Foreign Officials Sell A Record $48 Billion In U.S. Treasurys In December

There has been much speculation whether foreign official institutions (central banks, SWFs, reserve managers and so on) are selling Treasurys or equities, or both as part of the Quantitative Tightening phenomenon.

Moments ago, courtesy of the latest TIC data we have an answer: based on the monthly flow report breaking down Treasury transactions between foreign official and private entities, in December the far more important, former, group sold $48.1 billion in US Treasurys: the highest single monthly outflow on record.

 

This was partially offset by a $12.2 billion purchase by Private buyers, however as the chart below shows, on an LTM basis, December saw a total of $20.3 billion in selling, and was the third consecutive month of net selling by foreigners. This was the first such occurrence in 15 years.

 

Finally, for all those curious what China is doing with its US Treasury holdings, using the TIC’s stock data, we find that between China and its offshore trading proxy “Belgium”, China dumped another $41 billion in TSYs, a move which continues to track the decline in its official reserve holdings almost TIC for TIC, pardon the pun.


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Known Drunk Driver-Hating Officer Who Blatantly Shot a Drunk Driver for No Apparent Reason Loses Job

I reported last year about the curious case of Officer Patrick Feaster, a California policeman with a loud public record of being really peeved with drunk drivers, who came upon and casually shot Andrew Thomas after Thomas flipped his truck in a drunk driving incident that killed Thomas’ wife.

Thomas was struggling to crawl out the window of his truck vertically when Feaster shot him. Feaster neglected to report to dispatch that anyone had been shot, merely referring to a man who (Feater had just shot, and thus., but he didn’t mention any of that) “refuses to get out” of the truck.

As I reported then, Feaster was at first found not worthy of charges in the incident by Butte County District Attorney Mike Ramsey on the curious grounds that, as I summed it up, the:

shooting seemed to [Ramsey] maybe not intentional and thus not criminally negligent. (It seemed pretty intentional to me, but those judging police see with eyes suffused with a soft gelscreen of bitter, bitter mercy.) Because [Feaster] didn’t shoot him twice, according to Ramsey, that proves merely that Feaster is the kind of officer who pulls out his weapon, finger on the trigger, aims it at someone who represents no conceivable threat to himself or anyone else, and shoots him without meaning to, and that apparently is just fine and deserves no criminal punishment.

Why didn’t he tell anyone he’d shot him? He was in shock and not even actually sure he’d shot him!

So, reckless to the point of possible actual insanity. That’s fine in a cop. Certainly not worthy of charges.

Thomas died of his injuries shortly after my initial post.

Last week Paradise Post reported that Feaster has finally been relieved of his job, although Paradise Police Chief Gabriela Tazzari-Dineen “could not disclose why Feaster is no longer with the department.” 

After Thomas died, D.A. Ramsey reconsidered his initial decision not to prosecute at all, and that investigation, Ramsey now tells the Paradise Post:

 hinges on Thomas’ autopsy report. One of the things Ramsey wanted an opinion on was whether immediate medical attention could have saved Thomas’ life. Feaster did not acknowledge to superior officers that he had shot Thomas until 11 minutes after the shooting.

The video of the incident, highly disturbing, can be found at this Action News Now story.

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Presenting The Most Striking Way Chinese Are Evading Capital Controls

First it was over-invoicing 'exports' to friends in Hong Kong; then it was Bitcoin, most recently it was buying domain names, and now, the ever-industrious (and increasingly desperate) Chinese have found a new way to beat the government's quasi capital controls… by losing.

China Law Blog's Dan Harris explains how the Chinese are getting money out of China by losing in Arbitrations…

File this one under “just when I thought I had seen/heard everything.”

A month ago (exactly) we wrote about how it is getting a lot tougher to get money out of China. See Getting Money Out of China: What The Heck is Happening? Two weeks later, our own Steve Dickinson was interviewed by Bloomberg for a video piece, entitled, The Problem of Getting Money out of China. In the meantime, our China lawyers are getting a whole host of phone calls and emails from mostly foreigners who want to know (1) whether what their China counter-parties are giving as an excuse for not being able to send funds to invest or buy is true and (2) what can be done to get the funds?

Some of those callers/emailers want to use us to test some idea/scheme/plan to get money out of China. With all due respect/disrespect, 99 times out of 100, their ideas are either severely flawed and/or likely to lead to jail time.

But my favorite out of all of them came in through from an “advisor” to a Chinese company and the scheme they wanted to run by me was a plan to have the Chinese company quickly lose an arbitration in the United States. This is what I quickly surmised anyway, but it took me a bit of probing to discern this. Here, very roughly and with changes made to improve blog flow and to camouflage any identifiers (including nationality),  is how our conversation went.

Australian advisor: Can your firm defend a Chinese company in a U.S. arbitration involving a $3.5 million breach of contract.

Me: Sure. Not a problem, but that is not going to be inexpensive and we are going to require a large amount be paid upfront.

Australian advisor: This one is going to be different because both sides will want it to move forward as quickly and as cheaply as possible.

Me: Okay, that may be what they are saying now, but once these things get started that very well might change.

Australian advisor: It won’t in this case.

Me: Okay (while thinking, how many times have I heard someone insist that their matter is the one in a hundred that strays from the norm?)

Australian advisor: The parties would even be willing to agree on the award.

Me: Then why do they even need to arbitrate? The fastest, cheapest, easiest thing for them to do would be to enter into a settlement agreement that can be enforced in both China and the U.S. I’m just assuming that the other side is a U.S. company and that is why the arbitration is in the U.S.

Australian advisor: There are extenuating circumstances.

Me: Like what. And by the way, do you have the contract with the arbitration provision in front of you right now. What exactly does it say about arbitration? Where is it supposed to be and before what arbitral body? Does it provide for the winner to get its attorneys’ fees?

Australian advisor: Not exactly. We were kind of hoping to have you draft the arbitration agreement.

Me:  What? What are you talking about? Now I’m really confused. You cannot have an arbitration unless both parties agree to arbitrate. Are you saying that the contract between these two parties does not provide for arbitration but now the parties have agreed to arbitrate? That’s possible.

Australian advisor: Yes.

Me: Okay, what is the name of the other party and who is its lawyer?

Australian advisor: We were going to ask you to form the American company and represent it too.

Me: What? I don’t get it. My firm can’t represent both your Chinese company and the opposing party. It just can’t.

Australian advisor: What if they were really the same party?

Me: But they’re not.

Australian advisor: Well, they really are.

Me: How is that?

Australian advisor: Because the whole point of this arbitration is to get an award that the Chinese company can show to the Chinese government.

Me: “Not interested. No way are we going to do this and I really don’t appreciate your having wasted my time. Good-bye.”

Get it?

The Chinese company wanted us to represent it in a completely fake arbitration that it would lose so that it could then send $3.5 million to its own U.S. company so that — no doubt — in turn that US company could buy a house somewhere in the United States.

Other lawyers: you have been warned.


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Debt Slavery in Action – Texas Man Arrested for Not Paying Student Loan Debt

Screen Shot 2016-02-16 at 4.27.23 PM

Laws are effective only to the extent they are enforced. A law on the books has little impact if prosecution is highly unlikely.

The failure to punish big corporations or their executives when they break the law undermines the foundations of this great country: If justice means a prison sentence for a teenager who steals a car, but it means nothing more than a sideways glance at a CEO who quietly engineers the theft of billions of dollars, then the promise of equal justice under the law has turned into a lie. The failure to prosecute big, visible crimes has a corrosive effect on the fabric of democracy and our shared belief that we are all equal in the eyes of the law.

Under the current approach to enforcement, corporate criminals routinely escape meaningful prosecution for their misconduct. This is so despite the fact that the law is unambiguous: if a corporation has violated the law, individuals within the corporation must also have violated the law. If the corporation is subject to charges of wrongdoing, so are those in the corporation who planned, authorized or took the actions. But even in cases of flagrant corporate law breaking, federal law enforcement agencies – and particularly the Department of Justice (DOJ) – rarely seek prosecution of individuals. In fact, federal agencies rarely pursue convictions of either large corporations or their executives in a court of law. Instead, they agree to criminal and civil settlements with corporations that rarely require any admission of wrongdoing and they let the executives go free without any individual accountability.

– From the post: Elizabeth Warren Releases Blistering Report on Corporate Criminality – Singles Out SEC Uselessness

What a cute little Banana Republic this America has become. Our government can’t put a single bank executive in jail for destroying the global economy, but when a mere peasant is caught not paying back his student debt, a team of U.S. Marshals arrive at his door to arrest him at gunpoint.

Land of the thief, home of the slave, indeed.

Fox26 reports:

Believe it or not, the US Marshals Service in Houston is arresting people for not paying their outstanding federal student loans.

Paul Aker says he was arrested at his home last week for a $1500 federal student loan he received in 1987.

He says seven deputy US Marshals showed up at his home with guns and took him to federal court where he had to sign a payment plan for the 29-year-old school loan.

continue reading

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Why Aren’t Presidential Candidates Discussing Who They Would Pick For Fed Chairman?

Submitted by California State Assemblyman Mike Gatto

Electing the next head of the Federal Reserve

The large and eclectic field of presidential contenders is in full-out campaign-promise mode, as voters demand positions on everything from ISIS to ethanol.  With the economy so fragile, now might be a good time to seek commitments on who our next president will appoint to the Federal Reserve, and statements on what the proper role of the Fed should be.

Recent history is too important to ignore. After the Fed lowered interest rates to zero during the recession, it found itself lacking options for further “stimulating” the economy. It therefore began what it called Quantitative Easing (QE), which works more or less as follows: A bank buys a treasury bond for $97 million. Assume this bond matures in one year, and will be repaid at $100 million, or (very roughly) a 3 percent annual interest rate.

Under QE, the Fed creates new money. In our example, it will create $98 million, to buy this bond. By doing so, the interest rate has decreased to approximately 2 percent. And the bank made an easy profit, risk-free, on top of any commissions. But if the bank fails to lend out those funds, it does little for the economy.

You might ask yourself why the quasi-governmental Federal Reserve doesn't just buy bonds directly from the Treasury. “No,” they say, “that would be too close to just printing money for the government.” As if using a middleman and generating private profits makes the process significantly more palatable.

After easing for years, now the Fed seeks to raise rates. Of the available methods, it does not wish to force the government to repay loans, so it rolls over the bonds where possible. It also doesn't want to sell the bonds right back to the banks, which might make it appear they were “churning” – generating transactions to earn fees. And the Fed's typical pre-recession move – controlling the supply of money by soaking up bank reserves – would be ineffective now, since it created so much new money during the last decade.

So, what will the Fed do? It will offer interest to banks on the funds they hold on reserve. In other words, the Fed will pay banks to let their money stay put, instead of lending it to me and you. The percentages might seem small, but remember, this is risk-free profit, generated on vast sums. If you're questioning these actions – bidding up an asset that private parties own, paying them a commission to buy it, and then paying interest on the money you gave them – you're not alone.

Now that we've established that QE has profited banks, you might ask what it has done for the overall economy. Recently, certain economists have raised the possibility that it might have actually hurt it. Recall that conventional economics is often bad at predicting outcomes, like the extent that government spending (a theoretical stimulus) can “crowd out” private spending (and thus paradoxically hurt the economy) – or how the S&P downgrade of the United States' credit rating in August 2011 counterintuitively caused U.S. borrowing costs to decrease.

These contrarian economists seek to explain why decades of Japanese efforts to spark inflation have had the opposite effect, and why similar efforts in the U.S. largely failed to reflate anything besides the stock market. They wonder if the reduction of interest rates has had a counterintuitive result.

Conventionally, the "real" interest rate is the nominal (or common) interest rate, minus inflation. Therefore, if your bank pays you 5 percent on a CD, but inflation eats up 4 percent, your real interest rate is 1 percent. Similarly, if you borrow money at 7 percent, but inflation (and wages, investment returns, etc.) rise by 6 percent, then you're only really paying 1 percent on your loan. The contrarian economists theorize that real interest rates will always seek a certain level, independent of central-bank actions. Therefore, if the Fed depresses interest rates, inflation too will fall, to meet the real interest rate that the economy is pricing by itself. So if the Fed has driven down nominal interest rates to 1 percent, but the economy stubbornly sets a “real” interest rate of 1 percent, inflation will thus be zero.

I believe the real interest rate is more the result of a subtraction calculation, than an innate level on which one can base a re-arranged equation. But one wonders if the Federal Reserve, by raising their interest-rate target during a time when many questioned the move, perhaps wants to test this theory.

At any rate (pun intended), Americans are right to question whether the Fed's actions have had the intended results, whether they've benefitted anyone besides banks, and whether the Fed is experimenting with the economy at a time where everything feels pretty fragile. Let's hope the presidential field understands these concepts and lets us know where they stand sometime soon.

Gatto is the longest serving member of the California State Assembly Committee on Banking and Finance, overseeing the world’s 8th largest economy.  He represents California’s 43rd Assembly District, which includes Los Angeles, Glendale and Burbank. www.asm.ca.gov/gatto

 


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Calgary’s Housing Market Collapses While “Three-Alarm Blaze” Burns Next Door In Vancouver

In Waterloo, Ontario, the property market is red hot.

Dubbed “Canada’s Silicon Valley,” the city of just 140,000 people is drawing interest from real estate investors far and wide. Waterloo is around 70 miles west of Toronto and is home to a Google office as well as two universities and “dozens” of startups.

One-bedroom apartments in a new development being pitched to investors are going for CAD$270,000 while a two-bedroom will run you CAD$340,000. Rents in the building are as high as $2,000/month.

Vacancy rates are running at just 1.5%.

Meanwhile, in Vancouver, housing has gone full-retard. Average home prices for detached residences rose to an astronomical $1.82 million in January. It’s not as insane in Toronto, but at $631,092, there aren’t too many “bargains” to be had.

(Vancouver prices)

New data out on Tuesday shows average property values on resold homes in the Greater Vancouver area rising by 30.9% in January while average prices in the Greater Toronto Area and in the abovementioned Waterloo rose 14.2% and 9% for the month, respectively.

But oh what a difference a province makes.

While the Canadian housing bubble is alive and well in Ontario and British Columbia, in the heart of Canada’s dying oil patch the picture isn’t pretty. We’ve documented the glut of vacant office space in downtown Calgary on a number of occasions. Here’s a visual for those who missed it. 

Calgary is of course in Alberta, where collapsing crude has driven WCS down to just CAD1 above marginal operating costs. That’s led employers to cut jobs. In fact, last year was the worst year for provincial job losses since 1982. This has had a profound effect on Calgary and on Tuesday we learn that it isn’t just office space that’s sitting unoccupied.

According to data from Altus Group sales of condos in the city fell a whopping 38% from 3,000 units to 4,805 units in 2015, marking the largest y/y drop since 2008. “The drop-off doesn’t bode well for 2016,” Bloomberg notes. “Calgary, the biggest city in the oil-producing province of Alberta, ended 2015 with one of the highest inventories of unsold condos, at 3,356 suites in the fourth quarter, according to Altus.”

If you want to understand all of the above you need only look at the following chart which contrasts home prices in Calgary with those in Vancouver and Toronto:

Clearly, one of those things isn’t like the others. “While we continue to believe that things just can’t any hotter, markets in B.C. and Ontario continue to prove us wrong,” TD economist Diana Petramala said. “[For Toronto and Vancouver], every month of double-digit home price growth raises the risk of a deeper home price correction down the road.” 

“Hot doesn’t quite describe Vancouver’s three-alarm fire of a housing market,” Bank of Montreal chief economist Doug Porter remarked.

So while you can’t give condos and office space away in Calgary, you for all intents and purposes have to be a millionaire to afford to live in British Columbia and especially in Vancouver which, judging by the parabolic chart shown above, is one of the most desirable locales on the face of the planet. 

We close by noting that the Canadian real estate “bargain” we profiled three weeks ago has indeed sold – for $102,000 more than the original asking price…


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Keynesianism’s Long March To The Dustbin Of History

Submitted by Gary North via GaryNorth.com,

We read on Wikipedia:

The phrase "ash heap of history" (or "dustbin of history") figuratively refers to the place to where persons, events, artifacts, ideologies, etc., are relegated upon losing currency and value as history. A notable usage was that of the Russian revolutionary Leon Trotsky referring to the Mensheviks: "You are pitiful, isolated individuals! You are bankrupts. Your role is played out. Go where you belong from now on — into the dustbin of history!" in response to the Menshevik faction walking out of the All-Russian Congress of Soviets (25 October 1917) in Petrograd, which allowed the Bolshevik faction to dominate the party. In a speech to the British House of Commons (8 June 1982), U.S. President Ronald Reagan said that "freedom and democracy will leave Marxism and Leninism on the ash heap of history."

It is now the Keynesians' turn to join the losers of history.

They do not see it. Their critics do not see it. But it is a fact.

Allow me to shift metaphors away from the ashcan of history.

One of the most inspiring stories in the Bible is the story of the final night of the rule of the Babylonian Empire.

The Bible does not tell us what had happened. We know from secular history what happened. The general in command of the Medo-Persian forces had ordered his troops to redirect the Euphrates River to bypass the city. This left the river's entry point into the city undefended. The Army streamed into these undefended points and conquered the city.

The rulers of the city had not seen it coming. They should have seen it, but they didn't. They undoubtedly had reconnaissance information on the fact that the Medo-Persian army was at work up the river to redirect the river. But they did not respond fast enough. They did not see what was coming.

We may see this in retrospect as abnormal, but it is normal. Rulers at the end of the dynasty or an empire think it will go on forever. It may not last the night.

We are told that the King of Babylon invited the prophet Daniel to assess the situation. There follows one of the most famous incidents in the Bible.

At a banquet, a holy ghostly hand had written words on the wall. This terrified the king and his guests. He called in Daniel to explain. He had previously ignored Daniel.

25 And this is the writing that was written, Mene, Mene, Tekel, Upharsin.

26 This is the interpretation of the thing: Mene; God hath numbered thy kingdom, and finished it.

27 Tekel; Thou art weighed in the balances, and art found wanting.

28 Peres; Thy kingdom is divided, and given to the Medes and Persians.

29 Then commanded Belshazzar, and they clothed Daniel with scarlet, and put a chain of gold about his neck, and made a proclamation concerning him, that he should be the third ruler in the kingdom.

30 In that night was Belshazzar the king of the Chaldeans slain.

31 And Darius the Median took the kingdom, being about threescore and two years old.

From this, we get the saying: "The handwriting is on the wall."

The handwriting is on the wall for Keynesianism.

THE POWER OF COMPOUNDING

In his remarkable 2001 article, "The Law of Accelerating Returns," Raymond Kurzweil described the decline in the cost of information, beginning in 1890, and extending to the year 2000. If he had taken it back to 1844, he could've made an even stronger case, but the data are less clear. He began with the census of 1890, which was the first census to use punch cards.

He said that the cost of information fell by 50% every three years from 1890 to about 1950. Then, with the development of vacuum tube technologies in computers, it fell by 50% every two years. Then, sometime around 1965, with the development of transistor technology, it began to fall by 50% every 18 months. He said in 2001 that he believed that it was falling by 50% every 12 months.

Nothing like this has ever happened in the history of man. There has been no compounding process that continued for this long a period. This process is now approaching what some people call a tipping point. Others call it an inflection point. Kurzweil called it the upward move of the exponential curve. Whatever we call it, we are now in the middle of it.

In a follow-up article in 2003, Kurzweil made a fundamental point that has not been recognized by free-market economists, Keynesians, or social theorist in general. The rate of change, meaning the compound decline in the cost of information, was in no way slowed during the Great Depression. The world economy stopped growing for a decade, but the compound decline in the cost of information continued throughout the decade. He said this also applied in both world wars.

We don't absolutely know what the future will bring, and if you look at the models, they're absolutely linear.

We don't take into account this law of accelerating returns, which is absolutely a factor.

If you look at the economy as a whole, either per capita or just the total economy, it is growing exponentially. But the various recessions, even the Great Depression, are relatively minor features that you really see in this chart that is a big exponential. And what's interesting is that when the recession is over, including the Great Depression, it starts back to where it would have been had that never occurred in the first place. It does not represent even a permanent slowing down or delay in the underlying exponential.

The really pervasive phenomena is the exponential growth. We have exponential growth in productivity. Even that is understated because we're measuring the value in dollars of what can be accomplished. But what can be accomplished for a dollar today is far greater than what could be accomplished for a dollar 10 years ago.

 

Computation is not the only technology that is growing exponentially. Communications, bandwidth, speed and price performance–both wireless and wired–are also doubling every year. Biological technologies, the price performance of base pair scanning, for example, have doubled every year.

George Orwell was correct: we find it difficult to see what is under our noses. let me briefly mention what has been under my nose ever since I read this article over a decade ago. It means that, with respect to the most important transformation of modern times, the exponential declining cost of digital technologies, Keynesianism has not been able to deflect the spread of these technologies.

Keynesianism can affect which special-interest groups benefit and lose as a result of these technologies, because Keynesianism can control the allocation of physical resources. But Keynesianism cannot control the spread of information itself. This means that, at the core of the economic system, Keynesianism is impotent.

As bad as Keynesianism is, and as bad as regulation is, it can only marginally affect the transformations that are taking place today. These regulations can have major affect when they apply to individuals who are caught in the web of regulation. These regulations can affect the supply and quality of goods that are produced through large-scale physical production systems. The regulators can squeeze large companies. They can put small companies out of business. But what they cannot do is in any way retard the compound growth effects of information technology.

So, it really does not matter for the long run that the Keynesians are in charge. They can stretch out their control with respect to certain kinds of physical production. They can stretch it out with respect to certain kinds of licensing and regulation. But the steady compounding effects of the decline in the cost of information are going to overwhelm all attempts by all governments to keep social and economic change on government approved pathways. There really is no way for governments to do anything, including fighting a war, to stop the progress of digital technologies.

Regulatory actions can and do affect the kinds of innovations that take place. It especially can affect the kinds of applications of new digital technologies. These statist interventions are almost always negative. They protect some special-interest group. But, in the long run, meaning over the next 40 years, the whole Keynesian regulatory structure is going to collapse. Why? Because we are reaching an inflection point. We are reaching the point at which the exponential curve turns sharply upward. There is no way for the regulatory agencies to keep up with what is now taking place under their noses.

I see this as good news. It is good news for liberty, and it is bad news for the arrogant theorists of Keynesian central planning, the arrogant tenured bureaucrats of central banks, and the protected employees of virtually every other government-regulated industry or profession. These people are going to be replaced, and they are going to be replaced within three decades, or four at the most. They are presiding over the final stages of the illusion of central planning.

It has already happened to the socialists. History tossed them into the dustbin when the Soviet Union went belly-up in 1991. It was all over but the shouting at that point. Almost nobody defends socialism as an ideology these days. Nobody gets a hearing. They want to call themselves liberals. They want to call themselves Progressives.

The central planners cannot stop the arrival of the exponential curve of liberty and voluntarism. Maybe they can slow it down at the margin, but I doubt it. If the Great Depression did not slow it down, Janet Yellen cannot slow it down. Janet Yellen and her crew of bureaucrats are the only ones in a position to slow it down. The politicians can barely affect the process.

This should be under your nose. Think through your own profession, your own career prospects, and the legacy you expect to leave behind. Think it through in terms of an increase in the rate of technological change, and a decrease in the products of all digital technologies.

The days of wine and roses are coming to an end for the Keynesians. The ashcan of history awaits them. I will do what I can to speed up the process, but I don't think I can speed up the process. I can only prepare you and other readers by pointing out what should be obvious.

UNDER THE NOSES OF INSIDERS

I want to discuss a couple of examples in history of entire industries that did not see what was coming, even while it was almost upon them. Like a tsunami that pulls the tide out rapidly just before it hits, people playing on the beach do not notice what is happening, and do not run for cover from what will soon follow.

I teach a course in the history of American literature for the Ron Paul Curriculum. After 1912, I focus entirely on movies. Movies are the way in which storytellers affect tens of millions of people. Movies have displaced novels and short stories as the way to tell stories, which in turn are the foundations of literature.

Beginning with the 1915 movie, The Birth of a Nation I cover only films. My course has a 15-year gap: 1915-1930.

The movie industry had a warning. It was the equivalent of the tide that sweeps out rapidly. That was The Jazz Singer (1927). It had sound. It had sound only for Al Jolson's songs. The movie was not really a talkie. It was a "singie."

From the day that this movie was released, silent movies faced the handwriting on the wall. Yet even in 1928, movie producers still tried to get the public to attend silent films. In 1929, the deluge overwhelmed the entire industry.

My next piece of literature after Birth of a Nation is All Quiet on the Western Front (1930). The soundtrack is good. The photography is good. The story line, based on the best-selling novel by Remarque, is excellent. It won the Academy Award as the best picture in 1931. The director also won the Academy Award. The movie was highly successful, both artistically and at the box office.

Consider that transition. It took basically three years: from 1927 to 1930. Basically, 1929 was the year of the transition. This gets little attention in the textbooks, because 1929 was the year of the stock market crash. The stock market crash gets a great deal of attention, crowding out almost everything else.

I think of the two as related. Herbert Hoover was elected in 1928. That was the last year in which anybody could make money producing silent movies. In 1929, talking pictures overwhelmed silent movies, and the first stage of the depression overwhelmed Hoover's administration. Hoover suffered the equivalence of what silent movies suffered in 1929. But the great smash happened much more rapidly to silent movies than it did to Hoover.

In Hollywood in 1928, there were still people in the movie industry who were convinced that talking pictures were a fad. For those of you who have seen Aviator, you know the story of Howard Hughes. He had almost completed his nearly bankrupting movie, Hell's Angels. Then he started over. He added sound. The Wikipedia entry is accurate.

Hell's Angels is a 1930 American war film, directed and produced by Howard Hughes and starring Ben Lyon, James Hall and Jean Harlow. The film, which was written by Harry Behn and Howard Estabrook, centers on the combat pilots of World War I. The picture was released by United Artists and, despite its initial poor performance at the box office, eventually earned its production costs twice over . . .

Originally shot as a silent film, Hughes retooled the film over a lengthy gestation period. Most of the film is in black and white, but there is one color sequence–the only color footage of Harlow's career. Hell's Angels is now hailed as one of the first sound blockbuster action films.

As we saw in Aviator, everybody in Hughes' tool company was opposed to his decision to retool the movie so that it would have sound. It should have been obvious to everybody in late 1929 that this was mandatory, but it wasn't obvious.

Hughes risked everything on the success of the movie. He knew that it had to have sound. He knew that it would be a failure if it did not have sound. He had sunk a fortune into the movie, and yet he dared not release it on time. It had to be delayed. It had to have sound. He was right. His critics were wrong. The entire movie industry was wrong.

I point this out for a reason. Sometimes, without any warning, a new technology completely changes an industry.

Consider Google. The Wikipedia entry on the history of Google says:

By the end of 1998, Google had an index of about 60 million pages. The home page was still marked "BETA", but an article in Salon.com already argued that Google's search results were better than those of competitors like Hotbot or Excite.com, and praised it for being more technologically innovative than the overloaded portal sites (like Yahoo!, Excite.com, Lycos, Netscape's Netcenter, AOL.com, Go.com and MSN.com) which at that time, during the growing dot-com bubble, were seen as "the future of the Web", especially by stock market investors.

I used Alta Vista from 1996 until about 2002. It may have been 2001. Then I switched to Google. Wikipedia writes:

AltaVista was an early web search engine established in 1995. It was once one of the most popular search engines, but it lost ground to Google and was purchased by Yahoo! in 2003, which retained the brand but based all AltaVista searches on its own search engine. On July 8, 2013, the service was shut down by Yahoo! and since then, the domain has redirected to Yahoo!'s own search site.

And then there is Wikipedia. It has put out of business all physically published general encyclopedias. Encyclopaedia Britannica still exists online, but I would never use it, and I can't imagine anybody else using it. Wikipedia has simply destroyed all rival general encyclopedias. It did it without any advertising. It did it without any warning.

New technologies can transform societies in short periods of time. Not many of them ever do this, but a handful can.

STEADY GROWTH, RADICAL CHANGE.

Digital technologies have transformed our lives through steady improvements. The cost of information keeps dropping. This is the Steady Eddie change that, without any fanfare, transforms people's lives so slowly that they do not perceive what is happening to them and their environment.

If Kurzweil is right, this is going to happen to the cost of solar power. He thinks it is going to happen a lot faster than I do, because he is concentrating on solar panel technology, but solar panel technology constitutes only about 20% of what goes into an electrical power grid, whether local or national. The cost of the other components is not declining at anything like the decline in the cost per watt of solar panels. Nevertheless, there is a steady improvement, and it does not look as though this is going to be reversed. To the extent that panels can become less dependent on physical paraphernalia, the more rapidly this substitution process will take place.

My assessment is that YouTube will not be replaced by anything anytime soon. There will be steady improvements in YouTube, and these will produce steady transformations of those aspects of society that are dependent on digital viewing. I cannot imagine any rival company to YouTube. It is backed up by the income produced by Google searching, and it has no serious rivals today. There is not that much that we want to get out of videos. They consume a lot of time, and they consume a lot of bandwidth, but the cost of bandwidth keeps declining, unlike the value of our time.

There may be 3-D videos at some point. There may be high definition 3-D videos that can be projected on a wall. But my guess is this: they will be YouTube videos. It is very difficult to compete against "free."

We can see that YouTube is not going to be reversed or replaced. We see no swift movement of the video tide. Now the trick is to figure out how YouTube is going to transform the way we do things. It is certainly transforming education. This is not going to stop. This is going to accelerate. Yet there are teachers who do not see the handwriting on the wall. They are like people in the movie industry in 1928. They ought to be able to see what is going to happen, but they don't. They are going to be overwhelmed.

They are like IBM executives in 1982. They could see that Moore's law was going to enable the IBM PC's to overwhelm the minicomputer market. The idiots at Armonk forbade the innovators in Boca Raton to adopt Intel's 386 chip. They thought a 386-based computer would wipe out the market for the entry-level minicomputers sold by IBM's main branch. So, Compaq adopted the 386 computer, and destroyed the minicomputer market. IBM never caught up.

We do not want to admit what is going to happen to us, even when we can see what is going to happen to us. We think that something is going to save us. Nothing is going to save us, other than the government. The government can protect an industry or a profession, but the free market does not. Then, when the government tanks and finally collapses, the industry of the profession is overwhelmed in just a few years.

When I watch a movie produced in 1930, I can still enjoy it if there is a good script. We all enjoy King Kong (1933). It is a better movie than the recent versions. Gable and Colbert still make us laugh in It Happened One Night (1934). Snow White (1938) still works. (Grumpy is my guy.)

The great breakthrough in movies came in one year, 1939. There has never been a year in the history of the movies like that 1939. One man directed two movies: Gone with the Wind and The Wizard of Oz. Can you name him? Probably not. But those two movies changed entertainment forever.

In that year, John Ford directed Stagecoach, which was the breakthrough role for John Wayne, Young Mr. Lincoln, which was the breakthrough role for Henry Fonda, and Drums Along the Mohawk, a confirming role for Henry Fonda. The next year, he produced Grapes of Wrath, starring Henry Fonda. Yet there was more change in 1939 than there had been through the entire 1930's. From 1939 on, movies are pretty much the same as they are today, except they were better in 1939.

We cannot connect emotionally with the silent film era. We laugh at Charlie Chaplin's sight gags, but other than Chaplin's movies, we don't watch silent movies. Yet we can easily connect with the earliest talking movies. That single technological change made possible what we know as the movies. And yet from 1903 until 1929, people were transformed by the movies. Somehow, silent movies were able to get inside the minds of masses of people. Hollywood did not see the potential for talking pictures.

Color pictures were a marginal improvement on black and white pictures. But would you really want to watch Casablanca if it were colorized? I don't think I would. What about Stagecoach? Maybe.

As it turned out, 3-D pictures were a setback. Only with modern cartoons and science fiction movies have 3-D movies reappeared. We still don't pay extra to see a 3-D movie unless there is a lot of action involved. A 2-D movie is fine for most storylines.

Sound was the big transformation. The coming of modern loudspeakers in the 1930's pulled us into the movies in a new way. Yet Hollywood did not see it coming. It was literally under their noses, or blaring in their ears, in 1927, but they still neither saw nor heard it.

I don't think this is abnormal. I think this is normal. George Orwell was right. It takes a great deal of effort to see what is under our noses.

CONCLUSION

Keynesians today are like the dinner guests on Babylon's last night. They are the silent film producers in 1928. They are Alta Vista's owners in 2001. They are headed for the ashcan of history.

The steady decline in the cost of information, especially communications, has undermined every establishment on the face of the earth — North Korea excepted.

Here is how I view the future of Keynesianism. It is in the northern half of the map.


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Carl Icahn, David Einhorn Dump “No Brainer” Apple Shares

Having opened his position in AAPL in Q3 2013, Carl Icahn's projections, prognostications, and positioning have all lent credence (for CNBC watchers) to buying into the "no brainer" stock. However, it appears the plunge in the stock of the last few months has taken the shine of Icahn's glee as, according to his fund's latest 13F, he dumped 7 million shares (or aound 14% of his position) in Q4 2015. In addition, Greenlight's David Einhorn dumped 44% of his holding in Tim Cook's releveraging firm.

It began here in August 2013

 

And here is where it appers to be ending…

  • *ICAHN CUT APPLE STAKE BY 7M SHRS TO 45.8M SHRS

His first adjustment since Q1 2014…

 

AAPL stock is limping lower after-hours on the news…

 

But, according to Bloomberg, his cost basis for the entire position is $68.05 and so his exit here is still significantly positive.

In addition, Greenlight Capital, the hedge fund led by David Einhorn, also slashed its stake in Apple by 44% during the fourth quarter. The firm sold 4.9 million shares of Apple, leaving it with 6.3 million shares worth $661.5 million as of Dec. 31, according to a regulatory filing Tuesday.


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‘The poor are better off when we build more housing for the rich,’ reports Washington Post

HousingRightThe WaPo is today reporting a study by the California Legislative Analyst Office (LAO) that reports the apparently astonishing fact that increasing the supply of a good tends to lower its price. The study concluded, “Encouraging additional private housing construction can help the many low–income Californians who do not receive [low-income housing] assistance. Considerable evidence suggests that construction of market–rate housing reduces housing costs for low–income households and, consequently, helps to mitigate displacement in many cases.”

The Washington Post article begins:

To low-income residents and the groups that fight for them in expensive cities, new market-rate housing often feels like part of the problem. If San Francisco and Washington are becoming rapidly unaffordable to the poor, why build more apartments for the rich?

New housing, these voices fear, will only turn affordable neighborhoods into unaffordable ones, attracting yet more wealth and accelerating the displacement of the poor.

Then come along those pesky economists:

Economists typically counter with a lesson about supply and demand: Increase the sheer amount of housing, and competition for it will fall, bringing down rents along the way to the benefit of everyone.

It is understandable that skeptics raise their eyebrows at this argument. It’s theoretical, based on math models and not peoples’ lives. It seems counterintuitive — that building for people who are not poor will help the poor.

Not based on people’s lives? Counterintuitive for whom? Never mind. The WaPo article goes on to observe:

In tight markets, poor and middle­-class households are forced to compete with one another for scarce homes. So new market-rate housing eases that competition, even if the poor are not the ones living in it. Over time, new housing also filters down to the more affordable supply, because housing becomes less desirable as it ages. That means the luxury housing being built today will contribute to the middle-class supply 30 years from now; it means today’s middle-class housing was luxury housing 30 years ago.

Well, yes. In addition, the LAO report points out that low-income housing set-asides and vouchers utterly fail to fix the shortage for housing that government policies, e.g., zoning and rent control, have produced. The only way to end shortages is to permit entrepreneurs operating in markets to increase supply of the good that is being demanded.

In any case, kudos to the WaPo for teaching its readers this elementary lesson in economics.

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