Dead-Cat-Bounce Saves Stocks From Bankmageddon

Are the "fiction peddlers" winning?

 

Since the "great" jobs report, stocks are tanking, the dollar has roundtripped, and bonds & bullion are surging…

 

On the day, Nasdaq was the worst with FANGs FUBAR. Note that Stocks bounced off the European Close and the NYMEX Close…and Trannies made it green

 

Dow Futures dropped almost 500 points from overnight highs before a 250 point ramp in an hour shaved half the losses…

 

The almost standard buying panic was back in the last hour as USDJPY spiked but bonds were not buying it…

 

AAPL was mega-ramped to run friday's VWAP levels…

 

Financials (and homebuilders) are collapsing year-to-date…

 

As US bank risk continues to surge (yes contagiously)…

 

With energy stocks plunging after Chesapeake denied bankruptcy (while its bonds didn't)…

 

As FANGs have crashed over 13% in the last 4 days – worse than August's Black Friday plunge and the most on record…

 

As "Most Shorted" has collapsed since The Fed ended QE3 to 2009 lows…

 

Credit contionues to crumble to 2009 levels and the QE3 overvaluation is being unwound…

 

Treasury yields collapsed today…

 

With 5Y breaking below its 3-year channel… the lowest close in 5Y since June 2013

 

The USD was dumped again led by Swissy (intervention) and JPY strength…

 

Gold and Silver soared today as Copper and Crude faded…

 

With WTI ending back below $30…

 

And Gold pushing above $1200.. to six month highs…Today was gold's biggest single-day rise since Dec 2014…and the biggest 6-day gain since Oct 2011.

 

Finally, for anyone "hoping" that this is nearly over… it's not! There is no signs of capitulation or panic – the S&P 500 SKEW index (tracking bets on extreme outlier moves) has plunged back towards 8-month lows as it is increasingly clear that investors are derisking, unwinding actual exposure as opposed to hedging for a short-term dip (Equity weakness and SKEW collapse implies lifting hedges and reducing exposure overall)..

 

On the other side of the coin Gold 1M skew has flattened significantly in recent weeks due to strong call buying, and skew is now near its most inverted in almost 5-years…

 

 

Charts: Bloomberg

Bonus Chart: It seems US banks have collapsed far more than CAD banks – we suspect this will revert


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1Lc7LYW Tyler Durden

Another Reason Not to Vote Jeb Bush—He Wants to Overturn Citizens United

The enthusiasm is infectious. ||| Boston GlobeJeb Bush, the GOP presidential candidate who last polled north of double digits nationwide four months ago, who finished a distant sixth in the Iowa caucus behind a man who promptly dropped out of the race, and who has burned through more than $100 million in a vain attempt to convince voters that the third time will be the charm for Bush conservatism, is spending what one hopes are the waning hours of his spectacularly awful campaign arguing serially that political documentaries should be censored.

No, that’s not how the former Florida governor phrases it (fans of restricting campaign finance almost never come to grips with the inevitable results of their prohibitionism), but it’s the real-world application of reversing the 2010 Supreme Court decision Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, which Bush has advocated at least twice in recent days.

God help us. ||| Reason“If I could do it all again I’d eliminate the Supreme Court ruling,” Bush told CNN’s Dana Bash today. (Uh, if you could do what again, exactly?) “This is a ridiculous system we have now where you have campaigns that struggle to raise money directly and they can’t be held accountable for the spending of the super PAC that’s their affiliate.”

This was no momentary slip; Bush reiterated the idea on the hustings today, according to CNN: “The ideal situation would be to overturn the Supreme Court ruling that allows for…unregulated money for the independent and regulated for the campaign….I would turn that on its head if I could.”

The case Bush would like to see overturned made legal an anti-Hillary Clinton documentary that under previous law could have—if it hadn’t been successfully censored first—landed its producers a maximum of five years in prison under the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002, which prohibited such “electioneering communication” to be aired too close to an election. Not even Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.), who famously co-authored that law, dared to actually campaign on it during his presidential run, such was its deep unpopularity with conservative activists and intellectuals alike (including George Will, who was essentially libertarianized as a result).

Bush thus joins Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders in wanting to see this important free-speech precedent overturned—Bernie because he loathes corporations and fantasizes that only campaign finance stands between us and progressive policy utopia; Hillary because she has a quarter-century track record of being objectively pro-censorship. Jeb? It’s hard to avoid the conclusion that he’s heavy into the market for excuses. Either that, or he’s trying to secretly outdo his brother Neil in sullyling the family name.

Some related Reason reading: “Our Presidential Cycle Shows Why Citizens United Was Decided Rightly,” and “You Are Now Free to Speak About Politics.”

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1QnEzzQ
via IFTTT

Monday Humor: A Preview Of The Bernie Sanders Presidency

Pres(ident)ed with no comment… none whatsoever…

 

 

h/t @TheMarcoMobile


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/20RJsJ2 Tyler Durden

Either Banks Are Cheap… Or The Market’s Gonna Crash

Large cap financials have had an awful time in the last month and are 11.7% lower so far in 2016.

As ConvergEx's Nick Colas details, that’s worse than pretty much anything else, including all other S&P 500 sectors, the Russell 2000 small cap index, and even the MSCI Emerging Markets Index. 

This down and out sector is worth a look for three reasons. First, it seems clear now that the investment case for the Financials, based on a series of Fed rate increases and a steeper yield curve, was either wrong or early.  Which is the same thing as wrong.  Second, volatility in the group (both actual and implied) is now equal to the levels of August-September 2015. Third, even if the largest banks, brokers and regionals merely meet the lowest earnings expectations on the Street, they are still only trading for 10-12x this year’s EPS and 9.5-11.0x next year.

 

One caveat, though, and it’s a big one.  If the stock prices for these largest financial institutions are right, then the broader market is clearly still overpriced.  Something has to give.

Ask any veteran stock analyst what industry group draws the smartest but quirkiest colleagues, and you’ll probably hear one sector more than any other: “Insurance”.  At my first job in a bulge bracket research department, the fellow who covered the space was fond of talking to himself at the oddest times and modulating his voice between a whisper and scream on the morning call. It was like being at a Joe Cocker concert, if Joe had a collection of Hermes ties. He would preface his talks with “I have three things to say”, and call them out as “#1”, “B”, and “Thirdly”. None of this seemed to hurt his franchise; he was regularly listed among the top 3 analysts following the sector, besting a score or more of worthy competitors.

I could list other examples of similarly quirky people drawn to the group, and over the years I have come to the conclusion that since the Insurance industry is virtually unanalyzable it breeds a certain genius-level eccentricity in those charged with making sense of it.  And just behind them are the bank analysts. There’s more of these in the wild, looking at everything from small regional banks to the largest household “Money center” names.  And since the start of the year, they have generally been a miserable lot.

The Financials component of the S&P 500 is down 11.7% year to date.  To put that in perspective, this performance is worse than:

Any other major S&P sector, including Energy which is actually outperforming the broad market by 140 basis points thus far in 2016.

 

Any other broad market index, including the S&P Mid Cap 400 (down 7.0%), the S&P 600 Small Caps (down 8.1%), and the Russell 2000 small caps (down 10.8%).

 

The two major international stock market indices – the MSCI EAFE developed market (down 7.1%) and the MSCI Emerging Markets (down 6.4%).

When you see this kind of “Pain trade” in capital markets, you know two things.

There is a lot of aggressive selling. We saw that today with mega-cap banks such as Bank of America, Citigroup and Wells Fargo all moving through to new lows intraday or at the close.

 

There is fear in the air. Look at both the Implied Volatility and actual 30 day Historical “Vol” for the Financials sector of the S&P 500. Both hover around 25%, the same level the group saw on average from late August to September 2015 during the last market meltdown.

Since contrarian thinking is one of the hallmarks of both good investing and sharp trading, the logical question is “Does the market have it right, or is the current price action an overreaction?”  To evaluate that, you have to understand why so many market participants got the Financials so wrong in this still-young year.  A thumbnail sketch of the problem:

Interest rates. At the beginning of the year the consensus opinion was that the U.S. yield curve would slowly steepen over time.  We were just coming off a December Fed meeting where the central bank finally raised short term rates. Ten year Treasuries yielded 2.25% and should have been on their way to 2.5%. Market sentiment is that a steeper yield curve makes for a better profit environment for the banks.  Fast forward to today and the yield curve is flattening like a soufflé after a solid rap. And confidence in rising bank earnings has flattened as well.  It also doesn’t help that trillions of dollars’ worth of overseas sovereign debt trades for increasingly negative interest rates…

 

Concerns over oil-patch credits. The decline in oil prices to largely unforecasted levels makes for a large question mark over all the lending done to support the industry during boom times.  And while most U.S. banks have taken pains to quantify the limited nature of their particular exposures, the market clearly isn’t picking up what they are putting down.

 

U.S./Global economic growth. Fourth quarter U.S. GDP was barely positive at 0.7%. A strong dollar (until today, anyway) has put a crimp in confidence over U.S. corporate profits.  Reported unemployment is low enough that further job gains will be slower than prior years.  Overseas economies are sluggish and central banks in Japan and Europe now sit with negative overnight rates that look to get even more negative as the year goes on.  None of this is good for a traditionally “Early cycle” group like the financials.

So are the U.S. large cap financials cheap enough to buy?  To answer that question, we did a simple analysis of the ten largest “Money center” banks and the ten largest regional institutions.  We looked at their current price and analysts’ earnings estimates to determine their forward P/E ratios for 2016 and 2017. Our one wrinkle on this traditional analysis: we also pulled the single lowest earnings estimate for each name.  It is our “What’s the worst that can happen” scenario.

Here is what the math means for Financials valuations generally:

The larger institutions (mostly multinational banks and brokers) trade for 9.6x/8.7x the mean analyst earnings estimates for 2016/2017. In a world where 10x forward earnings puts a name or group within range of typical “Value” investors, this looks cheap.

 

Looking at the worst-case-scenario estimate for each name, the average P/E ratio goes to 10.4x and 9.5x for 2016 and 2017. Still below that 10x threshold, in other words. And therefore still statistically “Cheap”.

 

The large regional banks trade for 11.4x and 10.0x this year and next year’s mean earnings per share estimates. A little more expensive than the “Money center”, but one can hardly call these multiples expensive.

 

For the worst-case-scenario estimates in the regional bank space, the multiples rise to 12.1x this year and 10.9x next year. Not as cheap as the larger banks, but (again) not out of bounds for a value oriented money manager.

Good investors know that you never buy stocks on just a valuation argument.  Any attractively priced investment can still find its way to an even more subterranean bargain basement.  The point of our quick analysis is simply to show that markets are pricing in what amounts to the most bearish take on Financials earnings power over the next 24 months.

In the end, the weakness in Financials so far in 2016 isn’t really about how much banks and brokers will earn in the next 2 years.  It is about whether or not the world’s major economies are slipping into a yet invisible recession.  If you could guarantee that the low estimates for bank/broker earnings would materialize, the group would rally from here.  The fact that they remain under pressure means there is a larger game afoot.

Simply put, either large cap Financials are cheap, or the entire U.S. equity market is still overpriced.  Their precipitous decline year to date means markets fear they are both the transmission mechanism for a global slowdown/recession to come and a primary victim of that event.  Or, from the glass-half-full side, they overly discount a bearish scenario that will not materialize. Short term, they should bounce since their recent volatility looks to be in line with prior spikes and near term bottoms. Longer term, global and domestic economies need to show some resilience. And the sooner the better.

Because, as Gavekal Capital exposes, banks are approaching relative performance lows…

The KBW Bank Index, which consists of 24 banks, is approaching 2008 and 2011 lows relative to the S&P 500. In the chart below, we plot the KBW Index against the S&P 500 going back to September 1992 which is when the KBW Bank Index began. We have indexed the chart at 100 starting in September 1992. Banks have underperformed the S&P 500 by nearly 37% since 1992 and only twice, in 2008 and 2011, have banks underperformed more. In 2008, banks had underperformed by nearly 48% and in 2011 banks had underperformed by about 43%.

1 - Copy - Copy

It’s not just banks in the United States that have been getting pummeled either. Not a single stock in our GKCI DM Banks Index is trading above its 200-day moving average.

1 - Copy (2)

The median developed world bank is down 20% over the past year…

1 - Copy

 

And 85% of developed world banks made a new 200-day low on January 20th.

1

 

This was a greater percentage of bank stocks that made a new low in either 2008 or 2011.


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1Q3W9bT Tyler Durden

“We Can Put Refugees On Buses”: Leaked Memo Shows Erdogan Blackmailed Europe For Billions

If there’s anything we’ve learned over the past twelve months it’s that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is prepared to employ all manner of nefarious tactics in order to preserve his grip on power in Ankara.

Following unfavorable election results last June, Erdogan plunged the country into civil war be restarting a long simmering battle with the PKK and proceeded to crack down on journalists and anyone else critical of the ruling AKP. Ultimately, new elections were called and AKP put up a stronger showing, effectively paving the way for Erdogan to rewrite Turkey’s constitution and install an executive presidency.

But Erdogan’s bullying isn’t confined to his domestic political agenda. Greek media has obtained an internal memo which suggests the Turkish strongman effectively blackmailed the EU by demanding cash payments in exchange for efforts to curb the flow of migrants into Western Europe. “We can open the doors to Greece and Bulgaria anytime and we can put the refugees on buses,” Erdogan allegedly said, on the way to demanding $3 billion per year in aid.

Read more below.

*  *  *

Submitted by Keep Talking Greece

In internal EU memo obtained by Greek media reveals the blatant Turkish blackmail on the refugee crisis. The memo contains a summary of the dialogue between Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan with European Commissioner Jean Claude Juncker and President of the European Council Donald Tusk on 16th November 2015 during the G20 Summit in Antalya, Turkey. The three Presidents were discussing the Action Plan to tackle the Refugees and Migrants Crisis.

According to the memo, the bargain was hard and Turkey demanded 30 billion euro from the European Union in order to refrain from sending refugees and migrants to Europe through Greece.

EU’s offer was 3 billion euro in two years, but Erdogan demanded 3 billion euro per year.

In addition, Ankara threatened, that if the EU does not link the refugee issue to Turkey’s EU accession then it would:

1. Send buses full of refugees to Europe via Greece and Bulgaria and will let 10,000-15,000 refugees drown on its shores.

2. Turkey does not accept the 3 billion euro for two years he had agreed with and wants 3 billion a year at least, otherwise there will be no agreement.

3. Requests opening all accession funds soon and non instructions from the European Commission.

4. The European Commission deliberately delayed the publication of Turkey’s progress report, at the same Erdogan’s request to help him win the election.

Overwhelmed with arrogance Erdogan complains that the EU treated Turkey like a fool for 53 years and did not allow it to become full EU member, he compares a country like Luxembourg with the size of small Turkish town.

He also claimed that “Greece received 400 billion euro from Europe” during the economic crisis and that in fact Turkey should get a huge amount of money too. The two EU Officials told him, not to compare the Greek economic crisis with the refugee crisis. He claimed that the 3 billion euro will go for the refugees and not for Turkey.

The three-party meeting ended without an agreement.

What is worth noting is that neither Juncker, nor Tusk informed the other EU-member states about Turkey’s approach. Also the media covering the G20 summit were apparently told that “the ball was rolling”. but in fact there was a total media blackout on the EU-Turkey negotiations.

And at the end of the EU-Turkey agreement and Action Plan …what? The EU is expected to start pouring to Turkey -as it seems – part of the 3 billion euro as of end of February or beginning of March.

All we can do is to wait and see how Ankara will deal with the refugees and migrants.

I suppose, the EU leaked this internal memo to the Greek media, after Turkey complained that it has not received any more yet.

Copies of internal EU memo in English uploaded here.

Official EU statement on EU-Turkey Agreement 29. Nov 2015 here. As we all know meanwhile, official statements tell half the truth. The other half is been revealed little by little. That’s why there is no transparency which time frame these 3 billion euro cover.

PS I also suppose that Erdogan’s mind is stuck at the old US aid formula and (Truman Dogma) for Turkey and Greece. And he believes that Brussels operates in the same geopolitical way. But the red danger is gone and there is no Communist Russia anymore so that Turkey & Greece will need protection from.

*  *  * 

Full documents



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

Edge vs Risk Management (Video)

By EconMatters

Some traders think having good risk management in place is an edge, but there is a distinction to be made here. Today is a good day in financial markets to discuss this topic in depth.

© EconMatters All Rights Reserved | Facebook | Twitter | YouTube | Email Digest | Kindle  


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/23Th1gm EconMatters

The Increasingly Fragile Upper-Middle Class

Submitted by Charles Hugh-Smith of OfTwoMinds blog,

Many of these apparently high incomes are completely absorbed by high-cost upper middle class expenses.

Since the top 10% takes home 50% of all household income, it follows that this top slice has most of the discretionary cash, i.e. net income left after taxes, servicing debt and paying for essentials such as food, utilities and housing.

It also follows that the discretionary spending of the top 10% is supporting much of the economy that is dependent on discretionary spending: tourism, eating out, personal trainers, etc.

The top 10% includes the thin slice of Financial Oligarchy (top .01%) and the top 1%. This skews the income and wealth of the top 10%. But if we set aside the top 1%, the next 10% still earns the lion's share of household income.

The top .1% can prop up Maserati sales and buy $5 million vacation homes, but there simply aren't enough super-wealthy to support the U.S. economy. As for the top 1%, they can prop up the local Porsche dealership and pay dock fees at the yacht club, but there aren't enough of them to support the entire economy, either: around 1.5 million qualify as top 1%.

So that leaves the upper-middle class, the roughly 12 million households that earn a disproportionate share of household income, with the task of spending enough discretionary cash to prop up an economy that depends heavily on consumer spending.

Many of these upper-middle class households are far more financially fragile than their substantial incomes suggest. The vast majority of these high-income households depend on two earners, each making substantial salaries, bonuses and benefits such as 401K retirement contributions.

Many of these apparently high incomes are completely absorbed by high-cost upper middle class expenses. $250,000 a year may look like a lot until you throw in a couple of kids attending private prep schools or college, healthcare costs that aren't covered by insurance, an enormous mortgage and sky-high property taxes.

The upper-middle class includes many people with wealth, but it also includes many people who have saved very little, and what they do have is in IRAs and 401Ks trapped in the stock market. Their slide to insolvency can be very quick once one high-earner loses their job and can't find another equally lucrative position in a few months.

Many of these people are vulnerable to a downturn because they own/operate small businesses in discretionary spending sectors–the ones that will get creamed as people cut discretionary spending. Others are sandwiched between kids in college and elderly parents, and their seemingly big incomes are fully allotted to essentials and the generations they are sandwiched between.

One job loss will crumble the entire house of cards. As local government revenues start crumbling along with corporate profits, many high-cost jobs in both thr public and private sectors will suddenly be vulnerable as managers are forced to seek the largest possible savings from job cuts.

The upper-middle class that's supported the "recovery" with massive discretionary spending is far more vulnerable to implosion/insolvency than is generally appreciated.


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1Qnxsr8 Tyler Durden

The Coldplay/Beyonce Super Bowl Halftime Show Was Surprisingly Political

You may have missed it entirely (with milquetoast snooze-rockers Coldplay billed asBey by the Bay the headliners, no one would blame you), but yesterday’s Super Bowl halftime show included some striking political flourishes.

Chris Martin and company warbled through a short medley of their LITE-FM hits before Beyonce and a gaggle of dancers clad in Black Panther-style berets burst onto the scene, performing a verse from her new song “Formation.” At one point, Queen Bey and crew formed an “X” on the field, in an apparent nod to Malcom X. 

A segment of the music video for “Formation” features a young African-American boy in a hoodie raising his hands before a line of militarized police, followed by a shot of a graffiti spray-painted wall reading “Stop Shooting Us.” However, it should be noted, the lyrics to the song itself are strikingly apolitical

Prior to the game played at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, CA (not far from Oakland, where the Black Panthers were born), Beyonce’s dancers were photographed holding their fists in the air in a 1960s-style Black Power salute, with one dancer holding a piece of paper reading “Justice for Mario Woods,” a reference to the man whose shooting death at the hands of San Francisco police drew widespread attention late last year.

Though Queen Bey earned some fawning adulation for her performance, naturally there was some pushback from the usual suspects. Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani said on Fox and Friends this morning that “it was really outrageous that [Beyonce] used it as a platform to attack police officers who are the people who protect her and protect us, and keep us alive.”

The erstwhile “America’s Mayor” added: 

I mean this is a political position, she’s probably going to take advantage of it. You’re talking to middle America when you have the Super Bowl, so you can have entertainment. Let’s have, you know, decent wholesome entertainment, and not use it as a platform to attack the people who, you know, put their lives at risk to save us. 

Conservative writer and noted advocate of internment camps Michelle Malkin expressed her pearl-clutching horror at the use of the word “Negro” among Beyonce’s lyrics:

Never one to miss an opportunity to stoke the fires of the culture wars, friend of police unions and IRA terrorists Rep. Pete King (R-NY) issued a statement today, which read in part:

Beyoncé may be a gifted entertainer but no one should really care what she thinks about any serious issue confronting our nation. But the mainstream media’s acceptance of her pro-Black Panther and anti-cop video “Formation” and her Super Bowl appearance is just one more example of how acceptable it has become to be anti-police when it is the men and women in blue who put their lives on the line for all of us and deserve our strong support.

Bruno Mars was there too, for some reason, Make America Rainbow Againbut Coldplay concluded the 12-minute spectacle with a massive participatory effort by the audience holding up placards forming a stadium-wide rainbow and the words “Believe in Love.” This imagery was widely interepreted as a celebration of nearby San Francisco’s legacy as America’s LGBTQ mecca.

In what might be a case of squeezing political meaning out of a moment where little exists, The Daily Beast‘s Kevin Fallon wrote that Lady Gaga’s pre-game rendition of the Star-Spangled Banner was “campy, theatrical, and queer-as-hell” and “a sign of the times.”

Fallon didn’t really offer much evidence that this moment was “queer-as-hell” other than the fact that Gaga is a LGBTQ icon and was dressed in a red sequined pantsuit. In fact, Fallon even conceded her performance was “earnest” and “traditional,” but supposedly just by virtue of this international superstar performing at America’s most watched and macho event, the moment held important significance to Gaga’s “Little Monsters.”

That’s how it goes, sometimes people see politics everywhere as an excuse to feel outraged or aggreived, on other more rare occassions, they see hope. 

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1O0dmBz
via IFTTT

Overwhelming Majority of Americans Believe that Both Parties Are Too Corrupt to Change Anything … Want a Revolution

We’ve previously noted that polls show that Americans are in a “pre-revolutionary” mood, that less than 1 in 5 Americans think that the government has the “consent of the governed”, that government corruption tops the list of Americans’ fears, and that 3 times as many Americans supported King George during the Revolutionary War than support our OWN Congress today.

You might assume that such statements are over-the-top … or that the results come from partisan pollsters.

But a  group of Republican and Democratic pollsters and political strategists reviewed polling data last week, and revealed some stunning results:

  • 84% of all Americans believe political leaders are more interested in protecting their power and privilege than doing what is right
  • 81% percent believe the power of ordinary people to control our country is getting weaker every day as politicians of both parties fight to protect their own power and privilege
  • 80% believe the federal government is its own special interest primarily looking out for itself
  • 79% of all voters believe we need to recruit and support more candidates for office, at all levels of government, who are ordinary citizens, rather than professional politicians and lawyers

 

  • 78% believe that the Democratic and Republican Parties are essentially useless in changing anything, because both political parties are too beholden to special interests to create any meaningful change
  • 76% of Americans agree with the statement that America cannot succeed unless we take on and defeat the corruption and crony capitalism in our government
  • 75% believe that the US government is NOT working for the people’s best interest
  • 75% believe that powerful interests have used campaign and lobbying money to rig the system for themselves
  • 74% see the biased and slanted coverage of the media as part of the problem
  • 72% of Americans believe the U.S. has a two-track economy, where most Americans struggle every day, where good jobs are hard to find, and where huge corporations get all the rewards
  • 72% believe that the reason families in our middle class have not seen their economic condition improve for decades and economic growth is stalled is because of corruption and crony capitalism in Washington
  • 71% believe our government is not only dysfunctional, it is collapsing right before our eyes
  • 70% believe the government in Washington does not govern with the consent of the people
  • The majority – 56% – say they wish there were a third party with a chance of success to fight for their interests
  • Only 15% say the “values and principals of my political party are so important that I strongly prefer to vote for the candidates of my party…”

They concluded:

The country [is] in a prerevolutionary moment.

 

***

 

This election could mark the beginning of the end of two-party duopoly in the United States.

 

***

 

The people believe the real struggle for America is not between Democrats and Republicans, but between mainstream America and the ruling political elites of incumbent politicians, lobbyists, big business, big unions, big banks, big special interests and the big media.

 

***

 

The power elite asks, “When will this be over?” Although this is seen as a chaotic and temporary situation by most of the political and media establishment, our research shows a strong, evolving tidal wave of discontent and growing pressure for real and dramatic change.

 

***

 

Real change is what that the establishment fears most and fights hardest against. It is ultimately a losing battle.

 

***

 

This, in fact, is a revolution.


via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1KBj9Ti George Washington