What is on the Radar Screen in the Week Ahead?

The investment climate rests on three legs:  the divergence that is characterized by the de-synchronized business cycle, the decline in commodity prices and a slowing of China.   Data that underscores these factors appear to have stopped having much significance for investors.   

 

At the same time, small changes to perceptions, like the downtick in the University of Michigan survey’s inflation expectations, can have seemingly out-sized market impact.  Before the weekend, it reported that the five-year inflation expectation slipped through the 2.7%-3.0% range that has confined expectations over the past year or two.  It now stands at 2.6%, the same the as the one-year expectation, which eased from 2.9%.  It was sufficient to push US 10-year Treasury yields back to the lower end of their recent range (~2.30%), and sparked a pullback of the dollar.  

 

The flash euro area PMI and ZEW survey, on the other hand, are most unlikely to change perceptions of the near stagnant economies.  It will not alter ideas that policy makers have to do more to get back to a meaningful growth path.     Some observers are emphasizing the possibility that the ECB announces some measures to increase the participation of the second TLTRO next month. And despite our claim that there is no agreed upon definition of quantitative easing, many say the ECB is slowly moving toward it.   By that they mean the purchase of sovereign bonds.  

 

The technical, legal and political obstacles remain formidable.  There are several other classes of assets that the ECB can buy, including supra-nationals, corporates and non-covered bank bonds that are less cumbersome.  Moreover, it is possible that the low point of inflation is at hand, and the second TLTRO will be considerably more successful than the first.  Together they could be worth about 250 bln euros.  Some of the second TLTRO may be used to pay back part of the LTRO funds outstanding, especially among Italian banks.  

 

Despite some journalists and pundits, arguing that ECB and BOJ actions are shots in a currency war, it seems like hyperbole to us.     Leaving aside confusing a metaphor with the real thing, there is no sign that other high-income countries see this as a currency war.  In fact, the US (and IMF) are pressing European officials to do more.  US Treasury Secretary Lew was clear:  “Resolute action by national authorities, and other European bodies are needed to reduce the risk that the region could fall into a deeper slump.” 

 

The weekend G20 meeting was an ideal forum for countries to push back against the “currency warfare”, but this did not appear to be a salient issue, formally or informally.   Russia was center stage, and Putin was so criticized that he left the forum early.   Despite Putin’s denials, there seems to be little doubt that Russia has tanks, artillery and combat troops in east Ukraine.  Russia also sent a large navy armada toward Australia (where the G20 meeting was held) and announced the resumption of long-range air patrols as far as the Gulf of Mexico and the East Pacific Ocean.  Its submarines have also been chased from Swedish waters.  

 

Monday will be the first meeting of European foreign ministers under the new High Representative for Italy, Federica Mogherini. Recall her candidacy was resisted by some Baltic and central European countries because she was too soft on Russia.  She has made it clear that actions next week will, at most, be limited to broadening existing sanctions.  They will likely focus on the Ukraine separatists and Russians that facilitated the November 2 elections in east Ukraine.  The decision to expand economic sanctions outside finance, defense and energy sectors requires decisions by the heads of state, which effectively pushes more severe action into next month.  

 

There was no backlash against the more aggressive turn of Japan’s monetary policy.  It seems like a strange currency war if no one recognizes it as such.  If Japanese export volumes are not rising, it is hard to make a compelling case that the depreciation of the yen is hurting its trading partners.  Japanese companies seem to rely on the translation of its foreign earnings to lift profits, not increasing market share.  The US auto market is a case in point.  US producers market share has risen in recent months even as the dollar has risen.

 

Barring a significant Q3 GDP surprise from Japan on November 17, Prime Minister Abe is likely to do two things.  First, he will likely postpone, but not scrap, the retail sales tax increase from 8% to 10% that was to be implemented next October.  The prospect of postponing the sales tax help lift Japanese equities, and through this channel, weighed on the yen.  Second, Abe will likely seek a new mandate, which means dissolving the lower chamber of the Diet and calling for elections, likely for December 14. 

 

Abe needn’t call an election until 2016.  Although some observers think Abe is taking a gamble, we suspect there is little risk.  The LDP may lose a few seats, but the New Komeito party, the junior coalition partner, may pick up a few seats.   There is no compelling alternative.  The DPJ, the main opposition party, is polling less than 10%.  Surveys indicate that some three-quarters of Japanese voters are opposed to increasing the sales tax.  

 

A new mandate would do two things for Abe.  First, it would effectively deter a leadership challenge within the LDP next year.  Second, it would allow Abe to pursue more controversial policies, like restarting nuclear power plants, and further pursuing new “national security” legislation. It may also breathe fresh life into the elusive third arrow of structural reforms.  

 

Turning to the United States, there is much interest in the FOMC minutes from last month’s meeting. The minutes have a high noise to signal ratio, and therefore we encourage investors to look past the knee-jerk market reaction.  Recall at the meeting the FOMC upgraded its assessment of the labor market and announced the conclusion of its long-term asset purchase program.  It did not call these asset purchases QE (so remind us again why we should consider it QE but not the ECB’s effort to increase its balance sheet or why the BOJ can buy a wide range of assets, including corporate bonds, ETFs and REITs and is still regarded as QE?).  

 

We continue to argue that the real policy signal emanates from the Troika of Yellen, Fischer and Dudley.    They continue to indicate that a rate hike around the middle of next year is the most likely scenario, barring a significant economic surprise.  Over the next six-seven months, the labor market is expected to continue to improve as the recent JOLTS and Labor Market Conditions Index suggest is indeed taking place.  

 

While Fed officials will take the dollar’s appreciation into its economic assessment, it does not appear to be a critical factor.  In fact, there is some suggestion that the stimulative effect from the drop in energy prices largely offsets the appreciation of the dollar.    In addition, the risk of further appreciation of the dollar has not deterred US officials from pressing other countries from pursuing more aggressive pro-growth policies.  

 

Given the FOMC’s statement last month, many expect the minutes to have a hawkish bent. Yet, there was a dovish dissent, and it seems that the risk is that the doves’ cries will be more prevalent in the minutes.   The short-term market could be caught leaning the wrong way, which would add to the short-term gyrations.  

 

Both price gauges (PPI and CPI) will be reported.  Generally speaking, the decline in energy prices may soften the headline figures, but core rates will likely prove stickier.   The US also reports industrial production figures.  The 1.0% rise in September is unlikely to be repeated, and the consensus calls for a modest 0.2% increase.  Manufacturing output growth is also expected to moderate to 0.3% from 0.5%.  However, the regional Fed surveys for November offer more current assessments of the manufacturing sector.   On balance, we expected Q3 GDP to be revised lower, while Q4 GDP appears to be tracking something between 2.5%-3.0%.  

 

There is much discussion of the impact of the mid-term US elections.  One of the first legislative consequences is being played out with the lame-duck Congress.  Before the weekend, the House of Representative approved the controversial Keystone Pipeline, which would accelerate the flow of Canada’s tar sand oil to the US Gulf refineries.  The Senate will likely approve the bill as it has before.  The critical point is whether it gets 60 votes, which would nullify Obama’s threat to veto, as he did previously. 

 

Meanwhile, the euro has slipped to its lowest level against the Swiss franc in two years to come perilously close to the Swiss National Bank’s floor (CHF1.20).     Partly this may reflect the general bearishness toward the euro.  However, note that Swiss money market rates out through nine months are negative, while euro area money market rates, except EONIA is positive.  

 

There is also some speculation that if the “Save the Gold” referendum on November 30 passes, it would force the SNB to sell euros to buy gold.  However, as we have noted the real story is considerably more complicated.  Even if a majority of voters approve of the measure, which currently the polls suggest not to be the case, a majority cantons (state governments) would also have to approve.  Part of the return on SNB reserve assets is paid to the cantons, which helps defray social spending costs.  If the referendum passes, taxes may rise to compensate or the basket of benefits may be cut.  

 

Lastly, the deadline for the negotiations with Iran over its nuclear program is approaching (November 24).  A successful conclusion does not look particularly likely. The most that can be hoped for is a statement outlining the progress and an extension of the negotiations. A collapse of talks completely could lend support to the oil market, while a successful conclusion would mean more of Iranian oil would enter the market legitimately.    

 




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Americans Trust Government Less and Less Because We Know More and More About How It Operates

Fifty years ago,
FBI operatives sent Martin Luther King, Jr. was has come to be
known as the “suicide letter,” an anonymous note suggesting the
civil rights leader should off himself before his private sex life
was made public. The information about King’s extramarital
assignations was gathered with the approval not just of the FBI’s
J. Edgar Hoover but Attorney General Robert Kennedy and President
Lyndon Johnson.

There is but one way out for you,” reads the note, which
appeared in unredacted form for the first time just last week. “You
better take it before your filthy fraudulent self is bared to the
nation.”

Thus is revealed one of the most despicable acts of domestic
surveillance in memory. These days, we worry less about
the government outing our sex lives than in it tracking every move
we move online. It turns out that President Obama, who said he
would roll back the unconstitutional powers exercised by his
predecessor, had a secret “kill list” over which he was sole
authority. Jesus, we’ve just learned that small planes

are
using so-called dirtboxes to pick up cell phone traffic
.
One of the architects of Obamacare publicly states that Americans
are stupid and that the president’s healthcare reform was vague and
confusing on purpose. The former director of national intelligence,
along with the former head and current heads of the CIA, have lied
to Congress.

Is it surprising, then, that 72 percent Americans consider “big
government” the largest threat to the country’s future? That’s more
than twice the number in 1964, when the King letter was sent.

The thread—maybe it’s better called a piano wire—connecting the
present to the past is the subject of my latest Daily Best column.

Here’s part of it
:

Fifty
years ago—again, right around the time that the FBI was about to
become the subject of a
hagiographic hit TV show
 and trying to goad Martin Luther
King, Jr. into killing himself—Richard Hofstadter was denouncing
the “paranoid
style in American politics,”
. He lamented that, “American
politics has often been an arena for angry minds.”

But today’s lack of trust and confidence in the government
doesn’t seem all that angry. It’s more like we’re resigned to the
fact that our rulers think little of us—that is, when they think of
us at all. In gaining new knowledge about how people in power
almost always behave, we are wiser and sadder and, one hopes, much
less likely to put up with bullshit from the left, right, or
center.

There’s a real opportunity to the politicians, the parties, and
the causes that dare to embrace real transparency —about how
legislation is being crafted, about our surveillance programs at
home and abroad—as a core value and something other than a
throwaway slogan. But as an unbroken thread of mendacity and
mischief binds the present to the past, a future in which
government can be trusted seems farther off than ever.

Read the whole piece at
The Daily Beast
.

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The Reason Small Businesses Are Disappearing, As Explained By A Small Business Owner

Confused why despite endless daily propaganda that the US economy is getting better – after all “just look at the record high S&P 500” – fewer and fewer Americans believe the narrative, as the Democrats and Obama found out the very hard way in last week’s midterm elections? Then the following explanation written by the owner of a small business – the segment of the US economy that has historically led every single recovery but this time was left behind – should help answer some questions.

The reason small businesses are disappearing written by a small business owner.

I want to start out by saying that i am a 27 year old male with a small business in Sacramento CA. I started this business a few years ago with savings of 15k. With a lot of hard work and determination i have succeeded, but it sure as hell was not easy. I am a long time lurker and have never seen anyone go in depth about what its like to own a small business and the reason why they are disappearing. Without going into to much detail, i own a furniture store so obviously things are different then other businesses but a lot of the things are the same. I wanted to begin with the things that are killing small businesses. Also only my opinion.

  1. Small Business Loans – Although they are not killing small business they sure as hell don’t help anyone. Unless you are opening a unique small business you are not going to get any funding. By unique i mean something along the lines of creating solar panels. According to a recent investigation by the SBA Inspector General (ill post the article if you would like), over 75% of SBA loans went to large businesses. So basically if you want to open a normal business you need a ton of collateral and a miracle to get a loan.
  2. Permits and Licensing – In opening my specific business the first year totaled about $2000.00.
  3. Advertising – Many small business’s cant afford to take out pages or flyers in the news paper or TV ads so they only have a few choices such as Yelp or the Penny-saver. (Don’t get me started in Yelp).
  4. Street Advertising – While this used to be a good portion of how you get business it is now off limits. Code enforcement will not allow you to put anything outside. No balloons, signs, anything with your store name, window paint more than 50%, or any mattresses. Also delivery vehicles can not be closer than 50 feet from the curb. In my case that means behind the building.
  5. Board of Equalization – Cant go into to much detail here but they sure as hell aren’t here to help.
  6. Health Insurance – Now obviously with the people that have a large work force working full time they will be hit hard by obamacare, but i wanted to give you a perspective on a single person. The cheapest rate for myself and me only, and believe me i have looked around, is $250.00/month. Some might say oh that’s not bad, but let me explain what that covers, NOTHING lol. Basically if something happens to me i have to shell out 6K before insurance gets involved. Also 100 dollar co pay every time i go.
  7. The economy – While many know that when the President comes on TV and says the economy is doing great, we all know it is not, some people don’t. Every month more people drop out of the Labor Force and the number of families on food stamps is sky rocketing. So for those of you who don’t know the economy is terrible because of all the top stories of Kim Kardashian and whoever else, lots of people in america are struggling.
  8. Merchant Fees – This is for credit card processing machines. The machine itself costs 600.00 plus the percentages on sales and cards. Companies such as BofA charge once a year on top of the regular fees $150.00 to protect you from fraud (which they can’t even stop) and yes its mandatory. Paypal or Square seem to be the best options these days.
  9. Fire Department – Yes even the Fire Department wants a piece. Starting last year you must do your own visual inspection and send them a check for 150! Basically if you don’t they will come to your store and give you a million violations for wasting there time.

Something to watch out for is people who check fire extinguishers in business’s. This is a huge scam where they come in without permission to inspect your extinguisher, get you a new one and bill you like 200 the following month. They have no right or permission to enter your business and jump all over you. You can simply tell them politely to get out. They dress like they are fire fighters but they are not.

* * *

The thread with the author’s Q&A continues on Reddit.




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ISIS Beheads Another American After Report “Jihadi John” Injured In Air Strike; Gen. Dempsey Arrives In Iraq

As if like clockwork, just hours after reports surfaced that “Jihadi John”, the British-accented Islamic State militant allegedly responsible for the beheading of western hostages, had been injured in a US air strike, the Islamic State released another video which, as the WSJ reports, “appeared to show the severed head of American aid worker Peter Kassig, a Muslim convert who risked his life to provide medical attention to victims of Syria’s civil war.”

As the Daily Mail first reported yesterday, “Jihadi John, the Briton who beheaded two British and two American hostages held by Islamic State terrorists, has been injured in a US-led air strike, according to reports received by the Foreign Office. The masked ‘executioner’ with a London accent is believed to have narrowly escaped death when he attended a summit of the group’s leaders in an Iraqi town close to the Syrian border last Saturday.”

More from the Mail:

“We are aware of reports that this individual [Jihadi John] has been injured, and we are looking into them,’ a Foreign Office spokesman told The Mail on Sunday.

 

This newspaper has received an independent account of how Jihadi John was injured and rushed to hospital after a devastating air strike in Al Qaim, in Anbar Province, Western Iraq.

 

The Foreign Office spokesman added: ‘We have a number of sources of information coming in.

 

‘The incident occurred last weekend, and so we have received the reports in the last few days. We don’t have any representation inside Syria, and so it is difficult to confirm these reports.’

So perhaps in prompt and direct refutation that the infamous executioner had been injured, a few hours ago, ISIS release its latest execution video. Yet, oddly, as in several previous instances, the 15-minute video released Sunday doesn’t show the beheading according to the WSJ, but closes with a masked man clad in black standing above what he claims is Mr. Kassig’s severed head.

The extremist spoke with a British accent, and appeared to be the same man who appeared in four videos released over the past few months showing the killing of British and American hostages, i.e., the same Jihadi John who was said to have been injured.

Addressing U.S. President Barack Obama , the man says: “You claim to have withdrawn from Iraq four years ago and we said you were liars…and [now] here you are, you have not withdrawn,” justifying Mr. Kassig’s beheading as a response to the U.S.-led military coalition that is striking Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.

 

“The spark has been lit here in Iraq and its heat will continue to intensify until by Allah’s [God’s] permission it will burn the crusaders army,” he continues, referring to the U.S.-led military coalition.

As the WSJ further reports, “the 26-year-old Indiana native was kidnapped in October 2013 as he delivered aid to eastern Deir Ezzour province. During the past year, he converted to Islam and took on the name Abdul Rahman, Arabic for “servant of the merciful.”

He prayed devoutly and fasted during the holy month of Ramadan, according to other Western captives who were freed by Islamic State after their governments paid ransoms to the group.”

His friends had tried to talk him out of making his last trip to Syria from his base in southern Turkey in October 2013. The landscape in Syria had changed by then, and Islamic State was routing out the rebels and civilians who had given Mr. Kassig shelter and support during previous trips.

 

“If I do die, I figure that at least you and I can seek refuge and comfort in knowing that I went out as a result of trying to alleviate suffering and helping those in need,” Mr. Kassig wrote to his family in a letter they received in June.

Shortly after reports of the video emerged, Ed and Paula Kassig, Peter Kassig’s parents, issued a statement:

“We are aware of the news reports being circulated about our treasured son and are waiting for confirmation from the government as to the authenticity of these reports. We will have no other statement at this time and ask that you please respect our privacy.

 

“The family respectfully asks that the news media avoid playing into the hostage takers’ hands and refrain from publishing or broadcasting photographs or video distributed by the hostage takers. We prefer our son is written about and remembered for his important work and the love he shared with friends and family, not in the manner the hostage takers would use to manipulate Americans and further their cause.”

And in other, related news, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel told CNN that he may have to consider recommendations to place ground forces in Iraq to help forces there locate targets if, in fact, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff makes that recommendation.

But these would not be fighting forces, Hagel said. “There will be no American combat troops in Iraq or Syria.”

So just more “military advisors”?

Gen. Martin Dempsey has suggested at least twice that a recommendation of ground troops could come, although he has emphasized he has not made that proposal yet.

 

He has also said that he doesn’t “foresee a circumstance when it would be in our interest to take this fight on ourselves with a large military contingent.” The general landed in Iraq on Saturday to make a first-hand assessment of the situation.

In other words, the “situation” will likely change soon.




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Jesse Walker on a Stillborn Urban Utopia

The city in the video seems abandoned. As a
camera pans through plazas, streets, and buildings, just a handful
of people are visible. Activity is promised but deferred: Across
the landscape, posters declare that one enterprise or another is
“Opening Soon.” The place, writes Jesse Walker, is Masdar City, an
$18 billion attempt to build a zero-carbon community on the
outskirts of Abu Dhabi. It’s empty.

View this article.

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Thoughts on ISIS Coinage

ISIS says it will soon issue metallic coins. The early reports suggest there will be gold, silver and copper coins. ISIS is expected to announce shortly how their coins will trade. The indication being that they will trade according to the value of the metal of which they are made. Many critics of the fiat currency regime may be attracted to this new money.

 

I see some of the same problems that I saw with Bitcoins, though Bitcoins are fiat currency. Their “mining” may be on a gold-like pace, but Bitcoins are not backed by gold,nor does price appear to be tied closely to the price of gold. 

 

To the extent that the new money is perceived to be more sound that paper money, the coins will be hoarded. To the extent that they are hoarded, they will not provide a sufficient means of exchange. The monetary equivalent of hacking may be counterfeiting. The US and other countries work hard to prevent counterfeiters, though they still exist. The ISIS coins appear to be vulnerable to counterfeiting.

 

The ISIS money, like other foreign countries’ coins and notes, are not generally acceptable as payment for one’s liabilities outside of one’s country. Just like you cannot pay the American grocer or British landlord in euro, yen or even gold nuggets, ISIS money will only be good where ISIS dominates, and even then the people living under its heal will find other means of transactions, if necessary.

 

Remember ISIS in not a country.  There is no enforcement of contracts.  There is no judicial system apart from the sword.  The utility of gold, unlike water or air, is not obvious.  It is an expression of social relationships.  It  requires elements of social trust which do not and cannot exist in the territory ISIS terrorizes.    As it said, trust in Allah, but tether your camel.  

 

This Cool Video from CNN was posted on You Tube.  Former US Treasury official, Jimmy Gurule explains how ISIS is funded, including illegal oil sales in a little less than four minutes.  http://ift.tt/1tU9OXp




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How Eva Moskowitz Outmuscled the Teachers Union

“How Eva Moskowitz
Outmuscled the Teachers Union” was originally released on Nov. 7,
2014. The original text is below.

In November 2003, Eva Moskowitz, then a freshman member of the
New York City Council, held explosive public hearings about how
union contracts imposed inane work rules on public schools. The
city’s political establishment was astonished.

Mosowitz—a former history professor, public school teacher, and
self-proclaimed liberal, whose politics up until that point seemed
to resemble those of every other Democratic politician in New
York—was sacrificing her political career to take on organized
labor. Exposing the consequences of teacher union contracts was a
direct affront to the United Federation of Teachers (UFT), which
wields enormous influence in New York City elections.

Moskowitz didn’t pussyfoot. At one point in the hearings, she
even played audio testimony from a whistleblower with a disguised
voice. She said that many of her sources declined to appear because
they feared union retribution. She also went toe-to-toe with Randi
Weingarten, the UFT’s confrontational leader.

Two years later, when Moskowitz ran for Manhattan Borough
President, Weingarten and the UFT mobilized against her and sunk
her candidacy. So Moskowitz left politics for the time being; if
she couldn’t transform the system from within, she would build an
alternative to the public schools.

Today, Moskowitz is the founder and CEO of Success Academy, which is the
city’s largest and most successful charter school network. With 32
schools around New York City—staffed by a non-union teaching
force—Success Academy posted
test results last year
 that astounded
education policy experts.

Meanwhile, Moskowitz and her charter school allies started
building a powerful coalition to counter the
outsized political influence of organized labor. In March,
when New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio (D) tried to squash Success
Academy’s expansion plans, Moskowitz
bused 11,000 charter school parents and kids
 up to the
state capital in Albany to protest—and New York State Governor
Andrew Cuomo came out in support. De Blasio retreated. Success
Academy could move forward with its expansion plans after all, and
state lawmakers quickly passed a bill to protect charter schools
from future interference by the mayor.

Reason TV’s Nick Gillespie sat down with Eva Moskowitz to talk
about why her schools are so successful, whether her model is
scalable, how labor contracts hurt  schools, and what moved
her to sacrifice her political career to bring attention to the
corrosive influence of unions on public education.

About 17 minutes.

Written, shot, and edited by Jim Epstein; interview by Nick
Gillespie; additional camera Anthony L. Fisher.

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Sheldon Richman on How the Free Market Could Be Socialism

Libertarians are individualists. But
since individualist has many senses, that
statement isn’t terribly informative. Does it mean that
libertarians are social nonconformists on principle? Not at all,
writes Sheldon Richman. Some few libertarians may aspire to be, but
most would see that as undesirable because it would obstruct their
most important objectives. Virtually all libertarians observe the
common customs of their societies, just as they conform to language
conventions if for no other reason than they wish to be understood.
 Libertarians are individualists in other respects, however,
Richman continues. They are methodological individualists, which
means that when they think about social and economic processes,
they begin with the fact that only individuals act.

View this article.

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Gold Wars: Putin’s Mining Buddies Are Stepping Up The Plate

Russian Ruble

We have been giving the Russian and Asian demand for gold quite some attention lately, but now it looks like there are several more pieces of the puzzle falling into place. More than a year ago, a representative of Shandong Gold told us that when the Federal Reserve would stop its Quantitative easing program (check) and gold would fall to $1150/oz (check), the company would become more active on the M&A front and actively hunt for potential acquisitions.

In another column, we discussed the way China and Russia are growing closer and closer to each other, after Russia got ‘rejected’ by the Western countries. Both countries have signed very important energy deals, and it started to look like Russia is following the Chinese example and has started to accumulate more and more gold in the reserves of Central Bank. There are two things you can be sure of. First of all, Russia isn’t doing just for fun, there must be a central strategy or plan behind this move. Secondly, you can be very sure Russia’s gold is being stored in the vaults in Moscow and not being lent out in dubious gold lease deals.

And in the past few weeks it looks like Russia is stepping up its efforts to secure a continuous increase in its gold holdings. Two of the world’s largest gold mining companies are actually Russian, of which Polyus Gold is the largest one with an expected gold production of 1.7 million ounces of gold for this year, further increasing in the near future as it plans to bring another Russian mine into production. What was drawing our attention was the recent announcement by Polyus that it would be ‘hedging more of its gold production’. As this is a Russian company with Russian mines financed by Russian banks, we would dare to put a lot of money on a bet that the hedge deal involves a Russian bank. That Russian bank will very likely be Sberbank as it is Polyus’ main financier which has recently re-confirmed its confidence in the company through providing a $1B credit facility. And guess who’s the majority owner of Sberbank? INDEED, The Russian Central Bank. So it’s starting to look like Polyus’ hedge program with physical delivery will result in its gold bars being sold to the Russian Central Bank through Sberbank’s hedging program.

Polyus Gold Operations

Source

On top of that, Polyus was sitting on $1.8B in cash as of at the end of September, and its cash pile is growing at a rate of $2M per day (yes, even at the current gold price). The question is what will it do with the cash and it’s very likely more gold projects will be added to the portfolio and we wouldn’t be surprised if the company was pushed by the Central Bank and Sberbank to do so.

We wouldn’t be surprised to see Polyus Gold follow the ‘international’ approach of Nord Gold, which used to be Severstal’s gold business. Steel tycoon Mordashev still owns the absolute majority of Nord Gold’s shares, and as he’s a self-proclaimed ‘friend of Putin’, there’s little doubt who’s the ultimate buyer of Nord Gold’s output. And Nord Gold has been stepping up its game lately as it entered into two joint venture agreements (in Canada and French Guiana) and it acquired another advanced stage project in Burkina Faso where the company is already operating. But wait, that’s not all, earlier this week, Nord Gold made an offer to acquire a small Canadian exploration company for a total of less than $25M. This might sound low but that specific Canadian company has roughly 5 million ounces of gold in the ground which could be mined at an all-in cost of $644/oz. Throw in the acquisition cost and capital expenditures, and one ounce of gold would cost Nord Gold just $750. Now it’s easier to understand why it offered to acquire Carlisle Goldfields at a whopping 140% premium.

There’s little doubt this is just the starting phase and we expect both major Russian companies to buy more projects and companies to get their hands on as much gold as possible. All the signs are pointing in the direction of an end game as Russia’s major producers have very strong ties to the Putin regime and the Russian central bank, which is ultimately where the gold will end up. The end game has started. Did you take your precautions?

>>> Check Out Our Latest Gold Report!

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Paralyzed Iraq War Veteran’s Writes Last Words To Bush & Cheney

Submitted by Mike Krieger via Liberty Blitzkrieg blog,

Last March, I came across a letter written to George W. Bush and Dick Cheney from a paralyzed and dying Iraq war vet named Tomas Young. It touched me to such an extent, that I highlighted it on Liberty Blitzkrieg at the time. He died on Monday, the day before Veterans Day. If you really want to honor our nation’s soldiers, you should read the following and share it.

RIP Tomas Young.

 

Full letter below, from Counterpunch.

My Last Words to George W. Bush and Dick Cheney

by TOMAS YOUNG

 

I write this letter on the 10th anniversary of the Iraq War on behalf of my fellow Iraq War veterans. I write this letter on behalf of the 4,488 soldiers and Marines who died in Iraq. I write this letter on behalf of the hundreds of thousands of veterans who have been wounded and on behalf of those whose wounds, physical and psychological, have destroyed their lives. I am one of those gravely wounded. I was paralyzed in an insurgent ambush in 2004 in Sadr City. My life is coming to an end. I am living under hospice care.

 

I write this letter on behalf of husbands and wives who have lost spouses, on behalf of children who have lost a parent, on behalf of the fathers and mothers who have lost sons and daughters and on behalf of those who care for the many thousands of my fellow veterans who have brain injuries. I write this letter on behalf of those veterans whose trauma and self-revulsion for what they have witnessed, endured and done in Iraq have led to suicide and on behalf of the active-duty soldiers and Marines who commit, on average, a suicide a day. I write this letter on behalf of the some 1 million Iraqi dead and on behalf of the countless Iraqi wounded. I write this letter on behalf of us all—the human detritus your war has left behind, those who will spend their lives in unending pain and grief.

 

I write this letter, my last letter, to you, Mr. Bush and Mr. Cheney. I write not because I think you grasp the terrible human and moral consequences of your lies, manipulation and thirst for wealth and power. I write this letter because, before my own death, I want to make it clear that I, and hundreds of thousands of my fellow veterans, along with millions of my fellow citizens, along with hundreds of millions more in Iraq and the Middle East, know fully who you are and what you have done. You may evade justice but in our eyes you are each guilty of egregious war crimes, of plunder and, finally, of murder, including the murder of thousands of young Americans—my fellow veterans—whose future you stole.

 

Your positions of authority, your millions of dollars of personal wealth, your public relations consultants, your privilege and your power cannot mask the hollowness of your character. You sent us to fight and die in Iraq after you, Mr. Cheney, dodged the draft in Vietnam, and you, Mr. Bush, went AWOL from your National Guard unit. Your cowardice and selfishness were established decades ago. You were not willing to risk yourselves for our nation but you sent hundreds of thousands of young men and women to be sacrificed in a senseless war with no more thought than it takes to put out the garbage.

 

I joined the Army two days after the 9/11 attacks. I joined the Army because our country had been attacked. I wanted to strike back at those who had killed some 3,000 of my fellow citizens. I did not join the Army to go to Iraq, a country that had no part in the September 2001 attacks and did not pose a threat to its neighbors, much less to the United States. I did not join the Army to “liberate” Iraqis or to shut down mythical weapons-of-mass-destruction facilities or to implant what you cynically called “democracy” in Baghdad and the Middle East. I did not join the Army to rebuild Iraq, which at the time you told us could be paid for by Iraq’s oil revenues. Instead, this war has cost the United States over $3 trillion. I especially did not join the Army to carry out pre-emptive war. Pre-emptive war is illegal under international law. And as a soldier in Iraq I was, I now know, abetting your idiocy and your crimes. The Iraq War is the largest strategic blunder in U.S. history. It obliterated the balance of power in the Middle East. It installed a corrupt and brutal pro-Iranian government in Baghdad, one cemented in power through the use of torture, death squads and terror. And it has left Iran as the dominant force in the region. On every level—moral, strategic, military and economic—Iraq was a failure. And it was you, Mr. Bush and Mr. Cheney, who started this war. It is you who should pay the consequences.

 

I would not be writing this letter if I had been wounded fighting in Afghanistan against those forces that carried out the attacks of 9/11. Had I been wounded there I would still be miserable because of my physical deterioration and imminent death, but I would at least have the comfort of knowing that my injuries were a consequence of my own decision to defend the country I love. I would not have to lie in my bed, my body filled with painkillers, my life ebbing away, and deal with the fact that hundreds of thousands of human beings, including children, including myself, were sacrificed by you for little more than the greed of oil companies, for your alliance with the oil sheiks in Saudi Arabia, and your insane visions of empire.

 

I have, like many other disabled veterans, suffered from the inadequate and often inept care provided by the Veterans Administration. I have, like many other disabled veterans, come to realize that our mental and physical wounds are of no interest to you, perhaps of no interest to any politician. We were used. We were betrayed. And we have been abandoned. You, Mr. Bush, make much pretense of being a Christian. But isn’t lying a sin? Isn’t murder a sin? Aren’t theft and selfish ambition sins? I am not a Christian. But I believe in the Christian ideal. I believe that what you do to the least of your brothers you finally do to yourself, to your own soul.

 

My day of reckoning is upon me. Yours will come. I hope you will be put on trial. But mostly I hope, for your sakes, that you find the moral courage to face what you have done to me and to many, many others who deserved to live. I hope that before your time on earth ends, as mine is now ending, you will find the strength of character to stand before the American public and the world, and in particular the Iraqi people, and beg for forgiveness.

 

-Tomas Young

What’s so impressive about this letter, beyond the incredible emotion and pain behind it, is the fact that Mr. Young was so prescient about so many issues. He highlighted the debacle that became the Veterans Administration scandal before it broke, and he also pointed to the dangerous power vacuum created in Baghdad before the emergence of ISIS. We lost a special soul on Monday.

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Another related post I would strongly suggest reading is: “Stop Thanking Me for My Service” – Former U.S. Army Ranger Blasts American Foreign Policy and The Corporate State.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1tWn5Pn Tyler Durden