Clinton Campaign Issues Official Statement: Hillary “Overheated” During 9/11 Ceremony

An hour after Hillary Clinton was rushed away from a 9/11 memorial ceremony with "health concerns," the Clinton campaign has crafted the first official narrative for what happened to the "healthy" 68-year-old presidential candidate… "she felt overheated."

As The Hill reports, Hillary Clinton on Sunday left a 9/11 memorial ceremony in New York early due to a “medical episode,” a law enforcement source told Fox News. The source said the Democratic presidential nominee appeared to faint going into her van. Fox News reported that Clinton stumbled off a curb and her "knees buckled." An ABC News staffer tweeted that Clinton aides were not responding to questions about her whereabouts.

A Clinton spokesperson later said that the candidate “felt overheated,” but is “feeling much better.”

Official Statement:

 

Following her recent coughing fit (attributed to allergies in a moderate pollen count), the temperature at ground zero this morning was just 80 degrees..

 

And humdiity was low…

*  *  *

So, in other words, if it is 80 degrees outside and/or the pollen count is moderate or higher, the next US president will be out of commission.

via http://ift.tt/2cP0qJC Tyler Durden

Case For -2% Rates, Banning Cash? Jim Grant Blasts Lunatic Proposals

Submitte dby Michael Shedlock via KMichTalk.com,

Looking for group think, extrapolation of extreme silliness, linear thinking, and belief in absurd models?

Then look no further than Fed presidents, their advisors, and academia loaded charlatan professors.

Today’s spotlight is on Marvin Goodfriend, a former economist and policy advisor at the Federal Reserve’s Bank of Richmond, and Ken Rogoff, a chaired Harvard economics professor, a one-time chief economist at the International Monetary Fund.

Case for Minus 2% Rates

Goodfriend says the Fed Might Need to Cut Rates to Minus 2 Percent.

The U.S. Federal Reserve might need to cut interest rates to as low as negative 2 percent, far lower than levels other global central banks have tested, a former Fed economist said.

 

That’s what would likely be needed to engineer a recovery if the U.S. economy were to fall into a recession in the next couple of years, Marvin Goodfriend, who was an economist and policy advisor at the Federal Reserve’s Bank of Richmond from 1993-2005, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Thursday.

 

Goodfriend, who is currently a professor of economics at Carnegie Mellon University, pointed to data on the eight recessions in the U.S. since 1960.

 

“In eight of those recessions, the Fed had to push the short rate 2.5 percentage points below the long term rate. Today, the 10-year rate in the U.S. is 1.5 percent,” he noted, saying that would indicate that during the next recession, the Fed would need to cut rates as low as minus 1 percent at a minimum.

 

“In five of those recessions, the Fed had to push the federal funds rate 3.5 percentage points below the 10-year bond rate,” he said. “So if that happens this time around, we would have to push the federal funds rate to minus 2 percent.”

Linear Thinking Idiocy

Goodfriend extrapolates what the Fed did in the past with what the Fed might need to do in the future. Not once did this mentally-challenge wizard stop to ask:

  1. Did the Fed really “need” to do what it did before?
  2. Did excessively low rates create any bubbles?
  3. Why do we need a Fed in the first place?
  4. Who does the Fed serve?
  5. Can the economy be managed like a cook following a recipe to bake a cake?
  6. Isn’t the fact that the Fed “needed” to do this eight times indicative of a major problem in and of itself?

James Grant Blasts Ken Rogoff in Wall Street Journal Op-Ed

Please consider Hostage to a Bull Market by James Grant.

If there is a curse between the covers of this thin, self-satisfied volume, it doesn’t have to do with cash, the title to the contrary notwithstanding. Freedom is rather the subject of the author’s malediction. He’s not against it in principle, only in practice.

 

Ken Rogoff is a chaired Harvard economics professor, a one-time chief economist at the International Monetary Fund and (to boot) a chess grandmaster. He laid out his case against cash in a Saturday essay in this newspaper two weeks ago. By abolishing large-denomination bills, he said there, the government could strike a blow against sin and perfect the Federal Reserve’s control of interest rates.

 

In a deep recession, Mr. Rogoff proposes, the Fed ought not to stop cutting rates when it comes to zero. It should plunge right ahead, to minus 1%, minus 2%, minus 3% and so forth. At one negative rate or another, the theory goes, despoiled bank depositors will stop saving and start spending. According to the worldview of the people who constitute what Mr. Rogoff fraternally calls the “policy community” (who elected them?), the spending will buttress “aggregate demand,” thus restore prosperity.

 

This is a big can of worms that the author has pried open. He assumes, first and foremost, that falling prices are a calamity. It is not such a calamity that many Americans don’t spend most of the weekend seeking them out. Still, the policy community wants nothing to do with them.

 

And the policy community, especially in Europe, has had its way. More than $13 trillion of sovereign debt (German, Japanese, Swiss) is quoted at a yield of less than nothing. In Denmark, the banks pay homeowners to take out a mortgage. In Switzerland, depositors pay the bank to accept their francs.

 

Negative rates? You rub your eyes and search your memory. You can recall no precedent. And if you consult the latest edition of “A History of Interest Rates” (2005) by Sidney Homer and Richard Sylla, you will find none. A recent check with Mr. Sylla confirms the impression. Today’s negative bond yields, he says, are the first in at least 5,000 years.

 

As for the campaign for zero cash in the service of negative interest rates, Mr. Rogoff’s brief is best seen not as detached scientific analysis but as a kind of left-wing crotchet. Strip away the technical pretense and what you have is politics. The author wants the government to control your money. It’s as simple as that.

A Simple as This

Grant says it’s as simple as politics. Rogoff wants the government to control your money.

Clearly Rogoff wants government to have control of your money. But it’s not as simple as that. These guys are economic lunatics who actually believe negative interest rates will help the economy.

Negative Interest Rate Theory

 

  negative-theory

 

 

A currency crisis awaits.

 

via http://ift.tt/2cju5Yy Tyler Durden

How I Remember September 11, 2001

I wrote the following piece in 2013. It remains as relevant today as it was three years ago.

I remember 9/11 like it was yesterday. I was one year into my Wall Street career. I got up that morning just like every other morning and headed toward Union Square station to get on the subway down to 3 World Financial Center, the headquarters of Lehman Brothers. I had just purchased breakfast in the cafeteria when I saw one of the human resources folks from my floor yelling to evacuate. I was confused but I got my ass downstairs fast. When I got down there I joined the hundreds of others staring in awe skyward at the gaping hole in the North Tower of the World Trade Center. People speculated that a helicopter had hit the building, but I said no way. It looked like a bomb went off to me.

Shortly afterward, the ground started shaking and I heard an enormous explosion and saw fire and debris shooting out from behind the North Tower. The herd starting running and I was trampled on. We all retreated to safer ground, at which point I ran into some co-workers. I mentioned that I was a bit worried these things could fall, but I was ensured by a higher-up at the firm that this was impossible. It was at that point that some co-workers and I decided to take the long walk home to my apartment on east 12th street. As we walked, we saw people jumping from the buildings, and ultimately we saw the first one collapse in front of our eyes as we traversed through Soho.

continue reading

from Liberty Blitzkrieg http://ift.tt/2cbrSkM
via IFTTT

Hillary Clinton Reportedly Suffers “Medical Episode”, Rushed Away From Ground Zero: Fox News

While we have yet to receive any confirmation from a second source – so take this report with a big grain of salt – moments ago Fox News senior correspondent Rick Leventhal, citing an anonymous law enforcement official as a source, reported that Hillary Clinton who was present at the Sept 11 ceremony in downtown Manhattan, suffered a “medical episode” when she stumbled and nearly fell after her knees buckled, and was then ushered into a van, in the process losing a shoe, as she was rushed away from ground zero in an early departure.

There has been no official statement from the Clinton campaign yet.

Thanks to ABC we do know that Clinton left the Sept 11 ceremony about 45 minutes ago when the “medial incident”is said to have happened, however the press poll was not told to where, while aides are not responding to questions about her whereabouts.

via http://ift.tt/2c1Jolp Tyler Durden

Why A 2% Move In Stocks Feels Like 20%

A weekend anecdote from Eric Peters, CIO Of One River Asset Management

Everything is 10-times bigger now,” said the CIO. A 2% move in stocks feels like 20%. And a 10bp move in bond yields feels like 100bps. “It’s the kind of thing that happened to Alice in Wonderland.” When you combine negative rates with leveraged carry strategies, anything becomes possible. You can justify almost any price for an asset provided policy makers can suppress volatility. “But elevated asset prices come at the cost of systemic fragility. Because to suppress volatility requires feeding the beast with ever more stimulus.”

“30-year Japanese gov’t bonds yields jumped from 0.05% to 0.50% in 4 weeks,” continued the same CIO. Their price fell 15%. “The person who locked-up their money for 30yrs in exchange for 1.5% in cumulative interest payments, lost 15% of principal. That’s 300yrs of interest, lost in a month.” And the Bank of Japan just signaled that they want a steeper yield curve. Which means more losses to come. “These instruments are nuclear bombs. They’re toxic waste. They’re owned but un-ownable. Not even Alice encountered such nonsense.”

* * *

Kaboom! The earth shook. A manmade tremor. The chubby North Korean kid had popped off another plaything. The dark side of mankind’s technological coin. You see if Apple can waterproof an iPhone 7 supercomputer, any paranoid dictator can eventually miniaturize a nuclear weapon; if we allow him. And we have. Naturally, every coin has two sides, and mankind’s eternal tale is shaped by how we react to our tails. We responded to a bad 2008 coin flip with massive monetary stimulus, extending the limits of what was once thought technically possible. But after eight straight years of landing on heads, we’re again growing nervous about that inevitable, overdue tail. G20 leaders convening in China announced, “We will pursue innovative growth concepts and policies by forging synergy among fiscal, monetary and structural policies, enhancing coherence between economic, labor, employment and social policies as well as combining demand management with supply side reforms, short-term with mid- to long-term policies, economic growth with social development and environmental protection.”

Having studied our disastrous reaction to the 1929 tail, and frightened by the rising anger that led to Brexit, Trump, Sanders and Le Pen, policy makers appear intent on boosting economic growth through fiscal expansion, structural reform. They’d better deliver for the sake of society. But never in history have both bonds and stocks been this expensive simultaneously. Which is perfectly fine, so long as rates stay low and investors expect to flip heads yet again. But can bond prices sustain these levels once policy makers commit to aggressive borrowing/spending? No one knows. Is that the dark side to today’s innovative policy coin? Unsure. And with Draghi disappointing markets by not expanding his balance-sheet expansion, and the BOJ indicating it wants Japan’s yield curve steeper, are central bankers finally finished?

Investors rightly wonder, uncomfortably, hoping for heads, terrified by tails.

via http://ift.tt/2c7yU7h Tyler Durden

15 Years After 9/11, Will the West Shut Itself Down To Freedom Like the Arab World Has?

Over at FoxNews.com, the ambassador from the United Arab Emirates (UAE) to the United States, Yousef Al Otaiba, makes a bold pronouncement that “it is Arabs who have the most at stake” in the fight against Islamic jihad and that the Arab world, which supplied all of the 9/11 hijackers, needs to create a more-viable future for its inhabitants.

In the UAE, we are advancing moderation in both our schools and places of worship. Our education system is built to reinforce Islam’s true values based on dialogue, tolerance, moderation, and peace. And in our mosques, we are modernizing the way Islam is taught, developing new training programs for imams and updating Koranic commentaries.

We also recognize the vital importance of skills training and job opportunities for youth at home and across the region to encourage their entrance into the workforce rather than let them fall prey to terrorist recruitment.

Fifteen years after 9/11, the long war against extremism continues. It is now a global fight against a borderless plague. While every country is at risk, today it is Arabs who have the most at stake. And it is Arabs who must lead in this fight for tolerance and humanity, with force and with ideas, where we pray and where we live, online, in the classroom and on the battlefield.

Whole piece here.

This is all well and good but it also runs up against the hard limit of how Arab governments typically rule their countries: with an iron hand. Hardly the worst of the bunch, UAE still ranks as “not free” by Freedom House and most other international watchdogs. Years after the Arab Spring, things are generally bad all over the region and unlikely to change anytime soon. How can you advance the sort of freedom and dynamism that blunts the allure of jihad while constantly cracking down on all sorts of expressive activities ranging from artistic freedom to press freedom to political freedom? The short answer is that you can’t.

Yes, the Arab world has the most at stake when it comes to Islamic terrorism. The rest of the world, particularly the developed world, has in many important ways already learned to live with it (not always well, as in the case of incursions on civil liberties). Long before 9/11, the Arab world was in many ways cut off from modernity and any sense of future. In terms of trade and culture, it was and remains relatively cut off from the world (just 330 books are translated annually from English into Arabic).

Until that changes, very little else can change, and there are ultimately very few things the “West” can do. Certainly military occupation has come a cropper in terms of liberalizing politics in the region. If military intervention isn’t the answer—and the past 15 years say No! in thunder—trade, diplomacy, and real cultural exchange (that is, vulgar pop culture, not state-sponsored piano recitals and the like) provides a path forward. The developed world needs to be confident in our broadly libertarian values and ways of life, not to apologize for or close ourselves off due to fear of a terrorism that is in no way an existential threat to “our way of life.” We should defend ourselves forcefully and unapologetically but to the extent that both the Democratic and Republican parties push protectionism, apocalypticism, and repression in terms of expressive freedom and they both want to double down on failed and continuing military interventions, well, we’re hardly giving anyone a future worth building, much less defending. To that extent, it’s good to hear Libertarian candidates Gary Johnson and William Weld talk about opening up our country, to immigrants (who can be legally vetted), trade, and the sort of technological and personal freedoms that are the first, best answer to death cults of any sort.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/2cNJaAw
via IFTTT

15 Years After Sept 11, A Blast From The Past: “Anti-Soviet Warrior Puts His Army On The Road To Peace”

On the 15th year anniversary of September 11, a great number of questions about what – and why – happened that morning in 2001, remain unanswered and probably will forever, We don’t intend to provide any new or great knowledge on a topic that will dominate today’s airwaves (readers can watch the memorial service dedicated to Sept 11 at the following link), however, we do want to point out another, less popular, aspect of journalistic history: an article from 1993, in which the Independent’s Robert Fisk profiles an “Anti-Soviet warrior” who “puts his army on the road to peace.”

The “peace warrior” was of course Osama bBn Laden, who 8 years later would be held responsible by the US government for the worst terrorist attack on US soil in history. This makes Osama the first “vetted” moderate rebel to turn against the (CIA’s) hand that fed him for years, leading to countless other US-funded and equipped “freedom and peace” fighters across the years who would ultimately attack the very US that made their militant aspirations possible. One almost wonders why the US continues to wage war against itself. Is it sheer incompetence (and with such Secretaries of State as Kerry And Clinton, this is a distinct possibility), or just a trigger-happy Military Industrial Complex which, if unable to wage war against a foreign target, is just as happy to turn against America’s own people.

Just as importantly, we hope this particular 1993 “report” will remind readers to always take anything, and everything, written by the global media, with a grain of salt.

The full article can be found here “Anti-Soviet warrior puts his army on the road to peace: The Saudi businessman who recruited mujahedin now uses them for large-scale building projects in Sudan.”

via http://ift.tt/2cbbyR8 Tyler Durden

“This Is An Unbelievable Disgrace For The Country” – Austria Stunned After Symbolic Election Delayed

Austrian conspiracy theorists have had a bumper year in 2016.

First, in the April 24 presidential election, the frontrunning candidate of Austria’s anti-immigrant Freedom Party, Norbert Hofer, who many said was virtually guaranteed to become the central European country’s first president, mysteriously lost when some 31,000 mailed-in ballots tipped the vote against him in the last second, handing the election to his far more moderate, and pro-European challenged, Van der Bellen. Hofer’s defeat sparked widespread relief across the ranks of Europe’s unlected establishment bureaucrats, as his victory would mark yet another significant moment in the advance of nationalism across EU member states. As Newsweek put it, “in the wake of Brexit, it would be seen as another defeat for the European political establishment.”

Accusations immediately emerged that the vote had been rigged, with the traditional response that these are merely the deranged ramblings of sore loser “nationalists.” Only… that was not the case, and in July Austria’s Constitutional Court ruled that the presidential runoff election must be held again, after it found “widespread” voting fraud, handing yet another victory to “conspiracy theorists” everywhere.

Then, following the surge in terrorist attacks in France and Germany in July, an August Gallup polls showed that Hofer’s lead over his opponent Van der Belden had continued to grow, showing the midpoint of the wide range of support for Hofer at 52 percent—one point higher than a poll in early July—versus 48 percent for Van der Bellen.

At this point the establishment was clearly panicking, which may have indirectly led to the lastest fiasco surrounding what has already become the most scandalous presidential election in recent European history, an election that has little practical – but dramatic and widespread symbolic – value for Europe.

As AFP reports, it is now virtually certain that the election scheduled for October 2, and which Hofer will not lose this time, will not be held after all, as an “embarrassing postponement of Austria’s high-stakes October 2 presidential election looked all but inevitable Saturday, because of technical problems involving glue failing to stick on postal votes.”

In the wake of the abovementioned May presidential election, which was annulled after Austria’s highest court upheld claims of procedural irregularities made by the narrowly-defeated far-right, a new election had been scheduled for October 2. This necessitated fresh elections but this time there appear to be… problems with glue on postal votes not sticking, making them invalid.

On Saturday independent ecologist Alexander Van der Bellen joined his rival in the vote, Norbert Hofer from the far-right, in saying he now expects a postponement.

“I don’t believe that October 2 is possible any more,” Van der Bellen, 72, told a news conference. “I hope that (the new election) can still take place this year.” But they may not… because the glue on the same postal votes that were used to rig the last election is “no longer sticking.”

Interior Minister Wolfgang Sobotka meanwhile made his clearest indication yet of a postponement, saying that “it does not look like” the problems can be resolved in time. He is due to make an announcement on Monday.

According to local media, the October election may now not even take place in 2016: Die Presse daily cited unnamed sources as saying that the government was looking at several possible dates in November, but that mid-December or even January were being considered.

Pushing the election back poses legal problems, however, and the government is considering drawing up special legislation allowing it to happen.

Some called this farce for what it is: “this is an unbelievable disgrace for… the whole country,” Die Presse said in an editorial entitled “Banana Republic”.

Meanwhile Hofer, 45, officially launched his election campaign in Wels in northern Austria despite the likely postponement, hitting out at the “stupidity” of allowing mass immigration by “economic migrants”. The May 22 vote, a run-off after a first round in April, saw Van der Bellen narrowly beat Hofer by just 31,000 votes. The FPOe has stoked concerns about recent record immigration, and should Hofer eventually win it would make Austria the first country in Europe since 1945 to elect a nationalist president, and unleash even more anti-immigrant sentiment across Europe just in time for the all important French presidential elections where National Front’s Marine le Pen has a substantial advantage.

As reported before, the role of the Austrian president is largely ceremonial, but a victory by Hofer – symbolic as it may be – would be a major boost to Europe’s other surging populist movements.

And now the “conspiracy theorists”  can come up with alternative, and has been the case, correct, explanations for what really happened.

via http://ift.tt/2c1tV4O Tyler Durden

Libertarian Ticket Shifts Focus to Answering Questions Outside of Debates

Empty podium. ||| Matt WelchTwo weeks ago, as Nick Gillespie reported in this space, Libertarian Party presidential nominee Gary Johnson said that it was “game over” if he was not included in the first 2016 presidential debate on Sept. 26. Given that the Democratic/Republican-controlled “nonpartisan” Commission on Presidential Debates (CPD) will choose the debate roster in mid-September based on a five-agency polling average that currently sits at 8.8 percent, well short of the required 15 percent, for Johnson, the irresistible force of the LP’s debate-centric focus has been on a collision course with the immovable object of the CPD’s unreasonably high threshold. Until, it seems, this afternoon.

No matter how much independent-bent political celebrities such as Mitt Romney, Arnold Schwarzenegger, and Mitch Daniels support the L.P. ticket being included in the debates, and no matter how much that motion is seconded by solid majorities of the American voting public, rules are rules, and when said rules are written by the Republican and Democratic parties, Libertarians are screwed. Unless, vice presidential nominee William Weld told me this afternoon, the mounting outrage at the “rigged” system is married to the sight of the two candidates outside every debate venue, making a mockery of the proceedings inside by answering every question simultaneously, only better:

“So I’m no longer so sure that it’s game over if we’re not in the debates,” Weld told me. “I think there’s going to be kind of a national uproar if we’re not in the debates, and we will join in that uproar, and be standing together on the street corner outside every debate venue answering the same questions as in the debate in real time, you know, putting it out on Facebook Live.”

Weld made the same promise during his address at a midtown Manhattan rally this afternoon, which was attended by 500-plus enthusiastic supporters.

“We’ve seen that the little videos that we record in 90 seconds are seen by 15, 18 million people in a matter of less than two weeks,” he told me, “so that kind of free media attention might continue all the way from now until November 8th as a result of our exclusion. That would be a substitute, at least in part, for being in the debates, and it would give us the high ground. It’s ground that I think we could occupy with some happiness.”

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/2cg3wm6
via IFTTT

Global Economic Overview (Brexit, China, Screwflation, Humility, Patience… )

Global Economic Overview (Brexit, China, Screwflation, Humility, Patience... )

By Vitaliy Katsenelson, CFA
The following is an excerpt from Investment Management Associates’ second-quarter letter to investors (also published on Institutional Investor)

In this letter we are taking up the ambitious goal of painting a picture of the global economic landscape as we see it, in order to walk you through the investment process that we been fine tuning for this less-than-exciting picture.  

The Answer Is Not in Your Econ Book

The Great Recession may be over, but seven years later we can still see the deep scars and unhealed wounds it left on the global economy.  In an attempt to prevent an unpleasant revisit to the Stone Age, global governments have bailed out banks and the private sector.  These bailouts and subsequent stimuli resulted in swollen global government debt, which jumped 75% from $33 trillion in 2007 to $58 trillion in 2014.  (These numbers come from a recent McKinsey study on global debt.  They are the latest numbers we have, but we promise you they have not shrunk since.)

A lot of things about today’s environment don’t fit into economic theory.  Ballooning government debt should have brought higher – much higher – interest rates.  But central banks bought the bonds of their respective governments and corporations, driving interest rates down to… well, today a quarter of global government debt “pays” negative interest.  

The concept of positive interest rates is straightforward.  You take your savings, which you amass by foregoing current consumption – not buying a newer car or making fewer trips to fancy restaurants, and lend them to someone.  In exchange for your sacrifice you receive interest payments.  

With negative interest rates something very different happens: You lend $100 to your neighbor.  A year later, the neighbor knocks on your door and with a smile on his face repays that $100 loan in full by writing you a check for $95.  You had to pay him $5 for foregoing your consumption of $100 for a year.  This is what negative interest rates are!  Try to explain this logic to your kids.  We tried to explain it to ours and failed, miserably.  

The key takeaway is this: negative and near-zero interest rates show central banks’ desperation to avoid deflation, and more importantly they highlight the bleak state of the global economy.

In theory, low and negative interest rates were supposed reduce savings, get consumers off their butts, and stimulate spending.  In practice the opposite has happened – the savings rate has gone up.  As interest rate on their deposits declined, consumers felt that now they had to save more to earn the same income.  Go figure.
Some countries resort to negative interest rates because they want to devalue their currencies.  This strategy suffers from what economists call the fallacy of composition – the mistaken assumption that what is true of one member of a group is true for the group as a whole.  As a country goes to negative interest rates, its currency will decline against others – arguably stimulating its export sector (at the expense of other countries).  But there is absolutely nothing proprietary about this strategy: other governments will do the same, and in the end all will experience lowered consumption and a higher savings rate.  

The following point is so important we want to repeat it, bold it, italicize it, and underline it: If our global economy was doing great, interest rates would not be where they are today!  

As We Zoom in Things Get Worse

Let’s start with Europe, the world’s second largest economy.  European political (EU) and monetary (EMU) unions were great experiments that made a lot of sense on paper.  Europe, which had roughly the same size population and economy as the US, was at a competitive disadvantage, as dozens of currencies embedded extra transaction costs in cross-border trade, and each currency separately had little chance to compete with the US dollar for reserve currency status.  

There were also important noneconomic considerations. Germans were haunted by their past; they had started two world wars in the 20th century, and a united Europe was their way of lowering the chances of future European wars.

EMU sounded like a very logical marriage of all the significant powers of post–World War II Europe. But the arrangement was never really a marriage; it was more like a civil union. EMU members combined their currencies into one, the euro. They agreed to use the same central bank and thus implicitly guaranteed one another’s debts.
Though treaties put limits on budget deficits (limits that, ironically, Germany was the first to exceed), each country went on spending its money as it wished. Some were relatively frugal (like Germany); others (Portugal, Ireland, Italy, Greece, and Spain) went on spending binges like newly hitched college students who had just gotten their first credit card, with an irresistibly low introductory rate and a free T-shirt.  

The European Union is a collection of states that are vastly different from each other.  They are separated by culture, language (which impedes labor mobility resulting in semi-permanent labor productivity disparity between countries – think Greece and Germany), economic growth rate, total indebtness, and history. (Germany, for instance, suffered through hyperinflation in the early twentieth century and is thus paranoid about inflation.)

Now let’s turn to Brexit – the UK referendum on exiting the EU.  Ironically, the UK doesn’t have half the problems that most EU nations are going through.  Since it is not part of the European Monetary Union, it has retained its currency and its central bank.  

The UK’s main dissatisfaction with EU membership is due to the immigration issue.  Since treaties have turned the EU into a borderless union, when Germany accepted refuges from Northern Africa it basically made a unilateral decision on behalf of all EU members to accept those refuges to all EU countries.  High unemployment, wage stagnation, and Muslim terrorism are now endemic in the EU, and you can see how the UK citizenry might have a problem with this.  

After the Brexit vote, the financial media lit up with opinions on its consequences for the EU and global market economy.  They’ve varied from “Brexit is a non-event” to “This is a Lehman moment for the global economy” (referring to Lehman Brothers going bankrupt and almost bringing the financial system to a halt in 2008).  The arguments on both sides are quite convincing:  

The argument for Brexit being a non-event is simple and straightforward.  The UK maintained its currency; thus dis-joining the EU will bring lower complexity.  The UK and EU will forge new trade treaties.  There is a fear that the EU may impose trade sanctions on UK, not so much to punish the UK as to threaten other EU members that exit will come at a stiff economic cost (effectively turning this voluntary club into a prison).  However, the UK is a net importer of goods from the EU; thus any sanctions will hurt remaining EU members more than the UK.  

Of course, the UK may never exit the EU.  The referendum was not binding; it was there to measure the temperature.  The new prime minister may decide to ignore the will of the people and remain in the EU.  

The Lehman moment argument is less simple, but it is not unimaginable either.  Brexit may provide a spark that will ignite already gasoline-soaked ground.  Though the EU and EMU were supposed to unite Europeans, they may have had the opposite effect – they may have caused a groundswell of nationalism.   

In all honesty, we are concerned more about Italy than the UK.  Italy is the third largest economy in the EU and the second most indebted one.  Its debt to GDP stands at 132% (Greece is at 171%).  Seventeen percent of Italian bank loans are non-current.  In the depths of the financial crisis, that number was 5% in the US.  Italian lenders account for nearly half of bad debt in the EU (source WSJ).  

If Italy was not part of the European Monetary Union (EMU), it would just print lira and bail out its banks.  But it gave up that luxury when it joined the EMU.  To make things worse, in 2014 the EU passed a law that prohibits governments from bailing out their banking systems; thus the shareholders, debtholders, and depositors may bear the brunt of the eventual bailout.  Unless the EU passes a new law that bends the 2014 law – or the Italian government takes matters into its own hands, violating the EU charter – we may see Italian debtholders and depositors hit with the cost of bank bailouts take to the streets and demand “Italexit.”  

Nationalism is a highly emotional, zero-sum, us-against-them sort of business. Add immigration concerns on top of economic ones and it’s not hard to see how Europe has turned into a highly combustible mixture looking for a match.  And since emotions are often anti-logical, future decisions by EU countries may not necessarily be beneficial to the European continent.  

Since the situation in Europe is so complex and combustible, we don’t know whether Brexit will be just another match that simply burns out or the one that starts the fire.  Will it trigger other exits?  Will it slow down EU growth, thus straining an already leveraged system?  We don’t know, and nobody does.  

China is the third largest economy in the world and is living through the largest debt bubble we probably we’ll ever see in our lifetime.  From 2007 to 2014 its debt quadrupled from $7 to $28 trillion (according to McKinsey).  Over the same time period its economy tripled, growing from $3.5 to $10.5 trillion.  These numbers are staggering, and they point to one indisputable fact: all Chinese growth since 2007 came from borrowing.  There was no miracle in it.  

But it gets worse, much worse. The numbers also show that every $1 of new debt brought only cents of GDP growth.

In the absence of skyrocketing debt, the Chinese overcapacity bubble, which was already fully inflated pre-2007, would have burst years ago.  

As the government continues to engineer growth using debt, every yuan of debt will bring less growth. The laws of economics have not been suspended in China.   American economist Herbert Stein’s law states that things that cannot go on forever, won’t.  When its debt bubble bursts, China will turn from being a tailwind for global growth into a headwind.  

This brings us to the world’s fifth largest economy, Japan.  It is the most indebted developed nation in the world – its debt to GDP is over 230%.  Japan is the proof of Herbert Stein’s law – its economy is still suffering a hangover from what at the time seemed an endless real estate party (bubble) that lasted from the mid ’80s into the early ’90s. Japan has been on the QE and endless stimulus bandwagon longer than anyone else and has nothing (well, except a lot of debt) to show for it.  

Japan also has the oldest population in the world – 26% of its population is older than 65 (in contrast to the US, where the figure is only 15%).  Rising debt and an aging population are a double negative for the economy, as debt per capita is rising at an even faster rate than total debt. And since the working population is declining at an even faster rate than the population, debt per working person is growing at an even faster rate.  

From what we just told you, you might think Japan is paying the highest interest rates in the world, somewhere in the high teens.  Wrong! The Japanese ten-year bond yields negative interest.  

We just spilled a lot of digital ink to give you a brief overview of what we see around the world.  We did not do it to increase your consumption of alcohol or anti-anxiety medicine.  

We did it for a few reasons.  First, we wanted to show you that stock market performance has not been driven by the improving health of the global economy.  Just as negative interest rates are not a positive for the continued health of the economy, nor does current stock market performance augur rosy future returns for stocks.  In fact, the opposite is true.  The bulk of the stock market gains are due to one variable: the expansion of the price-to-earnings ratio.  S&P 500 earnings have stagnated since 2014.  

Stock prices have gone up because the Federal Reserve and other central banks have squeezed all investors to the right side of the risk curve.  Stocks, and especially high-quality ones that pay dividends, are looked upon as bond substitutes.  Investors now look at the dividends of those stocks and compare those yields to what they can earn in Treasuries.  This strategy will end in tears, as these bond-substitute stocks are significantly overvalued (see Coke example further on). 

Secondly, we wanted to show you the headwinds we are facing and what we are doing to avoid having them deflate the sails of your portfolio.  Summarizing, these headwinds are: 
The risk of lower or negative global economic growth.  If we get higher economic growth, we’ll treat that as a bonus.
Something-flation.  Inflation (high interest rates), deflation (low interest rates) or screwflation (higher interest rates and deflation).  We don’t know which of these extremes we’ll see and in which order.  Nobody does.  Despite their eloquence and portrayed confidence, financial commentators arguing one or another extreme point of view on CNBC don’t know, either.  In fact, the more confident they are more dangerous they are.  The difference between us and them is that we know we don’t know and are therefore trying to construct an “I don’t know” portfolio that can handle any extremes. 
And finally, stock valuations will decline.  

This is a time for humility and patience.  Humility, because saying the words “I don’t know” is difficult for us testosterone-laden alpha male money manager types.  

Patience, because most assets today are priced for perfection.  They are priced for a confluence of two outcomes: low (or negative) interest rates continue to stay where they are (or decline further) and above-average global economic growth.  Both happening at once in the future is extremely unlikely.  Take one of them away (only one!) and stock market indices are overvalued somewhere between a lot and humongously (we don’t even try to quantify superlatives).  
Take both away and… 

Vitaliy N. Katsenelson, CFA, is Chief Investment Officer at Investment Management Associates in Denver, Colo. He is the author of Active Value Investing (Wiley) and The Little Book of Sideways Markets (Wiley).  

His books were translated into eight languages.  Forbes Magazine called him "The new Benjamin Graham".   To receive Vitaliy’s future articles by email or read his articles click here.

via http://ift.tt/2cO9U86 Vitaliy Katsenelson