Bought & Paid For – 1/3 of All SuperPAC Donations Have Come from Wall Street

Screen Shot 2016-02-02 at 10.43.50 AM

So far, super PACs have received more than one-third of their donations from financial-services executives, according to data from the nonpartisan Center for Responsive Politics.

In the 2012 election, donations from the financial-services sector made up roughly 20% of the $845 million raised by super PACs, or political-action committees, and other independent campaign groups. In the 2004 election, Wall Street and other financial groups were responsible for just $2.4 million of the money collected by political-action committees.

The early fundraising data provides the most recent evidence that Wall Street is the single biggest driver behind the surge in spending by super PACs and other outside groups on U.S. elections.

– From the Wall Street Journal article: Wall Street’s Donor Role Expands as Money Flows Into 2016 Election 

If Wall Street knows anything, it’s how to hedge its bets. This is precisely why powerful financiers make sure they bankroll as many politicians as possible.

Indeed, when it comes to the 2016 Presidential race, the only two candidates who are not being funded by Wall Street are Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders. This explains much of the horror exhibited by the establishment when it comes to the success of these two individuals.

While the influence of Wall Street money in politics is nothing new, what is notable about the current race is the monetary investment by these financiers is substantially higher than as recently as 2012. It appears many financial oligarchs see a pressing need to boost their spending this time around in order to protect themselves against the justified angst of the American public.

A very interesting article in yesterday’s Wall Street Journal highlighted some the spending in detail. Here are some of the numbers as relates to those candidates still in the running:

continue reading

from Liberty Blitzkrieg http://ift.tt/1TArmsX
via IFTTT

In Latest Shock Video, Migrants Maul Elderly Germans In Munich Metro

“Migrants gone wild” is the new video craze sweeping the internet as cell phone footage of refugee-related shenanigans has replaced clips of Russia vaporizing “the terrorists” on geopolitics junkies’ must watch lists.

So far this year we’ve seen “shocking footage” of a shrieking migrant teen involved in a bitter dispute with an asylum center worker, a clip which depicts dozens of “football hooligans” rampaging through Stockholm’s central train station on the way to accosting non-Swedes, and a number of videos showing police clashing with demonstrators who have taken to the streets across the bloc to protest the influx of refugees.

On Tuesday we get the latest clip out of Europe, this time from Munich where a train going from Sendlinger Tor station to the Munich city center was the scene of what’s being described as an assault on an elderly man perpetrated by “young men of Middle Eastern appearance.”

“The clip shows how several young men of middle eastern appearance attack two elderly Germans, who moments earlier had come to the defense of a young woman harassed by the same group,” RT says

Tom Roth, who took the video, says an apparent refugee “touched the back” of a woman prompting the “old men” to scold the migrants and demand that they “behave.”

The situation deteriorated quickly from there as you can see from the video shown below.

Just another day in Angela Merkel’s multicultural utopia.


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1QY4iDC Tyler Durden

Rewardless Risk

Submitted by Ben Hunt via Salient Partners' Epsilon Theory blog,

I'm going full-nerd with the "Lord of the Rings" introduction to today's Epsilon Theory note, but I think this scene — where Denethor, the mad Steward of Gondor, orders his son Faramir to take on a suicide mission against Sauron's overwhelming forces — is the perfect way to describe what the Bank of Japan did last Thursday with their announcement of negative interest rates. The BOJ (and the ECB, and … trust me … the Fed soon enough) is the insane Denethor. The banks are Faramir. The suicide mission is making loans into a corporate sector levered to global trade as the forces of global deflation rage uncontrollably.

Negative rates are an intentional effort to weaken your own country's banks. Negative rates are a punitive command: go out there and make more bad loans where risk is entirely uncompensated, or we will, in effect, fine you. The more bad loans you don't make, the bigger the fine. Negative rates are only a bit worrying in today's sputtering economies of Europe, Japan, and the US because the credit cycle has yet to completely roll over. But it is rolling over (read anything by Jeff Gundlach if you don't believe me), it is rolling over everywhere, and when it really starts rolling over, any country with negative rates will find it to be significantly destabilizing for their banking sector.

There's a reason that the Fed kept paying interest on bank reserves even in the darkest, most deflationary days of the Great Recession. Yes, it's the Fed's job to support full employment. Yes it's the Fed's job to maintain price stability. But the Fed's job #1 — the reason the Federal Reserve was created in the first place — is to maintain the stability of the banking system. Go ask a US moneycenter bank how things would have turned out in 2008 if the positive interest coming in on their reserves had been flipped to negative interest going out on their reserves. Go ask a US regional bank how things would have turned out if they had made even more rewardless risk loans in 2006 and 2007 under the pressure of negative rates. 

Look, I get the "theory". I understand that weakening the yen is an existential domestic political issue for Kuroda and Abe, just as weakening the euro is an existential domestic political issue for Draghi and Merkel, just as weakening the yuan is an existential domestic political issue for Zhou and Xi. And I understand that policy-addicted markets will respond exuberantly to anything that can be described as central bank support for financial asset price inflation. Hey, I'm an addict, too.

But what I'm concerned about is not the theory but the practice. What I'm concerned about is the intentional destabilization of the global financial system for domestic political purposes. What I'm concerned about is the Fed's inevitable adoption of negative rates, something Alan Blinder pushed for in 2008 and Ben Bernanke is pushing for now.

When the ECB instituted negative rates, that was just a point. The BOJ's move last Thursday makes a line. Now we have a pattern. Now we have a market that expects MOAR! Now we have a Fed that will undoubtedly implement negative rates when things get squirrely again, even if there are some in the Fed who I'm sure are shaking their heads at all this.

I've come to expect every elected politician or politician wannabe to rail against "the bankers" and the terrible mess they've made of the world with their "predatory lending" and "easy credit", even though this is exactly what every politician in the world desires. But I didn't expect central bankers to betray their own charges. I didn't expect central bankers to throw their own domestic banks into a battle they can't win.

You know what negative rates are? They are the final stripping away of the illusion that central bankers somehow exist above and separately from domestic politics, that they are wise and able stewards of financial stability. Nope. They're Denethors.


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

The Last Time These Five Outlier Events Coincided Was In February 2009

When it comes to Wall Street permabulls, no one name sticks out more than that of FundStrat’s (formerly JPM’s) Tom Lee. Which is why, when even the traditional CNBC host during market up days, turns modestly bearish as he has in recent weeks and admits the investing community is gripped by a “growth scare” it is a notable event. As he writes, “the S&P 500 has been struggling since the start of the year and markets remain extremely on edge given the multitude of risks facing the market.”

In a curious departure from his traditional happy go lucky style, Tom Lee then proceeds to list all the things that can go even more wrong from here on out:

There are many issues potential becoming so significant that the economy and markets succumb to the risks:

  • China: China is navigating an extremely challenging balance of slowing credit growth/expansion while transitioning growth from an investment-oriented to consumption oriented model. The structural changes over the past decade have resulted in China and its EM neighbors increasingly operating as an ecosystem, with the US less affected by “shocks” in China.
  • Commodity producers: Commodity producers are seeing increasing financial stress, stemming from falling volumes and prices, currency weakening and diminished confidence by capital markets.
  • Deflation: Falling inflation and the pernicious effects of deflation weigh on markets–particularly since, debt burdens become very difficult to manage in a falling pricing environment.
  • Credit cycle: Default expectations have risen in 2016, stemming concerns about falling commodity prices and reduced market liquidity. Investors have pulled nearly $80 billion from high-yield mutual funds over the past 18 months.
  • Policy divergence: Lastly, investors worry about policy errors from Central Banks. The Fed is tightening while other major countries are easing. Hence, the fear of a continued surge in USD and therefore more headwinds to US corporates.

But Lee’s latest note is especially notable because Lee lays out the following chart which superimposes the confluence of five distinct, and troubling for risk, 1- and 2-standard deviation events which are taking place currently, and highlights that the last time all 5 occurred at the same time was in February 2009.

Here are the 5 outlier events laid out by Lee:

  1. HY spreads above 800bp;
  2. oil down at least 25% yoy;
  3. S&P 500 EPS is negative yoy;
  4. Technicals are weak (% of stocks above 200d is below 15%)
  5. sentiment is terrible (AAII).

And here is the visual history of the confluence of all these five events over time.

 

What happened in February 2009? Just as the S&P 500 was crashing in clear free fall, it was the Fed which just a few days later, on March 6 2009 bailed out the market for the first time, when it unveiled its expanded QE1 just as the S&P hit its “generational low” of 666.

This time, QE has been dormant for over a year and the Fed just hiked rates.


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1maIs2Q Tyler Durden

Retail Apocalypse: 2016 Brings Empty Shelves And Store Closings All Across America

Submitted by Michael Snyder via The End of The American Dream blog,

Major retailers in the United States are shutting down hundreds of stores, and shoppers are reporting alarmingly bare shelves in many retail locations that are still open all over the country.  It appears that the retail apocalypse that made so many headlines in 2015 has gone to an entirely new level as we enter 2016. 

As economic activity slows down and Internet retailers capture more of the market, brick and mortar retailers are cutting their losses.  This is especially true in areas that are on the lower portion of the income scale.  In impoverished urban centers all over the nation, it is not uncommon to find entire malls that have now been completely abandoned.  It has been estimated that there is about a billion square feet of retail space sitting empty in this country, and this crisis is only going to get worse as the retail apocalypse accelerates.

We always get a wave of store closings after the holiday shopping season, but this year has been particularly active.  The following are just a few of the big retailers that have already made major announcements…

-Wal-Mart is closing 269 stores, including 154 inside the United States.

-K-Mart is closing down more than two dozen stores over the next several months.

-J.C. Penney will be permanently shutting down 47 more stores after closing a total of 40 stores in 2015.

-Macy’s has decided that it needs to shutter 36 stores and lay off approximately 2,500 employees.

-The Gap is in the process of closing 175 stores in North America.

-Aeropostale is in the process of closing 84 stores all across America.

-Finish Line has announced that 150 stores will be shutting down over the next few years.

-Sears has shut down about 600 stores over the past year or so, but sales at the stores that remain open continue to fall precipitously.

But these store closings are only part of the story.

All over the country, shoppers are noticing bare shelves and alarmingly low inventory levels.  This is happening even at the largest and most prominent retailers.

I want to share with you an excerpt from a recent article by Jeremiah Johnson.  The anecdotes that he shares definitely set off alarm bells with me.  Read them for yourself and see what you think…

*****

I came across two excellent comments upon Steve Quayle’s website that bear reading, as these are two people with experience in retail marketing, inventory, ordering, and purchases.  Take a look at these:

#1 (From DJ, January 24, 2016)

“Steve-

[Regarding the] alerts about the current state of the RR industry. This is in line with what I’ve been noticing as I visited our local/regional grocery store, Walmart, and Target this week in WI. I worked in big box retail for 20 years specializing in Inventory Management. These stores are all using computerized inventory management systems that monitor and automatically replenish inventory when levels/shelf stock get low. This prevents “out of stocks” and lost sales. These companies rely on the ability to replenish inventory quickly from regional warehouses.

 

As I shopped this week and looked at inventory levels I was shocked. There were numerous (above and beyond acceptable levels) out of stocks across category lines at all three retailers.

 

And even where inventory was on the shelf, the overall levels were noticeably reduced. Based on my experience, working for two of these three organizations in store management, they have drastically/intentionally reduced their inventory levels. This is either due to financial stresses/poor sales effecting their ability to acquire new inventory, or it could be the result of what was mentioned earlier regarding the transporting of goods to these regional warehouses. Either way this doesn’t bode well for the what’s to come.  Stock up now while you can!”

#2 (From a Commenter following up #1 who didn’t provide a name, January 26, 2016)

“I’d like to tailgate on the SQ Alert “based on my experience…” regarding stock levels in big box stores. This weekend we were in two such stores, each in fairly isolated communities which are easily the communities’ best source for acquiring grocery items in quantity.

 

I myself worked in retail (meat) for thirty years so I know exactly what a well-stocked store looks like, understand the key categories and category drivers, and how shelves are stocked and displays are built to drive sales and profits. I also understand supply chain and distribution methodologies quite well.

 

Each of the stores we were in were woefully under-stocked. This time of year-the few weeks following the holidays-is usually big business in groceries and low stock levels suggest either poor ordering at the store level, poor purchasing at the distribution level or a purposeful desire to be under-stocked.

 

Anyone familiar with the retail grocery industry is also familiar with how highly touted “the big box store’s” infrastructure is. They know exactly when demand is high and for what items and in what quantities. It is very unlikely that both stores somehow got “surprised” by unusually high demand. It is reasonable then to imagine that low stock levels in rural areas with few options is a purposed endeavor to assure that both the budget conscious and the folks in more remote areas are not fully able to load up their pantries.

 

Simply put I believe the major retailer in question is doing their part to limit the ability of rural America to be sufficiently prepared. Nevertheless, we are wise to do our best to keep ahead of the curve. God bless your efforts, Steve.”

*****

Yes, this is just anecdotal evidence, but it lines up perfectly with hard numbers that we have been discussing.

Exports are plummeting all over the globe, and the Baltic Dry Index just plunged to another new all-time record low.  The amount of stuff being shipped around by air, truck and rail inside this country has been dropping significantly, and this tells us that real economic activity is really slowing down.

If you currently work in the retail industry, your job is not secure, and you may want to start evaluating your options.

We have entered the initial phases of a major economic downturn, and it is going to be especially cruel to those on the low end of the income spectrum.  Do what you can to get prepared now, because the economy is not going to be getting better any time soon.


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1maF3kD Tyler Durden

Full Summary Of Chinese Actions To Prevent An All-Out Economic Collapse

Last summer, China unleashed an unprecedented array of measures – up to and including the arrest of “malicious short sellers” and prominent hedge fund mangers – to prevent its stock market bubble from bursting. It failed. A few months later, the chaos has spilled over from the relative containment of the capital markets and has engulfed not only the country’s FX reserves, and capital account, but also the entire economy.

As a result, China’s government has gone all in, and as Bloomberg reports, is stepping up efforts to ward off a potential financial crisis, warning bank executives that their jobs are on the line unless they control risks and putting restrictions on an increasingly popular way of evading capital controls. These moves come in response to China’s slowest economic growth in a quarter century fueled concerns that bad debts will cripple the banking system and a catalyst for why virtually every hedge fund is now short the Yuan.

As Bloomberg puts it politely, these actions “add to evidence that President Xi Jinping’s government is moving with increased urgency to rein in financial-system risks.”

We disagree: these are the same panicked, “after the fact” reactions that only a government on the verge of losing control will engage in. As for their ultimate success, just compare the current price of the Shanghai Composite and its recent all time highs.

Here is a quick summary of the Chinese actions to if not prevent, then at least delay, financial and economic collapse.

First, in January, China aggressively stepped up measures to halt and slow down capital outflows that hit $1 trillion last year by boosting capital controls first described here last September. The tightening marked a reversal after years of easing that spurred global use of the yuan, a trend that turned on China when speculative bets against the currency offshore jumped.

Some of the primary measures have included:

  • Increased scrutiny of transfers overseas – Some Shanghai banks have recently asked their outlets to closely check whether individuals sent money abroad by breaking up foreign-currency purchases into smaller transactions and to take punitive action if violations were discovered, according to people familiar with the matter. Each person can send $50,000 abroad annually and so large sums can be transferred by utilizing the bank accounts and quotas of a range of individuals, a tactic known as smurfing.
  • Curbing the offshore supply of yuan to make shorting costlier – The PBOC told some onshore lenders to stop offering cross-border financing to offshore counterparts late last year, and on Jan. 11 advisedsome Chinese banks’ units in Hong Kong to suspend offshore yuan lending unless necessary. It’s also widened the scope of reserve requirements to include some yuan holdings of overseas financial institutions.
  • Restricting companies’ foreign-exchange purchases – Companies can only buy overseas currencies a maximum five days before they make actual payments for goods, having previously been free to make their own decisions on timing.
  • Suspension of foreign banks – DBS Group Holdings Ltd. and Standard Chartered Plc were among overseas banks suspended from conducting some foreign-exchange business in China until the end of March. The bans included the settlement of offshore clients’ yuan transactions in the onshore market and was introduced as a widening gap between the currency’s exchange rates in Shanghai and Hong Kong encouraged arbitrage trades.
  • Outbound investment quotas frozen – China has suspended new applications under the Renminbi Qualified Domestic Institutional Investor program, which allows yuan from the mainland to be used to buy offshore securities denominated in the currency. It has also refrained from granting new quotas for residents to invest in overseas markets via its Qualified Domestic Institutional Investor program since March.
  • Delaying the Shenzhen stocks link – China originally planned to start a link between the Shenzhen market and the Hong Kong bourse last year, but the plan was delayed amid a mainland equities rout.
  • UnionPay debit-card clampdown – New measures were introduced in December to crack down on illegal China UnionPay Co. card machines, which were suspected of being used to channel funds offshore via fake transactions, most notably in Macau casinos.
  • Underground banking clampdown – China busted the nation’s biggest “underground bank,” which handled 410 billion yuan ($62 billion) of illegal foreign-exchange transactions, the official People’s Daily reported in November. The Shanghai branch of the SAFE said last week that it will crack down on illegal currency transactions, including underground banking.

However, a recent estimate by Goldman Sachs put the total January FX interventions (and thus capital flight) at $185 billion, well above the December total and the second highest since August. This would means that whatever China has done so far has failed to stem the tide of capital outflows.

 

Which explains the latest, second round of interventions. Once again, courtesy of Bloomberg, these are as follows:

  • impose restrictions on buying insurance products overseas – Moving to plug one popular way for moving money out of China, the currency regulator is imposing restrictions on buying insurance products overseas, people with knowledge of the matter said Tuesday. Purchases of insurance products overseas using UnionPay debit and credit cards will be capped at $5,000 per transaction effective Feb. 4, according to the people. Purchases of insurance policies by mainland visitors in Hong Kong reached HK$21.1 billion ($2.7 billion) last year through September, following a 64 percent surge in 2014, according to the city’s industry regulator.
  • Threaten bank chiefs with termination if targets are missed – Shang Fulin, chairman of the China Banking Regulatory Commission, told an internal meeting last month that banks would be forced to restructure, inject new capital or change their senior management if key risk indicators fall outside “reasonable ranges,” people familiar with the matter said Tuesday. Those indicators include bad-loan coverage and capital adequacy ratios, Shang told the meeting, the people said.
  • Crackdown on Wealth Management Products – China’s central bank has told lenders it will require greater control over the amount of wealth management product funds they give to brokerages and other financial institutions to manage, people familiar with the matter said Tuesday. The People’s Bank of China told banks it will also impose more limits on the amount of proprietary funds managed by other institutions, and that it will tighten control of leverage taken on when buying bonds, the people said.
  • Lower minimum required down payment for a mortgage – The central bank said Tuesday it will allow banks to cut the minimum required mortgage down payment to 20 percent from 25 percent for first-home purchases to the lowest level ever as it steps up support for the property market. A rising stockpile of unsold new homes is hampering government efforts to spur investment expanding at the slowest pace in more than five years.

Expect many more actions and interventions over the coming months, all of which like last year, will be self-defeating as the harder China presses on its porous “capital” firewall, the more holes that will emerge.

Ultimately, what will happen is that the “Shanghai Accord” idea, in which China announces a dramatic one-off devaluation, is implemented which is perhaps the only shock-approach that could possibly stem the capital flight even if it comes at the expense of a global deflationary wave.

The only question is whether China will have any FX reserves left by then, and just how widespread public anger and civil discontent and disobedience will be as a result of mass layoffs and plant shutdowns as China, courtesy of mean reversion, finds itself in the same depression which its epic debt-creation engine in the period 2009-2014, and since shut down, saved the rest of the world from.


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

Ferrari Crashes

Another “no brainer” bites the dust. Ferrari is halted limit down in Milan trading and is crashing in US trading – now down over 40% from its “successful” IPO day highs…

 

Carnage…

 

Or Carnage…

  • *FERRARI SUSPENDED IN MILAN LIMIT DOWN

Down 40% from IPO day highs…

 

Blame The Chinese –

  • *FERRARI 2015 CHINA SALES DOWN 22%, JAPAN UP 33%
  • *FERRARI 2015 SALES UP 7% IN AMERICAS

So The Chinese are no longer expatriating their devaluing cash into Ferraris (because the government is cracking down on graft and conspicuous consumption is never a good thing when corruption means death)… but it appears The Japanese elites know full well the utility of transferring a collapsing Yen into “Hard Italian Assets” which are relatively easy to transport out of the country?

The silent bank run accelerates.


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

Austria To Pay Migrants €500 To Go Back Where They Came From

Late last month, we noted that Austrian Foreign Minister Sebastian Kurz was set to cut social benefits for refugees who failed to attend “special integration training courses.”

Austria, like Germany and multiple other countries in the Schengen zone, is struggling to cope with the influx of asylum seekers fleeing the war-torn Mid-East. Of particular concern is the “integration” process whereby those hailing from “different cultures” are having a decidedly difficult time blending into polite Western society.

Austria has sought to ameliorate the problem by providing helpful flyers featuring cartoons that depict acceptable and unacceptable behavior and by offering classes designed to teach migrants “laws and social norms.”

Still, policymakers are skeptical. “Let’s not delude ourselves,” Kurz said in January. “We have an intensive long lasting integration process ahead of us.”

That “intensive, long lasting process” will be mitigated by a plan to deport some 50,000 refugees. “Last year Austria had 90,000 asylum applications,” Kurz told Aargauer Zeitung. “This number is too high for a small country, and measured in terms of population, it is the second highest in Europe after Sweden.

Yes, “the second highest after Sweden” – and we all know how things are going in Sweden.

“We have reached the limit of feasibility,” Kurz explained, in an interview with APA. “I think 50,000 is realistic [in terms of a number to deport].”

As a reminder, Austria has already suspended Schengen, so the deportation announcement doesn’t exactly come as a surprise, especially in light of similar announcements from Sweden and Finland. 

What was surprising (not to mention sadly amusing) is Austria’s plan to boost voluntary repatriations. According to a summary of an agreement between the interior, defense and integration ministries published on Sunday, the country will now pay migrants €500 to leave. “Now the government has decided to carry out at least 50,000 deportations over the next four years,” Reuters reports. “It will also offer up to 500 euros ($542) to migrants whose asylum applications have been turned down if they agree to be deported.”

“We are already among the countries with the most deportations,” said Interior Minister Johanna Mikl-Leitner. “But we will increase the rate further.”

As for how the deportations will be carried out, Austria will reportedly load migrants up on C-130 Hercules military aircraft and drop them off in their home countries. Hopefully after landing. 

Kurz also says Austria will place an upper limit on the number of asylum seekers it accepts. The cap will amount to no more than 1.5% of the population. “Anything else would overwhelm our country,” Kurz says. 

Meanwhile, Angela Merkel is proposing a modified Marshall Plan in an attempt to cope with the problem. “German Chancellor Angela Merkel seeks to raise money for refugee camps in Syria’s neighboring states to add jobs in strategy similar to the Marshall Plan that helped rebuild Germany after World War II,” Bloomberg reports, citing Handelsblatt. “Refugees would get cash for work in camps.”

Countries bordering Syria “like the plan,” Handelsblatt says.

Clearly, the desperation is kicking in. Even if viable, Merkel’s idea will take months (at best) to implement and Austria’s plan to give migrants €500 to take a voluntary C-130 trip back where they came from reeks of desperation.

There was no immediate word on whether refugees could negotiate for larger sums in exchange for an agreement to go back home.


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1PdxSR3 Tyler Durden

Wall Street Drops The ‘C’ Word: Proclaims Junk Bond Risks Are Contained

Submitted by Jeffrey Snider via Alhambra Investment Partners,

To an economist, the economy can bear no recession. In times of heavy central bank activity, an economy can never be in recession. Those appear to be the only dynamic factors that drive economic interpretation in the mainstream. And they become circular in the trap of just these kinds of circumstances – the economy looks like it might fall into recession, therefore a central bank acts, meaning the economy will avoid recession; thus there will never be recession. It requires that both the central bank will identify the recession correctly and then invent and apply the requisite “acts.”

It was never really that simple to begin with, but what happens, like now, when central banks remain in the act (monetary policy, we are told, remains “highly accommodative”) but the economy appears more and more like recession? The result is increasing nonsense and absurdity. Such as:

But Deutsche Bank AG Chief International Economist Torsten Slok has some counterintuitive advice for his most pessimistic clients: Buy.

 

“I frequently hear clients express very negative comments about the U.S. economic outlook, including the statement that that economy is already in a recession,” he wrote. “The irony is that if you have the view that things are really bad at the moment and we are currently in a recession, then it is actually a good idea to buy risky assets today.”

If there is “blood in the streets”, etc. The problem with that saying is that nobody ever tells you how much blood must be in the streets to actualize those sentiments; even if there appears a lot of carnage there might still be room for a lot more. In fact, this happens far more than you think. For economists, they will first tell you that such blood-letting is impossible before being forced to admit it’s there only to suggest there will be no more.

That makes past denial relevant as if in court admissibility of prior bad acts. In Mr. Slok’s case, you can go back to the summer of 2014 when he suggested that stocks would go up until there was recession (ironically, the title of that post in 2014 was Deutsche Bank Economist: ‘Buy Equities’):

I believe the stock market will continue to go up until we get a recession. And we are nowhere near entering a recession. Recessions happen because of a bubble bursting in capex (as we saw on 2000) or because of a bubble bursting in consumption (as in 2008) or when monetary policy is too tight, i.e. when the fed funds rate is well above its neutral level. None of this is happening at the moment. If anything, we are seeing too little capex and consumption.

It’s safe to say it has been all downhill since that moment, ironically as the “dollar” has only “risen”; or what economists like Mr. Thok would claim, if they were aware of wholesale banking, as money being too tight. The problem with holding outside the financial paradigm is that it is impossible to recognize the relevant circumstances. The primary reason Thorsten Slok is so sanguine is either intentional obtuseness or great miscalculation. Back to his proclamation today:

Put simply, the U.S. leverage problem of today is peanuts compared with the Great Recession. The key factor informing Slok’s position that fallout from crashing oil prices won’t be a repeat of the subprime meltdown is the yawning gap between credit outstanding tied to mortgages circa 2006 and high-yield debt in 2016. [emphasis added]

The chart accompanying that claim shows that mortgages as a whole were a much higher percentage of overall credit than high yield is now; it’s not even close. But that is highly disingenuous. It wasn’t overall mortgages that were the problem then, it was and started in subprime. Thus, the correct scaling and comparison is not all mortgages then to just junk bonds now, but junk bonds now to subprime mortgages then or even all corporate debt now to all mortgage debt then. As noted here, if there is a problem in junk bonds, it won’t remain solely a junk bond problem as if magically “contained.” The basis of wholesale liquidity and the structures that perform on the way up and then disintermediate on the way down destroy the idea of “contained.”

This isn’t, however, the first instance Mr. Slok has downplayed the potential reversal of banking leverage and the economic potential of that. In this presentation given in June 2008, Slok and Deutsche Bank were also quite positive on the outlook even at that late date:

Aggressive easing of fiscal and monetary policy could build a bridge in Q2 [2008] and Q3 [2008] over a potential recession.

Worse, he presented among his “often-ignore facts” that, “Banks have so far raised capital to cover an impressive 75% of their losses.” That was only “impressive” in that apparently Deutsche Bank didn’t, like now, expect it to get any worse. A good part of the reason for that was, “Stimulus provided by economic policy is significant.”

ABOOK Feb 2016 DB 2008

Then, like now, there were conflicting market accounts about where the economy was headed. That is the case for every recession or depression ever presented; there are no clear signals from markets or otherwise for the onset of economic dislocation, nor will there ever be. Slok instead took that as being inconsistent and thus defaulted to the standard monetary policy setting:

ABOOK Feb 2016 DB 2008b

Mr. Slok is nothing if not consistent – and that is the problem. It’s not that he doesn’t think there will be a recession this year (or that there might have started one last year) like he thought the same as late as June 2008, recessions are always arguable when they start even to the point after they start. Instead, my contention is the manner in which he downplays the risks of it on two accounts. First, that monetary policy will save us all somehow now even though it did nothing on that count then. The monetary efforts that he believed would avoid a recession at that time not only failed to do so they were no mitigation whatsoever into a devolving panic and then economic catastrophe that we still seven and a half years later have not yet erased.

Worse, however, is this misreading of leverage and banking in his highly duplicitous manner. The comparison of junk bonds to overall mortgages is just plain wrong; the only question is whether it was intentional. On relatively comparative terms the current scale is much closer than anyone seems to recognize, but in raw, absolute numbers by the type of distribution it may be even worse than the subprime meltdown.

ABOOK Feb 2016 DB Corporate Grossb

In the mania portion of the housing bubble, covering the six years 2002 through and including 2007, there was about $15.9 trillion in mortgage-related debt gross issuance according to current SIFMA estimates. That includes only a fraction in subprime. In the past six years, from 2010 though and including 2015 (with preliminary figures through December), there was $7.8 trillion in gross corporate debt issuance. That may have been a little less than half in terms of overall volume, but the proportion in junk was far, far higher than the relative containment of subprime. And I haven’t even included leveraged loans in that figure.

ABOOK Feb 2016 DB Corporate Bubble Junk

In net terms, there was about $9.4 trillion in MBS debt outstanding at the end of 2007; $8.3 trillion in corporate debt (again, not including leveraged loans) at the end of Q3 2015. To suggest there is no comparison of leverage or risk exposure then to now just isn’t in any way correct. There might have been more raw mortgage volume in the housing bubble, but not so much more as to preclude any risks at all in 2016 and certainly nowhere near the “yawning gap” Mr. Slok tries to claim. Instead, the proportion of junk within the latter corporate bubble might in many ways mean a much more precarious station as the junk bubble is just now starting to crack up.

Where there is even more common ground is that true monetary condition that seems to be far too similar to 2008. The Fed believed itself “aggressively” accommodative in terms of monetary policy but the results prove, inarguably, it was no such thing at least not in the method that would matter. The eurodollar system imploded and thus removed all support for asset prices which were liquidated in general fashion as it occurred; often swiftly. The eurodollar system now is in the same position if not yet with the same sustained intensity; however, we have seen glimpses of that already in general, global liquidations if only in acute, discrete outbreaks to this point. But that is as much a warning of the similar type of general monetary instability; a warning not heeded by economists that never see these things coming because they remain fixed to a central bank-centric monetary system that ceased to exist as early as the 1960’s.

In other words, there remains the potential for a great deal more blood to flow – into the streets or just contained within the realm of wholesale finance. In the end it may not matter which, as the imbalances then and now are in some ways just the same if expressed slightly differently. The risks are all still there, and economists are still determined to downplay if not miss them entirely.


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1PSnK5X Tyler Durden