Cruz Vs. Trump Continues, Attacker in Nice Had Accomplices, Alleged Terror Plot Against Olympics Stopped: P.M. Links

  • Ted CruzSen. Ted Cruz’s refusal to endorse Donald Trump as the GOP nominee continues to dominate the political media cycle even as Trump prepares to give his acceptance speech this evening.
  • PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel’s speech tonight at the Republican convention will mention that he’s “proudly gay” and will warn the party against fighting “unnecessary culture wars” CNN has been told.
  • A French prosecutor says that the truck driver who killed more than 80 people in Nice was not some lone wolf, had accomplices, and had planned the attack for months.
  • Ten people have been arrested in Brazil for allegedly attempting to organize a terror plot against the upcoming Olympics.
  • Trump says that if NATO countries want the United States military to help defend them, they better start shelling out more of their own money.
  • The Department of Justice will attempt to stop health insurance companies Anthem and Cigna from merging and also Aetna and Humana from merging.
  • Roger Ailes is out at Fox News. For real this time.

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

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“Are Stocks Cheap Or Expensive” – Here Are 20 Answers

“Is the S&P 500 cheap or expensive” – that is the question every trader has to answer every day.

It is also the question BofA’s Savita Subramanian addresses today in a report which deconstructs the “Fed model”, or the goalseeked analysis which justifies high stock multiples (and prices) as long as bond yields are low (contrary to virtually all other valuation models). This is what she says:

As equity markets make new highs, the bulls are grasping for new (or very old) ways to justify the rally. The latest to garner attention is the Fed model, which compares the earnings yield on stocks with bond yields. There have been many iterations of the Fed model over the years, but they all come to the same conclusion today: stocks are cheap relative to bonds. The bulls argue that the spread between bond yields and the earnings yield will normalize as equity valuations re-rate higher. But this is just one of the ways that the relationship can mean-revert – which it has failed to do over the last decade. The other two may not be as bullish – the spread can mean-revert if earnings were to collapse, or if interest rates were to spike. Thus, the Fed model may not be as clear cut a buy signal for equities. And critically, our analysis suggests that the various forms of the Fed model have far less predictive power than simply using a PE ratio.

But while we will dissect the Fed model rationalization at a later time, let’s address the original question: are stocks over or under valued. The answer is nuanced.

With equity markets making new highs, the bears have egg on their face, at least for the time being. Margins have not collapsed, China has not imploded and credit markets are still open. But at the same time, the bulls are running out of ways to justify the rally. Valuations are no longer cheap, central banks appear to be running out of bullets and the hopes of a big rebound in growth just around the corner appears fleeting. In the near term, it appears that only thing to really hang your bullish hat on is weak investor sentiment and the idea that stocks are more attractive than the alternative (i.e. cash and bonds). 

Vague enough yet? If not, then here is the full answer, or rather 20 answers, because BofA does the proper thing and instead of giving one blanket statement to the most fundamental question, it looks at the 20 most important valuation measures, and finds that the market is overvalued, in some cases dramatically, according to a majority of the most popular metrics.

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Energy Giant Schlumberger Fires Another 8,000 As “Market Conditions Worsened” In Q2

Last quarter, Paal Kibsgaard, the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer the world’s largest oilfield services company, Schlumberger warned that “the decline in global activity and the rate of activity disruption reached unprecedented levels as the industry displayed clear signs of operating in a full-scale cash crisis. This environment is expected to continue deteriorating over the coming quarter given the magnitude and erratic nature of the disruptions in activity.” He then promptly fired 8,000 workers in the first quarter, and said that he is not expecting a meaningful recovery in the company’s activity until sometime next year.

He was right, because while the oil industry was touted as experiencing a substantial rebound since then, this appears to not have been the case for the energy services giant. This was confirmed in the results reported moments ago by Schlumberger which announced another unexpected loss or $2.16 billion, or $1.56 cents a share, compared with a profit of $1.12 billion, or 88 cents, a year earlier.

As Bloomberg notes, as the downturn dragged on, executives at the world’s largest oilfield services provider have had to push back their expectations for an improvement in drilling and fracking work, with crude prices remaining more than 50 percent lower than their peak in 2014.

As a result, the tone of Paal Kibsgaard this quarter was even gloomier than in Q1:

In the second quarter market conditions worsened further in most parts of our global operations, but in spite of the continuing headwinds we now appear to have reached the bottom of the cycle.

Or so he hopes.

On a pro forma basis, revenue decreased 12% sequentially with North America falling 20% due to the Canadian spring break-up and a 25% drop in the US land rig count, while international revenue decreased 9% due to weaker activity, continued pricing pressure, and a large-scale cutback in our operations in Venezuela. However, our wide geographical footprint and broad technology portfolio continued to offer unique advantages that helped to mitigate these effects.

And the real story behind the recovery, or lack thereof:

As a result of the weakness in activity that will persist through 2016 as expected, we have made another significant adjustment to our cost and resource base, including the release of more than 16,000 employees during the first half of 2016 and a further streamlining of our overhead, infrastructure, and asset base. This has led to $646 million in restructuring charges in the second quarter for the reduction in our workforce, as well as a non-cash $1.9 billion impairment charge for fixed assets, inventory, and multiclient seismic data. We also recognized $335 million in merger and integration charges relating to the Cameron acquisition.

So after firing 8,000 in the first quarter, Schlumberger just laid off another 8,000 workers. It may have been even more because while Schlumberger reported a headcount of 113,000 people at the beginning of this week, in the earnings release it said the company has “approximately 100,000 employees”, so it seems that even more cuts could have come in July.

As a result of the ongoing energy recession, Schlumberger, Houston’s largest energy employer as of a month ago, has now eliminated about 50,000 jobs, or a third of its entire workforce, in the two years of the ongoing oil bust according to FuelFix calculations.

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Cruz Vs. Trump Continues, Attacker in Nice Had Accomplices, Alleged Terror Plot Against Olympics Stopped: P.M. Links

  • Ted CruzSen. Ted Cruz’s refusal to endorse Donald Trump as the GOP nominee continues to dominate the political media cycle even as Trump prepares to give his acceptance speech this evening.
  • PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel’s speech tonight at the Republican convention will mention that he’s “proudly gay” and will warn the party against fighting “unnecessary culture wars” CNN has been told.
  • A French prosecutor says that the truck driver who killed more than 80 people in Nice was not some lone wolf, had accomplices, and had planned the attack for months.
  • Ten people have been arrested in Brazil for allegedly attempting to organize a terror plot against the upcoming Olympics.
  • Trump says that if NATO countries want the United States military to help defend them, they better start shelling out more of their own money.
  • The Department of Justice will attempt to stop health insurance companies Anthem and Cigna from merging and also Aetna and Humana from merging.
  • Roger Ailes is out at Fox News. For real this time.

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

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How to Actually Make America Great Again

Screen Shot 2016-07-21 at 2.55.59 PM

Earlier this week, I published a lengthy thought piece titled, America is Being Divided and Conquered Into Oblivion. I ended it with the following paragraphs:

All that said, I don’t want to end this post on a negative note. I think the real thing that’s missing from the equation is too many good, talented people are doing nothing. I’m not trying to be judgmental here. I personally had the ability and resources to quit my job and do what I do. I didn’t have a family at the time and didn’t have to provide for anyone else. That’s not the point. You don’t have to do what I did to make a difference and influence people. You don’t have to quit your job and fight the status quo with every breath you take. Life doesn’t need to be seen as an all or nothing endeavor in everything you do. Nevertheless, I think it’s important to consider the following (as an aside, I try to ask myself these questions all the time).

Think about your everyday life. What are you doing to push forward the decentralization of power and unite people? How are you being potentially divisive in life, and how can you bring people together as opposed to tearing others down? If you were brought up privileged and financially well off, you arguably have a greater responsibility to society. What are you doing to give back? Is it sufficient? Is what you do for a living accretive or extractive to society? What are you doing to make the world a better place than you found it? If nothing, why not?

continue reading

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Cruz Vs. Trump Continues, Attacker in Nice Had Accomplices, Alleged Terror Plot Against Olympics Stopped: P.M. Links

  • Ted CruzSen. Ted Cruz’s refusal to endorse Donald Trump as the GOP nominee continues to dominate the political media cycle even as Trump prepares to give his acceptance speech this evening.
  • PayPal co-founder Peter Thiel’s speech tonight at the Republican convention will mention that he’s “proudly gay” and will warn the party against fighting “unnecessary culture wars” CNN has been told.
  • A French prosecutor says that the truck driver who killed more than 80 people in Nice was not some lone wolf, had accomplices, and had planned the attack for months.
  • Ten people have been arrested in Brazil for allegedly attempting to organize a terror plot against the upcoming Olympics.
  • Trump says that if NATO countries want the United States military to help defend them, they better start shelling out more of their own money.
  • The Department of Justice will attempt to stop health insurance companies Anthem and Cigna from merging and also Aetna and Humana from merging.
  • Roger Ailes is out at Fox News. For real this time.

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

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Mattress Money & Need-For-Yield: “We Saw This In 2007”

Submitted by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

Today’s “Thoughts From The Beach” picks up on a couple of articles I read over the last few days. With the markets breaking out to new highs, the bull market commentary has been expanding quickly. As you know, I have increased equity allocations in models with the breakout, but this is a tactical position only. The fundamentals by no means support the rising risk levels in the market currently.  Let’s take a look at a 3-Things worth considering.

Money In The Mattress?

Here is a myth that just won’t seem to die: “Cash On The Sidelines.”

This is the age old excuse why the current “bull market” rally is set to continue into the indefinite future. The ongoing belief is that at any moment investors are suddenly going to empty bank accounts and pour it into the markets. However, the reality is if they haven’t done it by now after 3-consecutive rounds of Q.E. in the U.S., a 200% advance in the markets, and now global Q.E., exactly what will that catalyst be?

However, Clifford Asness summed up the problem with this myth the best and is worth repeating:

“Every time someone says, ‘There is a lot of cash on the sidelines,’ a tiny part of my soul dies. There are no sidelines. Those saying this seem to envision a seller of stocks moving her money to cash and awaiting a chance to return. But they always ignore that this seller sold to somebody, who presumably moved a precisely equal amount of cash off the sidelines.

 

If you want to save those who say this, I can think of two ways. First, they really just mean that sentiment is negative but people are waiting to buy. If sentiment turns, it won’t move any cash off the sidelines because, again, that just can’t happen, but it can mean prices will rise because more people will be trying to get off the nonexistent sidelines than on. Second, over the long term, there really are sidelines in the sense that new shares can be created or destroyed (net issuance), and that may well be a function of investor sentiment.

 

But even though I’ve thrown people who use this phrase a lifeline, I believe that they really do think there are sidelines. There aren’t. Like any equilibrium concept (a powerful way of thinking that is amazingly underused), there can be a sideline for any subset of investors, but someone else has to be doing the opposite. Add us all up and there are no sidelines.”

Furthermore, despite this very salient point, a look at the stock-to-cash ratios also suggest there is very little available buying power for investors current.

AAII-Stocks-Cash-071416

Margin debt levels, negative cash balances, also suggest the same.

SP500-Margin-Debt-071916

Cash on the sidelines? Not really.

 

All About That Yield

Despite the recent surge in the financial markets, the key to everything is found within the realms of the bond market. On both a global and domestic front, the bond market is telling a very different story about the economy and world we live in versus what is being assumed by the stock market. 

A recent note by Benjamin Streed, via Raymond James, summed up this point well. To wit:

However, the global bond markets appear to be singing a very different tune as increasing amounts of global sovereign debt is pushed into negative yields thanks in part to monetary policy in Europe and Japan. As we’ve noted in previous writings, domestic monetary policy is unclear/uncertain (at best) but the one thing that is becoming strikingly obvious is the undeniable influence overseas central banks are having on the US bond markets. For example, recent estimates have negative-yielding sovereign debt in the vicinity of $10 trillion leaving many ‘safe haven’ investors in dire need of not just safety and liquidity but a positive yield. If you’re an overseas investor, it’s almost a no-brainer that you’d seek out these high yielding instruments that also just happen to be the world’s largest and most liquid ‘risk-free’ asset. According to Citigroup, US Treasuries now account for nearly 60% of all positive-yielding sovereign debt and also represent ~90% of all positive yields with a short maturity of less than one year. If you want/need to stay short-term and risk-free, there is apparently only one place on the entire planet to go, here. Think about the potential ramifications of that last statement; how much will US monetary policy (the Fed) really influence the short-end of the yield curve if T-bills are the only game in town for short-term, high-quality debt? There are some indications that this demand is already having a meaningful impact on some of deepest parts of the Treasury market.”

gLobal-bond0-yields-072016-2

According to US Treasury data, demand for US Treasuries is so high that ‘stripping’ bonds, i.e. separating a bond into its component principal and interest payments now stands at a record $223 billion, the highest level in more than seventeen years. Most of the stripping is focused on maturities in 2045 and 2046, utilizing the most long-term of all US securities available in the market. In many ways, who can blame them? Year-to-date, the benchmark 30-year bond has returned a staggering 22% and is up nearly 26% over the last twelve months. For those investors willing to maintain longer-term bonds in their portfolios, duration truly has been their friend. As a result of the ongoing ‘duration demand’, the Treasury curve has flattened to its lowest levels since 2007 (see the chart below). The difference in yield between the 2yr and 10yr Treasury notes sits at only 75 basis points (bp) while the 2yr to 30yr difference is a mere 147bp.”

gLobal-bond0-yields-072016-2

Meanwhile, with the recent equity rally the markets are at a clear inflection point with equities at/near record highs and yields at/near record lows. Equities at all-time highs would indicate that Brexit-related concerns have subsided and that the ‘all clear’ has been signaled. However, bond yields at record lows offer up a conflicting view of the world, or at least one that is much less convinced that the ‘all clear’ has been signaled at this juncture.”

As is always the case, somebody is going to be very wrong. What is important to remember is two things:

  1. All bond yields are relative and U.S. debt yields can’t remain positive in a global sea of negative rates indefinitely. Yields will fall eventually inverting the yield curve as the next recession begins.
  2. Money flowing into U.S. debt for a positive yield will also push the U.S. dollar higher. This will negatively impact oil prices and crush expectations for a “hockey stick” recovery in earnings which has been a primary “bullish support” of the current advance.

 

Saw This In 2007

Adam Koos, via MarketWatch, had a very interesting piece out this week:

“It’s happened before and it can happen again — deceived investors piling onto an all-time-high in the stock market only to find themselves victims of a ‘bull trap.’ For those new to the term, a bull trap is simply a humbling false market signal, and we’re living right in the middle of potentially one of the biggest ever.”

I have substituted charts for Adam’s only so I can make a couple of additional points. But for now, let’s get back to Adam:

“In 2007, the market had become long in the tooth after rebounding from the pop of the tech bubble. The S&P 500 corrected mid-year and as the market began to show signs of fatigue, it managed to scrape higher, printing a new all-time high, which also brought excitement to investors and professionals everywhere. ‘The bull market was back!’ There was nothing to worry about … but they were wrong.”

SP500-2007-Breakout-072016

Note in the chart above, at the time of the previous push to new all-time highs in July 2007 the markets were pushing 3-standard deviations of the intermediate term moving average with the all primary indicators in an extreme overbought territory. For the importance of a 3-standard deviation extension, see my previous post on pushing extremes.

I don’t need to remind you what happened following that short-lived bullish exuberance of new highs. The subsequent 53% loss wiped out years of previous gains and set investors back more than a decade from their retirement goals.

Back to Adam:

“Since the bottom of The Great Recession in March of 2009, the market has clawed its way to the title of ‘Second-Longest Bull Market in History.’

So, here we are today, squeaking by with new all-time highs, and all the news is about the next big leg of another healthy bull market”

SP500-2016-Breakout-072016

As it was in 2007, we once again see a market breaking out to new highs with all of the bullish excitement and exuberance to accompany it. The problem is, just as we saw in 2007, the markets are pushing well into 3-standard deviation extremes with extreme overbought conditions.

Does this mean the market is about to collapse again? Not necessarily, but as a portfolio manager I must be prepared for all possible outcomes. Adam, picks up on some additional points of concern:

“The single biggest reason bull markets come to an end is because the price of stocks rise to a point at which investors no longer see value in owning them. What seems to accompany each bounce in the market is:

  • A decline in volume, indicating that enthusiasm is following downside pressure and not the buying excitement
  • An increase in the number of companies that have fallen more than -20% off their 52-week highs.

Regarding number one, typically, volume drops when a bull market is long in the tooth. Since the February lows when trading volume on the NYSE stood at around 4.9 billion, while the market has had a good run off those lows, Monday’s volume stood at less than three billion.

 

With regard to number two, between the last two market tops, the percentage of companies on the NYSE that are down more than 20% off their highs actually rose from 25% in May to over 33% in July.

 

When market crashes occur, it starts with the small caps, then bleeds into the mid caps, and eventually all the buying climbs the ladder toward safety, dividends, and yield in utilities, metals, materials, REITs and blue chips — exactly the stocks that have been exhibiting the most strength lately. Coincidence?

As I have stated previously, the “yield chase” has led investors into some of the most dangerous territory seen at any time since the “Nifty Fifty” in the late 70’s. With complacency extremely high, a very crowded trade in “yieldy stuff,” and little liquidity in the markets, the potential for a very nasty mean reversion in the areas perceived to be “safe” could readily occur.

And, as in 2008, investors will once again start questioning the wisdom of putting their life savings at “risk” in the Wall Street casino.

Just some things I am thinking about.

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Roger Ailes Resigns From Fox News; Rupert Murdoch Takes Over As Acting CEO

Following a barrage of allegations of sexual misconduct involving Fox News’ iconic CEO Roger Ailes, it seemed like it was only a formality before the departure was announced, and sure enough, moments ago it became official when Fox announced that Ailes has resigned as CEO and Chairman.

Full release:

Roger Ailes Resigns as Chairman and CEO of Fox News Channel and Fox Business Network, and Chairman Fox Television Stations

 

Rupert Murdoch to Assume Role of Chairman and Acting CEO of Fox News Channel and Fox Business Network

 

21st Century Fox (NASDAQ:FOXA) today announced that Roger Ailes, Chairman and CEO of Fox News Channel and Fox Business Network, and Chairman of Fox Television Stations, has resigned from his role effective immediately.

 

Rupert Murdoch will assume the role of Chairman and acting CEO of Fox News Channel and Fox Business Network.

 

Rupert Murdoch, Executive Chairman, 21st Century Fox, said:

 

“Roger Ailes has made a remarkable contribution to our company and our country. Roger shared my vision of a great and independent television organization and executed it brilliantly over 20 great years.

 

Fox News has given voice to those who were ignored by the traditional networks and has been one of the great commercial success stories of modern media.

 

It is always difficult to create a channel or a publication from the ground up and against seemingly entrenched monopolies. To lead a flourishing news channel, and to build Fox Business, Roger has defied the odds.

 

His grasp of policy and his ability to make profoundly important issues accessible to a broader audience stand in stark contrast to the self-serving elitism that characterizes far too much of the media.

 

I am personally committed to ensuring that Fox News remains a distinctive, powerful voice. Our nation needs a robust Fox News to resonate from every corner of the country.

 

To ensure continuity of all that is best about Fox News and what it stands for, I will take over as Chairman and acting CEO, with the support of our existing management team under Bill Shine, Jay Wallace and Mark Kranz.”

 

Lachlan Murdoch and James Murdoch, 21st Century Fox’s Executive Chairman, and CEO, respectively, said:

 

“We join our father in recognizing Roger’s remarkable contributions to our company. Our talented Fox News and Fox Business colleagues, up and down the organization and on both sides of the camera, have built something that continues to redefine the cable news experience for millions of viewers. We are enormously proud of their accomplishments. For them, as well as for our colleagues across our entire organization, we continue our commitment to maintaining a work environment based on trust and respect. We take seriously our responsibility to uphold these traditional, long-standing values of our company.”

And here is the letter Ailes sent to Rupert Murdoch, via Drudge:

Letter from Roger Ailes To Rupert Murdoch
**Exclusive** 

 

Dear Rupert, 

 

With your support, I am proud that we have built Fox News and Fox Business Channels into powerful and lucrative news organizations that inform our audience and reward our shareholders. I take particular pride in the role that I have played advancing the careers of the many women I have promoted to executive and on-air positions. Many of these talented journalists have deservedly become household names known for their intelligence and strength, whether reporting the news, fair and balanced, and offering exciting opinions on our opinion programs. . Fox News has become Number 1 in all of cable because I consistently identified and promoted the most talented men and women in television, and they performed at the highest levels. 

 

Having spent 20 years building this historic business, I will not allow my presence to become a distraction from the work that must be done every day to ensure that Fox News and Fox Business continue to lead our industry. I am confident that everyone at Fox News and Fox Business will continue as the standard setters that they are, and that the businesses are well positioned for even greater success in the future. 

 

I am proud of our accomplishments and look forward to continuing to work with you as a consultant in building 21st Century Fox 

 

All the best, 

 

Roger.

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Americans Stunned As Stocks… Fall

Seemed appropriate…

As Ryan Detrick (@RyanDetrick) noted, The Dow is up nine straight days. Going back 20 years this has happened only twice. Both times it was up day 10… So today is a historic #fail… Leaving Dow Futs at crucial support… with VIX surging back to a shocking 13 level before it was quickly squelched into the close… "off the lows"

 

Stocks had their worst day since Brexit today… Trannies were clubbed like a baby-seal out of the gate and no bounce (SouthWest)…and when Europe closed things got worse…

 

Leaving The Dow, S&P, and Small Caps unchanged-ish for the day…

 

Of course this is merely "the pause that refreshes" or the "healthy correction" that leads to the next leg higher. Although we note that the S&P is at record richness to The Fed balance sheet…

 

But global central banks saved the world (for US stock investors) – but note the last 2 weeks have seen central bank balance sheets shrink in USD terms…

And S&P valuations are at 14 year highs… "it's probably nothing"

 

Elon Musk is losing his touch…

 

Bank stocks have recovered mightily off the Brexit lows BUT…Citi and JPM are unch from Brexit

 

But financials remain full of exuberance relative to the yield curve…

 

Energy stocks began to catch down to crude..

 

Post-Brexit, Gold remains the biggest winner and bonds overtook stocks again today…

 

And off the Brexit bounce..

 

The decoupling continues in credit land as HY spreads are nowhere near record lows as stocks push ever higher…(note the break began when The Fed started to taper QE3)…

 

Treasury yields tumbled from the US open… 4th day in a row of Treasury selling into the US open, but notable bond buying after Draghi disappointed… the belly of the curve is at Turkey coup low yields…

 

FX markets were volatile with the USD index drifting lower amid Kuroda and Draghi comments…

 

As USDJPY dropped 1% –  the most in a month… (after Kuroda spoiled the helicopter money party)

 

Commodities were mixed today with PMs rallying after Draghi and Kuroda disappointed, crude weaker and copper flat to modestly higher…

 

Slamming WTI to 3-month lows…

 

As 2015 analogs move to top of mind…

 

And finally, yesterday's PM plunge was entirely reversed today…

 

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart: Fool me once, shame on you; Fool me twice, shame on me, Fool me a third time, I must be a bloody idiot…

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5 Charts That Prove Millennials Are Worse Off Than You

Submitted by Catey Hill via MarketWatch.com,

They’ve been called spoiled and entitled, but millennials may not be in nearly the advantaged position many think.

Millennials may be the first generation ever to have lower lifetime earnings than their predecessors, which is “in contrast to the taken-for-granted promise that each generation will do better than the last,” according to a report released this week by the U.K.-based think tank Resolution Foundation.

Indeed, the typical millennial in the U.K., which the think tank defines as aged 15 to 35, earned about 8,000 pounds (the equivalent of around $10,600) less during their 20s than did those in Generation X.

And this data isn’t the first to show that the millennial generation may be worse off than their predecessors, at least in some ways. In the U.S., more millennials than older generations graduate with student loan debt, and they tend to have more of it.

That may help explain why a significantly higher percentage of American millennials have student loan debt than older generations, according to the Pew Research Center, a nonprofit think tank in Washington, D.C. (Of course, part of this is also that the older generations have had a longer time to pay down their debt.)

 

Not only do millennials have lots of student loan debt, but they’re also not making much more than the previous generation. And that’s true even when you compare people ages 25 to 34 now (these are a subset of the millennial generation) vs. those we were ages 25-34 15 years ago with the same levels of education.

Millennials are also far less likely to own a home than previous generations — despite the fact that a number of surveys show that they want to, according to a 2014 survey of more than 1,000 U.S. adults aged 18 to 29 carried out by the Demand Institute, a New York-based nonprofit think tank jointly operated by the Conference Board and Nielsen.

They’re also more likely to live with their parents than some past generations, thanks in part to weak job prospects and high student loan payments. For the first time in 130 years, young adults are more likely to live with their parents than with their partners, Pew Research Center data released earlier this year shows.

Still, there are plenty of ways millennials are likely to be better off than previous generations. Generation X, are the most likely to have debt: 89% of Gen Xers have debt, compared with 86% of millennials. Gen Xers also have more total debt ($103,800 versus $46,000) according to data released last year from The Pew Charitable Trusts, a nonprofit organization in Philadelphia, Pa. And Gen Xers have more credit card debt — which, thanks to high interest rates is often one of the most costly kinds of debt — than millennials, defined by this group as those born between 1965 and 1980. Some 44% of Gen Xers have credit card debt and the median amount is $5,000 compared with 39% and $2,500 for millennials.

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