Turkish Hackers Crack Electric Utility; Delete $670 Billion Of Pending Bills

RedHack – a Turkish hacker collective – has hacked the website of the Turkey Electricity Transmission Company, and, as TechWorm reports, claim to have deleted the pending bills of Turkish citizens amounting to Turkish Lira 1.5 trillion (a stunning $668.5 billion). The collective, which has many hacktivism projects against Turkey's internet censorship laws, posted a video of how they deleted the debt of millions of Turks.

 

As TechWorm reports,

RedHack the Turkey’s number one hacker collective today hacked into the website of the Turkey Electricity Transmission Company website.

 

They then did something which will cheer a lot of Turkish citizens who owe large amounts to the Electricity department.

 

They have claimed that they have deleted the pending bill of Turkish citizens amounting to Turkish Lira 1.5 trillion. 
 

Redhack, are a Turkish hacker collective.  They follow the Marxist–Leninist ideology and were founded in 1997. The RedHack has so far hacked several high profile Turkish websites like Council of Higher Education, Turkish police forces, the Turkish Army, Türk Telekom, and the National Intelligence Organization and many other websites.

 

 

It has also put up a video about how it deleted the debt of millions of Turkish electricity distribution company customers.

The video is given below :

 




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Manipulation Of CPI Saved The Federal Government Over $150 Billion From 1998-2012

Submitted by Consumer Price Illusion blog,

Cost-of-living adjustments increase entitlement spending automatically every year. Most COLA’s use all or part of the CPI to calculate inflation. The US further embeds the CPI in the system by indexing a growing portion of its government debt via TIPs. Even welfare benefits like food stamps use applicable indices within the all-items CPI to calculate COLA.

In total almost $3 trillion of federal yearly liability is subject to automatic annual CPI-based increases. This calculation includes:

  • All yearly means-tested welfare benefits subject to a COLA (e.g. SNAP, NSLP, etc…)
  • All yearly social security spending (e.g. SSI, OASI, DI, everything…)
  • All outstanding TIPs balance (every year the principal of an outstanding TIP is adjusted up/down by the inflation rate)

This time series represents the majority of yearly federal obligations that are subject to inflation-based COLA increases. We can thus attempt to calculate how much the government saved each year through methodological changes to the CPI. By the government’s own reckoning:

[The] improvements made by the BLS have reduced the measured
increase in the CPI… The combined effect of the changes made through 1998 has been to lower the CPI inflation rate by 0.44 percentage point per year. Changes to be implemented in 1999 and 2000 will lower CPI inflation by a further 0.20 and 0.04 percentage point per year.

– Economic Report of the President Feb 1999 pg 93

Thats a total of 0.68% a year from 2000 onward. While this might not sound like a lot, given the immense sums of money the government owes the public, this adds up to billions of dollars in savings:

applies 0.0068 deflation rate to total amount calculated above

applies deflation rate implied from report (0.0044 in 1998 up to 0.0068 in 2000) to total obligations calculated above

That adds up to a total savings of $150,147,988,800. Again, this is basing our deflation rate at 0.68% from the economic report referenced above. There is considerable evidence, however, that the real effect of quality adjustments on the CPI is much higher.

Using the more realistic divergence of 1-2% we saw from the BPP data puts the total savings at the $200-$400 billion range. 

In the investigation of any crime, it is important to find motive:

  • When a seemingly trivial change to a statistical index can potentially deprive taxpayers of hundreds of billions of dollars 
  • When an agency keeps raw data hidden from outside inspection (BLS deems raw pricing data as confidential and thus exempt from FOIA)
  • When a government cannot make the unpopular decisions necessary to reign in entitlement spending

Then you are in a time where an executive branch might take actions into its own hands in the name of efficiency. Hiding in econometric obscurity, in an area of research so boring no economist would dare tread, did the government knowingly encourage the adoption of a dubious economic theory that would likely bias inflation downward? If so, it was a good bet.




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Chart of the Day – This is What Neo-Feudalism Looks Like

I got this from Naked Capitalism. Before presenting the chart, here are some words to bear in mind from Yves Smith:

Short omits some key elements from his discussion. One is that until recently, a profit share of GDP of 6% was perceived to be a cyclical peak; no less than Warren Buffet deemed a higher level to be unsustainable. And in fact, we see an explosion of profit share from 6% to 10% of GDP in the runup to the crisis, roughly from 2003 to 2007. The “rescue the banks and financial markets” measures succeeded in bringing the profit share back to its pre-crisis levels, at the expense of workers.

Notice the inflection point in profit share is 1987, when Greenspan became Fed chairman. Correlation may not be causation, but the timing is almost exact.

continue reading

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Anthony L. Fisher Talks Grubergate, Sexism in a Scientist’s Shirt, and Adult Underoos on Red Eye Tonight at 3 a.m. ET/Midnight PT

Stay up late and watch me on the panel of the venerable,
uber-late-night yakfest Red Eye with Greg
Gutfeld
tonight at 3 a.m. ET/midnight PT on Fox
News Channel.

Joining me will be the eponymous host, regular
panelist Joanne
Nosuchinsky
, Fox Business Network anchor Dagen McDowell and Anthony Cumia, formerly of
the Opie and Anthony radio show.

Worst. Shirt. Ever.

Scheduled topics include the latest obnoxious
musings
of Obamacare architect Jonathan
Gruber, the blubbering
apology of space scientist Dr. Matt Taylor
over absurd
and sexist choices in apparel (see right), and

the return of Underoos
(now in adult
sizes). 

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And The 10th Most Prosperous Nation In The World Is…

USA! USA! USA!

 

(click image for massive legible version)

 

Despite all the bravado from political leaders and the record high stock prices – which prove how clean America’s dirty short is – The Legatum Institute finds the United States is just the 10th most prosperous nation in the world… after Holland, Canada, New Zealand, and Denmark to name a few.

Still, could be worse… could be 11th, like Iceland…

(click image for massive legible version)

What is perhaps even more stunning is that America places 31st in the world for ‘Safety & Security’ and just 21st for ‘Personal Freedom‘… which all seems a little odd for the Land of The Free.




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Tonight on The Independents: Are There Any Secret Libertarians Running for President? Also: Suderman on Obamacare, Welch on the Collapse of Communism, V.A. Whistleblower Scott Davis, and Let the Damn Turkey Cool!

War on Christmas? How about the Christmas War on Thanksgiving!
Yuletide decorations started going up the day after Halloween, and
Kennedy ain’t
havin’ it:

Also on tonight’s episode of The
Independents
(Fox Business Network, 9 p.m. ET, 6 p.m. PT,
repeats three and five hours later) Party Panelists Michael Malice
(fast-talking state-smasher) and Rick Ungar (Forbes
columnist
) will assess whether there’s any secret libertarian
sauce living in the hearts of the 2016 presidential field. I
predict you will enjoy Malice’s take on Hillary Clinton….

Suderman
Computerpants
is in studio talking about Obamacare’s
disappointing enrollment numbers and the threat it faces at the
Supreme Court. Veterans Administration whistleblower
Scott Davis
will throw cold water on the institution’s stabs at
reform. John Tillman
of the Illinois Policy Institute will report on how state
regulation is driving small business from his state to Texas. And I
will talk about three underappreciated lessons/impact of the
collapse of
communism
25 years ago this month. It’s a groovy kind of show,
so dig.

Follow The Independents on Facebook at http://ift.tt/QYHXdB,
follow on Twitter @ independentsFBN, and
click on this page
for more video of past segments.

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Perhaps The BIS Can Share Its Next “Debt Trap” Warnings With Its Own Board Of Directors First

Lately, not a month passes without the IMF, or the G-20, or the BIS or the Fed itself issuing some warning about asset bubbles, systemic bank-runs, excessive risk taking, “levitating markets”, and yet the second the market almost enters correction territory, some Fed official, such as James Bullard for example. will “utter” a flashing red headline reminding the “market” it doesn’t actually exist and is merely a centrally-planned policy vehicle designed to stimulate the wealth effect: drop more and we unleash QEX+1. End result: one after another 10% surge such as that in the past month, which prevents even the chance at true price discovery ex-central bankers.

Yet, to keep the farce going, once the “market” hits its the upper bound of its trading corridor, the theater restarts as the same people who a few days ago said more easing is imminent, now demand a halt to that easing! Much to the amazement of anyone with a frontal lobe, and what should be his humiliation, James Bullard did just that earlier today.

And in case that was not enough, here is the BIS once again with its noble – and now thorughly ‘Austrian’ – public service announcement, this time warning about the implications of a global debt trap” and how everything will end in tears (stop us when this becomes familiar).

From a Luncheon speech by Jaime Caruana, General Manager at the Bank for International Settlements during the International Finance Forum 2014 Annual Global Conference in Beijing, on 1 November 2014 (source)

Debt trouble comes in threes

 

In my introduction, I said that the debt trouble comes in threes. At the origin is the build-up of financial imbalances that leads to excessive credit growth. What are the three types of trouble? 

 

The first and the most obvious: the build-up of financial imbalances risks a future financial crisis, an impaired financial sector and a debt overhang.

 

The leverage that builds up during the boom weakens balance sheets, which reduces borrowers’ capacity to repay and their resiliency to shocks. This vulnerability, in turn, magnifies creditors’ losses, amplifies market participants’ responses and contributes to generating market dynamics that are abrupt and non-linear. Relatively small declines in asset prices can force borrowers to cut back their activities, and in some cases default or reschedule their debts, which is costly for lenders and a potential drag on borrowers’ finances. We have seen this type of effect most recently in response to the sharp falls in house prices in countries such as the United States, Spain and Ireland. Similar adverse dynamics can occur if problems hit an overleveraged corporate sector, as several Asian economies learnt in the crises of the 1990s.

 

This excess sensitivity is just a symptom of the fact that leverage increases procyclicality. Small downside shocks to the economy become transformed, through various channels, into large ones. But the seeds of the problems that materialise in the bust are in fact sown during the boom. There, the procyclicality operates on the upside: borrowers can expand their balance sheets and take on risks too easily, pushing up asset prices and making it easier still to borrow more. The boom sets the stage for the subsequent bust. History has taught us that large external debt is correlated with greater vulnerabilities and potentially sudden stops.

 

Indeed, research at the BIS has found that when private sector credit-to-GDP ratios are significantly above their long-term trend, banking strains are likely to follow within three years. And right now, a number of emerging economies, as well as some advanced ones, have reached this point in the financial cycle.

 

And the subsequent debt overhang holds back growth. Households and firms seek to pay back what turn out to be excessive debt burdens, built on the illusory promise of permanent prosperity that the boom had fostered. Expansionary aggregate demand policies lose effectiveness. And, unless the financial sector is fixed quickly, it restricts and, more importantly, misallocates credit: reluctance to take losses keeps credit available for the weaker borrowers and curtails or makes it more expensive for the healthier ones. The damage caused by delayed balance sheet repair following the bust of the boom in Japan is well documented.

 

The second, but less obvious, kind of trouble is that debt accumulation fosters misallocations of real resources.

 

The GDP and credit growth in the pre-crisis boom years were not evenly spread. They were concentrated disproportionately in specific sectors. For instance, in countries like Spain and Ireland, growth in the boom years was largely propelled by the construction sector as well as finance. Leverage can distort investment decision-making, giving incentives to put resources into projects that promise quick, measurable returns, rather than into longer-term ventures with less certain but potentially more valuable rewards. Such incentives are arguably stronger when leverage is cheap. 

 

The consequence of this association between debt accumulation and real resource misallocation is important. When boom turns to bust, the bloated sectors will have to shrink. Reviving growth in this kind of recession requires flexibility and capacity in the economy to reallocate resources efficiently from less productive to more productive sectors.

 

Third, financial booms mask deficiencies in the real economy.

 

Credit booms can act as a smokescreen. They tend to mask the sectoral misallocations that I just described, making it difficult to detect and prevent these misallocations in time. Boom times also tend to hide other slow-moving forms of deterioration in real growth potential. One such example is the trend decline in productivity growth in the advanced economies that started decades ago. Arresting this decline is crucial to achieving sustainable economic growth. Additional examples are adverse demographics and the secular decline of job reallocation rates. What appears fantastically harmonious on the way up thanks to the flattering effect of the credit-driven boom becomes cacophony and fragmentation on the way down.

 

Conclusion

 

And so that’s why I said debt trouble comes in threes. The combination of these three types of debt-related phenomenon together with policies that neglect the power of financial cycles can give rise to serious risks in the long term. A sequence of such boom-bust cycles can sap strength from the global economy. And polices – fiscal, monetary and prudential – that do not lean sufficiently against the buildup of the financial booms but ease aggressively and persistently against the bust risk entrenching instability and chronic weakness: policy ammunition is progressively eroded while debt levels fail to adjust. A debt trap looms large.

 

Moving away from the debt-driven growth model of the last few decades is in my view essential in order for the global economy to truly recover from the crisis. This will require efforts from the public and the private sector alike to restore the resilience and reliability of the financial system. But no less importantly, it will require a rebalancing of economic policies so as to support greater flexibility and productivity in the real economy. In other words, a wider but country-specific reform agenda is needed.

Brilliant, Jamie, as usual. In fact, it is almost as if we are reading this very fringe, tinfoil-hatted website at any one moment over the past 6 years which has issued the same warning, after warning, after warning, virtually verbatim.

We have just one request. Next time, instead of sharing these profoundly Austrian observations with the general public, maybe you can just discuss them at the next BIS Board of Directors’ meeting which consists of…




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5 Things To Ponder: Market Stew

Submitted by Lance Roberts of STA Wealth Management,

The markets have been pushing new all-time highs this past week as earnings season begins to wind down. Starting next week, much of the focus will shift back to the economy and holiday retail sales. Expectations are for a robust season but the early arrival of winter could have a more negative effect on the economy than anticipated should current weather patterns persist.


As I discussed earlier this week:

"Unfortunately, economic predictions may once again be set up for disappointment as another wave of cold air is set to smash temperature records across the country the winter. As reported by Reuters this past weekend:

 

"The coldest air of the season is set to reach into some 42 states this week as an Arctic blast drops temperatures from the Canadian border down to the Gulf of Mexico. Some 200 million people are expected to be affected by the cold, with only Florida, Hawaii, and the Southwest being spared.

 

Monday also marks the start of two weeks of subfreezing temperatures in the Midwest, including Illinois and Missouri. The weather shift can be blamed on what forecasters call a polar vortex reaching into the United States from the north."

Polar-Vortex-2.0

This weekend's reading list is a hodge-podge of articles that cover more of the macro issues that may weigh on the economy and the markets. While the majority of analysts and economists are currently very ebullient on near term prospects, it is always important to remember Bob Farrell's Rule #9:

"When all the experts and forecasts agree – something else is going to happen."

Let's get to our reading:


 

1) Zero Rates, Resource Misallocation & Shale Oil by Edward Harrison via Credit Writedowns2)

"The nexus of zero rates, resource misallocation, and risk on has favoured shale oil. But the drop in oil prices will call many of these projects into question precipitating a high yield energy funding crisis and a panic dash for the exits. There will be carnage and the question will be whether this carnage causes contagion into other markets.

 

What we should be concerned about here is that, just as with subprime mortgages, this is not a particularly big market but one with interconnections to others. The leveraged loan and high yield market could be affected and other riskier US debt markets like student loans or auto ABS could be affected by sentiment. Right now, it is still early days. So the oil price might even recover. But the abundant liquidity of zero rates, resource misallocation and shale oil simply do not mix."

Read Also: Houston, We Might Have A Fracking Problem

Read Also: Detailed US Shale Oil Cost Curve via ZeroHedge


 

2) The Stock Market Is 100% Overvalued by ChrisMartenson via ChrisMarenson.com

Read Also: Do The Lessons Of History No Longer Apply? by John Hussman via Hussman Funds

Read Also: Investors Have Never Been So Bullish


 

3) Stock Returns After A Period Of Above Average Performance via A Wealth Of Common Sense

"While anything is always possible, there are some patterns in these numbers that investors can use to increase their probability for success, which is the best anyone can hope for. For any long-term investor in the stock market, there are two very basic ways to improve your returns:

(1) Buy low after there’s been a market crash.
(2) Increase your holding period."

10-yr-sub-rtns1


 

4) Paul Tudor Jones On The 200-Day Moving Average by Meb Faber via Meb Faber Research

"The whole trick in investing is: “How do I keep from losing everything? You don’t need to go to business school; you’ve only got to remember two things.

 

1) You always want to be with whatever the predomianat trend is.

 

2) 5:1 (risk /reward).  Five to one means I’m risking one dollar to make five.  What five to one does is allow you to have a hit ratio of 20%.  I can actually be a complete imbecile. I can be wrong 80% of the time, and I’m still not going to lose.

 

One principle for sure would be to get out of anything that falls below the 200-day moving average."

Read Also: Don't Make Kaelin Clay's Mistake by Mark Hulbert via MarketWatch


 

5) QE Isn't Dying, It's Morphing by Nomi Prins via NomiPrins.com

"A funny thing happened on the way to the ‘end’ of the multi-trillion dollar bond buying program known as QE – the Fed chronicles. Aside from the shift to a globalization of QE via the European Central Bank (ECB) and Bank of Japan (BOJ) as I wrote about earlier, what lingers in the air of 'post-taper' time is an absence of absence. For QE is not over. Instead, in the United States, the process has simply morphed from being predominantly executed by the Federal Reserve (Fed) to being executed by its major private bank members.

 

During the third quarter, Wells Fargo and Bank of America matched Fed purchases of US Treasuries, keeping the total amount of US Treasuries in QE land neutral. With such orchestration to keep rates down and the prices of US Treasury securities up, all the talk about whether the labor force is strengthening or inflation exists or not is mere show"


One of the funny things about the stock market is that every time one person buys, another sells, and both think they are astute." – William Feather

Have a great weekend.




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Smoking by Teenagers Continues to Fall As Vaping Continues to Rise

Yesterday the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) released
survey data
that show cigarette smoking by teenagers continued
to fall last year even as their use of electronic cigarettes
continued to rise. Between 2011 and 2013, according to the National
Youth Tobacco Survey, the prevalence of “current” (past-month)
cigarette smoking among high school students fell from 15.8 percent
to 12.7 percent, while the prevalence of current e-cigarette use
tripled from 1.5 percent to 4.5 percent. This is not what you would
expect to see if the rising popularity of e-cigarettes stimulated
demand for the conventional kind, as CDC officials repeatedly have
warned might happen.   

Last year, for instance, CDC Director Tom Frieden
said
“many teens who start with e-cigarettes may be condemned
to struggling with a lifelong addiction to nicotine and
conventional cigarettes.” In April he
worried
that e-cigarettes will “get another generation of kids
more hooked on nicotine and more likely to smoke cigarettes.” A
month later Tim McAfee, director of the CDC’s Office on Smoking and
Health,
condemned
 the marketing of e-cigarettes as an “egregious
experiment” on “our children.”

The CDC’s discussion of the latest data is a bit more
restrained. “Although the long-term impact of e-cigarette use on
public health overall remains uncertain,” says an
article
in the agency’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly
Report
, “the 2014 Surgeon General’s report found that
nicotine use can have adverse effects on adolescent brain
development; therefore, nicotine use by youths in any form (whether
combustible, smokeless, or electronic) is unsafe.” Maybe so, but
some forms of nicotine—in particular, the ones that involve
inhaling tobacco smoke—are decidely more unsafe than others. If
teenagers who otherwise would be smoking are vaping instead, that
should count as a public health improvement. In any case, the
unverified risk that e-cigarettes might serve as a “gateway” to
smoking should not be accepted as a valid reason for restricting
adult smokers’ access to a product that can dramatically reduce the
health hazards they face.

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Esquire on What America Needs: Politicians Who Can Do Things, Doesn’t Matter Much What

I have praised
and
lamented
Esquire (a magazine I pay to receive,
and mostly quite like) for its political coverage in the past, but
the overriding spirit that makes its political journalism generally
its worst aspect is that it tends to treat politicians and politics
with a thoughtless
spirit of veneration
, one expressed not only unquestioningly on
the part of the writer, but as if the writer can’t imagine that any
reader would question it.

A huge feature in its November issue (featuring Sexiest Woman
Alive, so-called, Penelope Cruz who stars in a
bizarrely misconceived story
that mixes profiling her with some
superdated and unenlightening coverage of a bullfight, whose
symbolic power is somehow believed to still pulsate decades
post-Hemingway) by Mark Warren is called “Help,
We’re in a Living Hell and Don’t Know How to Get Out
.”

The “we” are dozens of members of the House and Senate that they
interviewed; in a perfect Esquire touch, they reveal
that they actually started off trying to get tough with
politicians, who they generally can’t
help but love
, and not even generally in a purely partisan way.
But:

I had initially planned to ask for no more than ten minutes of
their time, basically just to ask them why they were so bad at
their job, but fairly quickly it became obvious that these were
going to be richer and deeper conversations than I had bargained
for. And along the way, something unexpected happened: I became
less angry and more sympathetic to the thresher that all of these
people find themselves caught in. They are not whining. They are
crying for help. After only a few interviews, I stopped asking,
“Why are you so bad at your job?” because it occurred to me that it
was a cheap question, the kind of question that’s not interested in
an answer, which is just the sort of cultural deformity that got us
into this mess. It’s a terrible job, being in Congress in 2014.

And so the story became, for thousands of words, with lots of
different politicians’ voices across party lines, a lament about
how politicians can’t get things done. The story is
surprisingly lacking in any discussion of what must or should be
done; perhaps they think that all right-thinking, watch-wearing
Esquire readers all agree, but it’s a little disconcerting
to have a often thoughtful magazine write thousands of words about
our alleged political crisis with so little content. (Except they
seem to agree with politicians that it’s sad they have to raise
money all the time, and sad that other people are permitted to
raise money against them, apparently thinking it a given
that all incumbents should be re-elected all the time with no
effort, which would tend to be the result of a moneyless
politics.)

You learn a lot about some specific other congresspeople their
colleagues are willing to go on record slamming—Harry Reid and Ted
Cruz most prominent—and how the filibuster is obstructionist, and
how people holding up votes is bad, and how it’s bad that some
congressmen don’t move their families to D.C. because it cuts their
time to GOVERN!!!

But there’s no real hint of why any of it matters or why it’s an
unalloyed good that our legislators need to legislate more, or
longer, or more successfully (except that some executive or
judicial branch appointments aren’t being made efficiently
enough).

It’s an annoying but all too prevalent centrist view of
government: c’mon, let’s get over partisanship, ideology, what
people might want, what is just or efficient or affordable–we’ve
got this really big, enormous, cool, expensive government—it
needs to govern more!

And do so with what Warren calls “humility and civility” but
it’s clear he doesn’t mean humility about their power, but
merely humility in dealing with their colleagues, who, claims Sen.
Patrick Leahy with little credibility, in the old days would never
have “dreamed of giving your word and not keeping it” which
apparently certain villains now do, though he doesn’t say who or
about what.

 And all reasonable people are supposed to nod,
and purse their lips, and say, dammit, they may be Republican, they
may be Democrat, they may be from the north or the south, but they
are legislators and it’s a damn shame they don’t
legislate more. 

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