Russian Leader Says Obama Suffers from ‘Mental Aberration’

In an interview with CNBC today, Russia’s Prime
Minister Dimitri Medvedev accused President Barack
Obama of suffering from a “mental aberration.”

Late last month at a United Nations General Assembly meeting
Obama slammed Russia, saying
it poses the same kind of threat to the world that ISIS and Ebola
do.

In return Medvedev today said, “I don’t want to dignify it with
a response. It’s sad, it’s like some kind of mental
aberration.”

Although Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov last month
suggested the U.S. and Russia could “reset” their relations,
Medvedev said that won’t happen anytime soon.

“No, of course not. It’s absolutely impossible. Let’s be clear:
we did not come up with these sanctions. Our international partners
did,” said Medvedev.

The U.S. and European Union allies have imposed sanctions on
Russia for its invasion of Ukraine, though the U.S. has said it
would end the sanctions if Russia ends the war. Secretary of State
John Kerry
reiterated
this at a meeting with Lavrov yesterday. Russia is
on the
verge of recession
, whether western sanctions are responsible,
or Russia’s own bloated military budget is. 

During the interview Medvedev insisted that Russia is not
responsible for the war in Ukraine or the downing of a Malaysia
Airline passenger plane over the country earlier this year, and
that he is “deeply concerned” by the neighboring nation’s
plight.

His statement isn’t surprising, since Russia has
continuously denied
any involvement in the conflict, despite a
former Russian military official
taking responsibility
 for shooting down the plane, a
Russian-backed leader
announcing
an influx of Russian troops days before they
arrived, mercenaries
claiming
to be on official orders, captured Russian soldiers
admitting
being on a mission,
satellite images
showing Russian troop and artillery movement
throughout the war, observation of
Russian military drones
flying over the border, the theft of
Ukrainian military equipment when Russian
staged a “humanitarian aid” mission
Russian
citizens’
 calling-out of
their government, and a growing list of Russian soldiers who have

mysteriously disappeared or died
in Ukraine.

Read more Reason coverage of U.S. relations with
Ukraine and Russia here

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This Time ‘Is’ Different – For The First Time In 25-Years The Wall Street Gamblers Are Home Alone

Submitted by David Stockman via Contra Corner blog,

The last time the stock market reached a fevered peak and began to wobble unexpectedly was August 2007. The proximate catalyst back then was the sudden recognition that the subprime mortgage problem was not contained at all, as Bernanke had proclaimed six months earlier. The evidence was the surprise announcement by the monster of the mortgage midway – Countrywide Financial – that it would be taking huge write-downs on its $200 billion balance sheet.

At the time, it had not quite invented the term “fortress balance sheet” per JPMorgan’s later hyperbole, but the market overwhelmingly believed that the orange man—–Angelo Mozillo—-ran a tight ship; that the proponderant share of its business was in “safe” Freddie/Fannie originations and guaranteed paper; and that any losses from the sketchier subprime mortgage business that it had recently entered would be covered by its loan loss reserves and the massive earnings on its GSE book of business. Only now do we know that Countrywide was a house of cards that has cost(so far) its reluctant suitor, Bank of America, upwards of $50 billion in write-offs, losses and settlements.

It is in the nature of bubble finance that markets do not recognize disasters lurking in plain sight. Prior to the August 2007 swoon, Countrywide still had a market cap of $15 billion. Indeed, at that point the combined market cap of Bear Stearns, Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, Lehman Brothers, AIG and GM, just to name the obvious, was upwards of one quarter trillion dollars!

Markets were most definitely not in the classic “price discovery” business. That is, they were not discovering information about the speculative rot under housing prices or the dealer lots bulging with unsold cars or freshly minted subdivisions where subprime residents were delinquent on both their mortgage and car loans or the adjacent strip malls that had no tenants and no customers.

Instead, the stock market had discovered the “goldilocks economy” – a pleasant place of subdued inflation, measured growth and perpetually rising stock and real estate prices. The most notable point was the belief that the Fed had delivered this salutary state of affairs owing to its enlightened management of the macro-economy, and that this condition could be sustained indefinitely.

Bernanke had somewhat immodestly called this the Great Moderation, and it was reflected in the stock market averages and the capitalization rates they allegedly embodied. Not incidentally, the market had risen nearly continuously for 55 months, and the “buy the dip” brigade of the dotcom era had come back from the dead. So dips got shallower and the setbacks less frequent.

That may sound like the recent past, and it was. The forward consensus of sell-side analysts was that S&P 500 earnings (ex-items) for 2008 would come in around $110 per share or at about 14X based on the July interim high of $1550 per share. Likewise, the NASDAQ had recovered from its thundering crash of 2000-2001 and had climbed by nearly 100% in the four and one-half years through early August 2007.

Needless to say, goldilocks turned out not to be all that. When the macro-economy buckled under the weight of crashing housing and real estate prices, a plunge in home and commercial real estate construction, a severe liquidation of auto and durable goods inventories and the evaporation of phony financial sector profits, the dips became a deathly plunge, and the “attractively valued” 14X market ended up something else altogether.

As it happened, S&P 500 earnings ex-items came in at about $55 per share for 2008, or half of Wall Street’s hockey-stick projections as of August 2007. And if honest accounting, as embodied in GAAP earnings reported to the SEC is considered, the outcome was only $15 per share.

Self-evidently, the stock market was no longer a discounting mechanism by the end of the second Greenspan Bubble in late 2007 when the Great Recession officially commenced. It had essentially become a casino where the hedge funds and day traders made short term bets in a rigged market. In effect, the Greenspan Put had become institutionalized by the liquidity flood that had accompanied the Fed’s slashing of interest rates from 6% to 1% during the 30 month period after the dotcom crash of 2000. There could no longer be any doubt, at least by the lights of Wall Street, that the central bank had a “put” under the market.

By now it seems indisputable that central banks “puts” are a magnificent elixir for stock market gamblers—so long as confidence is maintained and our monetary central planners have the tools and wits to short-circuit the “dips” before they become runaway crashes. In the section from the Great Deformation below, I described how the Fed reacted aggressively to thwart the correction that commenced in August 2007 when the subprime crisis began to manifest its ugly fangs.

As it turned out, the stock market rallied by another 10% before hitting a final peak in October 2007. Moreover, the Fed continued its campaign to put a floor under the market for another 11 months after the peak—even as the credit and stock market bubbles festered and the underlying macro-economy steadily deteriorated. During this interregnum, the Fed capitulated to Wall Street as symbolized by its panicked response to Jim Cramer’s famous rant described below.

But it was ultimately for naught. The market suffered a devastating 55% collapse in the 18 months after the unavoidable correction of the Greenspan Housing Bubble commenced in August 2007. Stated differently, central bank bubbles can be fueled and coddled for an extended period, but ultimately reality sets in.

 

 

So here we are once again, and it is once again claimed that this time is different. The 65 month rise of the S&P 500 bears all the hallmarks of a central bank fueled casino—- even more completely than the 2003-2007 run. Also once again, the market is said to be “attractively valued” and that next years earnings(ex-items) at $125 per share represent only a 15X PE multiple. So after the “healthy correction” of the past week or so, it is purportedly time once again to buy the dip.

Except this time is indeed different, but not in a good way. When Bernanke & Co. stalled off the August 2007 correction for nearly a year, they still had plenty of dry powder. The federal funds rate was 5.25% and the Fed’s balance sheet was only $850 billion.

But now, however, we are on the far side of the great monetary experiment known as ZIRP and QE. The money market rate is at the zero bound and has been pinned there for 69 months running—a stretch never before experienced even during the Great Depression. Likewise, the Fed’s balance sheet has grown by 5X to nearly $4.5 trillion—again a previously unimaginable eruption.

These conditions undoubtedly explain the “buy the dips” joy ride pictured above. And they also probably explain why actual LTM GAAP earning at about $102 per share on the S&P 500 are exactly where they were in the fall of 2007—-at the tippy top of the historic range at 19X. But no one cared then— nor apparently do they now.

But what is profoundly different this time is that the Fed is out of dry powder. Its can’t slash the discount rate as Bernanke did in August 2007 or continuously reduce it federal funds target on a trip from 6% all the way down to zero. Nor can it resort to massive balance sheet expansion. That card has been played and a replay would only spook the market even more.

So this time is different.  The gamblers are scampering around the casino fixing to buy the dip as soon as white smoke wafts from the Eccles Building.  But none is coming. For the first time in 25- years, the Wall Street gamblers are home alone.

CHAPTER 23

THE RANT THAT SHOOK THE ECCLES BUILDING

How the Fed Got Cramer’d

 

After climbing steadily for four and a half years, the stock market weakened during August 2007 under the growing weight of the housing and mortgage debacle. Yet in response to what was an exceedingly mild initial sell-off, the Fed folded faster than a lawn chair in a desperate attempt to prop up the stock averages. The “Bernanke Put” was thus born with a bang.

 

The frenetic rate cutting cycle which ensued in the fall of 2007 was a vir- tual reenactment of the Fed’s easing panics of 2001, 1998, and 1987. As in those episodes, the stock market had again become drastically overvalued relative to the economic and profit fundamentals. But rather than permit a long overdue market correction, the monetary central planners began once more to use all the firepower at their disposal to block it.

 

The degree to which the Bernanke Fed had been taken hostage by Wall Street was evident in its response to Jim Cramer’s famous rant on CNBC on August 3, 2007, when he denounced the Fed as a den of fools: “They are nuts. They know nothing . . . the Fed is asleep. . . . My people have been in the game for 25 years . . . these firms are going out of business . . . open the darn [discount] window.”

 

In going postal, Cramer was not simply performing as a CNBC commentator, but functioning as the public avatar for legions of petulant day traders who had taken control of the stock market during the long years Greenspan coddled Wall Street. What the Fed utterly failed to realize was that these now-dominant Cramerites had nothing to do with free markets or price discovery among traded equities.

 

AUGUST 2007: WHEN THE FED CAPITULATED TO FINANCIAL HOODLUMS

The idea of price discovery in the stock market was now an ideological illusion. The market had been taken over by white-collar financial hoodlums who needed a trading fix every day. Through Cramer’s megaphone, these punters and speculators were asserting an entitlement to any and all gov- ernment policy actions which might be needed to keep the casino running at full tilt.

 

If that had not been clear before August 2007, the truth emerged on live TV. The nation’s central bank was in thrall to a hissy fit by day traders. In a post the next day, the astute fund manager Barry Ritholtz summarized the new reality perfectly: “I have two words for Jim: Moral Hazard. Contrary to everything we learned under Easy Alan Greenspan, it is not the Fed’s role to backstop speculators and guarantee a one way market.”

 

Yet that is exactly what it did. Within days of the rant which shook the Eccles Building, the Fed slashed its discount rate, abruptly ending its tepid campaign to normalize the money markets. By early November the funds rate had been reduced by 75 basis points, and by the end of January it was down another 150 basis points. As of early May 2008 a timorous central bank had redelivered the money market to the Wall Street Cramerites. Although the US economy was saturated with speculative excess, the Fed was once again shoveling out 2 percent money to put a floor under the stock market.

 

This stock-propping campaign was not only futile, but also an exercise in monetary cowardice; it only intensified Wall Street’s petulant bailout de- mands when the real crisis hit a few months later. Indeed, on the day of Cramer’s rant in early August 2007, the S&P 500 closed at 1,433. The broad market index thus stood only 7 percent below the all-time record high of 1,553, which had been reached just ten days earlier in late July.

 

Ten days of modest slippage from the tippy-top of the charts was hardly evidence of Wall Street distress. Even after it drifted slightly lower during the next two weeks, closing at 1,406 on August 15, the stock market was still comfortably above the trading levels which prevailed as recently as January 2007.

 

Still, the Fed threw in the towel the next day with a dramatic 50 basis point cut in the discount rate. Although no demonstration was really needed, the nation’s central bank had now confirmed, and abjectly so, that it was ready and willing to be bullied by Cramerite day traders and hedge fund speculators. The latter had suffered a “disappointing” four weeks at the casino; they wanted their juice and wanted it now.

 

Needless to say, the stock market cheered the Fed’s capitulation, with the Dow rising by 300 points at the open on August 17. The chief economist for Standard & Poor’s harbored no doubt that the Fed’s action was a deci- sive signal to Wall Street to resume the party: “It’s not just a symbolic ac- tion. The Fed is telling banks that the discount window is open. Take what you need.”

 

The banks did exactly that and so the party resumed for another few months. By the second week of October the market was up 10 percent, enabling the S&P 500 to reach its historic peak of 1,565, a level which has not been approached since then.

 

Pouring on the monetary juice and signaling to speculators that it once again had their backs, the Fed thus wasted its resources and authority for a silly and fleeting prize: it was able to pin the stock market index to the top rung of its historic charts for the grand duration of about six weeks in the fall of 2007. There was no more to it, and no possible excuse for its panic rate cutting.

 

HOW THE FED GOT CRAMER’D

The Fed’s abject surrender to the Cramerite tantrums in the fall of 2007 was rooted in ten years of Wall Street coddling. Mesmerized by its new “wealth effects” doctrine, the Fed viewed the stock market like the famous Las Vegas ad: it didn’t want to know what went on there, and was therefore oblivious to the deeply rooted deformations which had become institu- tionalized in the financial markets. The sections below are but a selective history of how the nation’s central bank finally reached the ignominy of being Cramer’d by financial TV’s number one clown.

 

The monetary central planners only cared that the broad stock averages kept rising so that the people, feeling wealthier, would borrow and spend more. It falsely assumed that what was going on inside the basket of 8,000 publicly traded stocks was just the comings and goings of the free market— and that this was a matter of tertiary concern, if any at all, to a mighty cen- tral bank in the business of managing prosperity and guiding the daily to-and-fro of a $14 trillion economy.

 

But what was actually going on in the interior of the stock market was nightmarish. All of the checks and balances which ordinarily discipline the free market in money instruments and capital securities were being evis- cerated by the Fed’s actions; that is, the Greenspan Put, the severe repres- sion of interest rates, and the recurrent dousing of the primary dealers with large dollops of fresh cash owing to its huge government bond purchases.

 

This kind of central bank action has pernicious consequences, however. By pegging money market rates, it fosters carry trades that are a significant contributor to unbalanced markets. Carry trades create an artificially en- larged bid for risk assets. So prices trend asymmetrically upward.

 

The Greenspan Put also compounded the one-way bias. For hedge fund speculators, it amounted to ultra-cheap insurance against downside risk in the broad market. This, too, attracted money flows and an inordinate rise in speculative long positions.

 

The Fed’s constant telegraphing of intentions regarding its administered money market rates also exacerbated the stock market imbalance. By peg- ging the federal funds rate, it eliminated the risk of surprise on the front end of the yield curve. Consequently, massive amounts of new credit were created in the wholesale money markets as traders hypothecated and re- hypothecated existing securities; that is, pledged the same collateral for multiple loans.

 

The Fed’s peg on short-term rates thus fostered robust expansion of the shadow banking system, which as indicated previously, had exploded from $2 trillion to $21 trillion during Greenspan’s years at the helm. This vast multiplication of non-bank credit further fueled the “bid” for stocks and other risk assets.

 

Fear of capital loss, fear of surprise, fear of insufficient liquidity—these are the natural “shorts” on the free market. The paternalistic Dr. Green- span, trying to help the cause of prosperity, thus took away the market’s natural short. In so doing, he brought central banking full circle. William McChesney Martin said the opposite; that is, he counseled taking away the punch bowl, thereby adding to the short. Now the punch bowl was over- flowing and the short was gone.

 

Speculators were emboldened to bid, leverage their bid, and then to bid again for assets in what were increasingly one-way markets. As time passed, more and more speculations and manipulations emerged to capi- talize on these imbalances.

 

“Growth stocks” were always a favored venue because they could be bid- up on short-term company news, quarterly performance, and rumors of performance (i.e., “channel checks”). During these ramp jobs, which ordinarily spanned only weeks, months, or quarters, traders could be highly confident that the Fed had interest rates pegged and the broad market propped.

 

Financial engineering plays such as M&A and buybacks came to be es- pecially favored venues because these trades tended to be event triggered. Upon rumors and announcements, these trades could generate rapid replication and money flows. Again, speculators were confident that the Fed had their back, while leveraged punters were pleased that it had seconded to them its wallet in the form of cheap wholesale funding.

 

At length, the stock market was transformed into a place to gamble and chase, not an institution in which to save and invest. Since this gambling hall had been fostered by the central bank rather than the free market, it was not on the level. That means that most of the time most of the players won and, as shown below, the big hedge funds which traded on Wall Street’s inside track with its inside information won especially big and un- usually often.

 

Needless to say, frequent wins and hefty windfalls created expectations for more and more, and still more winning hands. As the Greenspan bub- bles steadily inflated—both in 1997–2000 and 2003–2007—these expecta- tions morphed into virtual Wall Street demands that the Fed keep the party going. Wall Street demands for a permanent party, at length, congealed into the presumption of an entitlement to an ever rising market, or at least one the Fed would never let falter or slump.

 

Finally, this entitlement-minded stock market became a blooming, buzzing madhouse of petulance, impatience, and greed. Cramer embodied it and spoke for it. By the time of his rant, the Fed had become captive of the monster it had created. Now, fearing to say no, it became indentured to juicing the beast. After August 17, 2007, there was no longer even the pretense of reasoning or deliberation about policy options in the Eccles Building. The only options were the ones that had gotten it there: print, peg, and prop.

 

One of the great ironies of the Greenspan bubbles was that the free market convictions of the maestro enabled the Fed to drift steadily and irreversibly into its eventual submission to the Cramerite intimidation. It did so by turning a blind eye to lunatic speculations in the stock market, dismissing them, apparently, as the exuberances of capitalist boys and girls playing too hard. By the final years of the first Greenspan bubble, however, there were plenty of warning signals that there was more than exuberance going on. Hit-and-run momentum trading and vast money flows into the stocks of serial M&A operations were signs that normal market disciplines were not working. Indeed, the M&A mania was a powerful indictment of the Fed’s prosperity management model.

 

These hyperactive deal companies with booming share prices were be- ing afflicted ever more frequently with sudden stock price implosions that couldn’t have been merely random failures on the free market. Yet, as in the case of the subprime mania, the central planners undoubtedly read the headlines about these recurring corporate blowups and never bothered to connect the dots.




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What’s Scarier Than Ebola? Fear-Induced ‘Solutions.’

Protective gearMake no mistake about it: Ebola
is a nasty bug. With its cinematically
awful symptoms
in the late stages of some cases, it’s seemingly
tailor-made to scare the shit out of people. That’s exactly the
problem. As legitimate a medical danger as Ebola poses, diseases
tend to breed fear-induced reactions that are less likely to
improve public safety than to pose threats to people’s liberty.

The classic example is the Spanish Flu, which raced around the
globe at the close of World War I. The bug gained its name not from
its source, but because Spain wasn’t a belligerent, and maintained
a free press
unburdened by wartime censorship. Spanish
newspapers reported on the spreading pandemic, while authorities in
other countries were afraid to permit such coverage. Spain was
rewarded by lending its name to an unpleasant chapter in medical
history.

But restrictions went well beyond censorship. In Phoenix,
Arizona,
police shot dogs
and arrested people who ventured outside
without wearing gauze masks. Both measures were ineffective (dogs
didn’t carry the disease and viruses pass right through gauze),
rendering the results unjust for the unmasked and tragic for the
city’s canine population.

Around the world, Spanish Flu killed somewhere between 20 and
40 million people
. Many of the dead were doctors and nurses,
while others decided the risk wasn’t worth what help they could
render. Faced with a shortage, officials weren’t afraid to
conscript medical personnel into service. In
Buffalo, New York
, even former nurses who had retired from the
profession were ordered to report for duty—by what authority is
anybody’s guess.

While it’s still spreading, Ebola isn’t the Spanish Flu. It’s
killed over
4,000 people
so far (that we know of), and will kill more
before it’s done. But those deaths have mostly been in impoverished
countries without modern medical care or resources. Knowledge of
how disease works has advanced since 1918, and so has our ability
(despite major missteps in Dallas and Spain) to care for people
afflicted with contagious diseases. The U.S. and other developed
countries will probably see more cases, but nothing that’s likely
to rival the thousands
of people who die in this country
from regular old influenza
every year.

But if medical science and practices have changed since 1918,
the human brain has not. Show us pictures of somebody bleeding from
the eyes and
drip out stories about newly infected patients
, and the urge to
do the equivalent of shooting every dog in Phoenix is hard to
resist.


Travel bans
are among the lousy proposals that have already
surfaced—limits on getting from Point A to Point B not just for
tourists and business people, but for private aid workers who might
actually limit the impact and spread of disease.

Some border warriors fret that illegals will stagger across the
southwestern desert with a a lethal dose of Ebola virus in their
baggage, and so are putting a
fresh gloss on their usual immigration-control proposals
.

Meanwhile, politicians on the other side of the aisle see Ebola
as the logical end result of
failing to placate the bureacracy gods with sufficient sacrifices
of tax dollars
.

To be honest, it could all be a lot worse. In the frenzy of
panic over potential bioterrorism post-9/11, many states adopted
part or all of the Model State
Emergency Health Powers Act
, written by Lawrence O. Gostin, a
professor of law and public health at universities including
Georgetown and Johns Hopkins. Gostin argued
that “Although security and liberty sometimes are harmonious, more
often than not they collide.” He added, “The central inquiry, then,
is not whether government should have the power to act…Rather,
the proper inquiry is under what circumstances power can be
exercised.”

The resulting legislation, the American Civil Liberties Union

noted at the time
, “doesn’t adequately protect citizens against
the misuse of the tremendous powers that it would grant in an
emergency.”

Nobody has yet proposed dusting off that fear-fueled
legislation. But with the whiff of cold sweat in the air, it’s all
the more reason to fear panic more than a virus.

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73 Percent of Americans Favor Restoring Voting Rights for Nonviolent Drug Offenders

According to the latest
Reason-Rupe poll
, 73 percent of Americans favor restoring
voting rights to nonviolent drug offenders who have served their
sentences, with strong majorities among Democrats, Independents,
and Republicans.

Eighty-two percent of Democrats, 71 percent of Independents, and
66 percent of Republicans all favor allowing nonviolent drug
offenders who have served their sentences to vote.

There were discrepancies between those of different
racial/ethnic backgrounds, however. An overwhelming percentage of
African-Americans—91 percent—are in favor. However, 72 percent of
whites, and only 66 percent of Hispanics are in favor. Still, there
are clear majorities among all three groups polled.

As
things currently stand
, only two states—Maine and Vermont—have
no restrictions on voting for convicted felons. In these states,
felons may even vote absentee from jail or prison. However, the
majority of states pose some restrictions on voting for those who
have been convicted of a felony. In eight states, voting
restrictions are imposed on offenders incarcerated for a
misdemeanor offense.

Thirteen states and Washington D.C. restore voting rights for
all convicted felons after they are released from prison or jail.
In four states, voting rights are restored for convicted felons
after they complete their term of incarceration and parole, and 20
states allow voting rights to be restored after convicted felons
complete their term of incarceration, parole and/or probation.

Of the remaining states, various restrictions are imposed on
those who have been convicted of felony offenses. Some states, like
Virginia, allow only those who were convicted of a nonviolent
felony to have their voting rights restored after completing their
prison sentence, parole and/or probation, and have paid all of
their court costs. Some states allow felons convicted of a
nonviolent offense to have their voting rights restored only after
receiving

Florida, with the toughest voting restrictions for convicted
felons, prohibits anyone convicted of any felony offense—even
nonviolent offenders—from ever voting. As a result, it has the
largest number of disenfranchised citizens out of any state in the
country. As of 2012,
10.4 percent
of the entire state population was prohibited from
voting due to a felony conviction.

According to
data provided by the Sentencing Project
, roughly 5.85 million
American citizens were disenfranchised through the criminal justice
system in 2012. At that time, roughly
7 percent of all African-Americans
had lost their right to vote
this way.

Public opinion seems to side with Senator Rand Paul, who
recently
filed legislation
that would allow individuals convicted of a
nonviolent criminal offense to vote in federal elections after they
have completed their terms of incarceration and parole/probation.
That legislation, however, only has a two percent
chance of being enacted
according to govtrack.us.

There’s no real public safety threat in allowing those who have
completed their sentences—even those convicted of violent
crimes—from expressing themselves at the ballot box. Still, it’s a
welcome sign that public opinion overwhelmingly favors allowing at
least nonviolent drug offenders to vote after they’ve served their
sentences.

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ISIS War Gets a Lame Name, Dems Anticipate Election Trouncing, Ebola Patient May Have Sat Next to You on a Plane: P.M. Links

Follow us on Facebook and Twitter,
and don’t forget to
 sign
up
 for Reason’s daily updates for more
content.

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Robby Soave: A Libertarian Answer to the Campus Rape Crisis

NeighborsLong
have feminists warned that an epidemic of rape was spreading across
American college campuses. Their concerns are eminently
questionable but have nevertheless drawn the backing of
governments, including the Obama administration and the state
legislature of California. The latter has responded by passing SB
967, the “Yes Means Yes” bill, which will force
university administrators
 to police intimate moments
between students.

By tilting the burden of proof against the accused, the law will
likely produce more accusations of rape, more rape convictions
under due-process-free judiciary proceedings, and ultimately, more
lawsuits. But it’s doubtful that the law will actually deter
rape.

As it turns out, there is something state and national
governments could do to combat the campus sexual assault crisis,
Reason’s Robby Soave notes: lower the federally-mandated drinking
age of 21.

View this article.

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Netflix Obliterated After Guiding To Half Expected Q4 EPS, Streaming Adds Hit Brick Wall: Stock Down $100

Curious why Netflix is being obliterated after hours, plummeting to 5 month lows, down some $100, or 24% after hours after reporting earnings? The answer is highlighted in the Q3 investor letter, and specifically the red highlighted number, which is NFLX’ guidance for Q4 EPS:

The problem is that the $0.44 guidance is about half of the $0.84 expected.

And that’s not all: the 4.00 million net additions is about 700k below the expected, with domestic and international streaming adds of 1.85 million and 2.15 million, respectively, are below the 2.15 million and 2.38 million expected. In other words, the growth is over, and now the time has come to focus on actual earnings and cash flow… which sadly don’t exist.

From the letter:

We added about a million new members in the US, ending Q3 with 37.22 million members, with lower net additions than our forecast and versus the prior year. Domestic streaming revenue of $877 million, in-line with forecast, grew 25% y/y and faster than membership due to the expansion of ASP from the price changes implemented in Q2.

 

Separate from forecast variability, year on year net additions in the US were down (1.3 million in Q3 2013 to 1 million in Q3 2014). As best we can tell, the primary cause is the slightly higher prices we now have compared to a year ago. Slightly higher prices result in slightly less growth, other things being equal, and this is manifested more clearly in higher adoption markets such as the US.

 

We are forecasting Q4 US contribution margin to increase almost 500 basis points on a y/y basis, but to decrease slightly sequentially, as it did last year from Q3 to Q4, due to significant sequential increases in content and marketing expense.

 

In September, we had a very successful launch in France, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Belgium and Luxembourg, adding about 66 million1 broadband households to our addressable market. In recent days, our app has gone live on set-top boxes from SFR in France and Deutsche Telekom in Germany, and we expect  deployments this quarter from Orange and Bouygues in France, and Belgacom in Belgium. We’ve had more success, more quickly, with MVPD set-top boxes in these new markets than anywhere else in the world.

 

As expected, we have a full quarter of new market expenses weighing on our international contribution margins in Q4, increasing contribution loss from Q3 to Q4. Our international markets launched prior to this year (Canada 4 years ago through Netherlands 1 year ago) are now collectively profitable on a contribution basis and will continue to help us fund new markets. Moreover, contribution margin from our first expansion market, Canada, now approximates the US.

 

Starting in January, we have to pay higher VAT in most of Europe due to changes in European law (country of origin to country of destination). We will absorb these increases rather than pass them on to our members. This absorption will be reflected in slightly lower international contribution margin/profit starting in Q1 than we would otherwise have.

And then there is the whole free cash flow thing:

Finally, it wasn’t just the guidance: Q3 domestic streaming adds was only 0.98 million, about 40% below the 1.37 million expected.

End result: the stock is in absolute freefall, down 24%

 

Expect epic liquidations from some of the largest NFLX holders tomorrow:

Don’t worry, though: the future for NFLX is rosy, after all it’s not like HBO is launching a standalone internet only service to compete directly with NFLX in a few months…




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Liquidation-nado: Stocks Crash-And-Thrash As Bonds Pump-And-Dump

The headlines… (from the most extreme levels)

  • VIX over 31 (highest since Dec 2011)
  • Dow Industrials -4% Year-to-date (nears correction, -8.6% from highs)
  • Nasdaq -10.5% from highs (correction, -1% Year-to-date)
  • Dow Transports -11.6% from highs (correction)
  • Russell 2000 -14.4% from highs (correction, -9.6% Year-to-date)
  • S&P -1.5% Year-to-date (nears correction, -9.8% from highs)
  • S&P 500 futures volume highest in 3 years
  • High-Yield Credit +20bps to 417bps (13 month wides)
  • Treasury yields down 16-18bps (multi-year low yields and multi-year high sized moves)
  • Gold at one-month high
  • WTI Crude hits $80.01 (lowest since June 2012)

And then – thanks to massive HFT order/cancels, squeeze of 'shorts' as long-short funds liquidated, and a well-placed random headline proclaiming Yellen confident – we ripped back green as if none of it ever mattered… (ignoring WMT guiding notably lower and Putin's nuclear sabre rattling)

BUT… thanks to missed earnings and guidance, all the major indices dropped 1% after hours…

 

*  *  *

Today, summarized in pictures

*  *  *

CNN's Fear & Greed index is buried at 0…desparate to go negative

*  *  *

Year-to-date, bonds remain the massive winners +22%, Gold +3%, and S&P -1.2%…

 

Bond yields utterly collapsed today… then screamed back higher…

 

For a sense of just how massive today's move was in bonds…

 

10Y inflation breakevens collapsed to fresh 3-year lows…

 

 

But is the stock market that opened most eyes today….

Year-to-Date, it's starting to get ugly…

 

On the week, intraday volatility is incredible…

 

And today…

 

Even with the afternoon meltup, Financials lagged…

 

VIX spiked above 31… before bouncing back

 

Stocks were driven by AUDJPY most of the day (recovering to VWAP thanks to the stability of USDJPY around the 106 the figure level)

 

JPY strength characterized the day and week but EUR strength also weighhed on the USD…

 

Gold was higher on the day – at one-month highs, Silver recovered early losses, copper tumbled and Oil fell further but not catastrophically…

 

Algos were extremely active with some major manipulation at the lows in the Russell.. As Nanex notes, intense order place/canceling made the lows in the Russell futures

 

Wondering what drove the recovery in the afternoon? It appears hedge funds are force-liquidating everything to free up margin – so "most shorted" got squeezed again.

 

Charts: Bloomberg and @Not_Jim_Cramer and @Nanexllc

Bonus Chart: Some context on the 'bounce' in Shale stocks…

 




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1wJkJ9H Tyler Durden

Why We Should Treat Our Children as We Wish to be Treated

Screen Shot 2014-10-15 at 2.07.06 PMDon’t just take things, that’s what the criminals and the government do…

That’s something I told my son yesterday when he ripped a book right out of my daughter’s hands. Respecting others and their property, and using conversation to express our wants and desires, is how I am raising my children. Essentially teaching them to grow up to become the opposite of an oppressive state.

Early on as a father, I regularly used spankings to discipline my children, even though it never logically made sense to me. My oldest daughter or son would hit each other, only to have me come in as the authority and spank them, while at the same time telling them to stop hitting each other.

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