Argentina: You won’t believe what law the government just passed

Kirchner Argentina Law Argentina: You won’t believe what law the government just passed

October 14, 2014
Buenos Aires, Argentina

In the pantheon of utter political stupidity in our time, the competition is pretty fierce to see who ranks #1.

But I have to imagine that, even with so many rivals, Argentina’s Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner makes a pretty compelling argument to be the champion.

And though the productive class of Argentina is no stranger to being vilified by a populist government whose grasp on power rests on praising the dignity of poverty, Cristina has managed to take things to an entirely new level.

Exhibit A: Argentina’s new ‘supply law’, or Ley de Abastecimiento, due to take effect in December next year.

Under this new law, the government will have the honorable burden of defending consumers from greedy producers.

Companies are now prohibited from setting their prices too high, generating too much profit, or producing too little. 

And unlike the country’s astronomically high taxes (which at least have defined numbers and penalties), the new supply law doesn’t even say what is meant by too high, too many, or too little.

It simply reinforces the government’s unchecked power to arbitrarily audit, fine, shut down, and expropriate production of private companies.

Argentina’s government has already been maintaining “voluntary” price controls on over 400 consumer products for the past year, all in the name of combating the inflation that they themselves created.

And as any high school economics student can tell you, price controls create… SHORTAGES. Duh.

Needless to say, local production of these staple consumer products has dropped as a result of price controls. And given the pitiful state of the peso, they’re too expensive to import.

And anyone who can actually get their hands on these products—sugar, cooking oil, canned fruits, cleaning products, etc. often strolls across the land borders into Paraguay and Brazil where they are sold at competitive market prices.

Argentina’s new law of clamping down supply-side control echoes Venezuela’s 2011 “Fair Price and Cost Law”, which instead of reigning in inflation has reduced the Bolivarian state to the continent’s preeminent example of failure

Throngs of Venezuelans now line up around the block for days to buy single-ply toilet paper at a “fair” price. Argentina is not far behind.

This isn’t even about the country being “leftist” or “socialist”.

What has destroyed the country is not the high taxes or government waste (although that certainly doesn’t help). Argentina shoots itself in the foot by passing laws that call into question legal certainty and basic property rights.

All of this exacerbates unquantifiable country risk and the inability for businesses and individuals to plan ahead—in any environment.

If you think Argentina is an aberration, think again.

Just as Argentina used to be one of the richest places in the world and Buenos Aires competed with New York for the brightest and most talented minds on the planet, many Western countries are going down the same road.

They create absurd and confiscatory tax systems and regulations. They condemn companies who have a fiduciary responsibility to their shareholders – not governments – and follow THEIR OWN LAWS to legally minimize their tax obligations.

The seize, steal, kill and regulate every aspect of our private and economic lives. And they even have to resort to such comical measures as in Europe where they now count illegal activities such as spending on drugs and prostitutes as part of the GDP to maintain the illusion of economic growth.

All this uncertainty pushes people and businesses out the door. No one wants to deal with long-term stability issues when the next debt-ceiling debacle is always just around the corner, and when you have to look out for any number of three-letter agencies to reprimand you for doing business.

Argentina is a sign of things to come. Are you willing to wait for when your government decides that your profits are too high?

from SOVEREIGN MAN http://ift.tt/1sMF3rT
via IFTTT

The “Crazy Ivan” Playbook: How To Time A Near-Term Market Bottom

From Nick Colas of Convergex

Just when you think the selloff couldn’t get any scarier, it did. The last hour of trading took over 1% out of the S&P 500 in rapid fashion, reportedly on fears of an Ebola check at a major U.S. airport. Today we offer up a “Top 10” list of specific markets and indicators to watch for signs of a near term market bottom. They include the CBOE VIX Index (key levels at 26 and 32), the action in small cap stocks and crude oil, and the dollar. Less quantifiable issues – but important nonetheless – are headlines related to Ebola (probably getting worse before better), 10-year Treasury bond yields (2.0% and 1.5% possible here), and European policymakers addressing a host of difficult monetary and fiscal policy issues. Bottom line: this is unlikely to be a dramatic “V-bottom” low given the range of issues of concern to investors.  Look for the majority of our “Top 10” to stop going down before calling a bottom.

“Too late to sell, too early to buy”. That old market aphorism captures the current state of play in U.S. equity markets and to a great extent stocks around the world. Today’s selloff, on a supposedly light volume half-holiday with U.S. bond markets closed, felt like a brick thrown through a window at about 3pm. Those with a technical inclination to their analysis don’t like the fact that the S&P closed below its 200 day moving average of 1905. Fundamentally oriented investors wonder how stocks could implode when they are so “Cheap”.  Safe to say: no one is happy. 

Another bit of market wisdom, told to me by the smartest (and richest) boss I have ever had: “Don’t make things harder than they have to be.”  That statement is the essence of good trading: listen to the market, respect what it has to say, and position capital accordingly. Investing, by contrast, is a bit of a hair shirt and ashy smudges on the face endeavor.  Investors know they will feel some pain when things go against them. They stick with their positions and hope/expect them to prove correct. Traders know that that if they are feeling pain, something has gone wrong. 

Right now, the discipline of the trader beats the faith based approach required of the investor, so let’s go with that. And hair shirts make me itch. “Sit tight, be right” is for analysts. And bull markets. 

Here’s a checklist of ten items that I’ll be watching to tell me when the bulk of the selling is over. Yes, that implies we haven’t hit bottom. Does Monday’s price action feel like a bottom to you?

1.       The CBOE VIX Index. Yes, the VIX gets its share of criticism, but in rapidly moving markets it has its place in the toolbox.  The long term average – back to 1990 – is 20 and the standard deviation around that mean is 6. That means at 26 and 32 you have 2 reasonable levels where the VIX should top out. Now, if you think we are entering a period of real crisis, the numbers shift higher. Typically the VIX averages 28 when things are really bad (think back to the Financial Crisis) and the standard deviation rises to 8. That puts the target at 36 and 44. 
Bottom line: don’t try to pick a bottom until the VIX gets to at least 26. It closed at 24.6 today.  If you aren’t especially brave, then wait until 32-34. 

2.      U.S. Treasury Bond yields. The U.S. Treasury 10 year yield has been signaling trouble for stocks over much of this year. We began 2014 at 3.03%, and there hasn’t been a day this year where yields traded higher than that. For a while, equity markets treated bonds as the “Boy that cried global recession” once too often.  Now, persistently low yields feel pretty right.

Where might yields go to signal that near term negativity is overdone?  Well, the all-time low in yields for the 10 year was 1.5% back in July 2012. Getting back there seems a stretch, so as a practical point we’d say investors will want to see yields start to rise (from whatever starting point they choose) before they believe stocks have bottomed.

3.      Small cap U.S. stocks stabilize. There is little doubt that the U.S. economy is in a marginally better position than Europe or Japan, but the Russell 2000 is down 10% on the year and meaningfully lower than the S&P 500 since the start of 2011: 34% versus 49%. All that signals both a reluctance to take risk (small caps being more volatile than larger names) and some squeamishness to allocate capital to equities with all-or-most of their business from the supposedly stronger U.S. economy.

The bottom line is simple: small caps need to show better performance to give investors confidence that we have made a bottom in large caps. Enough of the divergence – both asset classes have to start acting more consistently with respect to their common fundamentals.   

4.      Follow the ETF money. Equity money flows into U.S. listed exchange traded funds have been quite disappointing thus far in October, at negative $5.7 billion. By contrast, fixed income money flows are positive $8.2 billion. ETFs alone cannot lift equities higher, but you will want to see money flowing into this space before you ring the all-clear on the recent pullback.
 
5.      Crude oil prices.  Just as Treasuries gave us a warning sign that things weren’t quite right with the world, current levels for West Texas Intermediate at $85 are a flashing yellow light as well.   Yes, there are a host of secular reasons for lower oil prices – Saudi Arabia pumping more, the U.S. producing more, etc.  But oil prices are the blood pressure readings of the global economy, and the correlation is positive – not negative.  So oil needs to stabilize, somewhere. The $80/barrel level is a good one to watch, as the commodity got there in 2011 and 2012. 
 
6.      Any Positive Headlines from Europe. Between all the news about Ebola, ISIS, capital markets volatility and other more pressing concerns, it is easy to forget that Europe still has its hands full dealing with the threat of a third recession since the Financial Crisis. This region is still, one should remember, the largest single economy in the world. And yet…  It has no solid plan for encouraging investment and growth. Remember when the Dow fell +700 points after Congress failed to pass the TARP bill the first time? The current market volatility may give European policymakers the same impetus. 
 
7.       The value of the dollar. The fashionable discussion here is whether a strong or weak dollar if better for stocks. We could argue either. The real issue is just how volatile the U.S. currency has been, even including today. In truth, what we need to see is a stable dollar at whatever level it chooses. That will be a sign of a bottom, in that investors will have set some kind of equilibrium from which they can begin to choose between different asset classes. 
 
8.      Higher volumes.  Much higher.  We do appear to have snapped the 5 year downtrend for U.S. equity volumes with the recent volatility. Look for trading volumes to continue to rise in the coming weeks.  As will the dollar, oil, and small cap stock levels, whenever volumes plateau that will be a good place to call a bottom.
 
9.      Hedge fund chatter. The current price churn is really good news for your garden-variety equity hedge fund because it changes the game they will play for the next few weeks.  As a hedge fund, you typically want to make as much of a return as possible, since this drives fees and attracts new investors. In a down year – like the one we now have – the goal is to lose less than other hedge funds. That means cutting back the portfolio as markets decline to minimize risk of loss.  Do it quickly, and you will lose less than the next guy. 

While we don’t know which unlucky hedgie will actually do this trade, I can assure you that the bottom tick of the current pullback will be from some hedge fund letting go of their last favorite – but losing – stock position.  So look for signs of distress in the hedge fund community – perhaps including chatter of a high-profile closure or two – as a signal that stocks have actually hit their low points. 

10.   Ebola, ISIS, and other risk factors. I saved these points for the last because they merit the final word on the topic of “When do we bottom?”  If you believe ISIS will sweep the Middle East or Ebola is a large scale threat to human existence, you really shouldn’t be in equities. Or bonds.  Gold, Glocks and canned food should be your thing. And there’s absolutely nothing wrong with that. 

However, realize that the Middle East has been a mess longer than just the arrival of ISIS on the scene.  And Ebola is just one more stanza in the sad song of diseases that kill innocent human life.  For the moment, however, fear has the upper hand and we have to respect that. That’s why this list has 10 items, rather than just this last one.  “Ebola cured” or “ISIS defeated” are not going to be headlines in 2014. Or likely in 2015 or 2016 for that matter. The other nine of our top 10 will have to deliver the signal that these larger worries are discounted in stock prices. 




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1v8ogjv Tyler Durden

Scalia, Thomas, and Ginsburg File Rare Dissent from SCOTUS Refusal to Hear Crack-Cocaine Sentencing Case

The
U.S. Supreme Court turns down the vast majority of petitions it
receives without offering any sort of explanation. But in a rare
move today, Justices Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas, and Ruth
Bader Ginsburg spoke out against the Court’s refusal to hear a
crack-cocaine sentencing case.

Jones v. United States centers on the criminal
sentences handed down by a judge to three men for conspiring to
distribute drugs. However, those men had been acquitted of
the conspiracy charge by the jury, which voted only to convict them
of distributing a small amount of drugs. The question before the
Supreme Court was whether the harsher, judge-imposed sentence
violated the Constitution.

In his dissent
today
from the Court’s denial of the case, Justice Scalia,
joined by Justices Thomas and Ginsburg, explains both the stakes
and why the Court’s refusal to hear the appeal got it wrong:

The Sixth Amendment, together with the Fifth Amendment’s Due
Process Clause, “requires that each element of a crime” be either
admitted by the defendant, or “proved to the jury beyond a
reasonable doubt.” Any fact that increases the penalty to which a
defendant is exposed constitutes an element of a crime, and “must
be found by a jury, not a judge.” We have held that a substantively
unreasonable penalty is illegal and must be set aside. It
unavoidably follows that any fact necessary to prevent a sentence
from being substantively unreasonable—thereby exposing the
defendant to the longer sentence—is an element that must be either
admitted by the defendant or found by the jury. It may not
be found by a judge. [Internal citations omitted.]

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1sGpzGU
via IFTTT

5 Reasons Oil Prices Are Dropping

Submitted by Chris Pedersen via OilPrice.com,

As oil prices continue to fall, analysts and producers are trying to wrap their heads around the reasons and identify a floor price. Even though crude benchmarks like Brent and WTI keep dropping, the cost of finding oil continues to rise. What are some of the key drivers that have created this paradox?

1. The U.S. Oil Boom
America’s oil boom is well documented. Shale oil production has grown by roughly 4 million barrels per day (mbpd) since 2008. Imports from OPEC have been cut in half and for the first time in 30 years, the U.S. has stopped importing crude from Nigeria.

2. Libya is Back
Because of internal strife, analysts have until recently assumed that Libya’s output would hover around 150,000-250,000 thousand barrels per day. It turns out that Libya has sorted out their disruptions much quicker than anticipated, producing 810,000 barrels per day in September. Libyan officials told the Wall Street Journal last week that they expect to produce a million barrels per day by the end of the month and 1.2 million barrels a day by early next year.

3. OPEC Infighting
There have been numerous reports about the discord between OPEC members, leading many to believe that OPEC will not be able to reign in production like it has done so in the past. The Saudis and Kuwaitis have reportedly been in an oil price war, repeatedly lowering their prices in order to maintain their market share in Asia. John Kingston, the news director at Platts, believes that the Saudis will not be willing to give up market share like they have done during previous price drops.

4. Negative European Economic Outlook
European Central Bank president Mario Draghi has left investors concerned about the continent’s slow growth. Germany’s exports were down 5.8 percent in August, stoking the fears of anxious investors that the EU’s largest economy had double dipped into recession last quarter. Across the Eurozone, the IMF again lowered its growth forecast to 0.8 percent in 2014 and 1.3 percent in 2015.

5. Tepid Asian Demand
Beyond slow economic growth and currency depreciation, a number of Asian countries have begun cutting energy subsidies, resulting in higher fuel costs despite a drop in global oil prices. In 2012, Asia’s top spenders on energy subsidies, as a percentage of GDP included: Indonesia 3 percent; Thailand 2.6 percent; Vietnam 2.5 percent, Malaysia 2.3 percent, and India 2.3 percent. India is a primary example. Between 2008-2012, India’s diesel demand grew between 6 percent and 11 percent annually. In January 2013, the country started cutting the subsidies of diesel. Since then, diesel consumption has plateaued.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1ETCdWN Tyler Durden

Could Stocks Drop Another 30%?

The stock market is taking a breather from the recent bloodbath.

 

The key moving average that primed us for a bounce is the 252-DMA. If you take an entire year, remove the weekends and holidays, you arrive at 252 days during which the stock market is open.

As you can see in the chart below, this has been a line of great significance ever since stocks started going bananas in 2012:

 

 

As you can see, the 252-DMA has been “the line in the sand” three times since 2012. It was unlikely we’d take this line out the first time the market broke down.

 

However, the technical damage of this breakdown has been severe. We’ve learned a number of things:

 

1)   When selling pressure comes in, stocks crater VERY quickly.

2)   There are not a lot of buyers looking to enter the market during dips this time around.

 

This second point is key. The primary drivers for this latest leg up in stocks (the one that began in early 2013 has been individual investors and corporate stock buybacks.

 

We now are losing both groups. Individual investors put a record amount of money into bond funds last week. This money had to come from somewhere and most of it can from stocks.

 

Regarding corporate buybacks, it is now clear that the massive buying binge was the result of executives trying to juice stocks higher so they could cash out their options at the greatest possible price. We know this because while Corporate executives have been pushing their companies to buy stock at a record pace, on a personal level they have been dumping their personal stakes.

 

So… we’ve got a weak and fragile market, losing two of its biggest drivers… at the same time that the Fed is ending QE. This is a recipe for a potential bloodbath. If we wipe out the “bubble” portion of the market move from 2009, we’re going to 1,250 on the S&P 500.

 

That’s over 30% lower from where we are now.

 

 

The market is primed to drop. Now is the time to prepare.

 

If you’ve yet to take action to prepare for the second round of the financial crisis, we offer a FREE investment report Financial Crisis "Round Two" Survival Guide that outlines easy, simple to follow strategies you can use to not only protect your portfolio from a market downturn, but actually produce profits.

 

You can pick up a FREE copy at:

 

http://ift.tt/1rPiWR3

 

 

Best Regards

 

Graham Summers

 

Phoenix Capital Research

 




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1ETCdGs Phoenix Capital Research

Now Available in Paperback: The United States of Paranoia

The
paperback edition
of The United States of Paranoia, my
history of American conspiracy folklore, comes out today. It
includes a new afterword on the post-Snowden era, so the book is
now both longer and cheaper, and it’s easier to carry
around too.

The reviewers have liked the book—and when I say “the
reviewers,” I mean pretty much all of them, at least as far as
newspapers and magazines and webzines and journals go. (You can
find some negative takes on
Amazon
and
Goodreads
, and I love this sour
tweet
to death.) It’s enough to make a man suspect an unseen
hand is acting behind the scenes, pulling the critical community’s
strings. Some samples:

I'm also thinking of publishing an alt-text edition.

“a terrific, measured, objective study of one of
American culture’s most loaded topics” —Publishers
Weekly

“so many tasty morsels of historical marginalia that it nearly
bursts with weirdness” —The
Globe and Mail

“immensely entertaining” —The
Boston Globe

“lively and often witty…few readers are likely to get to the end
of the book without having cherished notions challenged” —Salon

“a thoroughly researched and completely readable look at infamous
and forgotten conspiracy theories and presumed cabals throughout
American history” —New
York Daily News

“It’s all too rare to come upon a writer willing to attack the
sacred cows of the right and left with equal amounts of
intelligence and flair. Walker is, thankfully, that kind of writer
and a tireless and thorough researcher to boot.” —Los
Angeles Times

“A lively, extremely interesting, and occasionally more than
slightly scary book.” —Booklist

Amazon named it one of the top 20
nonfiction books of 2013
, and it made the Chicago
Tribune
‘s year-end
best-books list
too. A conspiracy theorist reviews it
here
, and a conspiracy debunker reviews it
here
. The book is also, I am informed, going to appear in the
background during an episode of CSI. Disappointingly, the
show assured me that “the person whose home it would be in is NOT
evil.”

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1sCjF8q
via IFTTT

All That Is Broken With The US Financial System In One Chart

We have shown this chart before. We will show it again because, to nobody’s surprise, nothing has changed since then.

The chart in question, which we believe demonstrates all that is wrong with the US financial and banking system, shows JPM’s quarterly deposits, which in Q3 just hit a new all time record of $1.335 trillion, and its loans, which despite the much hyped rebound in Q2, once again declined to $743 billion from $747 billion in Q2 (so much for that lending-driven recovery?) leading to a new record low Loan-to-Deposit ratio of 56%. So while deposits are obviously hitting new record nominal highs quarter after quarter, when was the last time JPM’s loans printed at all time highs? The answer: just as Lehman filed for bankruptcy, when the number was $761 billion.

And for those who missed our explanation last time, here it is again, updated for the times:

As the blue bar shows, total loans issued by the biggest US bank were $743 billion in Q3 2014: about $20 billion less than in the quarter Lehman blew up. Four years later, and the US commercial bank lending apparatus is still in a state of depression. Or so it would appear on the books.

But why doesn’t JPM lend out more: after all that is the main pathway to stimulate the economy as all pundits will tell us. Simple: it doesn’t need to. As the red bars show, total consumer deposits held by the bank just rose once more, this time to a record $1,335 billion, up $15 billion in the quarter, pushing the deposit-over-loan difference to a new record $591 billion. This is happening exclusively due to the Fed, which when banks do not “create” money from loans (as they clearly don’t), has to step in with QE and create money on its own.

It also means that JPM has to allocate this excess capital somehow and until the London Whale blew up, was simply funding its prop trading desk with this deposit cash as “dry powder” to manipulate and corner various derivative markets courtesy of its unregulated London traders. Another result of course is that risk assets are bid up to record highs – excess reserves are a perfectly fungible source of margin collateral – even as the actual flow through of the Fed’s “wealth effect” is halted precisely due to the complete collapse in new loan creation – the primary “transmission mechanism” of economic growth.

In other words, by keeping the pedal to the metal on QE for the past 6 years, the Fed has giving the banks all the benefits of money creation (soaring deposits), without any of the risks (loan creation in a record low Net Interest Margin environment). And if you are JPM you will be perfectly happy with this arrangement and not seek to lend out any money, as the case has been for the past six years. Which means consumers who wish to take out loans to fund ventures and other growth strategies are fresh out of luck, because the banks that ordinarily supply them with this risk capital have simply shut down the process entirely, and instead are gambling in the stock market.

* * *

And that is precisely the jist of all that is broken in the US financial system, and why the Fed is in fact making things worse, not better, and is progressively destroying the wealth of the middle class, stunting any growth opportunities the US may have, and all the residual wealth is pumped into the hands of those benefiting solely from rising asset prices.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/11j4qXL Tyler Durden

NYPD Cops Tell Comedian to “Shut the Fuck Up” After Interrupting to Arrest Alleged Theater Masturbator

Cops from the New York Police Department (NYPD) stormed in
during stand-up comedian Adam Newman’s act to arrest a homeless man
allegedly masturbating in the theater.

The audience quieted down for the police but like a pro the
stand-up comedian tried to talk through the incident and
incorporate it into his routine. The cops didn’t appear to
appreciate it, especially when he asked them if they really
couldn’t wait until after the set to make that arrest, responding
that he should shut the fuck up. Watch below, where the cops come
in at about 40 seconds in:

Weston made a comment about the profanity but eventually
apologized to the cops. After they left, he noted that usually he’d
go crazy on a heckler who told him to shut the fuck up but that
it’s different with cops, and he couldn’t tell them to shut the
fuck up, could he?

These cops must not have heard about the civilian complaint
review board chairman’s desire to see police
use less profanity on the job
.

h/t sarcasmic

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1sGinue
via IFTTT

Nick Gillespie: The Web’s Biggest Stars

Johnny CarsonBack in his
day, Tonight Show host Johnny Carson bestrode the small
screen likea
late-night colossus
, pulling in audiences that were massive and
persistent for 30-plus years at NBC.

But the future (or even the present) belongs not to broadcast
networks or even cable—it belongs to the Internet and a host of
personalities and creators that you’ve probably never heard of
unless you have teenagers or gamers in the house.

Founded in 2005,YouTube reaches
a billion unique visitors a month all over the planet. “100 hours
of video are uploaded to YouTube every minute,” claims the
service’s stats page, and “over 6 billion hours of video are
watched each month on YouTube—that’s almost an hour for every
person on Earth.”

In 1981, the music-video network MTV famously launched by airing
a short video for the two-year-old
Buggles
 song “Video Killed the Radio Star.” These days,
online video is slowly killing old-style TV stars and replacing
them with people who gained their fame in the new medium of online
video. Here are some of the biggest and most interesting phenoms of
that burgeoning world.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1sGil5J
via IFTTT