It Begins: HazMat-Wearing Passenger Spotted At Airport

Last week we hinted at what was to come as Ebola fears spread across America. Today, we get confirmation. As The Daily Caller reports, one passenger at Dulles International Airport outside Washington, D.C. is apparently not taking any chances. A female passenger dressed in a hazmat suit – complete with a full body gown, mask and gloves – was spotted Wednesday waiting for a flight at the airport.

 

Source: The Daily Caller

We particularly liked the JCPenney bag – maybe that’s a new business line for the bankrupt retailer…

*  *  *

On a side note, try Halloween stores if you need a Haz-Mat suit in a hurry…




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Toxic Mix Blows up: Oil Price Collapse & Junk Bond Insanity

Wolf Richter   www.wolfstreet.com   http://ift.tt/Wz5XCn

It’s now called a “collapse”: The US benchmark light sweet crude plunged 4.6% to settle at $81.84 a barrel on Tuesday, the lowest since June 2012. In London, Brent made a similar journey to $85.04, its lowest level since November 2010. Explanations abound why this is suddenly happening, after years of deceptive calm.

Is it some harebrained plot to punish Russia by destroying its economy? Signs of success are everywhere. The ruble is in free fall despite the central bank’s efforts to prop it up. Yield on Russia’s 10-year note is nearly 10%. The government’s budget, heavily dependent on oil revenues, is in trouble. And every unit of foreign currency that isn’t nailed down is fleeing the country.

Or is it a plot by Saudi Arabia to squash the US shale oil boom? In November last year, the Saudi Gazette published an editorial on the “successful, wise, and balanced OPEC strategy” that led to “unprecedented” stability of oil prices for the past few years of around $106 a barrel. But couched in words such as “skeptics are demanding,” it uttered the threat to raise OPEC production until the price would drop “below $70 a barrel” to “remove the shale oil from the world oil production map….”

Or is it the combination of surging production in the US and sagging demand around the world, particularly in China and Europe?

Demand for oil would inch up this year at the slowest rate since the terrible year of 2009, the IEA predicted. OPEC might not be willing or able to lower production, it said. Why? Because of the US shale boom. And so, “Further oil price drops would likely be needed for supply to take a hit – or for demand growth to get a lift.”

Whatever the reasons for the market chaos, we already know what it has accomplished in the US: Investors who were long when they sleepwalked into this new era that started in late June have had their heads handed to them. WTI gave up 21% in less than four months. Over the same period, the SPDR Oil & Gas Equipment & Services Fund (XES), a basket of the largest oil- and gas-related stocks, plummeted 33%. Shares of smaller oil and gas companies have gotten demolished.

Reason for this mayhem: the toxic mix of high debt and plunging oil price.

The oil and gas sector is capital intensive. Drillers have borrowed phenomenal amounts of money, which was nearly free and grew on trees, to acquire leases and drill wells and install processing equipment and infrastructure. Even as debt was piling up, the terrific decline rates of fracked wells forced drillers to drill new wells just to keep up with dropping production from old wells, and drill even more wells to show some kind of growth. One heck of a treadmill. Funded in part by junk bonds [read…  Where Money Goes to Die: How Fracking Blows Up Balance Sheets of Oil and Gas Companies].

Junk bond issuance has been soaring as the Fed repressed interest rates and caused yield hungry investors to close their eyes and take on risks, any risks, just to get a teeny-weeny bit of extra yield. Demand for junk debt soared and pushed down yields further. And even within this rip-roaring market for junk bonds, according to Bloomberg, the proportion issued by oil and gas companies jumped from 9.7% at the end of 2007 to 15% now, an all-time record.

While the overall high-yield market is down 2.3% since the end of August, oil and gas junk debt has dropped 4.6%. But it hides the bloodletting beneath the surface.

Samson Investment, an oil and gas explorer headquartered in Tulsa, OK, owned by private equity firm KKR, extracted $2.25 billion of new money from gullible investors in July. In early August, these junk bonds still traded at 103.5 cents on the dollar. Then reality sank in, and that formerly low-risk paper plunged to 77.5 cents on the dollar.

Not just in fracking la-la land. Paragon Offshore, an offshore driller, completed its spinoff from Noble in early August. Its stock started trading at $17.50 a share and immediately plunged and is now down a cool 68% in the first 10 weeks as an independently traded company. In July, it also sold $580 million in 10-year junk bonds to your conservative-sounding bond fund at 100 cents on the dollar. Now they trade for 77.3 cents on the dollar.

Hercules Offshore, a Houston-based drilling company with the appropriate ticker HERO, saw its shares plunge 81% since July last year to $1.47 on Tuesday. In March, it had the temerity to sell – or rather investors had the Fed-induced idiocy to buy – for 100 cents on the dollar $300 million in junk bonds that now trade at 66 cents.

This is what happens at the tail end of a credit bubble. Investors still lust for high-risk debt because it offers a little more yield in the era of ZIRP, but that yield did not compensate investors for the risks they were taking on. Companies and Wall Street did what the Fed had wanted them to do: issue junk and push it into retirement portfolios where it can quietly decompose. And bamboozled investors – thinking that the Fed was the greatest thing since sliced bread – took this debt with a desperate grin.

Now that the bottom is falling out, it is getting more expensive for these companies to borrow. Newly awakened investors are demanding to be compensated at least a little for the risk, and that risk has now been exacerbated by the collapse of the price of oil. That’s the toxic mix.

If the money stops growing on trees, the jig is up for many of these over-indebted companies, and the American fracking boom may well do what other oil booms have done before, and what OPEC would like it to do: grind to a halt. And investors who’ve done what the Fed had wanted them to do – take on risks with their eyes closed – would lose their oil-stained shirts.

The broader market has, let’s say, some issues: “Too many poorly understood structural changes have created unstable markets. Now comes the dismount.” Read… Why the Market Swoon May Become “Disorderly on a scale not seen since the crash of 1987




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Second Ebola-Infected Nurse Identified, Was Symptomatic With 99.5 Degree Fever While Flying

Just about an hour ago, the CDC’s Tom Frieden held a press conference in which he tried to diffuse the CDC’s incompetence for a allowing healthcare workers who cared for the now deceased “Index Patient” Thomas Eric Duncan, to board a plane. A worker, who as was reported earlier today, was confirmed sick with the deadly virus. Still, in order to defend his agency from accusations of gross incompetence, of which it clearly is guilty, Frieden said that…

  • NEW PATIENT HADN’T BEEN BLEEDING OR VOMITING BEFORE FLIGHT

… Although, he promptly pushed the ball of blame back in her court adding that:

  • NEW PATIENT KNOWINGLY EXPOSED TO EBOLA,SHOULDNT HAVE FLOWN

But what is worse, is that as the WaPo reports the nurse had a fever of 99.5 degrees Fahrenheit before boarding a passenger jet on Monday, a day before she reported symptoms of the virus and was tested, according to public health officials. “Even though there appeared to be little risk for the other people on that flight, she should not have traveled that way, Thomas Frieden, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said during a news conference Wednesday.”

“She should not have flown on a commercial airline,” Frieden said.

The reason he said that is that since she was clearly symptomatic, she was also contagious. Which explains why the CDC is scrambling to uncover all those passengers who may have flowen with her. 

Furthermore, the nurse has now been identified: “The health-care worker was not identified by public health officials, but family members told Reuters and the Dallas Morning News that her name is Amber Vinson, a nurse at Texas Health Presbyterian Hospital. She was part of a team that had cared for Thomas Eric Duncan, a Liberian man who flew to Texas and was diagnosed with Ebola last month, during his hospitalization in Dallas. Duncan died last week. Nina Pham, a nurse who also cared for Duncan, was diagnosed with Ebola on Sunday.”

And where it gets simply ridiculous is that not only did the nurse fly once, she flied a second time, this time from Cleveland to Texas on Monday.

Vinson, who flew from Dallas to Cleveland on Friday, flew back to Texas on Monday, a day after Pham was diagnosed. She reported a fever on Tuesday and was isolated and tested for Ebola.

 

Still, the fact that she boarded a commercial flight raises the question of how much the other 50 health-care workers who entered Duncan’s room could have traveled or moved around in recent days. The CDC recommends controlled movement on private flights or vehicles for people who may have been exposed to Ebola, Frieden said.

Meanwhile, the panic to contain the possible spread of the airborne virus is full blown: as WFAA reports, “Frontier Airlines says the plane stayed at DFW International Airport overnight, and has since been cleaned. It traveled to Cleveland on Tuesday and was cleaned again. The airline says Vinson traveled to Ohio from Dallas-Fort Worth on Flight 1142 on Oct. 10.

“The safety and security of our customers and employees is our primary concern. Frontier will continue to work closely with CDC and other governmental agencies to ensure proper protocols and procedures are being followed,” the airline said in a press release.

Some other details:

Wednesday morning, Mayor Mike Rawlings confirmed that Vinson lives alone without pets at The Green in the Village Apartments, in the 6000 block of Village Bend near Skillman, just north of Lovers Lane.

 

 

Police and Dallas Fire-Rescue teams were at the complex early Wednesday, cleaning common areas and knocking on doors, communicating with neighbors. Reverse 911 calls were sent out at 6:15 a.m. to people who live in the area.

 

“We rallied together and we decided that we needed to move quickly like we did Sunday morning,” Mayor Rawlings said.

 

He added that the state has hired a company to come in Wednesday afternoon and clean Vinson’s apartment and car.

 

Like Pham, Vinson had also been involved in caring for Thomas Eric Duncan, the Liberian man who died of Ebola one week ago at Presbyterian. More than 70 hospital employees had been involved in that effort and are still being monitored.

So despite the epic Snafu that Tom Frieden has managed to achieve, and we fully expect that airplane travel will see a substantial decline until the Ebola pandemic is indeed contained, we will give him props for telling one piece of the truth this weekend, when he said that “more Ebola cases are likely going to emerge.” At least this time, he was telling the truth.




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What Options Are Left For Central Banks?

Submitted by Charles Hugh-Smith of OfTwoMinds blog,

Central banks have reached a fork in the road.

Never before have quasi-omnipotent financial gods had so few powers. A lot is being written about central bank policies now as the Federal Reserve ends its primary quantitative easing (QE) program and the limitations of central bank easing become increasingly apparent in Europe and Japan.

Let's start by listing the tools central banks have on hand. Strip away the fancy footwork and econospeak mumbo-jumbo, and what's left is:

1. Offer cheap credit to the banking sector, the idea being that the banks will use the free money to make loans to households and businesses. These new loans would inject the central banks' new money into the real economy.

2. Buy bonds to push interest rates down and buy mortgages to support the housing market.

3. Provide unlimited liquidity so banks and key financial institutions facing a liquidity crunch have a lender of last resort.

The basic idea here is that central banks provide a buffer against financial crises. When short-term loans come due and the borrower has run out of cash, rather than slip into insolvency they can borrow short-term money from the central bank.

The ability to push down interest rates is helpful as a buffer when credit-tightening and fear of defaults push interest rates up enough to choke off normal lending.

What happened over the past six years is that central banks have moved from providing short-term buffers to being the saviors of the government, economy and asset markets. This is an extraordinary transformation, and it's the core reason why central bank policies are now failing to move the needle: they were designed to serve as short-term buffers during crisis and the resulting recession, not permanent props under government borrowing, the financial sector and the stock, bond and real estate markets.

Every conventional analyst expected the global economy to recover quickly after the central banks provided the usual buffer. But they were wrong; the structural problems stemming from financialization–excessive debt, leverage, risk and opacity–coupled with near-zero oversight and perverse incentives have wreaked havoc on economies around the world.

On Monday, I suggested central banks would resort to buying stocks to prop up the stock market: Will the Fed Let the Stock Market Crash Before an Election? Reports suggest central banks and states are already buyers of equities, either via proxies or via public pension funds that have increased their ownership of equities.

Central banks have reached a fork in the road. The policies have the past six years– jawboning, i.e. talking up the power of the central banks, buying bonds and shoving new money into the financial sector–have reached diminishing returns. The public's once unbounded faith in the efficacy and power of these policies is waning, and now central banks face open skepticism.

One path is to admit the limits of central bank powers. This is tough to do when you've been glorified for so long, but the honest confession of the limits of making short-term buffers into permanent policies would force governments to deal with the issues that have been avoided for the entire six years of central bank free money.

The second path is to start buying assets en masse. With jawboning and easing both discredited, there really is nothing else the central banks can do to support asset prices and keep the thin veneer of a healthy economy from peeling off.

The third choice–continue jawboning and launching yet another failed easing program–will only further discredit central banks and their policies.




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Meet the Pied-à-Terre Levy – The Proposed Tax that Could Crush High End NYC Real Estate

Screen Shot 2014-10-15 at 11.29.22 AMIn July, I published a post titled, Introducing Ghost Skyscrapers – NYC Real Estate Goes Full Retard, in which I highlighted many of the current absurdities characteristic of Manhattan real estate. Of all the points made, the most striking statistic from the piece is the fact that:

“The Census Bureau estimates that 30 percent of all apartments in the quadrant from 49th to 70th Streets between Fifth and Park are vacant at least ten months a year.”

There is absolutely nothing healthy about this reality. As someone who grew up less than a mile from that quadrant, I can tell you this is very negative for NYC’s long-term vibrancy. Sure, while the boom is happening and global oligarchs are parking some of their savings in newly built glass towers, you’ll get jobs, construction and sales; but when the boom stops, and it always does, all you’ll be left will are empty multi-million dollar boxes that no one can afford. When such a high percentage of properties are built solely to serve as bank accounts, and not a space to live in, you’ve got a severe case of malinvestment on your hands.

continue reading

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HBO Finally Offering Online Streaming Without a Cable Package

Rejoice, all you television-philes. That which we’ve so long
hoped for will soon come to pass: HBO announced today that starting
next year, its shows will be available via an online streaming
service—no cable subscription necessary.


Entertainment Weekly
reports:

Cord-cutting HBO fans have increasingly clamored for the service
to be made available without a traditional cable subscription. The
network’s most popular program in its history, Game of
Thrones
, has been ranked the most pirated TV show in the
world, and one common refrain among illegal downloaders is that
there is no way to legally obtain the series in a timely manner
without opting into an expensive cable TV package.

HBO launched a streaming app called HBO Go in 2010 to view its
current programs, but it’s only available to subscribers of its
traditional cable service. The network took another step into the
streaming world earlier this year by licensing a large portion of
its library to Amazon Prime.

Earlier this summer, a
Movoto analysis
found Game of Thrones is the TV show
most frequently illegally downloaded across the country. Even
relative to the national average, it was the top torrented show in
fifteen states:

Top torrented TV shows according to Movoto

Love TV? Read all about it in this month’s magazine, includng
Peter Suderman on how murder, treachery, and mayhem made
TV
a “vast wasteland” no more.

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Obama Admin Wants NATO to Rebuild Iraq’s Military to Fight ISIS

Since American
airstrikes against the Islamic State (ISIS) have had little
success, a growing chorus of officials says troops
on the ground
 may be needed to fight this war. Whose
troops, though? An exclusive report from Foreign Policy
today suggests that the Obama administration wants the U.S. and its
NATO allies to bear the burden of retraining Iraq’s military to
fight ISIS.

Citing information from “a person familiar with joint
assessments by the American-led coalition and the Iraqi
government,” the publication
explains
:

The expanded retraining effort being proposed by the U.S. may
require asmany as 1,000 foreign trainers from the U.S., U.K.,
France, Germany and Australia to restore the beleaguered Iraqi
security forces to a battle-ready state led by American advisers,
said the person who spoke on the condition of anonymity because no
decisions have been made. The U.S. already has about 1,500 advisers
in the country, and Western European allies have signalled their
ability to send hundreds of trainers each, the person said. …

The U.S. is hoping that many of the NATO members will readily
consent to sending their troops to train Iraqi forces particularly
after troubling revelations that citizens from Western Europe and
Australia are both victims and participants alongside ISIS.

It’s important to remember that America is already
the largest
supplier
 of both military personnel and funding for NATO,
so it’s likely that the U.S. will be doing most of the heavy
lifting in Iraq.

In a related article Foreign Policy yesterday
reported that in spite of the State Department’s claim that about
60 nations are participating in the coalition against ISIS, there
are only 21 “core coalition members” and a meeting yesterday
“produced no immediate announcements of new commitments.”

It appears America’s allies don’t want to become too
tangled in this war.  Although ISIS is closing in on the
Syrian-Turkish border, Turkey, a NATO member, hasn’t sent troops
against ISIS out of fear of “being made the fall guy for the United
States not having a coherent Syrian policy,”
according
to Reuters.

Britain and France have launched airstrikes, and Germany has
committed to funding moderate rebels to fight ISIS, but “getting
their parliaments to approve sending ground troops into a warzone
to train Iraqi forces is likely to be enormously
complicated.” 

Read more Reason coverage of ISIS here. One
alternative idea suggested
for fighting the terrorist
organization is to use private military contractors. 

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IRS Employees Only Semi-Literate, Finds Audit

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) doesn’t do English good,
according to a Treasury inspector general
audit
. The Hill
reports
that, although the IRS sometimes speaks and writes
comprehensibly, it still falls far short of expectations:

The watchdog…said that half the letters and two-thirds of the
notices it examined either weren’t written clearly or didn’t give
enough information.

Mind you, that’s only for extant correspondence. It turns
out internal
emails
aren’t the only forms of correspondence lost in the
rabbit hole of IRS hard drives:

The inspector general also found that the IRS doesn’t have a
full list of all the letters and messages it sends to taxpayers,
making it difficult to know how clearly the agency is
communicating.

The syntactically challenged employees are also, incidentally,
in violation of federal law. The
Plain Writing Act
(yes, that exists) mandates that federal
workers write coherently. The act requires a senior official within
an agency to, among other things, “train employees of the agency in
plain writing” and submit annual compliance reports—also,
presumably, in plain writing.

For an agency that expects taxpayers to follow the exact letter
of a byzantine code whose complexity costs Americans hundreds
of billions
 of dollars to comply with, the IRS seems
fairly blasé about the literacy of its own gendarmes. Without a
hint of irony, the agency blames its coherency problems on the
difficulty of keeping track of its extensive correspondence:

Agency officials say they have tried to inventory all the
messages they send out, but that the sheer number makes that
difficult. The IRS office that corresponds with taxpayers also has
44 separate systems it uses to craft letters or notices to
taxpayers.

But never fear. At the agency that to date has spent
roughly $18
million
to find lost communications and create a system for
storing emails, progress soldiers on:

The inspector general did say that the IRS had made strides in
some areas to comply with the Plain Writing Act, including by
increasing training for staffers and corresponding differently with
taxpayers and tax professionals. 

If the government insists on scrounging
every last penny
from American taxpayers, the least it can do
is let us know in clear, concise English beforehand.

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Pentagon Picks a Name for Its Latest War—the Same One It Already Rejected

Earlier this month, The Wall Street Journal
reported
that senior defense officials were struggling with how
to resolve an ongoing issue related to the ongoing strikes in Iraq
and Syria: the operation didn’t have a name. As a result, all the
PowerPoint presentation decks—and if you know much of anything
about the military, you know how seriously it takes its PowerPoint
presentations—were referring to it with the blandly descriptive
phrase, “Operations in Iraq and Syria.” What’s a war without an
impressive, inspiring name?

After weeks of brainstorming, military
officials came up with a name they thought could work: Operation
Inherent Resolve. It was…very…very…well, okay, it wasn’t that
good.

And so, according to the Journal, the name was firmly
rejected.
From the WSJ’s October 3 report
:

To some military officers, Inherent Resolve didn’t properly
evoke the Middle East. Others faulted it for failing to highlight
the international coalition the U.S. had assembled. Still others
simply found it uninspiring…. Other officials said had the name
been better received it might well be the new war’s moniker.

“It is just kind of bleh,” said a military officer.

Senior military aides reportedly requested a new name, perhaps
something that would better capture the grandeur and importance and
contradiction of a series of “limited” strikes that somehow became
a multiyear military operation led by a president who campaigned on
ending the war in Iraq. (This last bit isn’t strictly true.)

Now, two weeks later, the Pentagon has finally settled on a, ah,
rather familiar moniker: Operation Inherent Resolve.

From The Wall Street Journal’s update
this afternoon
:

Despite the initial reaction at the Pentagon, military officials
said that Central Command pressed to adopt Operation Inherent
Resolve as the moniker. Additionally, some officials thought that a
mundane name also would be a safe choice, unlikely to offend any
member of the international coalition the U.S. has assembled to
strike extremist targets.

Still, some defense officials said privately Wednesday that the
Pentagon and Central Command may have missed an opportunity to find
a name that would better capture the imagination of the public, and
potentially build support or explain the military
operation.

Maybe “Operation: Let’s All Pretend It’s Not *Really* A War” was
a little too on the nose?

Come up with a better name? Share it in the comments section
below. 

 

 

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Dow Drops 1500 Points In 3 Weeks, Nasdaq Enters ‘Correction’ As VIX Breaks 30

From 17,350 intraday highs "proving the recovery is here," we are almost 1500 points down just 3 weeks later. The Nasdaq just fell 10.5% from its highs, officially in correction. VIX broke above 30. erhaps, just perhaps, the gap to fundamentals is finally about to be filled…

 

Dow ugly…

 

Nasdaq in correction…

 

VIX breaks above 30..




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