Venezuela About To Run Out Of Food Despite Fresh All Time High In Its Stock Market

Venezuela can be proud: while the US stock market has gone exactly nowhere in 2014, the Caracas stock exchange of the socialist paradise has continued kicking ass and taking names, just today printing a fresh all time high.

.. And the performance over the past year has been nothing short of breathtaking.

 

However, as everyone knows, there are trade offs to soaring stock markets in all socialist countries, be they paradises or not. By now everyone knows that Venezuela has had a rather systemic issue when it comes to procuring toilet paper, and from what we understand, the local population is still forced at times to wipe with stock certificates.

Alas, things are about to get worse. As a result of Maduro’s recent policies which have Lenin, Stalin and Engels positive beaming from the grave, the country may soon add another shortage to its growing list of daily product in short, or no, supply. Food.

Bloomberg reports that Empresas Polar SA, Venezuela’s largest privately-held company, said in an e-mailed statement that foreign suppliers of food, packaging, and equipment have closed credit lines because of the government’s delays in giving the company dollars at official rate. Empresas added that dollar delays are now the longest since the introduction of currency controls in Feb. 2003.

In other words, with the country doing everything in its power to allocate dollars “fairly” (while making sure nobody has profit margins higher than 30%), very soon the biggest distributors of staples are about to run empty.

Oh well, at least they have their stock market and the “wealth effect”…

And now, in praise of socialist paradises everywhere, let’s all sing along:


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1aqkr1M Tyler Durden

China: Workforce to World Investor

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There were times when people knew their places and stayed in them, never budging and certainly never imagining that they could change their lives into something else. Those times are a thing of the past thankfully. Even the Chinese have cottoned on to the fact that they don’t need a revolution these days to radically change their situation. When will we open our eyes to that and start realizing it? How may harp on about the fact that it’s never going to happen. The trouble is, when the scene is happening right in front of your eyes, you tend not to take any notice because it’s under your nose, or the changes are so insidiously small that you don’t actually notice them. But, China is slowly turning from workforce and sweat shop worker of the world into the world’s investor. That will leave the worker status open to the economies that are up and coming and that we should be focusing on today if we want to get some of the Asian pie up for grabs.

China’s workforce has declined for the second year in a row according to figures released recently. That will mean there are going to be knock-on effects for countries in the Western world but also in Indonesia, the Philippines and India in the coming years as production shifts to those countries while China concentrates on the financial aspect of its economy.

• The working population is all those people in China that are aged between 15 and 59 years of age. 
• That workforce currently stands at 67.6%of the total Chinese population. 
• That figure fell in 2013 in comparison to the previous year’s figure, by 1.6%
• There are currently 919.54 million people that are in the workforce-age range today in China. 
• The fall means a reduction of 2.44 million. 
• The figures were issued on Monday January 20th 2014 by the National Bureau of Statistics.

But, will the country become the world of investors that we are having stuck in our pipes and being told to smoke? It might not actually happen as the Chinese grow older faster than they get rich enough to invest elsewhere, in fact. The demographic disaster has been sitting there chuckling for decades now, waiting to hack them down. Fertility rates dropped drastically due to the one-child policy and the workforce was once young, dynamic and vibrant. Now, it has just grown old. 
Will the one-child policy have an effect on the ascent of the country, sending it into the abysses of the economic slump that we might all dread? In 2050, 22% of China’s population will be over 65 years old and way out of the present range of the workforce.

It wasn’t for the fun of it that the 1980-era policy of one-child per family was relaxed at the end of 2013 to allow certain families (those that had no siblings) to have a second child. It is estimated that the policy has stopped 400 million births in China. But, the consequences have been a ticking time-bomb foreboding of the collapse of the Chinese economy because of an ageing population and a falling workforce. This is coupled with the dire state of the healthcare and retirement system in the country that china is attempting to rectify since it can see the brick wall in the distance.

But, will the changes in that policy lead to a rise in the predictions that are being made regarding the workforce? Some say that the workforce decline has already been set in motion and there’s nothing to stop that immediately. It is predicted to fall to 743 million in 2040 and reach 650 million by 2050. The removal of the one-child policy (entirely or in part) will not allow for anything than the unavoidable. What was predicted long ago is already happening. There are 118 males born for every 100 females today in the country and that means that there is a lack of child-bearing women in order to create stability in the growth of population.

China may not make it into the top economic spot just yet, simply because they had a hardline policy that was incorrect from the start. Other countries will most certainly benefit from that decline and will be waiting in the wings to take center stage.

Originally posted: China: Workforce to World Investor

You might also enjoy:Oil Set to Rocket | Working for the Few | USA:The Land of the Not-So-Free 

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1aLajLm Pivotfarm

Thai CDS Rise To One Year Highs After Pro-Government Faction Leader Shot

Following last night’s implementation of emergency rule in Thailand for a period of 60 days, where the ongoing clashes between protesters and the government mean the economy is likely set to grind to a halt at least judging by the constant downward revisions in the country’s GDP, the default risk of Thailand just jumped to a fresh one year high, rising to 159 bps, or double where it was in May of this year (but still well below the 240bps hit at the peak of the European crisis in September 2011).

However, since tensions do not appear to be getting resolved, expect this particular CDS to continue drifting higher, especially following news that the Thai leader of a pro-government group was shot last night.

From the NYT:

A leader of a pro-government faction was shot and wounded outside his home in northeast Thailand Wednesday, one day after Thailand’s prime minister declared the imposition of emergency rule in Bangkok and surrounding areas as tensions in the country escalated.

 

 

Kwanchai Praipana, who runs a group of so-called red shirts that supports the government, was shot in Udon Thani Province in what appeared to be a politically motivated attack, the police said.

 

“From what we saw on CCTV, a bronze pickup truck drove by and several rounds were fired at the house,” Kowit Tharoenwattanasuk, a police colonel, told Reuters. “We believe this is a politically motivated crime.”

 

The shooting of Mr. Kwanchai, who has thousands of followers, came as the country’s prime minister, Yingluck Shinawatra, sought to counter the increasingly aggressive moves of antigovernment protesters on the streets of Bangkok. Her declaration of emergency rule on Tuesday suggested a more forceful posture toward protesters who have occupied parts of the city during the past two months and are seeking to overthrow the government.

 

But officials said they had no plans to crack down on protesters, who have escalated their campaign over the past week by blocking government offices, taking over major intersections and staging daily marches across Bangkok. The emergency decree enacted Tuesday gives the government the power to invoke curfews, censor the news media, disperse gatherings and use military force to “secure order.”

More importantly, those wondering if the current episode will degenerate into the same lethal clashes as were last seen in 2010 when dozens died, are keeping a close eye on what the local army is doing. Here it is in a nutshell from Bloomberg:

Thai army Chief Prayuth Chan-Ocha says the military will provide needed support to police in managing violence linked to anti-govt protests in Bangkok.

 

Prayuth declines to comment on whether it was necessary for the govt to use emergency decree; On Jan. 20, he said the situation now was not the same as in 2010, the last time the emergency decree was used to control protests.

 

“It is worrying that divisions in society and families have widened,” Prayuth tells reporters. “I’m concerned how we can live together if people are divided and don’t lower the degree of violence. If conflicts remain, no matter how we enforce the law, it will be dangerous”

 

Prayuth urges people on both sides of the political divide to hold talks to “find a way out” and says using violent tactics to curb protests “could worsen the situation”

One thing is sure: no matter if Thailand manages to temporarily shove the current bout of social anger under the rug, such escalations in which the poor, with little to lose, lash out against their governments, are sure to become a far more frequenty fixture of daily lives. Let’s hope that the Davos billionaires who are meeting right now to fix just this thing, have a quick and painless resolution to this biggest problem modern society is facing. We are not holding our breath.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/KFxIHK Tyler Durden

The Jamaican Bobsledding Team, Digital Currencies and Bitcoin Update

The Jamaican bobsledding team qualified for the 2014 Sochi Olympic Games, but did not have the resources for training, equipment or travel expenses.  It relied on crowd funding.

Many people donated in the form a digital currency called Dogecoin.  The demand for Dogecoin lifted the price by nearly 50% against the more widely known Bitcoin.  The Dogecoin contributions were converted into Bitcoins and the Bitcoins were then converted into US dollar and voila, the Jamaican bobsledding team will be at the Olympics.

When the digital currencies were valued at $15-$20 mln a year ago, officials and the media rightfully took little notice.  Now Bitcoins in circulation are worth around $10 bln and there is a multi-billion dollar ecosystem of small companies who facilitate Bitcoin (and other digital currencies) transactions.   The trading volume of several other digital currencies may exceed the Bitcoin on any given day.

None of this demonstrates that Bitcoins and the myriad of other digital currencies are really money.   The proponents argue that an increasing number of brick-and-mortar businesses accept it. Reports suggest Finland may roll out the first Bitcoin ATM, though Taiwan blocked a similar effort earlier this month. The networking effect remains elusive.  One economist estimated that businesses that accept the Bitcoin payments are less than 1/100 of 1% of US GDP.

Some analysts have celebrated their libertarian instincts by warning that digital currencies would be seized upon by central banks as reserve assets, or that the Bitcoin could supplant the dollar.  Others sought to estimate fair value of  the Bitcoin which has no income stream or intrinsic value, without taking into account production costs. 

 Our initial critique of Bitcoins (November 21, 2013),  took the controversial stance that there was a contradiction in the Bitcoin between its function as a store of value and as a means of exchange.   The more it was hoarded by those fearing the debasement of conventional money, the less it would be used as a means of exchange.  We now see that insight has been picked up in research by other banks and by Jean-Pierre Landau’s  in his critical essay in the Financial Times.

The money-ness of the digital currencies is not simply decided by the users.  A network of critical mass is necessary but insufficient.   It is clearer that government officials have to recognize it as such.  And therein lies another hurdle for digital currencies.  This is becoming a more salient issue as one considers the tax liabilities.  In the UK, for example, is the Bitcoin is ruled money, users would likely be exempt from a 20% VAT that would otherwise apply.

In Finland, laws already specify the definition of an official currency.  Digital currencies do not make the cut.  Moreover, Finnish officials have requirements for an electronic payment system, and without an issuer responsible for its operation, Bitcoins and many other digital currencies simply do not qualify.

Official opposition seems more adamant in Asia,  China has banned its banks from transacting in Bitcoins.  South Korea has ruled that Bitcoins are not legal tender.  Taiwan has discourage their use by banks and individuals. India has also discourage the use of Bitcoins.

The US Internal Revenue Service has yet to provide guidance, leaving many digital coin participants in a bit of no man’s land.  

As the market for digital currencies has grown, officials have a greater interest in protecting consumers and businesses as well as countering efforts to avoid taxes. Officials also have an interest in blocking the attempts to circumvent money laundering laws, the engagement in contraband trade,and/or the undermining  national security.

We have suggested that payment companies, including credit card businesses, may feel competitive pressures from the digital currencies.  We warned that they will likely respond to the challenge.  In this note we warn that the power of the sovereigns should not be under estimated when it comes to projecting the future of digital currencies.

 


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/KFxKzs Marc To Market

Elliott’s Paul Singer Debates Whether “Markets Are Safer Now” – Live Webcast

When it comes to the opinions of financial pundits and “experts”, most can be chucked into the garbage heap of groupthink and consensus. However, one person whose opinion stands out is Elliott Management’s Paul Singer. One of the most successful hedge fund managers has consistently stood against the grain of conventional wisdom over the past three decades and been handsomely reward, which is why his opinion is certainly one worth noting. Singer, together with Martin Wolf and several other panelists will be speaking at 45 minutes past the hour on a panel discussing one of the most pressing topics nearly 6 years after the Bear Stearns collapse: “Are Markets Safer Now.” Watch their thoughts on the matter in the session live below.

Live feed:

 

And here are his recent comments on financial stability, which are certainly worth perusing.

THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL SYSTEM IS STILL IN NEED OF FUNDAMENTAL REPAIRS

We can only assume that the reason the global financial system is still, four-and-a-half years after Lehman, overleveraged, opaque, reliant upon the implicit and explicit support of governments for its very existence, and unprotected against runs and sudden death, is that the straightforward and practical fixes advanced by us and others take too long to read – and, perhaps, that they would be too painful for powerful special interests. Since we believe the costs of the next financial crisis will be extremely high, and the nature of the fixes are quite modest, it is worth taking another crack at trying to get through to policymakers using all available venues and platforms. Our gut feeling, supported by anecdotes from the Street, is that the major financial institutions (those bailed out or implicitly supported in the last crisis) have taken important steps to reduce their trading risks since the 2008 collapse. However, it is impossible to verify such progress from public financial statements or even to assess these institutions’ true financial risks.

Unfortunately, opacity and extreme leverage still reign supreme.

Let us recount what happened to turn the relative safety (relative to their customers) of many of these institutions upside down. Financial institutions are counterparties, borrowers, lenders, traders, custodians and fee-based purveyors of advice and services.

The one essential characteristic for every one of those roles, except the last one, is that these firms need to be safe, in both perception and fact, with their financial conditions above reproach.

There is a system, developed over decades, consisting of both industry practice and federal regulation, to ensure that secured “margin” loans to the trading customers of financial institutions cannot become unsecured by the adverse movement of security prices. Customers must put up initial margin when entering a trade and have to post more if the equity in their account declines by a certain amount. A cushion is thus maintained, which protects the financial institutions and the system.

For the traditional banking side of financial institutions, in which loans are made to borrowers and relationships are maintained between bankers and customers, there is also a time-honored and sound system of industry practice and experienced and alert regulation. Under this system, institutions are monitored for acceptable levels of leverage and business practices, and reserves are booked against probable loan losses and then adjusted against actual losses. Whole loans are not marked-to-market, but reserves are applied and adjusted as necessary. “Actual” banks have occasionally failed, but they never seriously jeopardized the system as a whole.

These systems, of how customers finance securities positions, and how banks are financed and operate, enabled the world’s financial system to work without systemic collapse for more than 70 years after the Great Depression of the 1930s gave policymakers a solid to-do list of fixes which were necessary in order to avoid a repeat.

Over the last 20 years or so, however, many of the world’s financial institutions built astronomically massive books of derivatives, private equity, other illiquid assets and extensive proprietary trading positions which have dwarfed their traditional banking books and fee-for-services activities. Furthermore, to the extent they represent trading between financial institutions, these derivative books in particular have been allowed by regulators, lenders and customers to be established with little or no initial margin, thereby removing the presumptive aura and reality of safety and soundness from the entire universe of major financial institutions. It is certainly debatable whether the system, and many of the 100 largest such institutions, were “unsound” before the 2008 collapse, but it is undoubtedly the case that these firms ceased being unquestionably more sound than their customers. In addition, when things started unraveling in 2007 and 2008, there was (and still is) insufficient useful, publicly available information to enable any customer to determine whether to stay with or run from institutions in which they have assets, trading relationships, claims or securities. This point is both irrefutable and critically important.

It needs to be fixed. Contrary to what many policymakers would have us believe, no combination of regulation and edict anywhere in the world has yet to address the issue adequately.

Therefore, since there is basically no collaborative international process underway to study and fashion adjustments that would make the global financial system sound again, we submit herewith our version of the necessary fixes. It is essential that the fixes be agreed upon by all of the G-20 governments in order to prevent a “race to the bottom” by any one country aimed at picking up market share by allowing more risky behavior than the other countries allow:

  • All investors, traders, institutions and counterparties, regardless of size and regardless of whether they are customers or end-users, should put up the same initial margin. In the case of derivatives in which the initial margin is less than 30% of notional value, two-way daily mark-to-market should be required. Special rules may be needed for completely matched trades in which institutions, nominally principals, are mainly intermediaries. But such trades create a lot of counterparty risk, so this area needs to be carefully studied in light of the widespread use of “netting” agreements today.
  • The Orderly Liquidation Authority prescribed by Dodd-Frank should be repealed and replaced by an amendment to the U.S. Bankruptcy Code which would operate to prevent cross-default provisions from impacting derivatives books so long as mark-to-market payments are being made in a timely fashion. This way illiquid assets held by bankrupt entities can be handled in an orderly fashion without systemic risk, but the trading positions can keep going unless mark-to-market payments are not being made (in which case the defaulting party would trip the trigger for a termination event).
  • Governments need to be authorized to provide “open bank assistance.” The convolutions of Dodd-Frank aimed at “avoiding” this tactic are ludicrous and will prove to be extremely costly to the system.
  • Accounting rules need to change to provide investors with much more information about the sensitivity of bank holdings to various parameters, including: exposure to interest rates at different parts of the curve; exposure to moves in equity prices; currency relationships; delta and vega exposures to various underlyings; curve risk; what portion of positions is perfectly matched versus what portion is not matched.
  • Credit ratings and risk weightings must undergo a thorough process of review and revision. No security or instrument on the planet should have a zero risk weighting.
  • Regulatory regimes should be rationalized to eliminate inconsistent oversight of various instruments that represent exposure to particular assets.
  • Derivatives trading should be standardized and as much as possible moved to clearinghouses. Margin rules for bilateral contracts must be made more uniform. A rule recently proposed by regulators (based on a Dodd-Frank mandate) provides numerous exceptions to margin-posting requirements for OTC swaps trades. Each such exception leads to more fragility and less safety for individual counterparties and the system as a whole.
  • A globally-integrated study should be undertaken about how to ensure that deposit insurance does not support proprietary trading activities (as distinguished from enabling banks to make whole loans).
  • Position sizes must be significantly reduced from current levels. As a result, financial institutions would not be any more leveraged than their customers. The reduced profitability of these institutions would be a small price to pay for the dramatically increased stability of the world’s financial system.

With these fixes, financial institutions, even very large ones, would not be primary drivers of systemic risk, and metaphysical inquiries delving into the difference between proprietary trading, customer facilitation and hedging would be unnecessary. It would also be unnecessary to distinguish between “systemically important financial institutions” and everyone else, or to impose higher capital requirements on larger institutions.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/KFstb2 Tyler Durden

Elliott's Paul Singer Debates Whether "Markets Are Safer Now" – Live Webcast

When it comes to the opinions of financial pundits and “experts”, most can be chucked into the garbage heap of groupthink and consensus. However, one person whose opinion stands out is Elliott Management’s Paul Singer. One of the most successful hedge fund managers has consistently stood against the grain of conventional wisdom over the past three decades and been handsomely reward, which is why his opinion is certainly one worth noting. Singer, together with Martin Wolf and several other panelists will be speaking at 45 minutes past the hour on a panel discussing one of the most pressing topics nearly 6 years after the Bear Stearns collapse: “Are Markets Safer Now.” Watch their thoughts on the matter in the session live below.

Live feed:

 

And here are his recent comments on financial stability, which are certainly worth perusing.

THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL SYSTEM IS STILL IN NEED OF FUNDAMENTAL REPAIRS

We can only assume that the reason the global financial system is still, four-and-a-half years after Lehman, overleveraged, opaque, reliant upon the implicit and explicit support of governments for its very existence, and unprotected against runs and sudden death, is that the straightforward and practical fixes advanced by us and others take too long to read – and, perhaps, that they would be too painful for powerful special interests. Since we believe the costs of the next financial crisis will be extremely high, and the nature of the fixes are quite modest, it is worth taking another crack at trying to get through to policymakers using all available venues and platforms. Our gut feeling, supported by anecdotes from the Street, is that the major financial institutions (those bailed out or implicitly supported in the last crisis) have taken important steps to reduce their trading risks since the 2008 collapse. However, it is impossible to verify such progress from public financial statements or even to assess these institutions’ true financial risks.

Unfortunately, opacity and extreme leverage still reign supreme.

Let us recount what happened to turn the relative safety (relative to their customers) of many of these institutions upside down. Financial institutions are counterparties, borrowers, lenders, traders, custodians and fee-based purveyors of advice and services.

The one essential characteristic for every one of those roles, except the last one, is that these firms need to be safe, in both perception and fact, with their financial conditions above reproach.

There is a system, developed over decades, consisting of both industry practice and federal regulation, to ensure that secured “margin” loans to the trading customers of financial institutions cannot become unsecured by the adverse movement of security prices. Customers must put up initial margin when entering a trade and have to post more if the equity in their account declines by a certain amount. A cushion is thus maintained, which protects the financial institutions and the system.

For the traditional banking side of financial institutions, in which loans are made to borrowers and relationships are maintained between bankers and customers, there is also a time-honored and sound system of industry practice and experienced and alert regulation. Under this system, institutions are monitored for acceptable levels of leverage and business practices, and reserves are booked against probable loan losses and then adjusted against actual losses. Whole loans are not marked-to-market, but reserves are applied and adjusted as necessary. “Actual” banks have occasionally failed, but they never seriously jeopardized the system as a whole.

These systems, of how customers finance securities positions, and how banks are financed and operate, enabled the world’s financial system to work without systemic collapse for more than 70 years after the Great Depression of the 1930s gave policymakers a solid to-do list of fixes which were necessary in order to avoid a repeat.

Over the last 20 years or so, however, many of the world’s financial institutions built astronomically massive books of derivatives, private equity, other illiquid assets and extensive proprietary trading positions which have dwarfed their traditional banking books and fee-for-services activities. Furthermore, to the extent they represent trading between financial institutions, these derivative books in particular have been allowed by regulators, lenders and customers to be established with little or no initial margin, thereby removing the presumptive aura and reality of safety and soundness from the entire universe of major financial institutions. It is certainly debatable whether the system, and many of the 100 largest such institutions, were “unsound” before the 2008 collapse, but it is undoubtedly the case that these firms ceased being unquestionably more sound than their customers. In addition, when things started unraveling in 2007 and 2008, there was (and still is) insufficient useful, publicly available information to enable any customer to determine whether to stay with or run from institutions in which they have assets, trading relationships, claims or securities. This point is both irrefutable and critically important.

It needs to be fixed. Contrary to what many policymakers would have us believe, no combination of regulation and edict anywhere in the world has yet to address the issue adequately.

Therefore, since there is basically no collaborative international process underway to study and fashion adjustments that would make the global financial system sound again, we submit herewith our version of the necessary fixes. It is essential that the fixes be agreed upon by all of the G-20 governments in order to prevent a “race to the bottom” by any one country aimed at picking up market share by allowing more risky behavior than the other countries allow:

  • All investors, traders, institutions and counterparties, regardless of size and regardless of whether they are customers or end-users, should put up the same initial margin. In the case of derivatives in which the initial margin is less than 30% of notional value, two-way daily mark-to-market should be required. Special rules may be needed for completely matched trades in which institutions, nominally principals, are mainly intermediaries. But such trades create a lot of counterparty risk, so this area needs to be carefully studied in light of the widespread use of “netting” agreements today.
  • The Orderly Liquidation Authority prescribed by Dodd-Frank should be repealed and replaced by an amendment to the U.S. Bankruptcy Code which would operate to prevent cross-default provisions from impacting derivatives books so long as mark-to-market payments are being made in a timely fashion. This way illiquid assets held by bankrupt entities can be handled in an orderly fashion without systemic risk, but the trading positions can keep going unless mark-to-market payments are not being made (in which case the defaulting party would trip the trigger for a termination event).
  • Governments need to be authorized to provide “open bank assistance.” The convolutions of Dodd-Frank aimed at “avoiding” this tactic are ludicrous and will prove to be extremely costly to the system.
  • Accounting rules need to change to provide investors with much more information about the sensitivity of bank holdings to various parameters, including: exposure to interest rates at different parts of the curve; exposure to moves in equity prices; currency relationships; delta and vega exposures to various underlyings; curve risk; what portion of positions is perfectly matched versus what portion is not matched.
  • Credit ratings and risk weightings must undergo a thorough process of review and revision. No security or instrument on the planet
    should have a zero risk weighting.
  • Regulatory regimes should be rationalized to eliminate inconsistent oversight of various instruments that represent exposure to particular assets.
  • Derivatives trading should be standardized and as much as possible moved to clearinghouses. Margin rules for bilateral contracts must be made more uniform. A rule recently proposed by regulators (based on a Dodd-Frank mandate) provides numerous exceptions to margin-posting requirements for OTC swaps trades. Each such exception leads to more fragility and less safety for individual counterparties and the system as a whole.
  • A globally-integrated study should be undertaken about how to ensure that deposit insurance does not support proprietary trading activities (as distinguished from enabling banks to make whole loans).
  • Position sizes must be significantly reduced from current levels. As a result, financial institutions would not be any more leveraged than their customers. The reduced profitability of these institutions would be a small price to pay for the dramatically increased stability of the world’s financial system.

With these fixes, financial institutions, even very large ones, would not be primary drivers of systemic risk, and metaphysical inquiries delving into the difference between proprietary trading, customer facilitation and hedging would be unnecessary. It would also be unnecessary to distinguish between “systemically important financial institutions” and everyone else, or to impose higher capital requirements on larger institutions.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/KFstb2 Tyler Durden

Images From Ukraine Clashes After Three Killed Overnight – Live Feed

Following the deaths of three protesters (two from gunshot wounds) after the government crackdown overnight instigated by the increasingly hard-line President Yanuckovich, the streets are becoming markedly more tense and violent. The uprising in Ukraine is not simply one of a youthful population dismayed at not joining Europe. Similar in vein to Thailand's protests, Ukrainians have become disgusted with the corruption in government (and increasingly enraged at Yanuckovich's repressive laws against the protesters). As Martin Armstrong warned recently, "welcome the ticking clock measuring how little time we have until this whole things just goes bust." As the following images of the war-torn-looking streets of Ukraine show, perhaps that clock is closer than many think…

 

Live Feed:

Via Reuters,

Azarov said earlier on Wednesday that police deployed on the streets did not possess firearms and the interior ministry has denied that police have used guns during the crisis.

 

In the worst violence that anyone can remember in Kiev, a 200-metre stretch of the city center close to government buildings has been turned into a battle zone as hard-core protesters, ignoring opposition leaders' pleas for calm, have bombarded police with petrol bombs and cobblestones.

 

Riot police have replied with rubber bullets, stun grenades and tear gas.

 

Wednesday's violence erupted ironically as Ukraine marked 'National Unification Day' – the day in 1919 which brought together that part of the country that had been under Russian rule with that which had been in the Austro-Hungarian empire.

 

In a Unification Day message, Yanukovich expressed the conviction that 2014 would be a year of "mutual understanding and frank discussion about our common future".

The President calls for Compromise…

 

As Martin Armstrong noted:

The protest in Ukraine are getting really out of hand. Even the Russians have now said this is too much. Over 100,000 people have responded with violence as the President ignores the people and the corruption is simply our of control. This is turning into war on the city streets.

Yanukovych_Viktor

 

The President Viktor Yanuckovich comes from the East where they speak Russian, not Ukrainian. When he tries to speak Ukrainian on TV, he does not even get the accent down correctly. This is primarily about corruption. However, his repressive laws against the protesters have only brought out more people who see the country headed back into Communism.

 

But the following images are stunning…

 

Pro European protesters holding a rally this morning…

 

Interior Ministry members take cover behind shields as pro-European protesters erect a barricade during a rally in Kiev

 

Pro-European protesters launch a pyrotechnic pistol towards riot police during clashes in Kiev

 

Pro-European protesters take cover behind a burnt bus, with a demonstrator seen on fire, during clashes with riot police in Kiev

 

Pro-European protesters take cover behind a burnt bus as a demonstrator throws a stick during clashes with riot police in Kiev January 22, 2014. Two demonstrators were on Wednesday reported killed in new anti-government unrest in the Ukrainian capital Kiev, inflaming protesters who confronted police shouting "Murderers" and "Glory to Ukraine!"

 

Pro-European protesters take cover during clashes with Ukrainian riot police in Kiev

 

Pro-European protesters throw stones during clashes with riot police in Kiev

 

 

and Kiev this morning…


    



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

Meet The Fortress Hotel That Separates The Davos Billionaires From The Peasants

The theme of this year's Davos meeting where the world's wealthiest and most powerful people meet to enjoy each other's company, a fawning media, and of course the best food and entertainment that money can buy, is social stability, class hatred, and how to fix a world torn by a record wealth inequality.

An ambitious task to be sure, especially for the very people who have benefited the most from the record wealth transfer of the past 5 years. Still, while these true Robin Hoods of the modern gilded age are desperate for a few minutes of humanitarian TV exposure, or at least a soundbite or two, their advice to the peasants out there is quite clear: don't get too close.

And just to make sure the appropriate distance of at least a few hundred meters to every member of the great unwashed class they are "saving" is maintained, here is the hotel in which the bleeding heart Davos billionaires are staying: a $170 million fortress surrounded by barbed wire, security cameras, motion sensor and even its own helipad.

Oh, and for those dignitaries of the non-private sector staying here, guess who is picking up the bill dear taxpayers.


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/LFINZz Tyler Durden

Is Britain’s Recovery Too Good To Be True?

There was more good news for the UK economy this morning; the unemployment rate dropped to 7.1% during the three months to December – the biggest ever quarterly increase in employment. This follows the IMF this week raising its (admittedkly terrible track record-based) forecast for the UK economy; it now expects it to grow 2.4% this year which is faster than any other major European economy. Nick Beecroft, Chairman of Saxo Capital Markets UK, is “optimistic” about Britain’s recovery, but has three concerns…

1. The recovery is too dependent on consumer spending. Nick says that in order to feel “really” comfortable about the recovery, he would like to see growth in business investment ans well as consumer spending.

2. The pound is too strong. Nick says sterling, which is at a five year hjigh against the dollar, is getting too strong for the sake of the recovery. The Bank of England is now starting to get concerned about it too. Nick warns there could even be more strength to come, unless we see an adaptation of forward guidance.

Furthermore, as Bloomberg notes, the pound, despite all the rhetoric from the Bank of England, is now almost 2% (on a trade-weighted basis) higher than when the Bank of England said last month that further gains would endanger the economy.

3. Bank of England could lose its credibility. Nick is worried there is now a risk of credibility for BoE Governor Mark Carney. If he wants to keep rates lower but keep the threshold at 7 percent, people may start to ask what value it actually has.

The Bank of England has said it will consider increasing interest rates from the current record low of 0.5 percent when the unemployment rate falls below 7 percent.

 

Source: Saxo Bank


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/KF2TmB Tyler Durden

Is Britain's Recovery Too Good To Be True?

There was more good news for the UK economy this morning; the unemployment rate dropped to 7.1% during the three months to December – the biggest ever quarterly increase in employment. This follows the IMF this week raising its (admittedkly terrible track record-based) forecast for the UK economy; it now expects it to grow 2.4% this year which is faster than any other major European economy. Nick Beecroft, Chairman of Saxo Capital Markets UK, is “optimistic” about Britain’s recovery, but has three concerns…

1. The recovery is too dependent on consumer spending. Nick says that in order to feel “really” comfortable about the recovery, he would like to see growth in business investment ans well as consumer spending.

2. The pound is too strong. Nick says sterling, which is at a five year hjigh against the dollar, is getting too strong for the sake of the recovery. The Bank of England is now starting to get concerned about it too. Nick warns there could even be more strength to come, unless we see an adaptation of forward guidance.

Furthermore, as Bloomberg notes, the pound, despite all the rhetoric from the Bank of England, is now almost 2% (on a trade-weighted basis) higher than when the Bank of England said last month that further gains would endanger the economy.

3. Bank of England could lose its credibility. Nick is worried there is now a risk of credibility for BoE Governor Mark Carney. If he wants to keep rates lower but keep the threshold at 7 percent, people may start to ask what value it actually has.

The Bank of England has said it will consider increasing interest rates from the current record low of 0.5 percent when the unemployment rate falls below 7 percent.

 

Source: Saxo Bank


    



via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/KF2TmB Tyler Durden