Why One Big Bank Is “Worried That The Market Is Stretched And Could Correct Rapidly”

Aside from a relentless barrage of deteriorating geopolitical updates almost on a daily basis, which have led even the “very serious thinkers” to pull up comparisons to the days just before World War I, it has been smooth sailing for global capital “markets” which merely continue to follow the path of least central bank balance sheet resistance. It is this relentless melt up which has seen what was once a market and is has for the past 5 years become a policy vehicle to boost confidence (for whom, it is unclear: the vast majority of the population no longer cares what rigged stocks do, as for the trickle down wealth effect, 5 years of deteriorating real incomes for the middle class have promptly put an end to that fable) alongside a slow-motion LBO of the entire S&P 500, as companies repurchase trillions of their shares using ultra-cheap credit, bask in the glow of complacency so vast even the Fed is openly warning against it.

It is in this context that at least one bank, has voiced an alarm against pervasive, record complacency (that no matter how bad things get, the Fed will step in a bail everyone out, in fact the worse things get the better) after UBS’ Stephane Deo released a paper titled “We are worried. We reduce risk – for now.

The key excerpts from the report:

Firstly we are concerned about valuations. We show that equity markets are stretched (e.g., more than 80% of the S&P rally since last year is due to re-rating), but we also find that the fixed income market has become quite rich (we have been overweight European peripherals for more than a year on valuation grounds, we show that this argument no longer holds), and the same is true of the credit market. Second because capital has been flowing rapidly into risky assets, we document that argument and here too find evidence that the market might be ahead of itself. We read the market reaction last week to the Portuguese news as a sign that the market is indeed too complacent and could correct rapidly.

Why we are worried

As we wrote in the previous section we remain constructive on risky assets over the medium term. However we think it is now time to scale down risk. The canary in the coalmine this time was Portuguese: The issue last week with Banco Espírito Santo (BES) had large impact on a variety of asset classes over the world. This includes other Portuguese banks, but also wider range of asset like the all SX7E index, the sovereign spreads in Europe and it even had an impact on the VIX. The various reactions from these asset classes seem large unless the BES event hides something much bigger and is the start of a new systemic crisis. This is not our central case scenario. In a recent note Bosco Ojeda explains that genuine improvements have been accomplished in peripheral Europe and the return of systemic risk is unlikely. Rather we think the event tells us a story about market positioning and market pricing: we think the market is stretched (more on that immediately below). If this is true, the market is already pricing most of the potential good news and is prone to react to bad news.

The pricing argument

Let’s first look at pricing. We have argued that all the major stock markets are close to fair value. This is the case if we look for e.g. at our trend adjusted P/E, or if we look at our equity risk premium index. What is true though is that the recent momentum in markets is difficult to justify. The chart below shows that our economic surprise index has been very highly correlated with the S&P 500 until the beginning of last year. Since then the market has continued his rally with little fundamental improvement to support it. This divergence is becoming uncomfortably large.

And indeed, as we go to press, we get a helping hand from the Fed himself. The Fed said in a report that “valuation metrics in some sectors do appear substantially stretched, particularly those for smaller firms in the social media and biotechnology industries, despite a notable downturn in equity prices for such firms early in the year.”

We also believe that the credit market is reaching tight levels. There are two additional characteristics of the credit market that worry us. First the quality of issuance has deteriorated as evidenced by a number of metrics: for instance the average rating of issuers has declined, the number of first-time issuers has increased, the number of payment in kind (PIK) clauses has surged, etc… Second the ratio between primary market issuance and secondary market daily turnover has greatly deteriorated, which is also a worrying sign. We have highlighted repeatedly in the past that the lack of liquidity in this market is a key issue for us and that it could prompt a sharp market over-adjustment.

* * *

Risk premium is the extra return investors demand to hold a risky asset above the return of a risk-free asset. Although excess return varies widely over time, particularly for equity, risk premium tends to be mean-reverting. This can either be estimated using expected cash flows as the rate that has to be added to the discount rate to back out current market prices. Or more simply we can look at historic excess returns.

In Figure 14 we can see the long-term excess returns of the assets in our portfolio against the excess return over the last year. The data have been sorted by return over the last year, and it is clear that the last year has been highly atypical. Equity, credit and listed real estate have had excess returns far above their long-term averages particularly in the UK and Europe. At the bottom of the bar graph volatility has been very low and the mid-term VIX futures index (SPVXMTR) has been losing value more quickly than usual.

It is interesting that some assets are broadly in line with their long-term average, such as US listed real estate, US high yield credit, and US Treasuries. The excess return of Asian listed real estate is actually below its long-term average. As a trading signal risk premium is very unreliable because it gives no sense of timing. But given the returns over the last year risk premia are certainly unfavourable.




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The Cancer Death-Panel App Is Here

Originally posted at Economic Policy Journal,

When government gets involved in a sector, it distorts the sector. Corporations are not incentivized to strictly serve customers. This is now occurring in the healthcare sector–and is only going to get worse. A “cancer app” is an example of where medical personnel will play god to advance government and crony corporate interests instead of patient interests.

Robert Goldberg writes:

The latest innovation in cancer care isn’t a medical breakthrough but an app to ration new drugs. It’ll measure care in terms of what it costs health plans, instead of what it means for patients’ lives.

 

That it’s being developed under the auspices of the American Society for Clinical Oncology, or ASCO, the world’s leading oncology association, is a grim warning about the state of organized medicine.

 

The app will use an algorithm like those many health plans apply to limit access to innovative treatments. Wellpoint Inc., for one, measures cost-effectiveness by comparing the benefits, side effects and costs of various treatments for specific types of cancer. The ASCO app uses the same benchmarks…

 

The app’s biggest problem, though, is that it’s one-size-fits-all: It treats all patients as the same, ignoring the genetic variation in patient response that a new class of “targeted” cancer drugs will soon address.

 

Dig a bit deeper, and it’s clear that ]Dr. Lowell Schnipper, who heads ASCO’s Value in Cancer Care Task Force] and his allies have a more ideological motivation. He talks of limiting spending on new treatments as a way to make “the health-care system, not just the cancer system, more rational and just.”

 

And this line of thinking does away with the Hippocratic Oath. No longer is the doctor’s first obligation “to apply for the benefit of the sick, all measures that are required.” Instead, Schnipper believes three months of added life “is not a large enough benefit to trump the greater benefits to many that would have to be foregone to provide it.”

 

In fact, he regards the premium that Americans place on life as a character defect, observing, “Other cultures do not seem to view the postponement of death by a few months” the same way we do.




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Vote Could Let Most Federal Drug Prisoners Go Free Early

Last April the
U.S. Sentencing Commission
approved a change
to the guidelines federal judges use in
selecting penalties for drug offenders, reducing prison terms for
about 1,300 defendants a year by an average of 11 months. Today the
commission
decided
to make that change retroactive, which will have a much
more dramatic impact. The commission
estimates
that it will make some 51,000 inmates—more than
 half of the drug offenders in federal prison—eligible for
sentence reductions averaging 23 months. Many will go home years
earlier than expected, and more than 28,000 could be released
within the next few years.

“This amendment received unanimous support from commissioners
because it is a measured approach,”
said
U.S. District Judge Patti B. Saris, who chairs the
commission. “It reduces prison costs and populations and responds
to statutory and guidelines changes since the drug guidelines were
initially developed, while safeguarding public safety.” 

Judges are not obligated to follow the sentencing guidelines,
but they do so in 80 percent of cases. The change to the
sentencing guidelines approved in April reduced the “base offense
level” for about 70 percent of drug defendants by two, shortening
the prison term at the lower end of the recommended penalty range.
It did not affect mandatory minimum sentences, which are prescribed
by statute, and it originally applied only to defendants sentenced
on or after November 1, 2014.

According to the commission’s
calculations
, today’s vote means that 4,571 prisoners could
petition for immediate release. But under the “delayed
retroactivity” policy approved by the commission, they will not be
allowed to seek resentencing until November 2015. By
then 
another 8,000 or so prisoners could be
eligible for immediate release. An additional 25,000 could be
released within the next five years, with the rest, more than
12,000, released “at various times over a period of more than 30
years.” 
Unlike the last two major guideline
revisions, which focused on crack cocaine offenders, the prisoners
affected by today’s vote were convicted mainly of crimes involving
methamphetamine (28 percent) or cocaine powder (27 percent). Crack
accounts for another 19 percent, followed my marijuana (14 percent)
and heroin (3 percent).  

Judges are supposed to shorten sentences only for offenders who
do not pose a threat to public safety. For those who still worry,
the commission has some
reassuring information
 about crack offenders who were
released early due to retroactive application of a 2007 amendment
to the guidelines: “There is no evidence that
offenders 
whose sentence lengths were reduced
pursuant to retroactive 
application of the 2007
Crack Cocaine Amendment had higher 
recidivism
rates than a comparison group of crack
cocaine 
offenders who were released before the
effective date of the 2007 
Crack Cocaine
Amendment and who served their full prison terms.”

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Pentagon Says “Strains Credulity” That Jet Shot Down Without Russian Aid – Live Feed

While admitting that he has no evidence, Pentagon Press Secretary John Kirby offered his opinion in today’s press conference:

  • *’STEADY, CONCERTED’ EFFORT PROVIDES ARMS TO SEPARATISTS: KIRBY
  • *’STRAINS CREDULITY’ SA-11 FIRED WITHOUT RUSSIAN AID: KIRBY

But still no proof…




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Stocks Ramp As Shorts “Squeezed” Most In A Month

Thanks to the capable carry-induced ramp in AUDJPY (and a helpful OPEX pile-on for VIX), US equity markets are surging this morning (Russell 2000 above yesterday’s highs?!) on the heels of the biggest short squeeze in over a month… SSDD…

 

 

We do note that the big tumble in shorts yesterday has now been fully retraced..

but AUDJPY seems unstoppable…




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Ronald Bailey on the World of Plenty Ahead

Four
billion more people than the 7.2 billion now alive could be fed an
adequate diet if current crop production devoted to nonfood uses,
such as animal feed and biofuels, were switched to direct
consumption. This is one the fascinating calculations made in a new
article published in Science by a team of researchers led
by Paul West, a researcher at the University of Minnesota’s
Institute on the Environment. West and his colleagues are looking
for “leverage points” in global agriculture that would reduce
humanity’s impact on the natural world while at the same time
providing more than enough food for the 9 billion or so people who
will be alive in 2050.

West and his colleagues acknowledge that more work is needed to
figure out how to get best practices that they identified widely
adopted. But, as Reason science correspondent Ronald
Bailey writes, the prophets of overpopulation doom and imminent
global famine will likely once again be disappointed.

View this article.

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Watch the NYPD Choke a Guy to Death Over Alleged Black Market Cigarettes

The city will get its pound of flesh, either through taxes or other means.Eric Garner, 43, said he was
just breaking up a fight. New York Police Department officers said
he was selling untaxed cigarettes and tried to arrest him. When he
refused to cooperate, police jumped on the 400-pound Staten Island
man, put him in a chokehold, and forced him to the sidewalk. He
complained loudly that he couldn’t breathe as a pack of police kept
him held down. Then, according to the police, he went into cardiac
arrest and died at Richmond University Medical Center.

The arrest was caught on video and has been
posted
by New York Daily News, who also spoke to
Garner’s wife. She and family members claimed he didn’t have any
cigarettes on him at the time of his arrest:

Officials confirmed that NYPD Internal Affairs officers launched
an investigation Thursday night.

Records show Garner was due in court in October on three Staten
Island cases, including charges of pot possession and possession or
selling untaxed cigarettes.

Esaw Garner said her husband was unable to work because he
suffered from a host of ailments, including chronic asthma,
diabetes and sleep apnea.

Garner’s mother, Gwen Carr, 65, added, “I want justice.”

Watch the video
here
.

Reason writers have repeatedly made note that skyrocketing
cigarette taxes have increased the size and scope of the black
market for the little cancer sticks. Read about it here.

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Feds Want to Conscript FedEx to Block Your Cheap Medicine

FedExWhy should law enforcement
agencies do their own footwork when they can simply threaten others
into doing it for them? Specifically, why should the United States
government trouble itself with enforcing its silly rules against
you and I purchasing our medicine over the Internet when it can
hold package delivery services liable for delivering our orders
from point A to point B. It’s deputization, the hard way, and cargo
delivery giant FedEx is on the receiving end as Uncle Sam looks to
conscript assistance for its prohibition efforts.

According to a
press release
from the United States Attorney’s Office from the
Northern District of California, FedEx is delivering drugs. That’s
probably not a shocker, considering the number of sealed packages
the company moves. But just how nefarious is this drug
business?

beginning in approximately 1998, Internet pharmacies began
offering consumers prescription drugs, including controlled
substances, based on the provision of information over the
Internet. While some Internet pharmacies were managed by well-known
pharmacy chains that required valid prescriptions and visits to the
patient’s personal physician, others failed to require a
prescription before filling orders for controlled substances and
prescription drugs. Rather, these Internet pharmacies filled orders
based solely on the completion of an online questionnaire, without
a physical examination, diagnosis, or face-to-face meeting with a
physician. Such practices violated federal and state laws governing
the distribution of prescription drugs and controlled
substances.

Oh noes! Somebody is selling Uncle Bob discount little blue
pills! For shame. And he’s willingly buying them! Shocker.

So…Why the fuck should FedEx care?

As it turns out, the feds say that “as early as 2004, DEA, FDA
and members of Congress” told the delivery company that willing
buyers and sellers were engaging in transactions that make
politicians very, very sad. FedEx apparently established internal
systems for tracking online pharmacies, but shipments still got
through. This makes the feds even sadder, and they insist FedEx has
been “conspiring” to let the packages through.

FedEx says this is all
bullshit
. The company insists that, in response to the
government’s crusade to keep Uncle Bob from buying his little blue
pills at a discount, it’s asked the feds for a list of suppliers it
shouldn’t service. The feds haven’t gone beyond the bitching phase
to offer anything helpful.

We have repeatedly requested that the government provide us a
list of online pharmacies engaging in illegal activity. 
Whenever DEA provides us a list of pharmacies engaging in illegal
activity, we will turn off shipping for those companies
immediately. So far the government has declined to provide such a
list.

So, what do the feds want FedEx to do? The indictment isn’t
specific, but FedEx hints that the government wants the company to
paw through everything it ships and block the stuff that officials
don’t think people should be allowed to send from place to
place.

FedEx transports more than 10 million packages a day.  The
privacy of our customers is essential to the core of our
business.  This privacy is now at risk, based on the charges
by the Department of Justice related to the transportation of
prescription medications.

We want to be clear what’s at stake here:  the government
is suggesting that FedEx assume criminal responsibility for the
legality of the contents of the millions of packages that we pick
up and deliver every day.  We are a transportation company –
we are not law enforcement.  We have no interest in violating
the privacy of our customers. We continue to stand ready and
willing to support and assist law enforcement.  We cannot,
however, do the job of law enforcement ourselves.

Oh, awesome. Instead of government-conducted NSA-style
surveillance of our personal activities, we’ll get coerced
surveillance by a private company. It’s like contracting out an
astoundingly creepy law-enforcement task, but without the actual
contract. Or any compensation.

It’ll probably have interesting consequences for delivery speed,
too.

This is modern, efficient government for you: Arm-twisting
private enterprise into engaging in intrusions that nobody should
be committing, presumably at a cost-savings to the taxpayers being
intruded upon.

For the record, I don’t give a damn if FedEx is transporting
containers of heroin, so long as the shipper and recipient are
happy with the price and speed of delivery.

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Adults Who Use E-Cigarettes to Quit Smoking Prefer Supposedly Juvenile Flavors

The New
York Times 
reports that
“more than 7,000 [e-cigarette] flavors are now available and, by
one estimate, nearly 250 more are being introduced every month.”
Critics often claim this proliferation of flavors shows the
industry is targeting children. In my latest
Forbes column, I cite new survey data that show the
critics are wrong to assume that nontobacco flavors appeal only to
kids. Here is how it starts:

At a Senate
hearing
 last month, Jay Rockefeller noted that electronic
cigarette fluid is available in a wide variety of
flavors—conclusive evidence, to his mind, that e-cigarette
companies want to hook children on nicotine. “I am an adult,” the
West Virginia Democrat said. “Would I be attracted to Cherry Crush,
Chocolate Treat, Peachy Keen, Vanilla Dreams? No, I wouldn’t.”

Call it the Rockefeller Rule: If an e-cigarette flavor does not
appeal to this particular 77-year-old senator, it could not
possibly appeal to anyone older than 17. Rebutting that claim,
Jason Healy, founder and president of Blu eCigs, cited a customer
survey that found “the average age of a cherry smoker is in the
high 40s.” 
Survey
results
 released on Thursday by E-Cigarette
Forum
, an online gathering spot for vaping enthusiasts,
reinforce Healy’s point, showing that grownups prefer the flavors
that Rockefeller insists are strictly for kids.


Read the whole thing
.

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‘We’re Lying’: RT Reporter Resigns Over Malaysia Airline Coverage

The Russian government-funded, English-language
news network RT (formerly Russia Today) today lost a correspondent
over its questionable coverage of the Malaysia Airline passenger
plane that was shot down in Ukraine yesterday.

Sara Firth, who worked for RT as a London correspondent for five
years,
told
BuzzFeed:

“When this story broke I ran back into the newsroom and saw how
we were covering it already and I just knew I had to go,” she
said.

“It was the total disregard to the facts. We threw up eyewitness
accounts from someone on the ground openly accusing the Ukrainian
government [of involvement in the disaster], and a correspondent in
the studio pulled up a plane crash before that the Ukrainian
government had been involved in and said it was ‘worth
mentioning’.

“It’s not worth mentioning. It’s Russia Today all over, it’s
flirting with that border of overtly lying. You’re not telling a
lie, you’re just bringing something up. I didn’t want to watch a
story like that, where people have lost loved ones and we’re
handling it like that.

“I couldn’t do it anymore. Every single day we’re lying and
finding sexier ways to do it.”

Firth isn’t the first to resign in protest of
RT’s perceived bias. Anchor Liz Wahl
quit live on-air
earlier this year, citing the network’s
“whitewashing” of Russian President Vladimir Putin’s invasion and
annexation of Crimea.

RT shot back at Firth with a
press release
:

We were not surprised by Sara Firth’s decision to leave … as she
has recently informed us that she was likely to take an offer from
another firm. …

Sara has declared that she chooses the truth; apparently we have
different definitions of the truth. We believe that the truth is
what our reporters see on the ground, with their own eyes and not
what’s printed in the morning London newspaper.

Exactly how yesterday’s airplane tragedy played out is still up
for debate, though Radio Free Europe has a good
fact sheet
on the evidence at play so far.

For more Reason coverage of the ongoing crises in
Ukraine, click
here

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