consolidated Airlines Group SA. http://bit.ly/2fPEltT

The Guardian

Millions of families who are being charged hundreds of pounds by agencies to cover the supposed administrative costs of renting will be offered relief when the chancellor of the exchequer promises to ban letting fees. Philip Hammond will unveil the measure in the autumn statement on Wednesday alongside a 1.4 billion pounds ($1.74 billion) investment in affordable housing as he tries to deliver on Prime Minister Theresa May’s promise to help families who are “just about managing.” http://bit.ly/2g1guoY

Discount chains Aldi and Lidl have begun putting up the price of basic groceries, including milk and bananas, as the squeeze from the Brexit-driven fall in the value of the pound hits. http://bit.ly/2g1c9BU

The Telegraph

MPs have written to the Pensions Regulator to ask if assets owned by Philip Green, including his multi-million-pound super yacht, could be seized in order to pay the pensions of thousands of BHS workers. http://bit.ly/2fPAMDV

Hewden, the heavy machinery rental firm, has collapsed into administration after being hit by uncertainty following the EU referendum and after a desperate search for new funding failed. http://bit.ly/2g1fqRR

Sky News

Administrators to BHS have lodged a furious protest against a move to force them to begin liquidating the collapsed retailer within days, accusing its biggest creditor of jeopardising efforts to complete an orderly wind-down, according to a copy of a progress report obtained by Sky News. http://bit.ly/2g1czbH

The Independent

The UK government has reduced its stake in Lloyds Banking Group Plc to below 8 percent as it continues progress towards fully privatising the bailed-out lender. http://ind.pn/2g1cMM1

 

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How Much Credit Should Obama Get for Shrinking the Federal Prison Population?

President Obama’s latest batch of commutations puts his total above 1,000, as Scott Shackford noted yesterday. The New York Times used that milestone as a peg for a story about trends in the federal prison population that gives Obama too much credit and Richard Nixon too much blame. “President Obama is on pace to be the first president in a half-century to leave office with a federal prison population that is smaller than when he was sworn in,” says Times reporter Matt Apuzzo, who attributes that development to “eight years of liberal criminal justice policies, historically low crime rates and an aggressive use of presidential commutations.”

Commutations have played a small role in reducing the number of federal prisoners. After a slow start (just one commutation in his first term, just 20 in the first half of his second term), Obama is earnestly and admirably trying to make up for lost time. If he shortens as many sentences this month and the next two as he did in October, his total will be almost 1,500, which is more than his 12 most recent predecessors combined, from FDR through George W. Bush. But even 1,500 commutations would represent just 0.7 percent of federal prisoners, half of whom are drug offenders.

What about “eight years of liberal criminal justice policies”? The biggest factor has been the Fair Sentencing Act of 2010 (FSA), which reduced crack cocaine penalties, and the changes to federal sentencing guidelines that law prompted. According to a 2015 report from the U.S. Sentencing Commission (USSC), about 6,000 crack offenders received shorter prison terms as a direct result of the FSA from 2010 through 2014. The average reduction was nearly three years. Retroactive changes that the USSC made to its sentencing guidelines in light of the FSA reduced another 6,880 prison terms. That’s a total of nearly 13,000.

To his credit, Obama supported the FSA. But so did almost every member of Congress (including the “drug war dinosaur” Jeff Sessions). The bill was approved by unanimous consent in the Senate and by a voice vote in the House. Only one federal legislator—House Judiciary Committee Chairman Lamar Smith (R-Texas)—spoke against it. And when it came to retroactive application of the ensuing guideline changes, Obama’s attorney general, Eric Holder, urged the USSC to be more conservative than it decided to be. His recommendation would have reduced the number of prisoners who were allowed to seek resentencing from more than 12,000 to about 5,500.

A 2014 amendment to the sentencing guidelines, reducing the “base offense level” for drug offenders, resulted in more modest penalty changes but applies to a larger group. The USSC estimated that “approximately 70 percent of federal drug trafficking defendants would qualify for the change, with their sentences decreasing an average of 11 months, or 17 percent, from 62 to 51 months on average.” Retroactive application of that amendment made as many as 46,000 prisoners eligible for resentencing.

The Times also mentions guidelines that Holder issued in 2013, urging federal prosecutors to omit drug weights that trigger mandatory minimums when charging low-level, nonviolent offenders. “Prosecutors have responded by reducing the frequency of those charges by about 25 percent,” Apuzzo says, citing the Justice Department. According to an estimate by Paul Hofer, a policy analyst with Federal Public and Community Defenders, Holder’s charging guidelines, if fully implemented, might have helped about 500 of the 25,000 or so federal drug offenders sentenced each year, or 2 percent.

The year Obama was elected, there were 201,668 federal prisoners. After rising during the first five years of the Obama administration, that number fell from 219,298 in 2013 to 214,149 in 2014, a 2.4 percent drop. That encouraging development had almost nothing to do with Obama’s commutations, 98 percent of which were issued in 2015 and 2016, or Holder’s new charging policy, which was announced in mid-2013. Assuming the downward trend continues (data for 2015 are not available yet), the FSA and the USSC’s amendments will play a much bigger role than the “liberal criminal justice policies” that Obama and Holder implemented on their own authority. Apuzzo’s suggestion that “Mr. Obama’s criminal justice legacy” includes a substantially smaller federal prison population is therefore rather misleading.

Apuzzo also exaggerates Richard Nixon’s impact on the prison population. “President Lyndon B. Johnson was the last president to leave office with a smaller federal prison population than he inherited,” he writes. “His successor, Richard M. Nixon, declared war on drugs in 1971, and the prison population has since ballooned into the world’s largest, with about one in every 100 adults locked up in local, state or federal prisons or jails.” The number of federal prisoners rose by 37 percent between 1971 and 1977, then fell for three consecutive years before starting a steady climb that continued for more than three decades. The real explosion in the prison population began during the Reagan administration, when the number of federal prisoners more than doubled, from fewer than 25,000 in 1980 to more than 50,000 in 1988. It kept rising, peaking in 2013 at more than 219,000, nine times the 1980 number.

In this context, the 2014 drop looks puny but promising. Assuming it was a turning point, the fact that it happened while Obama was in the White House has less to do with his policies than Apuzzo implies. Given the importance of falling crime rates and sentencing reforms that had bipartisan support, the trend line probably would have looked very similar if voters had elected John McCain in 2008 or Mitt Romney in 2012. Although it is reasonable to assume that either of them would have been much less interested than Obama in using his clemency power to free drug offenders, commutations do not explain the reversal of the upward trend in the federal prison population.

As for the future, neither Donald Trump nor his pick for attorney general, Jeff Sessions, seems inclined to view shrinking the federal prison population as a worthwhile goal. Sessions “strongly opposed Mr. Obama’s liberal approach to criminal justice,” Apuzzo notes, favoring “vigorous enforcement of drug laws and the use of mandatory minimum sentences.” Trump probably will not make much use of his clemency power, and Sessions is apt to reverse Holder’s charging policy for low-level, nonviolent drug offenders. But as Apuzzo notes, the changes made by Congress and the sentencing commission will be harder to reverse, and they will continue to curtail the number of federal prisoners (as will crime rates, assuming they remain historically low). Unfortunately, the prospects for further sentencing reform look dimmer with a “law and order” Republican in the White House and a fan of mandatory minimums in charge of the Justice Department.

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Bunds Tumble On Report ECB May Lend Out More Bonds To “Unfreeze” Broken Repo Market

As we showed yesterday, while the rest of the European bond market has suffered from the some “trumpflation-linked” weakness in the long end as US Treasurys in the aftermath of the Trump election as inflation and new supply fears grow, short-dated German bund yields unexpectedly plunged to record lows…

 

… as a result of what appears to be a massive year-end collateral shortage (which has come in about a month early) with demand for German collateral soaring and reflected in repo funding levels as funds are now forced to pay up to 1.5% to borrow a 10-year Bund, up from some 0.40% a year ago, according to Icap data..

Today we saw more of the same in early trading, as the German 2Y continued to outperform on collateral shortage fears, which likely prompted Reuters to report that the ECB is looking for ways to lend out more of its huge pile of government debt to avert a freeze in the €5.5 trillion repo market that underpins the financial system, manifesting in the surge in short-term Bunds.

While the ECB has bought more than a trillion euros ($1.06 trillion) of euro zone government bonds in a bid to shore up economic growth and inflation in the euro zone, in doing so, it has taken away the key ingredient for repurchase agreements, or repos, whereby financial firms lend to each other against collateral, typically high-rated government bonds such as Germany’s. Repo, as covered here extensively over the years, is the core lubrication of debt capital markets, and is used by investment funds to finance trading and is regarded by the ECB as a key avenue to transmit its own monetary stimulus to the economy. More details:

A freeze in repo activity risks undoing some of the ECB’s stimulus by hampering lending between financial companies and leaving bond markets vulnerable to sharp selloffs.

 

To avert this, the ECB wants to make it easier for banks to borrow the bonds that it has bought so that they can be used as collateral for repo loans, the sources said.

 

Possible changes include reducing charges for firms which fail to return on time the bonds they have borrowed, accepting new types of collateral and extending the duration of loans.

 

“If liquidity dries up there are more fails and banks are more cautious when it comes to making the market,” one of the sources said. The sources added the issue will be discussed at the ECB’s Dec. 8 meeting, when rate setters will decide on whether to continue purchases beyond March and ensure they can still find enough bonds to buy.

 

Any decision on bond lending will depend on what other changes the ECB makes to its asset-purchase program and might not be finalised in December.

While Europe is not alone in its central bank dominating the repo market, with the Fed likewise having quietly become the biggest player in the US repo market as well, the problem appears to be most severe in Germany.

With the ECB now owning more than a quarter of all outstanding German bonds as it continued to slowly nationalize European debt, funds pay up to 1.5% to borrow a 10-year Bund, up from some 0.40 percent a year ago, according to Icap data.

This is putting a strain on investors as they face increasingly frequent demands to put up cash or liquid collateral against their derivative positions due to new regulation.

“If a pension fund can’t borrow a bond in time, it may have to sell its own cash bond, foregoing a potential return in the future to fulfill a short-term obligation,” Godfried DeVidts of the International Capital Market Association industry body said. “So basically the pension funds are getting poorer and the pensioners too.”

Any ECB decision how to remedy the “repo freeze” would meet further roadblocks as it would then have to be implemented by national central banks, which own the bulk of the debt bought by the ECB and bear the risk for their own bond-lending schemes. “This means the most radical proposals may run into resistance, the sources said.”

And while the actual remedy to be implemented by the ECB is yet to be determined, the concern that the ECB may inject more securities to unfreeze repo has quickly rippled through the bond market, and as a result Germany’s two-year bond yields rose: the two-year Schatz yield shot up 6 basis points from the day’s lows to minus 0.69 percent, having hit a record low earlier in the day. Other euro zone bond yields also rose, reversing earlier falls.

The most notable move was in 10Y bunds which jumped to 0.278% after hitting a session low of 0.21%. French 10Ys also rose over 7 bps, as did Italian bonds.

Bund futures slid to a session low of 160.78, losing as much as 62 ticks, following the Reuters report.

The best summary of the quandary the ECB has found itself in comes from David Schnautz, interest rate strategist at Commerzbank, who first pointed out the collateral shortage, and who said that “there is something going on with the repo markets and we can see that as soon as the ECB starts talking about tackling these problems we see a market reaction.

For now, despite the modest pick up in yields, the market is confident that the collateral shortage, something we have warned about since 2013, will be resolved although the specifics could lead to another major asset repricing, especially if it comes at a time when the ECB and BOJ are expected to provide the “cross-border” helicopter money to finance Trump’s stimulus plan, as reported yesterday.

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Speculators Are Finally Bailing Out Of Gold, And That’s A Good Thing

 

 

Hold your real assets outside of the banking system in one of many private international facilities  –>    http://ift.tt/2cyFwvQ;

 

 

 

 

Speculators Are Finally Bailing Out Of Gold, And That’s A Good Thing

Posted with permission and written by John Rubino

 

 

 

 

All this talk of massive new infrastructure spending financed with a tsunami of freshly-minted currency should be lighting a fire under gold. That it hasn’t is a testament to how out-of-whack the precious metals market had gotten during the first six months of this year.

 

As gold rose, the futures contract traders whose games tend to dictate near-term price action had set the metal up for a fall. Specifically, the speculators (who are always wrong at the extremes) were ridiculously long. With the suckers all-in, a big correction was needed to restore balance.

 

But it didn’t come. Several months passed with gold treading water, leading some to wonder if the paper market tail had finally stopped wagging the physical market dog.

 


 

Now the long-overdue correction seems to have arrived. Gold is down 11% from its recent high, and the speculators are bailing. Here’s the Commitment of Traders (COT) report (courtesy of GoldSeek) for the week ending Tuesday the 15th showing a 17% drop in large speculator long positions. That’s a huge move for a single week. And based on the price declines of the subsequent three days, it’s likely that the next report will show a similar drop.

 

Meanwhile the commercial traders – the guys who sucker the speculators into these unwise bets – cut their short positions by an also notable 9%.

 

 

Typically, a bottom occurs when both commercials and speculators are flat — that is, carrying more-or-less equal long and short positions. The latest report is still a long way from that kind of balance. But another few weeks like the last one and this indicator, at least, will be screaming “buy gold”.

 

 

 

Please email with any questions about this article or precious metals HERE

 

 

 

 

Speculators Are Finally Bailing Out Of Gold, And That’s A Good Thing

Posted with permission and written by John Rubino

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Futures Flirt With Records As Asian Stocks Rise; Commodities, Dollar Take A Breather

In a quiet overnight session in which Japan was closed, European shares are mixed as financials and auto weigh, Asian stocks rise led by materials while S&P futures little changed against a backdrop of the continuing commodity rally with oil holding near $48 a barrel, up fractionally on the session. Against a basket of currencies, the dollar index was up slightly at 101.12, very close to a 14-year peak. The dollar also kept most of its recent hefty gains on the yen at 111.05 though it has met resistance around 111.35 in the last couple of sessions

“I think markets had been a bit euphoric in the wake of Trump and now they are coming around to the understanding that there is not going to be fiscal stimulus that is going to be good for everyone” said Rabobank strategist Lyn Graham-Taylor said.

Emerging markets have struggled in recent days as surging U.S. bond yields sucked much-needed capital out of Asia. President-elect Donald Trump’s past talk of trade tariffs has also weighed on sentiment in the export-intensive region.

With Japan on holiday, Australia’s main index led the action in Asia with a rise of 1.35 percent to a one-month top helped by strength in bulk commodity prices. China’s blue-chip CSI300 index advanced 0.5 percent to a near 11-month peak as the yuan touched its lowest in six years.

Ahead of tomorrow’s Thanksgiving holiday in the US, European stocks were little changed, with miners leading gains after a metals index rose to the highest since June 2015 on Tuesday. Oil fluctuated after OPEC left unresolved participation by Iraq and Iran in the group’s plan to cut output. German two-year note yields touched a new record-low amid a scarcity of collateral and speculation the European Central Bank will ease policy at next month’s meeting. Treasuries gained before the Federal Reserve releases minutes of its November meeting.

“The reflation theme in the U.S. is dominating all markets,” said Christian Stocker, a strategist at UniCredit Bank AG in Munich, Germany. “In Europe the picture is a bit more complicate.d”

As Bloomberg notes, markets are flat ahead of U.S. economic reports including jobless claims, durable goods orders and consumer confidence for confirmation the Fed will hike rates next month.  As the chart below shows, the market-implied probability of a rate hike has been at 100% for the past few days, just as S&P hit new all time highs above 2,200.

Developed-market shares and the dollar have been among the biggest winners since Donald Trump’s surprise election victory fueled speculation of more fiscal stimulus in the U.S., while government bonds and emerging markets have slumped.

Futures on the S&P 500 Index rose less than 0.1 percent at 10:12 a.m. in London, after all four major U.S. stock benchmarks climbed to records on Tuesday.

The Stoxx Europe 600 Index slipped 0.1 percent, while the U.K.’s FTSE 100 Index added 0.6 percent. U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer Philip Hammond is scheduled to outline a series of measures to help “ordinary working-class families” and stress that a stable economy, fiscal discipline and better productivity are the best ways to raise living standards in his Autumn Statement to Parliament on Wednesday.

Earlier today Europe reported Flash November PMI Data, which largely came in stronger than expected. As BBG notes, Euro-area economic growth accelerated to its fastest pace this year as growing order books prompted companies to add more workers and raise prices. A Purchasing Managers’ Index for manufacturing and services rose to 54.1 in November from 53.3 a month earlier, IHS Markit said on Wednesday. That’s the strongest level in 11 months and above the 50 mark that divides expansion from contraction.

  • Eurozone Nov. Flash Composite PMI 54.1; Est. 53.3
  • Eurozone Nov. Flash Services PMI 54.1; Est. 52.9
  • Eurozone Nov. Flash Manufacturing PMI 53.7; Est. 53.3
  • Germany Nov. Flash Composite PMI 54.9; Est 55
  • Germany Nov. Flash Services PMI 55; Est 54
  • Germany Nov. Flash Manufacturing PMI 54.4; Est 54.8
  • France Nov. Flash Composite PMI 52.3 Vs 51.6; Est 51.9
  • France Nov. Flash Services PMI 52.6; Est 51.9
  • France Nov. Flash Manufacturing PMI 51.5; Est 51.5

The signs that recovery is gathering momentum should give some relief to
the European Central Bank as it faces a complex decision on Dec. 8
whether to extend its 1.7 trillion-euro ($1.8 trillion)
quantitative-easing program. President Mario Draghi said this week that
the recovery remains reliant on continued monetary support. However, any hints of rising inflationary pressures will be met with disappointment by the market which expects no changes from the ECB’s QE for the foreseeable future.

* * *

Bulletin Headline Summary from RanSquawk

  • European equities trade mixed with participants awaiting Chancellor Hammond’s inaugural Autumn budget, while Bunds have been hampered by ECB source comments regarding measures of addressing bond scarcity
  • Another relatively quiet morning in FX markets, but notable was the hit on EUR/USD, with players still gunning for 1.0500 on the downside
  • Looking ahead, highlights include FOMC minutes, UK Autumn Statement, US mfg PMI, US Durables and DoEs

Market Snapshot

  • S&P 500 futures up less than 0.1% to 2202
  • Stoxx 600 down 0.1% to 341
  • FTSE 100 up 0.6% to 6860
  • DAX down 0.3% to 10680
  • German 10Yr yield down less than 1bp to 0.22%
  • Italian 10Yr yield up 6bps to 2.09%
  • Spanish 10Yr yield up 2bps to 1.54%
  • S&P GSCI Index down less than 0.1% to 370.9
  • MSCI Asia Pacific up 0.5% to 136
  • Nikkei 225 closed
  • Hang Seng down less than 0.1% to 22677
  • Shanghai Composite down 0.2% to 3241
  • S&P/ASX 200 up 1.3% to 5484
  • US 10-yr yield down 2bps to 2.3%
  • Dollar Index up 0.11% to 101.15
  • WTI Crude futures up 0.4% to $48.22
  • Brent Futures up 0.3% to $49.26
  • Gold spot up less than 0.1% to $1,212
  • Silver spot up less than 0.1% to $16.66

Top Headline News

  • US Oil Trades Near $48 as OPEC Fails to Agree on Iraq, Iran: Iraq, Iran output levels left for Nov. 30 meeting to resolve
  • Facebook May Have Tool to Return to China, But No Government OK: Social network operator said to lack Beijing office license
  • IAC Directors Sued Over Creation of Non-Voting Class of Shares: Chairman Diller accused of seeking to cement control
  • Dollar Rally Cools Before Thanksgiving as Traders Mull 2017 Fed: Traders less certain Fed will hike aggressively in 2017
  • Trump Shifts Tone on Climate Change, Environmentalists Scoff: Says there is ‘some’ link between humans and global warming
  • Monsanto Sued Over Alleged CEO, Board Bayer Merger Conflicts: CEO Grant may collect $18 million through deal, investor says
  • Engine Capital Said Pushing Del Frisco to Seek Options: Reuters: Co. pushed to seek alternatives, including a sale

* * *

Looking at regional markets, we start in Asia where stock markets traded higher across the board following a positive lead from the US where all 3 major US indices extended on record highs, with DJIA breaking above 19,000 for the first time. The increased risk appetite filtered through to ASX 200 (+1.3%) which led the region and was also boosted by gains in the materials sector. Hang Seng (+0.1%) and Shanghai Comp (-0.2%) traded mixed, with the latter failing to extend on its best levels seen in 10-months, while Japanese markets remained shut for Labour Thanksgiving Day. PBoC injected CNY 100bIn 7-day reverse repos, CNY 80bIn in 14-day reverse repos, CNY 10bIn in 28-day reverse repos. PBoC set mid-point at 6.8904 (Prey. 6.8779).

Top Asian News

  • Ex-StanChart Global Rates Head Said to Open Singapore Hedge Fund: Three Bamboo said to plan raising external money next year
  • The ‘Widow-Maker’ Returns as Shorts Target Australian Banks: Short interest in big four lenders has climbed in past month
  • China Selfie App Said in Talks for $5 Billion Valuation in IPO: Meitu plans to test demand with investors in U.S., London
  • Crown Staff Face at Least Two Months Detainment on Arrest: Group of Crown employees were arrested last Friday
  • HSBC Said to Advise Saudi Pension Fund on Financial Hub Sale: Parties discussing sale of struggling $8b district in Riyadh

In Europe, equities trade mixed with participants awaiting the Chancellor Hammond’s inaugural Autumn budget in which there are some expectations that the budget will entail a ban on letting fees. As such, property names have come under pressure thus far with Foxtons falling as much as 11%. Additionally, after yesterday’s debacle whereby Vinci shares fell just shy of 20% following a false report the company of pared the entirety of those losses. Fixed income markets have seen a bid this morning with much of the focus in the German 2yr after the yield fell to record lows of -0.745%, however has pulled off in recent trade. While political uncertainty in Italy remains at the forefront of investors’ minds which has been observed in the ITA-GER 10yr spread, now at the widest in 3-yrs. Heading into the US crossover, ECB sources suggested that the ECB are reportedly set to issue more bonds in order to avoid a market freeze, however, details may not be finalised in December. This subsequently weighed on prices given the supply impact with the Dec’16 Bund contract falling circa 50 ticks.

Top European News

  • Euro-Area Economic Growth Gathers Pace as Orders and Prices Rise: Euro-area Nov. services PMI rises to 54.1 from 53.3
  • German Two-Year Yields Drop to Record as ECB Speculation Mounts: Benchmark 10-year bunds hold gain before 2026 auction
  • Lufthansa Cancels About 900 Flights Amid 2-Day Pilot Strike: Walkout extended to Thursday after effort to block strike
  • Ericsson Falls After Reports of Corruption in Costa Rica, Poland: Reports on wireless network contracts at end of 1990s
  • Credit Suisse’s Dougan Said to Land $3b for Merchant Bank: Firm backed by royal families, state funds to stake venture
  • Innogy, Galapagos, Cembra to Be Added to Stoxx Europe 600 Index: Effective as of Europe market open on Dec. 19
  • Crunch Time for Monte Paschi, and Italy, as Share Sale Looms: New CEO Morelli criss-crosses globe to pitch crucial offering

In commodities, WTI (+USD 0.14/bbl) and Brent crude futures (+USD 0.14/bbl) are up marginally on the day edging ever closer to the USD 50.00/bbl area as we await more comments from oil producing nations, an API inventory drawdown failed to provide any sustained support to prices overnight after the Iraq Governor stated that ‘we are agreed and happy after the OPEC meeting’. Gold and silver have not seen too much movement this session, but USD 1204/oz may be targeted after a firm rejection yesterday.

In FX, it has been a quiet morning in FX markets, but notable was the hit on EUR/USD, with players still gunning for 1.0500 on the downside, however it has since rebounded on a Reuters report that the ECB is seeking to lend out more bonds to prevent a market freeze. Overstretched levels do not seem to be deterring the unyielding USD bulls in the current climate, and with the Fed funds rate path now significantly steeper dip buying has been pretty shallow. As such, 1.0650-60 continues to contain the lead EUR rate, but sops continue to build above this area, which could generate a stronger short squeeze the more shorts are added. Similarly in USD/JPY, there is no let up in the quest for 111.40-45+ – this the target level standing in the way of higher levels amid the backdrop of buoyant stock markets. To this end, AUD and CAD have seen some upside in recent sessions, with higher metals prices adding to the AUD/USD move through .7400, while USD/CAD looks to be tempering the move below 1.3400 as WTI holds comfortably off $50.00 levels. All eyes on GBP ahead of the Autumn statement, where the growth forecasts are expected to be lower.

Looking at the day ahead, the early release will be the October durable and capital goods orders data which generally speaking would be considered an important release however given that the data is for the month prior to the Election, the more important release will probably be next month’s print where we’ll get a better idea of the possible shift in order flow. Also due out in the US is the latest weekly initial jobless claims print, new home sales, FHFA house price index, flash manufacturing PMI and the final revisions to the University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey. The focus then turns to the FOMC minutes from the meeting earlier this month where most will be looking for a confirmation that the Fed will be tightening next month. Away from the data, the other big event today is the aforementioned UK Chancellor Hammond’s long awaited post-Brexit Autumn statement.

US Event Calendar

  • 7am: MBA Mortgage Applications, Nov. 18 (prior -9.2%)
  • 8:30am: Durable Goods Orders, Oct. P, est. 1.7% (prior -0.3%); Capital Goods Orders, Oct. P, est. 0.3% (prior -1.3%)
  • 8:30am: Initial Jobless Claims, Nov. 19, est. 250k (prior 235k); Continuing Claims, Nov. 12 est. 2.008m (prior 1.977m)
  • 9am: FHFA House Price Purchase Index q/q, 3Q (prior 1.2%)
  • 9:45am: Bloomberg Consumer Comfort, Nov. 20 (prior 45.4)
  • 9:45am: Markit U.S. Manufacturing PMI, Nov. P, est. 53.5 (prior 53.4)
  • 10am: New Home Sales, Oct., est. 590k (prior 593k)
  • 10am: U. of Mich. Sentiment, Nov. F, est. 91.6 (prior 91.6)
  • 10:30am: DOE Energy Inventories
  • 11am: EIA natural-gas storage change
  • 1pm: Baker Hughes rig count
  • 2pm: FOMC Minutes, Nov.

* * *

DB’s Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

Over in markets the pre-Thanksgiving holiday cheer has continued with the four major US equity markets once again recording fresh all time highs last night. Indeed the S&P 500 (+0.22%), Dow (+0.35%), Nasdaq (+0.33%) and Russell 2000 (+0.92%) all nudged higher despite a wobble midway through the session after Oil pared gains following a fresh batch of OPEC headlines (more on that shortly). It was also a decent session for risk in Europe with the Stoxx 600 recording a +0.23% gain with the miners leading the way following moves higher for base metals including the likes of iron ore (+6.48%), copper (+0.97%) and aluminium (+2.21%).

It was a good recovery day for European sovereign bond markets too with 10y Bund yields finishing 5.4bps lower at 0.216% and in fact having their strongest day since September 22nd. Yields in the periphery were also 5-9bps lower with the market seemingly playing catch up to the accommodative Draghi and ECB comments on Monday. In fact 2y Bund yields tumbled to -0.753% yesterday and to a fresh record low. With that move it now means that the spread between 2y Bunds and 2y Treasuries has blown out to 183bp which is in fact the highest now since 2005. It’s amazing to think that just 5 years ago Bunds traded about 130bps on top of Treasuries.

Meanwhile, as we’ve been somewhat accustomed to recently, a fresh flurry of OPEC headlines has had Oil whipsawing about again over the past 24 hours. WTI is hovering little changed around $48/bbl this morning but traded in a $2 range around that level yesterday after headlines suggested that OPEC talks in Vienna yesterday had failed to yield an agreement on whether or not Iran and Iraq would join production cuts, and instead deferred the decision to ministers at the meeting this time next week. That was despite Libya’s OPEC governor suggesting that the meeting had ended with a consensus. Yesterday our commodity strategists published a report looking ahead to the meeting. In it they sketched out a range of possible outcomes with their central case being a freeze with loose compliance in which production would be established in the 32.5 to 33.0 mmb/d range for a period of six months, to be revisited and possibly renewed. However they also believe that this is still likely to mean that compliance will both be difficult to achieve and also doubted by the market, hence their revised forecast production rate of 33.4 mmb/d in 2017 versus actual output of 33.8 mmb/d in October.

Refreshing our screens this morning, with little new news flow to change things, the positive tone on Wall Street last night has continued into the Asia session this morning with the Hang Seng (+0.37%), Shanghai Comp (+0.23%), Kospi (+0.50%) and ASX (+1.23%) all higher. Markets in Japan are closed for a public holiday while US equity index futures are also a shade higher in early trading.

Moving on. The potentially most interesting event today is the long anticipated post-Brexit UK Autumn Budget Statement at 12.30pm GMT. As a reminder our Economists last week highlighted that Chancellor, Philip Hammond, has reduced expectations for the volume of his fiscal ‘reset’. Resources are not unlimited. Even with a modest relaxation, our economists expect a GBP30bn increase in Public Sector Net Borrowing (PSNB) on average over the 5-year planning period given the general deterioration in public finances (GBP10bn in 2017/18). They also expect Hammond to say there is some “fiscal space” in reserve if needed. There may be some space relative to the UK’s low Gross Financing Needs, but the more Hammond uses this fiscal space, the steeper the debt trajectory. The more credible the fiscal down-payment, the easier it will be to convince the markets of sustainability if the policy needs to be scaled up later. Credibility is a function of how well the policy targets the problems and the balance Hammond’s new fiscal rules achieve between flexibility and commitment. The Chancellor’s ability to target spending at boosting potential GDP growth (e.g. infrastructure spending) and protect it in weaker-than-expected economic scenarios will determine the success and sustainability of the Autumn Statement. Ahead of the Statement today, yesterday we got October public finances data in the UK which showed that net borrowing excluding banking groups amounted to £4.8bn in October which was a bit less than expected (vs. £6.0bn expected) and also down from £6.4bn a year earlier.

The rest of the more interesting newsflow is unsurprisingly politics orientated again. Following on from his policy agenda video announcement, President-elect Trump confirmed that he has no intention to prosecute or investigate Hilary Clinton over the handling of her secret email information saying that it would be ‘very divisive for the country’ in an interview with the NY Times. Interestingly, in the same interview Trump also suggested that he might abandon another campaign pledge in saying that he would ‘keep an open mind’ about whether or not to withdraw the US from the climate change treaty signed last year in Paris.

Meanwhile in Italy the deputy-secretary of PM Renzi’s Democratic Party, Lorenzo Guerini, confirmed that Renzi’s party would seek early elections by the summer of 2017 in the event that Renzi loses the upcoming referendum. That news shouldn’t come as a big surprise however with Guerini also declining to say whether the premier would stay on to lead the party or honor his promise to resign, should he be defeated.

Before we wrap up, once again it was another relatively quiet day for dataflow yesterday. In the US we learned that existing home sales climbed +2.0% mom in October (vs. -0.6% expected) to an annualised rate of 5.60m which is actually the highest level since February 2007. Meanwhile the Richmond Fed’s manufacturing index rose 8pts to +4 in November with the new orders index in particular up a rather robust 19pts to +7. In Europe the flash November consumer confidence print rebounded to -6.1 from -8.0 which is actually the best print this year. Finally in the UK the CBI Distributive Trends Survey for November showed an improvement in firms’ order books with total orders rising from -17 to -3.

Looking at the day ahead, this morning in Europe it’s all eyes on the November flash PMI’s for the Euro area, Germany and France. The consensus is for a stabilisation in the Euro area composite at 53.3. Across the pond this afternoon we’ve got a reasonably busy diary with the data packed in ahead of Thanksgiving tomorrow. The early release will be the October durable and capital goods orders data which generally speaking would be considered an important release however given that the data is for the month prior to the Election, the more important release will probably be next month’s print where we’ll get a better idea of the possible shift in order flow. Also due out in the US this afternoon is the latest weekly initial jobless claims print, new home sales, FHFA house price index, flash manufacturing PMI and the final revisions to the University of Michigan consumer sentiment survey. This evening, the focus then turns to the FOMC minutes from the meeting earlier this month where most will be looking for a confirmation that the Fed will be tightening next month. Away from the data, the other big event today is the aforementioned UK Chancellor Hammond’s long awaited post-Brexit Autumn statement.

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

Thanksgiving Tragedy: New at Reason

Be thankful for property rights this Thanksgiving.

John Sotssel writes:

I know that seems weird, but before that first Thanksgiving, the Pilgrims nearly starved to death because they didn’t respect private property.

When they first arrived in Massachusetts, they acted like Bernie Sanders wants us to act. They farmed “collectively.” Pilgrims said, “We’ll grow food together and divide the harvest equally.”

Bad idea. Economists call this the “tragedy of the commons.” When everyone works “together,” some people don’t work very hard.

Likewise, when the crops were ready to eat, some grabbed extra food—sometimes picking corn at night, before it was fully ready. Teenagers were especially lazy and likely to steal the commune’s crops.

Pilgrims almost starved. Governor Bradford wrote in his diary, “So they began to think how they might raise as much corn as they could… that they might not still thus languish in misery.”

His answer: He divided the commune into parcels and assigned each Pilgrim his own property, or as Bradford put it, “set corn every man for his own particular. … Assigned every family a parcel of land.”

View this article.

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EU Retaliates Against US Banks & London With Global Trade War Tit-For-Tat

Submitted by Michael Shedlock via MishTalk.com,

The EU fired a major global trade war tit-for-tat retaliation today against US banks and the UK in a single action.

Brussels will raise costs for foreign lenders while simultaneously taking a pot shot at London.

 

retaliation

Please consider EU to Retaliate Against US Bank Capital Rules.

Brussels is proposing to tighten its grip over overseas banks operating in the EU in a tit-for-tat step against the US that will raise costs for big foreign lenders and potentially hurt the City of London after Brexit.

 

The European Commission will unveil provisions on Wednesday that mirror controversial US “intermediate holding company” rules that ringfence foreign bank capital. When these were announced in 2014, the EU complained to Washington of “protectionism” and threatened to retaliate.

 

If adopted into EU law, the commission’s proposals would force big US investment banks such as Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan to hold additional capital and liquidity in the EU so their subsidiaries can be separately wound up in a crisis by European authorities.

 

The counterblow from Brussels, slipped into late drafts of the proposal, will be welcomed by European banks that have been complaining about an unlevel playing field with their US rivals. But it underlines the accelerating trend towards further fragmentation in financial rules, as jurisdictions assert control even at the risk of duplicating international requirements.

 

Although EU officials insist the proposal was drafted without Brexit in mind, the reforms would potentially affect London as a non-EU financial centre. The proposal could add costs and complexity to UK-based banks by forcing them to establish a separate pool of capital in the EU after the country leaves the bloc.

 

“This is a taste of what is to come,” said one adviser to an investment bank that would be affected by the rules. “At a time when everyone is rethinking bank structures, it adds one more point of uncertainty.”

 

He added: “If you must create an EU holding company that acts as your hub, the question becomes: how many European hubs do you want?”

 

The move is likely to stoke tensions between the US and Europe, which have already been ignited by a $14bn claim on Deutsche Bank from the US Department of Justice to settle claims of mis-selling mortgage securities.

 

European officials have also pushed back against US-led pressure for tough capital requirements to be introduced by the Basel Committee of global regulators in a move that some European banks claim would put them at a disadvantage to their US rivals.

 

US banks say they are already forced to hold significant amounts of capital and liquidity in their large UK operations. But if Europe presses ahead with the latest proposals, it could force them to increase the amount of resources they have tied up in Europe.

 

In 2014 Michel Barnier, then EU’s financial services commissioner, warned that US plans to force foreign banks to hold more capital were “protectionist” and risked bringing a “fragmentation of global banking markets”. Mr Barnier is now the commission’s chief Brexit negotiator.

The US and EU both want to be in control of a very fragmented and essentially insolvent global banking system.

It appears the UK was caught in the middle of a US-EU dispute, but in reality, the EU wanted to punish the UK and would have done this anyway.

Regardless, this adds fat to the fires of retaliations even as far bigger problems loom. Italy may be one vote away from leaving the Eurozone.

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

Muni-Massacre Leaves Bonds Most-Oversold Ever

US Municipal Bond yields have now risen for 10 straight days, spiking from 1.72% to 2.34% today – the highest since July 2015. This crash has now moved munis to the most-oversold-ever as the group suffers the biggest fund outflows since 2013’s taper tantrum.

The last 2 times that Muni yields spiked at such a pace marked dramatic buying opportunities…

 

Notably, Munis are also “cheapest” to Treasuries since Oct 2015…

As Bloomberg notes, BofA analyusts have pointed out that “the market sell off in munis is likely to continue to the end of November and into the first full week of December in a slow and negotiating fashion in order to reach an exhaustion point,” the report said.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch projects that the bull market in bonds that began in 1981 should run for another two years given the current and expected health of the global economy.

“This sloppy market provides buying opportunities, in our view.”

via http://ift.tt/2fo1znd Tyler Durden

Obstacles To Trump’s “Growth” Plans

Authored by Alastair Crooke, via Raul Ilargi Meijer's Automatic Earth blog,

We are plainly at a pivotal moment. President-Elect Trump wants to make dramatic changes in his nation’s course. His battle cry of wanting to make “America Great Again” evokes – and almost certainly is intended to evoke – the epic American economic expansions of the Nineteenth and Twentieth centuries.

Trump wants to reverse the off-shoring of American jobs; he wants to revive America’s manufacturing base; he wants to recast the terms of international trade; he wants growth; and he wants jobs in the U.S. – and he wants to turn America’s foreign policy around 180 degrees.

The run-down PIX Theatre sign reads “Vote Trump” on Main Street in Sleepy Eye, Minnesota. July 15, 2016. (Photo by Tony Webster Flickr)

It is an agenda that is, as it were, quite laudable. Many Americans want just this, and the transition in which we are presently in – dictated by the global elusiveness and search for growth (whatever is meant now by this term “growth”), clearly requires a different economic approach from that followed in recent decades.

As Raúl Ilargi Meijer has perceptively posited, greater self-reliance “is the future of the world, ‘post-growth’, and post-globalization. Every country, and every society, needs to focus on self-reliance, not as some idealistic luxury choice, but as a necessity. And that is not as bad or terrible as people would have you believe, and it’s not the end of the world … It is not an idealistic transition towards self-sufficiency, it’s simply and inevitably what’s left, once unfettered growth hits the skids. …

“Our entire world views and ‘philosophies’ are based on ever more and ever bigger and then some, and our entire economies are built upon it. That has already made us ignore the decline of our real markets for many years now. We focus on data about stock markets and the like, and ignore the demise of our respective heartlands, and flyover countries …

 

Donald Trump looks very much like the ideal fit for this transition … What matters [here] is that he promises to bring back jobs to America, and that’s what the country needs … Not so they can then export their products, but to consume them at home, and sell them in the domestic market …There’s nothing wrong or negative with an American buying products made in America instead of in China.

 

“There’s nothing economically – let alone morally – wrong with people producing what they and their families and close neighbours themselves want, and need, without hauling it halfway around the world for a meagre profit. At least not for the man in the street. It’s not a threat to our ‘open societies’, as many claim. That openness does not depend on having things shipped to your stores over 1000s of miles, that you could have made yourselves, at a potentially huge benefit to your local economy. An ‘open society’ is a state of mind, be it collective or personal. It’s not something that’s for sale.”

A Great Wish

That’s Trump’s ostensible great wish, (it seems). It is not an unworthy one, but things have changed: America is no longer what it was in the Nineteenth or Twentieth centuries, neither in terms of untapped natural resources, nor societally. And nor is the rest of the world the same either.

Mr. Trump rather unfortunately may find that his chief task will not be the management of this Great Re-orientation, but more prosaically, fending off the headwinds which he will face as he hauls on the tiller of the economy.

In short, there is a real prospect that his ambitious economic “remake” may well be prematurely punctured by financial crisis.

These headwinds will not be of his making, and for the main part, they lie beyond human agency per se. They are structural, and they are multiple. They represent the accumulation of an earlier monetary doctrine which will fetter the President-elect into a small corner from which any chosen exit will carry adverse implications.

Ditto for anyone else trying to steer any ship of state in this contemporary global economy. Paradoxically – in an era moving toward greater self-sufficiency – what success Trump may have, however, will likely depend not on self-reliance so much as he would like.

For his foreign policy about turn, he will depend on finding common interest with Russian President Vladimir Putin (that should not be too hard) – and for the economic “about turn” – on Trump’s ability not to confront China, but to come to some modus vivendi with President Xi (less easy).

“Things are not what they were.” Complexity “theory” tells us that trying to repeat what worked earlier – in very different conditions – will likely not work if repeated later. In the Clinton era, for example, 85 percent of the U.S. population growth derived from the working-age population. The headwind that Trump will face is that, over the next eight years, 80 percent of the population growth will comprise 65+ year olds. And 65+ year olds are not a good engine of economic growth. This is not an uniquely American problem; it is a global trend too.

 

“The peak growth” (according to Econimica blog), “in the annual combined working age population (15-64 year/olds) among all the 35 wealthy OECD nations, China, Brazil, and Russia has collapsed since its 1981 peak. The annual growth in the working age population among these nations has fallen from +29 million a year to just +1 million in 2016 … but from here on, the working age population will be declining every year … These nations make up almost three quarters of all global demand for oil and exports in general. But their combined working age populations will shrink every year, from here on (surely for decades and perhaps far longer). Global demand for nearly everything is set to suffer.

(FFR stands for Federal Funds Rate: i.e. the US key interest rate) Source: http://ift.tt/2geWAG4…

And then there is China: It too is passing through a difficult “transition” from the old economy to an “innovative” one. It too, has an aging population and a debt problem (with a debt-to-gross domestic ratio reaching 247 percent). Trump argues that China deliberately holds down the value of its currency to gain unfair trade advantage, and he further suggests that he intends to confront the Chinese government on this key issue.

Again, Trump does have a point (many nations are managing their exchange rates precisely in order to try to “steal” a little bit extra growth from the diminished global pot). But as noted at Zerohedge, citing the analysis of One River Asset Management executive Eric Peters:

“What’s good for the US in this case [the rising dollar and interest rates in anticipation of ‘Trumponomics’], is not good for emerging markets (EMs). Emerging markets benefit from a weaker dollar, and you’re not going to get that. Emerging markets benefit from global capital flows moving in their direction and that’s not happening either. Back in February, emerging markets were in sharp decline, driven by (1) a strong dollar, (2) rising US interest rates, and (3) slowing Chinese growth. Then China spurred a massive credit stimulus, the Fed became wildly dovish, and the dollar declined sharply.

 

“Interest rates collapsed throughout the year. As the growing pool of dollar, euro and yen liquidity searched for a decent return, it headed to emerging markets. Trump has reignited the dollar rally, and his fiscal stimulus will force interest rates higher. This reversed everything. [the dollars are heading home]

 

“And to be sure, the Beijing boys don’t want to see material weakness ahead of next autumn’s Party Congress. But we’re currently near peak impulse from China’s Q1 stimulus.”

In short, Peters is saying that, with the appreciating dollar and rising interest rate environment, growth from emerging markets as a whole will falter, since emerging markets have effectively leveraged their economies to Chinese growth. It used to be the case that they were closely tied to U.S. growth, but it is now China which dominates the EMs’ trade flows [i.e. without China growth, the EMs languish]. The question is, can America reboot its growth whilst China and the EMs languish? It is another structural shift, whereas heretofore, it was vice versa: without U.S. growth, the EMs and China languished. Now it is the converse.

Hollowed-Out Economies

There are other structural changes of course which will make it harder for the industrially hollowed-out economies of the West to recuperate jobs off-shored earlier. Firstly, there has been a systemic shift of innovation and technology eastwards (often to a more skilled and better-educated workforce). This represents not only an economic event, but a redistribution of power too. In any case, technology in this new era is being more job destructive than creative.

In one sense, Trump’s economic plan to “get America working again” through massive debt-financed, infrastructure projects, harks back to the Reagan era, which was also a period in which the dollar was strong. But yet again, “things today are not what they were then.” Inflation then was at 13 percent, Interest rates were around 20 percent, and crucially, the U.S. debt to GDP ratio was a mere 35 percent (compared to today’s estimate of 71.8 percent or 104.5 percent with external debt included).

Then, as Jim Rickards has suggested, the strong dollar was deflationary (deliberately so), and interest rates had nowhere to go, but down. It was the beginning of the three decades’ bond boom, which finally seems to have come to an end, coincident with Trump’s election. Today, inflation has nowhere to go but up – as have interest rates – and the bond market, nowhere to go, but (perilously) down.

Growth and Jobs?

Can Trump then achieve growth and jobs through infrastructure expenditure? Well, “growth” is an ambiguous, shape-shifting term. The first chart shows both sides of the equation … the annual GDP growth and the annual federal debt incurred, spent, and (thus counted as part of the growth) to achieve the purported growth.

The second chart shows the annual GDP minus the annual growth in federal debt to achieve that “GDP growth.” In other words, unlike in the earlier Reagan times, more recently, the debt is producing no growth – but … well … just more debt, mostly.

In fact, what the second chart is reflecting is the dilution – through money “printing” – of purchasing power: away from one entity (the American consumer), through the intermediation of the financial sector, to other entities (mostly financial entities, and to corporations buying back their own shares). This is debt deflation: the American consumer ends having less and less purchasing power (in the sense of residual discretionary income).

The point here is that “growth” is becoming rarer everywhere. Russia and China, like everyone else, are in search for new sources for growth.

As Rickards has said, debt is the “devil” that can undo Trump’s whole schema: a “$1 trillion infrastructure refurbishment plan, along with his proposal to rebuild the military, will — at least in the short-term — significantly increase annual deficits. In fact, deficits are already soaring; the fiscal 2016 budget hole jumped to $587 billion, up from $438 in the prior year, for a huge 34% increase…in addition to this, Trump’s protectionist trade policies would implement either a 35% tariff on certain imports or would require these goods to be produced inside the United States, at much higher prices. For example, the increase in labor costs from goods made in China would be 190% when compared to the federally mandated minimum wage earner in the United States. Hence, inflation is on the way.”

In sum, self-sufficiency implies higher domestic costs and price rises for consumers.

Debt will rise. And there is seemingly already a buyers’ strike against U.S. government debt underway: well over a third of a $1 trillion worth of Treasuries were disposed of, and sold in the year to Aug. 31 by foreign Central Banks. And who is buying it? (Below, the chart shows what this purchasing looks like, as a percentage of total debt issued by the Treasury). Well, foreign central banks have disappeared. (The Chinese have not bought a U.S. Treasury bond since 2011.)

(Above: who purchased the marketable debt as a percentage, by period)
Source.

 

It is the American public who are buying. Will they be willing to take on Trump’s $1 trillion infrastructure spree? Or, will it be “printed” in yet another dilution of the American consumer’s purchasing power? The question of whether the infrastructure splurge does give growth hangs very much in the balance to such answers. (Equity shares in construction firms will do okay, of course).

The bottom line: (Michael Pento, Pento Report): “If interest rates continue to rise it won’t just be bond prices that will collapse. It will be every asset that has been priced off that so called ‘risk free rate of return’ offered by sovereign debt. The painful lesson will then be learned that having a virtual zero interest rate policy for the past 90 months wasn’t at all risk free. All of the asset prices negative interest rates have so massively distorted including; corporate debt, municipal bonds, REITs, CLOs, equities, commodities, luxury cars, art, all fixed income assets and their proxies, and everything in between, will fall concurrently along with the global economy.

“For the record, a normalization of bond yields would be very healthy for the economy in the long-run, as it is necessary to reconcile the massive economic imbalances now in existence. However, President Trump will want no part of the depression that would run concurrently with collapsing real estate, equity and bond prices.”

A Pending Financial Crisis

Trump, to be fair, has said consistently throughout the election campaign that whoever won the Presidential campaign to take office in January would face a financial crisis. Perhaps he will not face the “violent unwind” of the QE and bond bubble as some experts have predicted, but many more – according to Bank of America’s survey of 177 fund managers over the last six days, and controlling just under half a trillion of assets – expect a “stagflationary bond crash.”

This has major political implications. Trump is setting out to do no less than transform the economy and foreign policy of the U.S. He is doing this against a backdrop of many of the followers of the liberal élite, so angered at the election outcome, that they reject completely his electoral legitimacy (and, with the élites themselves staying mum at this rejection of the U.S. democratic process). Movements are being organized to wreck his Presidency (see here for example). If Trump does indeed experience a severe financial “unwind” at a time of such domestic anger and agitation, matters could turn quite ugly.

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