Heroin Use In The United States Reaches A 20 Year High

The war on drugs in the United States is always a topic of debate, however what isn't debatable according to the UN's World Drug Report is that a heroin epidemic is gripping the United States.

Whatever the war on drugs is accomplishing, it certainly was not keeping one million people in 2014 from using heroin in the United States, which according to the UN report is almost three times as many users as in 2003. Additionally, heroin related deaths have increased five-fold since 2000. Angela Me, the chief researcher for the report said "There is really a huge epidemic (of) heroin in the US. It is the highest definitely in the last 20 years."

According to Reuters, Me named two potential reasons for the uptick in usage. One being that the US legislation introduced in recent years has made it harder to abuse prescription opioids such as oxicodone, a powerful painkiller that can have similar effects to heroin. A second reason is that the supply in the US from Mexico and Colombia is greater, and prices have been depressed in recent years.

In 2014, at least 207,000 deaths globally were drug related, with heroin use and overdose-related deaths increasing sharply also over the last two years according to the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC)

"Heroin continues to be the drug that kills the most people and this resurgence must be addressed urgently." said Yury Fedotov, executive director of the UNODC.

Reuters notes that President Obama earlier this year asked Congress for $1.1 billion in new funding over two years to expand treatment for users of heroin and prescription painkillers.

* * *

Sadly, this chart from the National Institute on Drug Abuse shows the dramatic increase in the number of heroin related deaths in the United States over recent years.

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The All-Night Nailbiter: The First Official Results Give “Leave” Some Hope

Update 7:00 PM: And a shocker already from Newcastle. As we noted earlier, Newcastle was supposed to have a comfortable 12 point leads for Remain. However, moments ago the official results came out and while Remain did in fact vote for Remain, it won by the smallest possible margin with 51% voting to Remain and 49% voting to Leave, or 65,404 REMAIN vs 63,598 LEAVE.

As noted, this was a far smaller victory than expected, and as a result Sterling has tumbled nearly 200 pips from the session highs, and has wiped out all intraday gains.

* * *

Until this point, it was all polling, hearsay, speculation and rumors. Now, we finally have the first official results. We will update this post with incremental data as long as a clear picture emerges.

The first official result, Gibraltar, has been a whopping victory for Remain with 19,322 voting to Remain and only 823 to leave.

Some additional details from the BBC:

However a small hiccup may have emerged in the expected Bremain steamrolling, when moments ago the BBC said that Newcastle is shaping up as a marginal win for Remain, which as BBC adds appears to be worse than expected based on initial polls which had suggested a far stronger showing for Remain.

And the biggest surprise: moments ago Opinium may have flipped everything on its head when moments ago it reported that Leave is 45% and Remain is 44%:

Sterling has lost 100 pips on the news, and ES was now only up 4.5 on the session.

* * *

Continuing coverage

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America’s Seen 50% Surge In Partisan Conflict Since Obama’s Second Term Started

'Hope & Change' and devolved into Nope & Deranged… Since the start of President Obama's second term, Goldman Sachs note that the Partisan Conflict Index has averaged 50% higher than its 30 year average. So who is to blame? President Obama's divisiveness? Or The Federal Reserve's extremely accommodative monetary polict removing any need for actual decision-making?

Get back to work Mr. Chair(wo)man!!

 

As we previoously noted, while President Obama's progressive agenda has not endeered a "reaching across the aisle" moment, we place the blame squarely at the foot of The Federal Reserve and one look at the chart below shows the surge in "conflict" since The Fed started printing money, slashing rates, and enabling largesse…

We have said for many years that accommodative monetary policy completely removes the burden from politicians that would require them to actually make difficult decisions around fiscal reforms, and now Standard & Poor's is saying the same thing.

Speaking in London on Tuesday, S&P's top EMEA analyst Moritz Kraemer said that there was a strong relationship between government bond yields, an indicator of how much countries must pay to borrow, and their willingness to undertake structural reforms. "All of these (reform) efforts from the governments have really fallen by the wayside under the palliative that the ECB is providing" Kramer told the Euromoney Global Borrowers & Bond Investors Forum.

As the ECB policymakers have been urging governments to take advantage of the easy financing conditions to implement reforms, Kramer points out what everyone other than central planners have already figured out, which is that as long as the central banks monetize the debt, why face political difficulties and enact reforms – "The moment the pressure goes away, the action goes away as well" Kramer said.

Kramer also pointed out that in a normal interest rate environment, government deficits across the bloc would be 1.5 to 2 percentage points of GDP higher, which would force the issue of reform up the agenda for many nations.

Simply put, as we have tried to convey repeatedly over the years. As long as the central banks will continue to monetize the government's debt, and continue to push trillions of sovereign debt into negative yields, no pressure will ever be felt by any government to change its ways.

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“I’ve Never Felt So Resigned To The Fact That We Are All Stuck…”

Submitted by Ben Hunt via Salient Partners' Epsilon Theory blog,

Negative rates are ice-nine. If you don’t know what ice-nine is, read the book. Spoiler alert: the world ends.

Admit it. You assume her poetry is soft because she’s a woman and writes about flowers. Read it again. Emily Dickinson is a total badass. You don’t even feel the slice of her work, but then you see the blood.

The Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis is changing its characterization of the U.S. macroeconomic and monetary policy outlook. An older narrative that the Bank has been using since the financial crisis ended has now likely outlived its usefulness, and so it is being replaced by a new narrative. The hallmark of the new narrative is to think of medium- and longer-term macroeconomic outcomes in terms of regimes. The concept of a single, long-run steady state to which the economy is converging is abandoned, and is replaced by a set of possible regimes that the economy may visit. Regimes are generally viewed as persistent, and optimal monetary policy is viewed as regime dependent. Switches between regimes are viewed as not forecastable.

 

– James Bullard, “The St. Louis Fed’s New Characterization of the Outlook for the U.S. Economy” (June 2016)

Jim Bullard’s resignation letter here in the Silver Age of the Central Banker, as he adopts the game theoretic concept of minimax regret theory and the postmodern social theoretic concept of narrative construction.

Warren Beatty and Natalie Wood’s best work. I experience this movie so differently today, as the father of four teenage daughters, than I did watching it as a young man. In investing as in life, we all love and lose. The question is how you deal with it.

If we will be quiet and ready enough, we shall find compensation in every disappointment.

– Henry David Thoreau (1817 – 1862)

In his classic work on game theory, “The Strategy of Conflict”, Nobel Prize winner Tom Schelling begins by writing about cooperative games, where players are trying to arrive at a common outcome for a mutual benefit. This is a different class of games from the competitive games like Chicken and Prisoner’s Dilemma that we usually consider when we think about game theory, but in truth it’s the cooperative games that account for so much more of our daily lives and social interactions. For example, driving on the right-hand side of the road (or the left-hand side in the UK) is an example of a cooperative game equilibrium. The only thing that matters is that we agree on which side of the road we drive on, not that my preferred side or your preferred side ends up being the final choice.

The most interesting cooperative games are those where — unlike driving conventions — we don’t have a government or other authority telling us what our agreement should be. Even more interesting are those games where we can’t communicate directly with the other players to talk through the appropriate equilibrium behavior that works for all concerned. For example, let’s say that a friend and I agree to meet in New York City at 1 pm tomorrow. Unfortunately, we neglected to agree on a location to meet, and now I have absolutely no way to communicate with my friend, or vice versa. What do we do?

As Schelling writes, almost everyone will, in fact, meet their friend successfully tomorrow at 1 pm in New York City. Where? By the big clock in the middle of Grand Central Station. Why? Because there is Common Knowledge — something that everyone knows that everyone knows — to guide both me and my friend to this outcome. Now Schelling doesn’t call it Common Knowledge — he calls it a focal point — but it’s exactly the same thing. And once you start looking for focal points that drive our strategic behavior in the cooperative games that comprise our daily social lives, you see them everywhere.

Okay, Ben, all kinda interesting, but what’s the point? The point is that when governments undertake emergency actions and extraordinary policies, they obliterate the focal points that make our cooperative games of investing and market making possible.

Specifically, extraordinary monetary policy has obliterated the focal points of price discovery. When you no longer have Common Knowledge regarding the price of money, you don’t have Common Knowledge regarding the price of anything. For more than seven years now, investors have been sitting down at the poker table ready to play the cards they’re dealt, only to find that central bankers with infinitely high stacks of chips have sat down at the table, too. And as any experienced poker player knows, the cards are meaningless if you tangle with an opponent like this. Maybe you think that was a bad flop. Maybe you think Nestle investment grade debt is worth 99 cents. But what you think about valuation and intrinsic worth Does. Not. Matter. when the infinite stack player says with his inexhaustible string of bets of massive size that this was actually a wonderful flop and that Nestle investment grade debt is actually worth $1.10 and the Emperor is actually wearing a beautiful suit of clothes. The very act of stock-picking or bond-picking or security selection in general has become nothing more than a bad joke in vast swaths of global markets. It’s a crooked game — a moke’s game — but it’s the only game in town.

Specifically, extraordinary regulatory policy has obliterated the focal points of liquidity. When you no longer have Common Knowledge regarding the ability of banks to make markets and hold an inventory of securities, you don’t have Common Knowledge regarding the liquidity of anything. The market risk from a Brexit “Leave” vote, for example, has absolutely nothing to do with anything in the real economy, and next to nothing as a signal or precedent for the core currency union of the EU. Instead, the market risk from a Brexit “Leave” vote is a liquidity shock in currency, rates, credit, or derivative securities that sets off a chain reaction of liquidity shocks across global risk assets. This sort of liquidity shock is temporary, to be sure, but that’s no consolation at all if you find yourself stopped out of a position. When trillions of dollars in risk assets move by several percentage points because a few thousand quid switched from one line or another in a UK betting parlor, or because the latest online poll with suspect (to be kind) methodology is printed by a tabloid … you can’t tell me that market liquidity and structural normalcy is more than skin deep. We swing from pillar to post and endure mini-Flash Crashes on a regular basis because too often the act of making a market in, say, equity index volatility is a potential career-ender for anyone sitting on a bank trading desk, and that’s entirely the result of unintended consequences from financial regulations like Dodd-Frank.

It’s the combination of focal point obliteration, from both monetary policy and regulatory policy sources, that creates the most powerful and destructive earthquakes in our investment landscape. For example, I’m often asked if I think that negative rates will ever come to the U.S. My answer: they’re already here by proxy (U.S. Treasury rates are so low today because German Bunds are negative out to 10 years duration), and negative rates will hit the U.S. in earnest and in practice early next year. How? Major U.S. money market fund providers like TIAA-CREF have already announced plans to stop providing fee waivers as new regulations force fund type consolidation, which will create negative rates in the safe, liquid funds that remain. It’s baked in. It’s going to happen. As George Soros is fond of saying, I’m not predicting. I’m observing. And nothing will ever be the same. If you think that the current anguished cries from savers and retirees and public pension plans are loud now … if you think that the rewardless risk of modern markets can’t get any worse … well, just wait until your money market fund starts charging you interest for the privilege of investing your cash in short-term government obligations. Just wait until Nestle floats a negative interest rate bond. Just wait until borrowing money, not lending money, becomes a profit center. Just wait until the entire notion of compounding — without exaggeration the most important force in human economic history — is turned on its head and becomes a wealth destroyer.

Sigh.

You know, I’ve written a lot of Epsilon Theory notes over the past three years. As I figure it, about three novels’ worth and just over the halfway mark of War and Peace. But in all that time and across all those notes I’ve never felt so … resigned … to the fact we are ALL well and truly stuck. The Fed is stuck. The ECB and the BOJ are stuck. The banks are stuck. Corporations are stuck. Asset managers are stuck. Financial advisors are stuck. Investors are stuck. Republicans are stuck. Democrats are stuck. We are all stuck in a very powerful political equilibrium where the costs of changing our current bleak course of ineffective monetary policy and counter-productive regulatory policy are so astronomical that The Powers That Be have no alternative but to continue with what they know full well isn’t working.

It’s through this lens of resignation that I think we should view one of the most fascinating Missionary statements of the past 20 years, St. Louis Fed Governor Jim Bullard’s latest paper, where he says that the entire exercise of Fed guidance and dot plots and planning for interest rate increases and interest rate normalization is a complete and utter waste of time. In fact, he goes farther than that. Bullard writes that forward guidance is actually highly counter-productive and credibility destroying, because it teases us with the notion that normalization is possible, when, in fact, absent some deus ex machina miracle, it’s not. My god, you think I’m a downer? This is the President of the St. Louis Fed, saying that everything the FOMC has been doing for the past four years is just a bad joke! Or as Vonnegut would say, there’s “no damn cat and there’s no damn cradle” in the oh-so-complex hand weaving that Bernanke and Yellen have crafted with forward guidance, no matter how hard we look. The Emperor has no clothes.

What Bullard wrote is a letter of resignation. Not just a letter of resignation in the sense of quitting one’s job (although that, too … if you’re not going to play the game you were appointed to play, if you’re just going to pick up your dot plot and go home, then you should actually go home), but more importantly in the emotional sense of resignation to one’s fate. It’s a capitulation, a recognition that the U.S. is well and truly stuck in the current macroeconomic regime of low growth + massive debt + insanely low interest rates, and there’s nothing the Fed can do in terms of jawboning or “communication policy” or forward guidance to get us out. So, Bullard says, let’s stop this charade of dot plots and just admit the truth: rates are not going up, maybe not EVER, until something beyond the Fed’s control shocks the world into some other macroeconomic regime.

By the way, here’s the problem with what Bullard is saying: the current regime/stable equilibrium of low growth + massive debt + negative interest rates isn’t something that just “happened”. It’s not like the Fed woke up one morning to find that some terrible houseguest soiled the sheets and overfed the dog and left a lit cigarette smoldering in the trash can. Please. Here’s a 4-year chart of the VIX, looking for all the world like a Whack-a-Mole game, as every surge in volatility is met with a mallet strike of Large Scale Asset Purchases (LSAPs), forward guidance, or (outside the U.S.) interest rate cuts well past the zero-bound.

epsilon-theory-ben-hunt-cats-cradle-bloomberg-1

Source: Bloomberg, as of 05/31/2016

Over the past four years, we haven’t seen the VIX stick over 20 for more than 2 months. Compare this to the seven year period of Sept. 1996 – Sept. 2003, where the VIX was almost never below 20.

epsilon-theory-ben-hunt-cats-cradle-bloomberg-2

Source: Bloomberg, as of 05/31/2016

Granted, there were some scary market moments from late 1996 through late 2003, but it’s not like the past four years have been a walk in the park. I don’t think anyone can deny that we are living today in a different regime or state of the world, where volatility is simply not allowed to raise its ugly head as it always has in the past. That’s the Entropic Regime in a nutshell — volatility is not allowed to reach historically normal levels. Not allowed by whom? By central banks, of course. S&P 500 down 8%? Gasp! We must provide more accommodation! The macroeconomic regime that Bullard finds so objectionable and resistant to any policy choices was created lock, stock, and barrel by the Fed and their regulatory cousins. They weren’t trying to lock the world into the Entropic Regime, a long gray slog where neither recession nor real growth appears, and maybe the world would have been even more wrecked if they had taken a different path, but they did what they did all the same.

My issue with Bullard is neither his assessment of the current macroeconomic regime nor the silliness of forward guidance and Fed communication policy. I am in violent agreement with Bullard in his recognition of the power of Narrative and the simple fact that all of our crystal balls are broken. But don’t tell me that the Fed “has no choice” but to accept the current macroeconomic regime, because they DO have a choice. The Fed giveth. The Fed can taketh away. It’s just a very, very, very painful choice that the Fed would have to make in order to taketh away, full of loss assignment and bankruptcy and status quo shattering. It’s a very brave choice they would have to make, a Volcker-esque choice they would have to make. And that’s why I don’t think they will ever do it.

So we’re left with Hope, hope that a miracle occurs after the November election to change our current political regime of decay and macroeconomic regime of low growth + massive debt + negative interest rates. Politically on the left, it’s hope that Hillary Clinton isn’t really as venal and principle-less and in-the-bag for Big Money and Big War as she seems. Politically on the right, it’s hope that Donald Trump doesn’t really mean what he says about Muslims and Hispanics and judges and torture and libel and debt and women and and and. On both the left and the right, it’s hope that the election will yield some massive Keynesian public infrastructure spending spree, where our “crumbling roads and bridges” are made whole, where every city gets a football stadium for the local billionaire’s use, and where high-speed rail and gleaming airports usher in a new age of productivity and easy trips to Grandma’s house. Truly, as Voltaire’s Pangloss would say, this is the best of all possible worlds.

But hope, of course, is not a strategy. What do investors and advisors and voters — The Non-Powers That Be — DO when the entire world is stuck in a powerful negative equilibrium, when we are presented with nothing but miserable choices, at the ballot box and public markets alike? How can we find “compensation in our disappointment”, to quote Thoreau? Or to be slightly more modern in our references, let’s accept that we can’t get what we want. Can we at least get what we need?

To answer that question, at least from an investment perspective, I need to go back to the big Epsilon Theory note I wrote earlier this year, “Hobson’s Choice.” I’m not going to repeat much of that here (at 26 pages long, it’s a bit of a tome), except to say that it’s as close to an Epsilon Theory investment strategy as I can convey in this public venue. But here’s the skinny, with what I call Five Easy Pieces for the Investment World As It Is.

In and of themselves, admonitions like “Mind your sails” may not sound like much, but I promise they make sense in context. Here’s what they mean translated into market behaviors.

Now the point of “Hobson’s Choice” is that these behaviors I’m describing, like “Keep risk constant, not dollars”, are new ways of describing good old-fashioned investment ideas that just so happen to conflict with other investment ideas that have become rote articles of faith in our modern, overly equity-centric vision of what it means to be a “good” investor. For example, I think that it’s nuts to stay fully invested in the stock market through thick and thin, and I would love to embrace that most-hated epithet in investing today: market timer. (Shudder!) But I can’t SAY that I’m a market timer, any more than I could say that I’m a libertarian or that I love Emily Dickinson’s poetry or that my wife and I homeschool our children … no, no, you wouldn’t take me seriously if the conversation about politics or books or education were framed in this way. It’s the same with investing. In the immortal words of John Maynard Keynes, “it is better for reputation to fail conventionally than to succeed unconventionally” (and for an Epsilon Theory twist, I’d add, “and if you fail unconventionally, then your reputation is really dead”), which means that even if you agreed with me on the virtues of market timing, you’d never adopt a strategy based on market timing, because it would be way too risky from a social perspective. I mean, just imagine the shame if your client or wife or partner thought you were a … again, I can hardly bring myself to write the words … market timer. Oh, the humanity!

So let’s change the conversation. I’m NOT a market timer. Nope, not me. Instead, I’m a risk balancer. I have fewer dollars in the market when risk goes up, and I have more dollars in the market when risk goes down. Will I be over-invested in the market when it hits a top and rolls over? Yep. Will I be under-invested in the market when it hits bottom and turns up? Yep. But I’m going to be adding to my dollar exposure all the way up and I’m going to be subtracting from my dollar exposure all the way down. I’ll take those odds. And just imagine if I did this risk balancing thing across asset classes, or maybe across yield-oriented strategies. Hey, now.

Here are the broad categories of strategies that the Five Easy Pieces market behaviors imply.

Is this a comprehensive list? Of course not. But it’s a start.

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Farage Denies Conceding: “We Haven’t Had A Single Bloody Vote Counted”; S&P Futures Surge

In a twist worthy of a soap opera, just minutes after Sky and the major newswires reported that Nigel Farage said “looks like Remain will edge it”, a Nigel Farage spokesman told Bloomberg that “he never conceded. He looked at the prevailing weather and was honest. We’re not saying it’s over. We haven’t had a single bloody vote counted”, even as just moments later, wires also reported that Farage told his PA that “the UK has voted to remain in the EU.”

In any event, and Farage is quite right about this – without a single vote counted – the suspense over Brexit appears over, and reopening S&P futs were spiked 13 points higher, hitting 2,119 and less than 1% from all time highs.

 

Cable likewise jumped and rose above 1.15 moments ago…

.. although it has since trimmed some of its gains and was back under 1.15 at last check. As Bloomberg adds, leveraged accounts that bought GBP just after U.K. polls closed have trimmed positions after a post-voting survey sent the currency higher, according to an Asia-based FX trader.

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An 85 Percent Probability of Black Swan Event in Bond Markets (Video)

By EconMatters


This is one of the Few times in financial market history that analysts could with high probability predict a black swan market event. The Federal Reserve is going to lose a lot of money on their Bond Portfolio Holdings over the next 10 years.

© EconMatters All Rights Reserved | Facebook | Twitter | YouTube | Email Digest | Kindle   

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Brexit market chaos begins GBP spreads widen, price gaps

Rolling into the NY rollover we’re seeing spreads widen on GBP/USD by as much as 30 – 40 pips, (normally, GBP/USD about 2-4 pips wide):

It’s also interesting to see GBP/USD gap – major currencies almost never do this:

Most Forex brokers/banks have lowered leverage for GBP pairs leading up to today’s vote, and will resume to normal at the start of next week’s trading (probably).

For those who don’t have vanilla FX accounts, try Oanda if you’re a US Citizen via Fortress Capital or LMAX if you’re non-US.  

Many traders have turned off their algos, because of the unknown risks how markets may react.  This gap and spread widening at this quiet time – it’s a sign that it’s going to be a very long night for US traders, as final results will not come in until 2am EST.  That’s just 2 hours before the official UK open around 4am EST, and it’s a friday.  Traders will want to spend the weekend risk-off so expect a volatile friday both EU and NY sessions as traders clear their books of any GBP exposure.  If UK votes to Brexit, which doesn’t look likely at the moment – expect massive volatility FX has never seen.

Don’t forget – the Great British Pound was once the world’s reserve currency.  London is the FX capital of the world.  It’s called ‘Sterling’ because one ‘pound’ was worth literally – one pound of fine sterling silver.  

While Brexit will rock financial markets – let’s remember that at the end of the day, it will take 2 years for Brexit to actually happen and even when it does, it only transfers power from Brussels back to London – effectively nothing changes.  This is explained well in this article “EU Government Deception”  Will life improve for the average British citizen?  Probably not.  Will the rich be impacted?  Probably not, as they have world-class asset managers that have carved up ways to profit from Brexit.  So what’s all the fuss about – really? 

Because it’s a harbinger of ‘populism’ – demanding ‘better’ management from their owners.  If you want to understand Brexit better, don’t put out food for the cat tonight, see how they react.  Finally, you’ll be forced to put something in their bowl.

If you want to understand more about the Forex mechanism behind Brexit, and how Forex is a social control paradigm, checkout Splitting Pennies – Understanding Forex.

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The Fed’s 3rd Mandate & The Value Of Cash

Submitted by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

El-Erian – The Value Of Cash

My friend, Anora Mahmudova, recently wrote for MarketWatch about Mohamed El-Erian’s discussion on the importance of “cash” for investors.

“At a breakfast meeting with reporters on Monday, the former Pacific Investment Management Company chief executive said central bank asset purchases have successfully decoupled asset prices from fundamentals and distorted traditional correlations.

 

‘Investors cannot rely on correlations as a risk mitigator, making cash a very valuable thing to have.

 

It can give your portfolio resilience during stressful times, optionality—whether you use it for tactical or strategic purposes and flexibility to deploy it when necessary.’

 

Central banks are finding it harder and harder to repress volatility in financial markets, and any jolts, such as currency devaluation in China or political events, such as Brexit, result in wild swings in the markets.’

 

El-Erian also said years of unconventional monetary policy, including asset purchases, and a lack of fiscal stimulus are making developed economies less stable.”

Whenever El-Erian makes comments about the value of holding cash, there is generally a good bit of media lash-back about relating to the impacts of inflation and the inability to successfully navigate market cycles.

El-Erian’s comments are a valuation call, driven to excess by monetary interventions, on the financial markets suggesting that having capital invested will likely yield substantially lower or negative returns in the future. This is an extremely important concept in understanding the “real value of cash.”

The chart below shows the inflation-adjusted return of $100 invested in the S&P 500 (using data provided by Dr. Robert Shiller). The chart also shows Dr. Shiller’s CAPE ratio. However, I have capped the CAPE ratio at 23x earnings which has historically been the peak of secular bull markets in the past. Lastly, I calculated a simple cash/stock switching model which buys stocks at a CAPE ratio of 6x or less and moves to cash at a ratio of 23x.

I have adjusted the value of holding cash for the annual inflation rate which is why during the sharp rise in inflation in the 1970’s there is a downward slope in the value of cash. However, while the value of cash is adjusted for purchasing power in terms of acquiring goods or services in the future, the impact of inflation on cash as an asset with respect to reinvestment may be different since asset prices are negatively impacted by spiking inflation. In such an event, cash gains purchasing power parity in the future if assets prices fall more than inflation rises.

Value-Of-Cash-062316

While no individual could effectively manage money this way, the importance of “cash” as an asset class is revealed. While the cash did lose relative purchasing power, due to inflation, the benefits of having capital to invest at low valuations produced substantial outperformance over waiting for previously destroyed investment capital to recover.

While we can debate over methodologies, allocations, etc., the point here is that “time frames” are crucial in the discussion of cash as an asset class. If an individual is “literally” burying cash in their backyard, then the discussion of the loss of purchasing power is appropriate. However, if the holding of cash is a “tactical” holding to avoid short-term destruction of capital, then the protection afforded outweighs the loss of purchasing power in the distant future. 

Of course, since Wall Street does not make fees on investors holding cash, maybe there is another reason they are so adamant that you remain invested all the time.  

 

Fed’s 3rd Mandate

It was in 2010 when Bernanke clearly stated a third mandate for the Fed by targeting asset prices:

“This approach eased financial conditions in the past and, so far, looks to be effective again. Stock prices rose and long-term interest rates fell when investors began to anticipate the most recent action. Easier financial conditions will promote economic growth. For example, lower mortgage rates will make housing more affordable and allow more homeowners to refinance. Lower corporate bond rates will encourage investment. And higher stock prices will boost consumer wealth and help increase confidence, which can also spur spending.”

I remind you of this because this past week, during Janet Yellen’s semi-annual Humphrey-Hawkins testimony, she was asked by California Rep. Edward Royce the following:

“ROYCE: I’m worried that the Federal Reserve has created a third pillar of monetary policy, that of a stable and rising stock market. And I say that because then-Chairman Bernanke, when he appeared here, stated repeatedly that, ‘the goal of QE was to increase asset prices like the stock market to create a wealth effect.’

 

That seems as though that was goal. It would stand to reason then that in deciding to raise rates and reduce the Fed’s QE balance sheet standing at a still record $4.5 trillion, one would have to be prepared to accept the opposite result, a declining stock market and a slight deflation of the asset bubble that QE created. Yet, every time in the past three years when there has been a hint of raising rates and the stock market has declined accordingly, the Fed has cited stock market volatility as one of the reasons to stay the course and hold rates at zero.

 

YELLEN: It is not a third pillar of monetary policy. We do not target the level of stock prices. That is not an appropriate thing for us to do.”

Yellen’s response is most interesting given the weight of evidence to the contrary.

Fed-BalanceSheet-SP500-053116

While Yellen stated that it is “not appropriate” for the Federal Reserve to target asset prices, she DID SAY they would continue to reinvest the proceeds derived from their asset base.

Fed-BalanceSheet-Reinvestment-062315

It is the timing of those reinvestments that is most suspicious.

 

Yellen Channels Bernanke

Jon Hilsenrath penned yesterday:

“Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen said the chances of recession this year are ‘quite low’ despite mounting worries that the U.S. could be heading toward a downturn after seven years of tepid economic expansion.

 

‘The U.S. economy is doing well. My expectation is that the U.S. economy will continue to grow.’

The problem is that a bulk of the economic and fundamental data suggests the opposite is likely true as witnessed by the recent decline in the Economic Output Composite Indicator which measures both the service and manufacturing side of the economy.

EOCI-062316

The problem, as I have stated many times in the past, is the Federal Reserve can not “speak the truth.”  If Yellen stated that despite all efforts, there is little that can be done to forestall an impending recession; consumers would contract, markets would fall and a recessionary onset would be accelerated.

Of course, this was the same problem that Ben Bernanke faced in 2008 when he stated on January 10th of that year:

The Federal Reserve is not currently forecasting a recession.”

Or on the following 9th of June:

The risk that the economy has entered a substantial downturn appears to have diminished over the past month or so.

Well, we all know what happened next.

For investors, the fact Janet Yellen has started to channel Bernanke could well be a clear warning sign that something is about to break.

Just some things to think about.

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UK Polls Close As Nigel Farage Admits Defeat: “Looks Like Remain Will Edge It”, Sterling Soaring

It is 10pm local time, which means the Brexit polls are officially closed.

And, in a surprising announcement, even before the YouGov poll was announced, Nigel Farage appears to have just admitted defeat.

YouGov added to the fire, when after surveing around 5,000 voters, it reported that Remain is set to win with a 4% lead, with 52% while Leave is at 48%.

  • YOUGOV U.K. POLL ON EU SHOWS 52% REMAIN, 48% LEAVE: SKY

Bookie odds on Leave are imploding:

  • WILLIAM HILL SAYS UK EU ODDS 1/10 REMAIN; 11/2 LEAVE
  • IG CLIENTS SEE A 91.5% CHANCE UK WILL REMAIN IN EU

And sterling is soaring, rising just shy of 1.50 moments ago:

Futures are closed for the time being, although we expect an immediate spike higher in kneejerk response once they reopen at 6pm.

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Stress Test 2016 Results Are Out: Fed Says All 33 Banks Can Weather VIX At 70 Without Needing Outside Capital

While hardly coming as a surprise to anyone, moments ago the Fed announced that all 33 banks have enough capital to withstand a severe economic shock, though Morgan Stanley trailed the rest of Wall Street in a key measure of leverage, Bloomberg reports. The biggest bank cleared the most severe scenario handily, with the exception of Morgan Stanley whose projected 4.9% leverage ratio tied for last place alongside a Canadian bank’s U.S. unit, falling within a percentage point of the 4 percent minimum. As a result of today’s “test result” many banks will likely win regulators’ approval next week to boost dividends.

From the Fed:

The most severe hypothetical scenario projects that loan losses at the 33 participating bank holding companies would total $385 billion during the nine quarters tested. The “severely adverse” scenario features a severe global recession with the domestic unemployment rate rising five percentage points, accompanied by a heightened period of financial stress, and negative yields for short-term U.S. Treasury securities.

 

The firms’ aggregate common equity tier 1 capital ratio, which compares high-quality capital to risk-weighted assets, would fall from an actual 12.3 percent in the fourth quarter of 2015 to a minimum level of 8.4 percent in the hypothetical stress scenario. Since 2009, these firms have added more than $700 billion in common equity capital.

 

“The changes we make in each year’s stress scenarios allow supervisors, investors, and the public to assess the resiliency of the banking firms in different adverse economic circumstances,” Governor Daniel K. Tarullo said. “This feature is key to a sound stress testing regime, since the nature of possible future stress episodes is inherently uncertain.”

 

Capital is important to banking organizations, the financial system, and the economy because it acts as a cushion to absorb losses and helps to ensure that losses are borne by shareholders. The Board’s stress scenario estimates use deliberately stringent and conservative assessments under hypothetical economic and financial market conditions. The results are not forecasts or expected outcomes.

Last years was the first time that all banks cleared the Dodd-Frank test without sinking below the minimum capital thresholds. Two banks, one of Deutsche Bank AG’s U.S. units and Banco Santander SA’s U.S. arm, failed the more demanding CCAR assessment and Bank of America Corp. had to resubmit a plan that demonstrated improved risk controls and capital planning.

The Fed’s annual confidence boosting exercise is now a tradition ever since the 2008 meltdown; in prior years a few banks have “failed” and were forced to build up capital or withhold dividends. The exams subject banks to Fed-invented hardships and are the cornerstone of the regulator’s efforts to ensure lenders can sustain another financial crisis. The results announced Thursday will be followed next week by the Fed’s release of a more closely watched measure that determines whether banks can make proposed payouts to shareholders. 

“The nation’s largest bank holding companies continue to build their capital levels and improve their credit quality, strengthening their ability to lend to households and businesses during a severe recession,” the Fed said in a statement.

In this year’s scenarios the Fed told the for banks to assume – in the most severe case – that U.S. unemployment doubled to 10% while the markets tumbled and Treasury yields went negative. The banks would have experienced resulting loan losses of $385 billion, according to the Fed. In a lesser “adverse” event, the banks contemplated a minor U.S. recession and mild deflation, while a third was a baseline that tracked the average projections of economists. The scenarios also included some extra hardships for big trading firms, as they had to assume market shocks and trading-partner woes on top of the other troubles.

Two of the forecast assumptions – unemployment and VIX – are laid out below. Yes, according to the Fed all 33 “stressed” banks can weather VIX at 70 without needing a dollar in outside funding.

 

More of the details from the severly adverse scenario:

The severely adverse scenario is characterized by a severe global recession accompanied by a period of heightened corporate financial stress and negative yields for short-term U.S. Treasury securities. In this scenario, the level of U.S. real GDP begins to decline in the first quarter of 2016 and reaches a trough in the first quarter of 2017 that is 6.25 percent below the pre-recession peak. The unemployment rate increases by 5 percentage points, to 10 percent, by the middle of 2017, and headline consumer price inflation rises from about 0.25 percent at an annual rate in the first quarter of 2016 to about 1.25 percent at an annual rate by the end of the recession.

Asset prices drop sharply in the scenario, consistent with the developments described above. Equity prices fall approximately 50 percent through the end of 2016, accompanied by a surge in equity  market volatility, which approaches the levels attained in 2008. House prices and commercial real estate prices also experience considerable declines, with house prices dropping 25 percent through the third quarter of 2018 and commercial real estate prices falling 30 percent through the second quarter of 2018. Corporate financial conditions are stressed severely, reflecting mounting credit losses, heightened investor risk aversion, and strained market liquidity conditions; the spread between yields on investment-grade corporate bonds and yields on long-term Treasury securities increases to 5.75 percent by the end of 2016.

As a result of the severe decline in real activity and subdued inflation, short-term Treasury rates fall to negative 0.50 percent by mid-2016 and remain at that level through the end of the scenario. For the purposes of this scenario, it is assumed that the adjustment to negative short-term interest rates proceeds with no additional financial market disruptions. The 10-year Treasury yield drops to about 0.25 percent in the first quarter of 2016, rising gradually thereafter to reach about 0.75 percent by the end of the recession in early 2017 and about 1.75 percent by the first quarter of 2019

As Bloomberg adds, in the first phase — the Dodd-Frank Act Stress Tests — measures banks’ capital over the next nine quarters, assuming they will continue paying current levels of dividends and won’t repurchase stock. The next phase — the Comprehensive Capital Analysis & Review, or CCAR — slated for June 29 evaluates whether firms can increase dividends and buy back shares. Leverage proved a tough hurdle for a number of companies in the first phase, with the U.S. unit of Bank of Montreal tying with Morgan Stanley for the lowest projected level. State Street Corp. was seen dropping to as little as 5.4 percent, with Bank of New York Mellon Corp. at 5.5 percent, according to the Fed. Huntington Bancshares Inc., based in Columbus, Ohio, ranked last on three capital measures.

Now that banks have the first part of their results, they have an opportunity to revise the capital plans they sent to regulators before CCAR comes out. Those who think their capital-distribution strategies may have been overambitious can send a new version, as JPMorgan Chase & Co., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley did last year.

Earlier this week, Janet Yellen said in congressional testimony this week that the stress-test process is about to undergo “meaningful changes.” She underlined plans recently announced by Fed Governor Daniel Tarullo that would impose a higher capital target on eight of the largest firms, while giving mid-size banks a break from CCAR assessments of whether lenders adequately track their market risks.

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The full report is below:


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