Dubai Stocks Crash On Levered Liquidations, Margin Calls Turmoil

Long before there was a Greece (and its existential threat to world order), there was Dubai’s sovereign crisis in 2009 with Nakheel; and Dubai World (the floating islands) faced with massive debt loads and interconnectedness were bailed out. Since then it’s been nothing but ponies and unicorns… until now. The debt is all still there (and the interconnectedness)… and despite the mirage of wealth creation that equity’s massive rally has created, the drop in Dubai’s stock market we noted yesterday turned into a rout overnight as it dropped a further 8% as one of the countries largest companies (Arabtec – Dubai’s largest builder) plunged after high-level executive dismissals. “This is indiscriminate selling,” Ramez Merhi, director of asset management at Dubai-based Al Masah Capital, said by e-mail. “The markets took the stairway up, and an elevator down.”

 

 

As Bloomberg reports,

Dubai stocks dropped the most in 10 months following top-level dismissals at Arabtec, the United Arab Emirates’ largest-listed builder.

 

Arabtec dropped 9.8 percent to the lowest since January after the company confirmed it cut staff. People familiar with the matter said yesterday the company’s chief operating officer, chief information officer and chief risk officer have been fired.

 

 

The builder’s shares plunged 53 percent so far this month as Abu Dhabi state-run Aabar Investments PJSC cut its stake, stoking speculation the builder was losing government backing.

Dubai’s speculative bubble looks to be bursting…

“Selling pressure on Arabtec is causing margin calls on retail investor accounts, hence the big move down across the U.A.E. as a whole,” Nayal Khan, head of institutional sales and trading at the Naeem Holding brokerage in Dubai, said by e-mail.

 

 

“The market wasn’t able to resist the turmoil that has been triggered by Arabtec,” Montasser Khelifi, senior manager for global markets at Quantum Investment Bank Ltd. in Dubai, said by e-mail. “At this level we’re starting to see good buy opportunities, but this doesn’t seem to be the opinion of the majority of the market players.”

 

 

“This is indiscriminate selling,” Ramez Merhi, director of asset management at Dubai-based Al Masah Capital, said by e-mail. “The markets took the stairway up, and an elevator down.”

The world’s sovereign debt crises started in Dubai so it would be somewhat ironic if the central planners’ bubble would start to crack first in this construction-bubbler-prone state…




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

Are You Over Or Underpaid

It’s a simple question, yet one which is so difficult to answer (for lack of available data), and which fills most workers (especially those with a chip on their shoulder and/or delusions of grandeur) with dread: “Am I over, or underpaid in my job?”  The following handy chart, created by Reddit user Dan Lin, attempts to answer just this question with a breakdown of some 820 jobs listed by the BLS, with percentile data (25th, 50th, 75th, 90th) for the wage of any given occupation, allowing the determination where, relative to the median, one is paid.

Something tells us those jobs at the top of the chart, mostly education and training-intensive healthcare jobs, will not be pushing hard for minimum wage laws. Those on the bottom of the chart, however, those are a different story.

http://ift.tt/V2lG0t




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/V8Qzka Tyler Durden

Frontrunning: June 24

  • The Kerry Konfusion Kontinues: Kerry urges Kurds to save Iraq from collapse (Reuters)
  • Because the recovery: Avon to Cut 600 Jobs as CEO McCoy Seeks to Trim Expenses (BBG)
  • Iraqi Parties Pressure Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki to Step Down (WSJ)
  • Ukraine Rebels Call Cease-Fire to Match Government Truce (BBG)
  • IRS accused of obstruction over lost emails in Tea Party affair (Reuters)
  • IRS chief scorched as ‘liar’ (WND)
  • Big Investors Missed Stock Rally (WSJ)
  • U.K. Jury Finds Coulson Guilty of Conspiracy to Intercept Phone Voice-Mail Messages (WSJ)
  • HSBC to halve countries served by private bank, sells assets (Reuters)
  • Bond Market Has $900 Billion Mom-and-Pop Problem When Rates Rise (BBG)
  • Egypt’s president says will not interfere in judicial rulings (Reuters)
  • Goodbye Boeing “durable orders”: Officials at Ex-Im Bank Face Investigations (WSJ)
  • Who Gets Into NYC’s Elite Schools? Wrong Mix of Kids, De Blasio Says, Fighting Test (BBG)
  • Apple’s Big IPhones Said to Start Production Next Month (BBG)
  • Iran seeks to resolve HSBC freeze on some trade financing (Reuters)
  • Ex-Millennium Fund Manager Gets Four Years in Prison (BBG)

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

* Avon Products Inc plans to reduce its headcount by an additional 600 positions, largely in its corporate staff and North America business, part of the beauty-products company’s continuing turnaround efforts. (http://on.wsj.com/1nZ7bEi)

* Seven major auto makers on Monday disclosed they combined would recall millions of vehicles equipped with air bags that could explode under certain circumstances. The moves expand on earlier efforts to find and fix potentially defective air bag inflators made by Takata Corp and highlight the challenges for auto makers to contain mass recalls. (http://on.wsj.com/1uZISqS)

* Amazon.com Inc has reversed a halt on preorders of movie discs from Time Warner Inc’s Warner Bros studio as the two sides near a resolution to a pricing dispute, according to people familiar with the matter. (http://on.wsj.com/1sABnea)

* The head of Delta Air Lines Inc is expected to back the Export-Import Bank of the United States providing some support for sales of Boeing Co’s biggest jets, softening his stance even as the agency’s political critics step up a campaign to have it abolished. (http://on.wsj.com/1wq8PT4)

* Abbott Laboratories agreed to acquire Russian drug maker Veropharm for up to $495 million, a deal that would give the U.S. pharmaceutical company a manufacturing presence in that country. (http://on.wsj.com/UD9HpD)

* Payments business Comdata Inc is fielding interest from potential buyers after filing for an initial public offering earlier this year, according to people familiar with the matter. (http://on.wsj.com/1sAGomX)

 

FT

The US secretary of state John Kerry is scrambling to head off the break-up of the country by a surging rebel alliance and has called on Iraq’s leaders to immediately form a new government that includes all the country’s political and religious factions.

Tony Blair is apparently attempting to expand his role as a behind-the-scenes business and political broker in the Middle East and is looking to open an office in Abu Dhabi, the increasingly assertive oil-rich emirate.

Britian’s Labour party will target big outsourcing companies if it wins the election and try to reduce their role in delivering the government’s back-to-work programme.

Emirates Airline has said it would take a fresh look at the case for buying Airbus long-range passenger jets, in a head-to-head contest with Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner, giving Airbus a second chance to sell its new A350 aircraft to the fast-growing Gulf carrier.

Poland’s foreign minister has claimed in a secretly taped conversation that the British Prime Minister David Cameron had “messed up” his handling of the EU.

 

NYT

* Dean Foods Co has been asked to supply documents to the Federal authorities as part of an investigation into well-timed trades placed by the championship golfer Phil Mickelson and the well-known sports gambler William Walters. (http://nyti.ms/1sAH1wG)

* Seven automakers said that they were recalling more than three million vehicles worldwide because their air bags, made by Takata Corp, could rupture and send debris flying inside a car. The move is the latest in a series of recalls related to air bags made by Takata, one of the world’s top automotive supply firms, which has run afoul of regulators and prosecutors. (http://nyti.ms/1wqeqsx)

* The Supreme Court on Monday endorsed the Obama administration’s efforts to regulate greenhouse gas emissions from sources like power plants, even as it criticized what it called the administration’s overreaching. The decision is one in a recent string of rulings upholding the Environmental Protection Agency’s authority to issue Clean Air Act regulations to curb climate change, and the agency celebrated the decision. (http://nyti.ms/1iAygyj)

* Three technology stock traders have left the Boston office of Steven Cohen’s nearly $10 billion family office over the last week in a new round of defections at a firm that is still dealing with the fallout from a significant insider trading investigation. (http://nyti.ms/1rsFJPW)

* Allergan Inc told its shareholders on Monday not to hand over any stock to Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc, which last week offered to exchange $72 in cash and 0.83 of a Valeant share for each unit of Allergan stock. (http://nyti.ms/T4mQH4)

* Goldman Sachs Group Inc has been hired by Shire PLC as the London-listed drug maker confronts a takeover offer, people briefed on the matter told the New York Times. (http://nyti.ms/1iAzfyy)

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

* A magnitude-8.0 earthquake was felt in communities along Alaska’s sparsely populated Aleutian Islands on Monday but there were no immediate reports of damage. All tsunami advisories have been cancelled following the earthquake. (bit.ly/1lm4PQ0)

* Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne is splitting her finance department in half, appointing a powerful minister whose sole job is to wrestle down the massive deficit and deal with record-high debt. (bit.ly/1pHDZ6i)

Reports in the business section:

* South Africa might be on the brink of recession and refusing to sign any foreign investment treaties these days but it will remain the linchpin of Canada’s economic strategy on the African continent, International Trade Minister Ed Fast said. (bit.ly/1sAZ85J)

NATIONAL POST

* Com Dev International Ltd, a Canadian space company, is seeking millions of dollars in compensation after the Conservative government scuttled the launch of a satellite because it was scheduled to be sent into orbit on a Russian rocket. (bit.ly/1meodyw)

FINANCIAL POST

* Bell Media Inc plans to lay off about 5 percent of its Toronto workforce due to “financial pressure” in its advertising and subscription TV services. (bit.ly/1wqYhmG)

* The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board is making its first infrastructure investment in India by taking a $332-million stake in a toll road company. CPPIB will invest in L&T Infrastructure Development Projects Ltd in two tranches through a wholly owned subsidiary. (bit.ly/1wr0myW)

 

China

SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST

— Hong Kong’s former central banker Joseph Yam Chi-kwong has warned that the city could lose its status as China’s top financial centre if political developments unnerve the country’s leaders. Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Chairman Chow Chung-kong weighed in by warning that the increasingly tense political atmosphere could shake the confidence of international investors. (bit.ly/1qFGR5n)

— Up to 40 per cent of cyber attacks on the website used to run Occupy Central’s unofficial plebiscite on electoral reform came from computers registered to mainland firms in Hong Kong, said an IT expert who advised the poll’s organisers. (bit.ly/1j9eHZ1)

— Hong Kong entrepreneur Allan Zeman revealed that it was the government that was forcing him out as Ocean Park chairman. Zeman, who made his name establishing the Lan Kwai Fong nightlife district, said he was sure the government knew he wanted to continue in the post he had occupied for 11 years. (bit.ly/1jKbEq4)

THE STANDARD

— Beijing knows the views of Hong Kong people on visits by mainlanders but has not reached any decision, Hong Kong’s Secretary for Commerce and Economic Development Gregory So Kam-leung said. (bit.ly/UCvcaj)

— An extra HK$9 billion ($1.16 billion) a year will be required if building of the third runway at Chek Lap Kok extends beyond 2023, the Airport Authority warned. The authority estimated the budget for the third runway at HK$136.2 billion when it announced its master plan for the project in June 2011. (bit.ly/1qtsqz3)

— A total of 117 market participants will be ready for Shanghai Hong Kong Stock Connect when it is launched in October and that will account for 86 percent of the total amount of stock market transactions, Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing said. (bit.ly/1nzmWyE)

HONG KONG ECONOMIC JOURNAL

— Printer and publisher Hong Kong Economic Times Holdings Ltd said revenue rose 3 percent to HK$1.07 billion ($138.04 million) for the year ended March while profit plunged 55 percent to HK$28.1 million without any one-off gain.

HONG KONG ECONOMIC TIMES

— Mainland online KTV operator Tiange Group (IPO-TIGP.HK) is expected to raise up to HK$1.6 billion ($206.41 million) in an initial public offering in Hong Kong, selling new shares in a range of HK$4.50 to HK$5.3 apiece, according to a term sheet.

MING PAO DAILY NEWS

— Hong Kong recorded an average rent of HK$22.9 per sq ft for the city’s 85 residential developments in May, up 1.3 percent from April’s HK$22.6 per sq ft in its biggest gain since July 2013, according to property agency Centaline.

APPLE DAILY

— Privately held Chow Tai Fook Enterprises and Far East Consortium said they would team up with Australian casino operator Echo Entertainment to bid for a resort and casino project at Brisbane in Australia.

 

Britain

The Telegraph

LENDERS PREDICT MORTGAGE APPROVALS WILL FALL IN THE COMING MONTHS

(http://bit.ly/1uZigpV)

Bank of England’s quarterly credit conditions survey suggests lenders are becoming more cautious ahead of an expected move by Governor Mark Carney and the Financial Policy Committee (FPC) to rein in the market.

BRITAIN’S NUCLEAR CLEAN-UP BILL SOARS TO 110 BLN STG

(http://bit.ly/1l4UPG2)

The bill for cleaning up Britain’s nuclear waste has topped 110 billion pounds, after a 6.6 billion pound increase in the cost estimate for work required over the next 120 years.

The Guardian

ASOS TO MARK RETURN TO SELLING AFTER WAREHOUSE FIRE WITH HUGE SUMMER SALE

(http://bit.ly/1pclvNA)

Asos is launching a massive summer sale on Tuesday as it seeks to woo back customers affected by the fire in its main warehouse at the weekend.

UK FLIGHTS COULD BE HIT BY FRENCH AIR TRAFFIC CONTROLLERS’ STRIKE

(http://bit.ly/1iAdNd6)

Passengers flying to France and beyond this week could face disruption as a strike by French air traffic controllers has forced airlines to cancel dozens of flights.

The Times

SMALL FIRMS SUE FOR RATE SWAP DAMAGES

(http://thetim.es/1rscM6N)

Thousands of small companies hit with huge losses because of the mis-selling of complex financial products have been “failed” by official compensation, according to a victims group, with affected businesses instead preparing to turn to the courts for redress.

SHIRE TALKS UP PROSPECTS TO FEND OFF BIDDER

(http://thetim.es/1iAdZZJ)

Shire waxed lyrical about the sales potential of its pipeline of drugs in development as the pharmaceuticals group shored up its defences against a 27 billion pound bid approach from AbbVie, its American rival.

The Independent

AA GROUP RAISES 1.4 BILLION STG IN LONDON FLOAT BUT SHARES SLUMP

(http://ind.pn/1nznTqE)

The roadside assistance group AA group was valued at 1.4 billion pounds as it joined the London Stock Exchange, completing one of the most anticipated flotations in recent years. However, despite the fanfare surrounding the float, shares slumped 7.2 percent below the 250p offer price.

BNP PARIBAS CLOSE TO $9 BILLION SETTLEMENT WITH US AUTHORITIES

(http://ind.pn/1jKduY5)

BNP Paribas, the French bank with 7500 staff in the UK, is expected to pay to $9 billion to settle allegations it broke US trade sanctions, according to reports.

 

Fly On The Wall 7:00 AM Market Snapshot

ECONOMIC REPORTS

Domestic economic reports scheduled today include:
FHFA house price index for April at 9:00–consensus up 0.5% for the month
S&P Case-Shiller 20-city composite index for April at 9:00–consensus up 11.4% y/y
New Home Sales for May at 10:00–consensus up 1.4% to 441K rate
Consumer confidence for June at 10:00–consensus 83.7

ANALYST RESEARCH

Upgrades

CGG SA (CGG) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Societe Generale
Hercules Technology (HTGC) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at Wells Fargo
IDEXX (IDXX) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Canaccord
Spirit Realty (SRC) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at BofA/Merrill
Wisconsin Energy (WEC) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at Wells Fargo

Downgrades

Aviva (AV) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at UBS
Cabot Oil & Gas (COG) downgraded to Equal Weight from Overweight at Morgan Stanley
Covidien (COV) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at Leerink
Dr Pepper Snapple (DPS) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Citigroup
Enanta (ENTA) downgraded to Neutral from Outperform at RW Baird
ITG (ITG) downgraded to Neutral from Overweight at JPMorgan
IntercontinentalExchange (ICE) downgraded to Market Perform at Wells Fargo
MICROS (MCRS) downgraded to Sector Perform from Outperform at RBC Capital
National Retail Properties (NNN) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at BofA/Merrill
Web.com (WWWW) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at B. Riley

Initiations

Advance Auto Parts (AAP) initiated with an Overweight at Morgan Stanley
AerCap (AER) initiated with a Buy at UBS
Air Lease (AL) initiated with a Neutral at UBS
AutoZone (AZO) initiated with an Equal Weight at Morgan Stanley
Bed Bath & Beyond (BBBY) initiated with an Underweight at Morgan Stanley
Best Buy (BBY) initiated with an Overweight at Morgan Stanley
Charles River Labs (CRL) initiated with a Neutral at SunTrust
Chimerix (CMRX) initiated with a Buy at Brean Capital
Costco (COST) initiated with an Overweight at Morgan Stanley
Covance (CVD) initiated with a Neutral at SunTrust
Cyberonics (CYBX) initiated with a Buy at Sterne Agee
Dick’s Sporting (DKS) initiated with an Underweight at Morgan Stanley
Ducommun (DCO) initiated with a Hold at Topeka
GNC Holdings (GNC) initiated with an Equal Weight at Morgan Stanley
Home Depot (HD) initiated with an Equal Weight at Morgan Stanley
Johnson Controls (JCI) initiated with a Neutral at Susquehanna
LeMaitre (LMAT) initiated with a Buy at Stifel
Lennox (LII) initiated with a Neutral at Susquehanna
Lowe’s (LOW) initiated with an Equal Weight at Morgan Stanley
Lumber Liquidators (LL) initiated with an Equal Weight at Morgan Stanley
O’Reilly Automotive (ORLY) initiated with an Overweight at Morgan Stanley
Office Depot (ODP) initiated with an Equal Weight at Morgan Stanley
PAREXEL (PRXL) initiated with a Buy at SunTrust
PetSmart (PETM) initiated with an Underweight at Morgan Stanley
Ply Gem (PGEM) initiated with an In-Line at Imperial Capital
Quintiles (Q) initiated with a Neutral at SunTrust
Ruckus Wireless (RKUS) initiated with a Market Perform at Wells Fargo
Sensata (ST) initiated with an Overweight at Atlantic Equities
Target (TGT) initiated with an Underweight at Morgan Stanley
Tower Semiconductor (TSEM) initiated with an Outperform at Imperial Capital
Tractor Supply (TSCO) initiated with an Equal Weight at Morgan Stanley
Williams-Sonoma (WSM) initiated with an Overweight at Morgan Stanley

COMPANY NEWS

Micron (MU) said revenues for both DRAM and NAND Flash products were down slightly for Q3 vs. Q2. The company said it has no plans to expand wafer production in 2015
Avon Products (AVP) announced a workforce reduction of approximately 600
Google (GOOG) entered domain registration with new beta website (WWWW, WIX, VRSN, NSR)
KKR (KKR) to pay EUR 417M to take 33% stake in Acciona’s renewables business
Harbinger (HRG) offered $750M in cash for Central Garden & Pet (CENT, CENTA) pet segment
Zhaopin Ltd (ZPIN) said Tiger Global reported a 18.6% passive stake in the company.
Abbott (ABT) said it would acquire Russian drug maker Veropharm for $295M-$495M

EARNINGS

Companies that beat consensus earnings expectations last night and today include:
Micron (MU), Sonic (SONC)

Giga-tronics (GIGA) reports Q4 EPS (25c) vs.(31c)
Adamis Pharmaceuticals (ADMP) reports FY EPS ($1.22)
Xcel Energy (XEL) backs FY14  EPS view $1.90-$2.05, consensus $2.00
Sonic (SONC) sees FY14 EPS up 14%-15%, consensus 83c

NEWSPAPERS/WEBSITES

Dean Foods (DF) subpoenaed in insider trading probe, WSJ reports
Amazon (AMZN), Warner Bros. (TWX) near resolution of pricing dispute, WSJ reports
Shire S(HPG) hires Goldman (GS) as it confronts takeover offer, NY Times reports
Apple (AAPL) to mass produce 12-inch MacBook Air in Q3, DigiTimes says
Seven autoamkers (F, FIATY, TM, NSANY, HMC) to repair air bag problems in vehicles, Detroit News says
American Apparel (APP) co-chairman says firm not up for sale, Reuters reports
Microsoft (MSFT) making foray into quantum computing, NY Times reports
Allergan (AGN) CEO says firm targeting upped earnings guidance, Reuters says

SYNDICATE

AmSurg (AMSG) files to sell 8.5M shares of common, 1.25M shares of convert preferred
Atlanticus Holdings (ATLC) announces $100M ‘modified dutch auction’
Brixmor (BRX) files to sell 25M shares of common stock for holders
Descartes Systems (DSGX) files to sell 9.5M shares of common stock
Diamondback Energy (FANG) files to sell 2M shares for holders
G-III Apparel (GIII) files to sell 1.5M shares of common stock
Hilton (HLT) files to sell 90M shares for holders
KNOT Offshore Partners (KNOP) files to sell 4.6M common units
Prothena (PRTA) files to sell $115M of ordinary shares
Vince Holding (VNCE) files to sell 3.55M shares for holders
Xunlei (XNET) 7.315M share IPO priced at $12.00




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

Overnight Equity Futures Algos Jittery After Discovering Dubai On The Map

Judging by the surprising reversal in futures overnight, which certainly can not be attributed to the latest data miss out of Europe in the form of the June German IFO Business Climate report (print 109.7, Exp. 110.3, Last 110.4) as it would be naive to assume that centrally-planned markets have finally started to respond as they should to macro data, it appears that algos, with their usual 24 hour delay, have finally discovered Dubai on the map. The same Dubai, which as we showed yesterday had just entered a bear market in a few short weeks after going turbo parabolic in early 2014. It is this Dubai which crashed another 8% just today, as fears that leveraged traders are liquidating positions, have surfaced and are spreading, adversely (because in the new normal this needs to be clarified) to other risk assets, while at the same time pushing gold and silver to breakout highs. Recall that it was Dubai where the global sovereign crisis started in the fall of 2009 – will Dubai also be the place where the first domino of the global credit bubble topples and takes down the best laid plans of central-planners and men?

European equity markets have paused for breath (Euro Stoxx 50 -0.1%), with core European indices trading flat ahead of the US open, with eyes turning to the looming Fed speakers, with both Williams and Plosser due on the docket. This comes despite underperformance in the FTSE MIB (-0.7%) as Italian banks remain under pressure. Further cross-border M&A based on tax benefits has lifted specific stocks today, with Switzerland’s Syngenta the latest to gain on reports that Monsanto had tabled a USD 40bln bid for the Co. two months ago.

JGBs traded 5 ticks higher at 145.43 despite underperformance in the long-end, as 30yr yields rose to their highest level since January 7th. The Nikkei 225 (+0.05%) recovered from early weakness with JPY as a main driver for price movement. Shanghai Comp (+0.47%) led by consumer shares, while the Hang Seng (+0.33%) bounced back from its biggest loss in three months yesterday.

Oil extends its decline as Iraqi army victories damped concern the nation’s crude supplies will be disrupted. Also adding to Oil’s losses was a Putin proposal to government to end the resolution for using force in Ukraine, which appears set to pass tomorrow.

U.S. futures are also little changed, Asian stocks gain. Treasuries advance ahead of reports that economists said will show new-home sales slowed and GDP contracted more than originally estimated.

U.S. S&P/Case-Shiller home price index, consumer confidence, FHFA house price index, new home sales, Richmond Fed index, due later.

Bulletin headline summary from RanSquawk and Bloomberg

  • GBP underperforms as BoE’s Carney suggests a rate hike can only occur once slack in the economy has been reduced, which has dampened expectations of a near-term hike.
  • Risk-off tone following weak IFO report from Germany and concerns in the Middle-East over the Dubai stock index losing another 8% on a slowing property market.
  • Focus turns to the first Fed official comments since last week’s decision with Plosser (Voter, Hawk) and Williams (Voter, Dove) due to speak
  • Treasuries gain before week’s auctions begin with $30b 2Y notes, yield 0.508% in WI trading. Stopout at that level would be highest since May 2011.
  • Ifo institute’s index of German business confidence fell to 109.7 in June, weakest level this year, from 110.4 in May, amid signs of slower growth in Europe’s largest economy
  • Bank of England Governor Mark Carney said policy makers can wait for the economy to absorb more slack before increasing interest rates, and insisted such a move will be guided by economic data
  • Norway’s $880 billion wealth fund, the world’s largest, will expand its scope of investments to target “frontier markets” and add more currencies to generate higher returns
  • U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry arrived in the capital of Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region in his bid to prod the country’s leaders to unite against an al-Qaeda offshoot that has seized control over swaths of the country
  • Kerry said Obama is gathering the information he’d need if he decides to order airstrikes to counter the ISIS  advance
  • Dissatisfaction with Obama’s conduct of foreign policy has shot up among both Republicans and Democrats in the past month, even though a slim majority supports his recent decision to send military advisers to Iraq, according to the latest New York Times/CBS News poll
  • Russia’s Putin asked lawmakers in Russia’s upper house of parliament to rescind approval they granted to use force in Ukraine
  • The U.S. Supreme Court largely upheld the EPA’s requirement for emitters of gases tied to climate change — backing the rules for large facilities, while barring them for smaller polluters such as apartment buildings, schools or restaurants
  • Hilary Clinton will speak in Denver at a Clinton Global Initiative forum on “economic justice” as she tries to rebound from a round of comments in which she  suggested that she and former President Bill Clinton aren’t really rich; daughter Chelsea, married to a hedge-fund manager, recently said she’s incapable of caring about money
  • Sovereign yields lower. EU peripheral spreads tighter. Asian stocks gain, European stocks mostly lower. U.S. stock futures decline. WTI crude lower, copper little  changed, gold higher

US Event Calendar

  • 9:00am: FHFA House Price Index, April, est. 0.5% (prior 0.7%)
  • 9:00am: S&P/Case-Shiller 20 City m/m, April, est. 0.8%  (prior 1.24%)
    • S&P/CS Composite 20 Cities y/y, April, est. 11.5% (prior 12.37%)
    • S&P/CS Home Price Index, April, est. 169.09 (prior 166.8)
  • 10:00am: Consumer Confidence Index, June, est. 83.5 (prior 83)
  • 10:00am: Richmond Fed Manufacturing Index, June, est. 7 (prior 7)
  • 10:00am: New Home Sales, May, est. 439k (prior 433k)
    • New Home Sales, m/m, May, est. 1.4% (prior 6.4%)
  • 11:00am POMO: Fed to purchase $850m-$1.1b in 2036-2044 sector
  • 11:30am: U.S. to sell $25b 1Y bills; U.S. to sell $25b 4W bills
  • 1:00pm: U.S. to sell $30b 2Y notes

Central Bank Speakers

  • 8:05am: Fed’s Plosser speaks in New York
  • 2:00pm: Fed’s Dudley speaks in New York
  • 6:30pm: Fed’s Williams speaks in Stanford, Calif.

Market Wrap

  • S&P 500 futures down 0.1% to 1951.7
  • Stoxx 600 little changed at 346.4
  • US 10Yr yield down 2bps to 2.61%
  • German 10Yr yield little changed at 1.33%
  • MSCI Asia Pacific up 0.1% to 144.9
  • Gold spot little changed at $1316.7/oz

EUROPE

  • 11 of 19 Stoxx 600 secors rise, led by chemicals and oil & gas; miners underperform
  • 42% of Stoxx 600 members gain, 55% decline
    Eurostoxx 50 +0.2%, FTSE 100 -0.1%, CAC 40 +0.2%, DAX +0.1%,  IBEX little changed, FTSEMIB -0.1%, SMI +0.3%
  • German June IFO business climate index 109.7; est. 110.3

ASIA

  • Asian stocks rise with Indian, Korean shares outperforming
  • MSCI Asia Pacific up 0.1% to 144.9
  • Nikkei 225 little changed, Hang Seng up 0.3%, Kospi up 1%, Shanghai Composite up 0.5%, ASX down 0.4%, Sensex up 1.4%
  • 8 out of 10 sectors rise led by utilities; energy stocks underperform

ASIAN HEADLINES

JGBs traded 5 ticks higher at 145.43 despite underperformance in the long-end, as 30yr yields rose to their highest level since January 7th. The Nikkei 225 (+0.05%) recovered from early weakness with JPY as a main driver for price movement. Shanghai Comp (+0.47%) led by consumer shares, while the Hang Seng (+0.33%) bounced back from its biggest loss in three months yesterday.

EUROPE/UK

The Bank of England’s appearance in front of the Treasury Select Committee focused closely on the level of spare capacity in the UK economy, with Carney, Bean and Miles all highlighting that slack in the UK must still be exhausted before any move on rates can occur. As such, UK rates fell across the curve as Carney failed to maintain his hawkish turn at Mansion House a fortnight ago. Also of note. Today has seen the DMO 30yr syndication with demand currently standing at GBP 10bln.

Worse-than-expected German IFO data (109.7 vs. Exp. 110.3) failed to dent the EUR, with a short-squeeze in EUR/USD erasing the modest Asia-Pacific losses.

Prelim Barclays month end extensions show Pan-Euro Agg at +0.09y (Prev. +0.04y)

US HEADLINES

Newsflow remains light out of the US with participants looking ahead to US consumer confidence and the first Fed official comments since last week’s decision and blackout period with Plosser (Voter, Hawk) and Williams (Voter, Dove) due to speak.

Prelim Barclays month end extensions show US Treasury at +0.07y (Prev. +0.12y)

EQUITIES

European equity markets have paused for breath (Euro Stoxx 50 -0.1%), with core European indices trading flat ahead of the US open, with eyes turning to the looming Fed speakers, with both Williams and Plosser due on the docket. This comes despite underperformance in the FTSE MIB (-0.7%) as Italian banks remain under pressure. Further cross-border M&A based on tax benefits has lifted specific stocks today, with Switzerland’s Syngenta the latest to gain on reports that Monsanto had tabled a USD 40bln bid for the Co. two months ago.

Concerns are mounting in the Middle-East after Dubai’s DFM General index fell over 8% which is its biggest decline since October 2008. Yesterday marked the start of a bear market (20% decline from peak) after 19% year to date gains. Dubai is continuing the downtrend which has been in place since the beginning of May with the recent catalyst yesterday being property company Arabtec falling nearly 10% after it cut a large number of staff, this in turn weighed on Emmar properties which accounts for nearly 25% of the main index. This also follows the UAE central bank earlier in the month saying there were signs the property market is overheating.

FX

GBP fell aggressively following the change in direction from Carney, which saw GBP/USD break below 1.7000 and EUR/GBP break through 0.8000 on the upside. USD sits lower ahead of Consumer Confidence and New Home Sales data later today.  Elsewhere, after failing to break the 0.9450 option barrier yesterday AUD/USD sees a continued downward trend with stops taken out at 0.9400.

COMMODITIES

Energy markets trade softer, with WTI and Brent crude futures retreating from nine month highs after US Secretary of State Kerry’s push for a new government in Iraq to include sectarian factions, in order to present a unified front against the ISIS militants. Elsewhere in commodities, precious metals have been lifted by a break in USD 21.00/oz to March highs in silver, as the softer USD and poorer-than-expected IFO figures in Germany lifted the complex.

* * *

DB’s Jim Reid, recovering from his biking extravaganza, completes the overnight recap

Following the excitement of the ECB and the Fed meetings earlier this month, we’ve quickly returned to a familiar pattern of low volatility and even lower volumes. Though the S&P 500 notionally broke its six-day winning streak, it finished virtually unchanged at -0.01% after trading in a narrow 4 point range and seeing the second lowest volume for a Monday this year. In saying that, there have been some interesting underlying themes such as the recent nine month highs reached in Brent and WTI crude. Markets have been left wondering whether this could derail the EM carry theme, particularly amongst the oil-exposed economies, and whether it will add to the recent uptick in US inflation. Indeed the IDR, ZAR, INR and TRY have been the worst performing currencies over the past month according to Bloomberg data. These currencies got a small reprieve yesterday when crude fell by the most in about a month (WTI -1.02%, Brent -0.6%) , helped along by reports that the Iraqi military had recaptured some areas bordering Syria and Jordan. There was very little negative reaction to reports that ISIS had captured the Baiji oil refinery, the largest refinery in Iraq. The refinery’s production is entirely slated for domestic consumption across Northern Iraq according to France24, and though there are widespread reports of domestic oil shortages in Iraq, for now global markets have taken comfort from the fact that the supply of oil from the country’s south is largely intact. Brent (-0.4%) and WTI (-0.5%) have extended their declines this morning.

The global PMIs were a little mixed yesterday with the European readings taking some of the gloss off yesterday’s better than expected Chinese PMIs. The US manufacturing PMI was better than expected at 57.5 (vs 56.0), the highest reading since May 2010. Outside of the PMIs, the only other data to note was US existing home sales which were up 4.9% to 4.89 million SAAR (versus expectations of +1.9% and 4.74m). DB’s economics team notes that this was the highest level since October of last year (5.13 million). The headline gain was driven by single-family sales (+5.7% vs. +0.7%), while condo sales were unchanged in the month (vs. +7.3% previously). UST yields hit a low of 2.588% shortly before the home sales data but closed +2bp on the day at 2.626%.

There’s not a lot on the US data docket this week but one of the more interesting data points could be Thursday’s May personal consumption expenditures report. The PCE core and PCE deflator indices were up 1.4% yoy and 1.6% yoy in April, respectively. Both indices have registered gains for three straight months and are showing signs of acceleration after marginal gains in Q1. In an opinion piece yesterday, the WSJ’s Jon Hilsenrath wrote that this could test Yellen’s view that inflation is “moving back gradually over time toward our 2% objective”. The article argues that if the March trend holds, the PCE index might already be at the Fed’s objective and therefore would be “begging all kinds of questions” in terms of Fed policy. On a separate but related theme, the FT writes that central banks are planning to cut their exposure to longer-term bonds to protect against a shift in Fed policy. The article notes that “the majority of respondents in a survey of reserve managers who control assets worth $6.7tn, or more than half of central banks’ total reserves, said they were likely to adjust their portfolios in preparation of tighter monetary policy”.

It’s been a mixed session overnight even though most bourses are up on the day following a strong showing Chinese stocks. A number of street economists have increased their GDP growth forecasts for China following yesterday’s PMI and this is perhaps buoying Chinese stocks today (HSCEI +0.4%). Chinese copper futures are trading up (+0.1%) and are poised to close stronger for the sixth time in the last 7 sessions. More broadly, metals prices appear to be recovering, and Chinese merchants are reportedly restocking following recent investigations into inappropriate inventory financing at one or more Chinese ports.

Elsewhere in China, the province of Guangdong became the first local government to issue bonds directly in its own name. This comes after the State Council gave tentative approval to 10 regions last month to directly issue bonds as part of its financial market reforms. The WSJ says that that the Guangdong Province sold five-year bonds at 3.84% which is lower than the 3.99% on a sale of bonds by the finance ministry earlier this month that were issued on behalf of local governments. The WSJ suggests that demand for the bonds may have been elevated by local banks who were keen to buy the debt so they keep receiving the large pools of deposits from the local government.

Looking at the day ahead, there is more US housing data today in the form of Case-shiller home prices for April and May new home sales. The US consumer confidence index is also released today. In Europe we have the German IFO survey. Governor Carney presents the BoE’s inflation report to parliament’s Treasury Committee. He will be joined by fellow MPC members including Charles Bean, David Miles and Ian McCafferty. Philadelphia Fed President Plosser speaks about the economic outlook and monetary policy at the Economic Club of New York – we can expect a relatively hawkish speech.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/TrqcEp Tyler Durden

Head Of German Gold Repatriation Initiative Responds To Bloomberg Story About Repatriation Halt

Just hours after we noted Bloomberg’s story of Germany’s decision to halt its repatriation of gold from the NY Fed, the gentleman at the center of the story, who Bloomberg quoted as saying his ‘Repatriate Our Gold’ campaign was “on hold” – Peter Boehringer – has come out swinging… The Bloomberg story is “a ‘non-news’ article with a wrong headline, strange interviewees, old news, and with a clearly apologetic ideological approach.” and that’s just the start…

From Peter Boehringer (via Bloomberg Businessweek),

 

Just to set the record straight re this article in which my name is mentioned and in which I am quoted out of context:

a) BusinessWeek/Bloomberg uncritically cites statements of politicians and BuBa-bankers who have or give no proof whatsoever re the untouched whereabouts of the german Gold.

b) Re our campaign “Repatriate our Gold”: “On hold” does of course NOT mean that we are in any way satisfied with the current status of BuBa´s ongoing repatriation (far too slow and too little – only 5 tons came from NY in 2013! Not exactly a proof for the untouched existence of 1500 tons in a NY vault unaudited since 1950…). Our public campaign will therefore have to continue.

c) Almost no info in the article can be considered in any way “news”. Simply because there has not been any material news in this context since early 2013.

d) Especially the headline is plainly false, because there has not been any change in BuBa´s (too slow) repatriation plans: at least 300+ tonnes will come from NY by end 2020. It is not much – but contrary to the headline, BuBa has NOT stopped the ongoing partial repatriation – enforced solely by public pressure!

e) The political party “Alternative for Germany” has never been part of our campaign – they can therefore not have been “rebuffed” as the article suggests.

f) The political party “FDP” has (with the exception of one (1) MP ) never demanded a repatriation – yet another false info in the article.

g) Some politicians cited in the article can not in any way claim to be “in charge” of the german gold hoard (abroad or not). This holds true for both Mr Barthle and for Mr Hardt: BuBa alone is in charge – and officially, BuBa is independent from political influence…

Summary: a “non-news” article with a wrong headline, strange interviewees, old news, and with a clearly apologetic ideological approach: the main purpose seems to be NOT to give space to the myriad of unanswered and extremely relevant questions BuBa and the Fed have been refusing to answer for decades.

Pls read more at “Repatriate our Gold”




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1q2Tesg Tyler Durden

Why Standard Economic Models Don’t Work – Our Economy Is A Network

Submitted by Gail Tverberg of Our Finite World blog,

The story of energy and the economy seems to be an obvious common sense one: some sources of energy are becoming scarce or overly polluting, so we need to develop new ones. The new ones may be more expensive, but the world will adapt. Prices will rise and people will learn to do more with less. Everything will work out in the end. It is only a matter of time and a little faith. In fact, the Financial Times published an article recently called “Looking Past the Death of Peak Oil” that pretty much followed this line of reasoning.

Energy Common Sense Doesn’t Work Because the World is Finite 

The main reason such common sense doesn’t work is because in a finite world, every action we take has many direct and indirect effects. This chain of effects produces connectedness that makes the economy operate as a network. This network behaves differently than most of us would expect. This networked behavior is not reflected in current economic models.

Most people believe that the amount of oil in the ground is the limiting factor for oil extraction. In a finite world, this isn’t true. In a finite world, the limiting factor is feedback loops that lead to inadequate wages, inadequate debt growth, inadequate tax revenue, and ultimately inadequate funds for investment in oil extraction. The behavior of networks may lead to economic collapses of oil exporters, and even to a collapse of the overall economic system.

An issue that is often overlooked in the standard view of oil limits is diminishing returns. With diminishing returns, the cost of extraction eventually rises because the easy-to-obtain resources are extracted first. For a time, the rising cost of extraction can be hidden by advances in technology and increased mechanization, but at some point, the inflation-adjusted cost of oil production starts to rise.

With diminishing returns, the economy is, in effect, becoming less and less efficient, instead of becoming more and more efficient. As this effect feeds through the system, wages tend to fall and the economy tends to shrink rather than grow. Because of the way a networked system “works,” this shrinkage tends to collapse the economy. The usage of  energy products of all kinds is likely to fall, more or less simultaneously.

In some ways current, economic models are the equivalent of flat maps, when we live in s spherical world. These models work pretty well for a while, but eventually, their predictions deviate farther and farther from reality. The reason our models of the future are wrong is because we are not imagining the system correctly.

The Connectedness of a Finite World 

In a finite world, an action a person takes has wide-ranging impacts. The amount of food I eat, or the amount of minerals I extract from the earth, affects what other people (now and in the future) can do, and what other species can do.

To illustrate, let’s look at an exaggerated example. At any given time, there is only so much broccoli that is ready for harvest. If I decide to corner the broccoli market and buy up 50% of the world’s broccoli supply, that means that other people will have less broccoli available to buy. If those growing the broccoli spray the growing crop with pesticides, “broccoli pests” (caterpillars, aphids, and other insects) will die back in number, perhaps contributing to a decline of those species. The pesticides may also affect desirable species, like bees.

Growing the broccoli will also deplete the soil of nutrients. If 50% of the world’s broccoli is shipped to me, the nutrients from the soil will find their way around the world to me. These nutrients are not likely to be replaced in the soil where the broccoli was grown without long-distance transport of nutrients.

To take another example, if I (or the imaginary company I own) extract oil from the ground, the extraction and the selling of that oil will have many far-ranging effects:

  •  The oil I extract will most likely be the cheapest, easiest-to-extract oil that I can find. Because of this, the oil that is left will tend to be more expensive to extract. My extraction of oil thus contributes to diminishing returns–that is, the tendency of the cost of oil extraction to rise over time as resources deplete.
  • The petroleum I extract from the ground will consist of a mixture of hydrocarbon chains of varying lengths. When I send the petroleum to a refinery, the refinery will separate the petroleum into varying length chains: short chains are gasses, longer chains are liquids, still longer ones are very viscous, and the longest ones are solids, such as asphalt. Different length chains are used for different purposes. The shortest chains are natural gas. Some chains are sold as gasoline, some as diesel, and some as lubricants. Some parts of the petroleum spectrum are used to make plastics, medicines, fabrics, and pesticides. All of these uses will help create jobs in a wide range of industries. Indirectly, these uses are likely to enable higher food production, and thus higher population.
  • When I extract the oil from the ground, the process itself will use some oil and natural gas. Refining the oil will also use energy.
  • Jobs will be created in the oil industry. People with these jobs will spend their money on goods and services of all sorts, indirectly leading to greater availability of jobs outside the oil industry.
  • Oil’s price is important. The lower the price, the more affordable products using oil will be, such as cars.
  • In order for consumers to purchase cars that will operate using gasoline, there will likely be a need for debt to buy the cars. Thus, the extraction of oil is tightly tied to the build-up of debt.
  • As an oil producer, I will pay taxes of many different types to all levels of governments. (Governments of oil exporting countries tend to get a high percentage of their revenue from taxes on oil. Even in non-exporting countries, taxes on oil tend to be high.) Consumers will also pay taxes, such as gasoline taxes.
  • The jobs that are created through the use of oil will lead to more tax revenue, because wage earners pay income taxes.
  • The government will need to build more roads, partly for the additional cars that operate on the roads thanks to the use of gasoline and diesel, and partly to repair the damage that is done as trucks travel to oil extraction sites.
  • To keep the oil extraction process going, there will likely need to be schools and medical facilities to take care of the workers and their families, and to educate those workers.

Needless to say, there are other effects as well. The existence of my oil in the marketplace will somehow affect the market price of oil. Burning of the oil may affect the climate, and will tend to acidify oceans. It would be possible to go on and on.

The Difficulty of Substituting Away from Oil 

In some sense, the use of oil is very deeply imbedded into the operation of the overall economy. We can talk about electricity replacing oil, but oil’s involvement in the economy is so pervasive, it can’t possibly replace everything. Perhaps electricity might replace gasoline in private passenger automobiles. Such a change would reduce the demand for hydrocarbon chains of a certain length (C7 to C11), but that only reduces demand for one “slice” of the oil mixture. Both shorter and longer chain hydrocarbons would be unaffected.

The price of gasoline will drop, (making Chinese buyers happy because more will be able to afford to use motorcycles), but what else will happen? Won’t we still need as much diesel, and as many medicines as before? Refiners can fairly easily break longer-chain molecules into shorter-chain molecules, so they can make diesel or asphalt into gasoline. But going the other direction doesn’t work well at all. Making gasoline into shorter chains would be a huge waste, because gasoline is much more valuable than the resulting gases.

How about replacing all of the taxes directly and indirectly related to the unused gasoline?  Will the price of electricity used in electric-powered vehicles be adjusted to cover the foregone tax revenue?

If a liquid substitute for oil is made, it needs to be low priced, because a high-priced substitute for oil is very different from a low-priced substitute. Part of the problem is that high-priced substitutes do not leave enough “room” for taxes for governments. Another part of the problem is that customers cannot afford high-priced oil products. They cut back on discretionary expenditures, and the economy tends to contract. There are layoffs in the discretionary sectors, and (again) the government finds it difficult to collect enough tax revenue.

The Economy as a Networked System

I think of the world economic system as being a networked system, something like the dome shown in Figure 1. The dome behaves as an object that is different from the many wooden sticks from which it is made. The dome can collapse if sticks are removed.

Figure 1. Dome constructed using Leonardo Sticks

Figure 1. Dome constructed using Leonardo Sticks

The world economy consists of a network of businesses, consumers, governments, and resources that is bound together with a financial system. It is self-organizing, in the sense that consumers decide what to buy based on what products are available at what prices. New businesses are formed based on the overall environment: potential customers, competition, resource availability, services available from other businesses, and laws. Governments participate in the system as well, building infrastructure, making laws, and charging taxes.

Over time, all of these gradually change. If one business changes, other business and consumers are likely to make changes in response. Even governments may change: make new laws, or build new infrastructure. Over time, the tendency is to build a larger and more complex network. Unused portions of the network tend to wither away–for example, few businesses make buggy whips today. This is why the network is illustrated as hollow. This feature makes it difficult for the network to “go backward.”

The network got its start as a way to deliver food energy to people. Gradually economies expanded to include other goods and services. Because energy is required to “do work,” (such as provide heat, mechanical energy, or electricity), energy is always central to an economy. In fact, the economy might be considered an energy delivery system. This is especially the case if we consider wages to be payment for an important type of energy–human energy.

Because of the way the network has grown over time, there is considerable interdependency among different types of energy. For example, electricity powers oil pipelines and gasoline pumps. Oil is used to maintain the electric grid. Nuclear electric plants depend on electricity from the grid to restart their operations after outages. Thus, if one type of energy “has a problem,” this problem is likely to spread to other types of energy. This is the opposite of the common belief that energy substitution will fix all problems.

Economies are Prone to Collapse

We know the wooden dome in Figure 1 can collapse if “things go wrong.” History shows that many civilizations have collapsed in the past. Research has been done to see why this is the case.

Joseph Tainter’s research indicates that diminishing returns played an important role in the collapse of past civilizations. Diminishing returns would be a problem when adding more workers didn’t add a corresponding amount more output, particularly with respect to food. Such a situation might be reached when population grew too large for a piece of arable land. Degradation of soil fertility might play a role as well.

Today, we are reaching diminishing returns with respect to oil supply, as evidenced by the rising cost of oil extraction. This is occurring because we removed the easy to extract oil, and now must move on to the more expensive to extract oil. In effect, the system is becoming less efficient. More workers and more resources of other types are needed to produce a given barrel of oil. The value of the barrel of oil in terms of what it can do as work (say, how far it can move a car, or how much heat it can produce) is unchanged, so the value each worker is producing is less. This is the opposite of efficiency.

Peter Turchin and Sergey Nefedov have done research on the nature of past collapses, documented in a book called Secular Cycles. An economy would clear a piece of land, or discover an approach to irrigation, or by some other means discover a way to expand the number of people who could live in an area. The resulting economy would grow for well over 100 years, until population started catching up with resource availability. A period of stagflation followed, typically for about 50 or 60 years, as the economy tried to continue to grow, but bumped against increasing obstacles. Wage disparity grew as wages of new workers lagged. Debt also grew.

Eventually collapse occurred, over a period of 20 to 50 years. Often, much of the population died off. An inter-cycle period followed, during which resources regenerated, so that a new civilization could arise.

Figure 2. Shape of typical Secular Cycle, based on work of Peter Turkin and Sergey Nefedov in Secular Cycles.

Figure 2. Shape of typical Secular Cycle, based on work of Peter Turkin and Sergey Nefedov in Secular Cycles.

One of the major issues in past collapses was difficulty in funding government services. Part of the problem was that wages of common workers were low, making it difficult to collect enough taxes. Part of governments’ problems were that their costs went up, as they tried to solve the increasingly complex problems of society. Today these costs might include unemployment insurance and bailing out banks; in ages past they included larger armies to try to conquer new lands with more resources, as their own resources depleted.

Today’s Situation 

Our situation isn’t too different. The economy started growing in the early 1800s, abut the we started using fossil fuels, thanks to technology that allowed us to use them. Oil is the fossil fuel that is depleting most quickly, because it is very valuable in many uses, including transportation, agriculture, construction, mining, and as a raw material to produce many goods we use every day.

Our economy seems to have hit stagflation in the early 1970s, when oil prices first began to spike. Now, some of the symptoms we are seeing are looking distressingly like the symptoms that other civilizations saw prior to the beginning of collapse. Our networked system has many weak points:

  • Oil exporters Governments can collapse, as the government of the Former Soviet Union did in 1991, if oil prices are too low. The fact that oil prices have not risen since 2011 is probably contributing to unrest in the Middle East.
  • Oil importers Spikes in oil prices lead to recession.
  • Governments funding Debt keeps expanding; infrastructure needs fixes but they don’t get done; too many promises for pensions and healthcare.
  • Failing financial systems Debt defaults are likely to be a major problem if the economic system starts shrinking. Debt is needed to keep oil prices up.
  • Contagion if one energy product is in short supply This happens many ways. For example, nearly all businesses rely on both electricity and oil. If either one of these becomes unavailable (say oil to supply parts and ship goods to customers), then the business will need to close. Because of the business closure, demand for other energy products the business uses, such as electricity and natural gas, will drop at the same time. Direct use of energy products to produce other energy products (mentioned previously) also contributes to this contagion.

Unfortunately, when it comes to operating an economy, it is Liebig’s Law of the Minimum that rules. In other words, if any required element is missing, the system doesn’t work. If businesses can’t get financing, or can’t pay their employees because banks are closed, businesses may need to close. Workers will get laid off, and the inability to afford energy products (economists would call this “lack of demand”) will be what brings the system down.

Modeling our Current Economy 

Everywhere we look, we see models of how the energy system or the economy can be expected to work. None of the models match our current situation well.

Growth will Continue As in the Past It is pretty clear that this model is inadequate. Every revision to growth estimates seems to be downward. In a finite world, we know that growth at the same rate can’t continue forever–we would run out of resources, and places for people to stand. The networked nature of the system explains how the system really grows, and why this growth can’t continue indefinitely.

Rising Cost of Producing Energy Products Doesn’t Matter In a global world, we compete on the price of goods and services. The cost of producing these goods and services depends on (a) the cost of energy products used in making these goods and services (b) wages paid to workers for producing these services (c) government, healthcare, and other overhead costs, and (d) financing costs.

One part of our problem is that with globalization, we are competing against warm countries–countries that receive more free energy from the sun than we do, so are warmer than the US and Europe. Because of this free energy from the sun, homes do not need to be built as sturdily and less heat is needed in winter. Without these costs, wages do not need to be as high. These countries also tend to have less expensive healthcare systems and lower pensions for the elderly.

Governments can try to fix our non-competitive cost structure compared to these countries by reducing interest rates  as much as possible, but the fact remains–it is very difficult for countries in cold parts of the world to compete with countries in warm parts of the world in making goods. This cost competition problem becomes worse, as the price of energy products rises because we are competing with a cost of $0 for heating requirements. If cold countries add carbon taxes, but do not surcharge goods imported from warm countries, the disparity with warm countries becomes even worse.

In the early years of civilization, warm countries dominated the world economy. As energy prices rise, this situation is likely to again occur.

Price is Not Important  Apart from the warm country–cool country issue, there is another reason that energy cost (in real goods, not just in financial printed money) is important:

The price of the energy used in the economy is important because it is tied to how much must be “given up” to buy the oil or anther energy product (such as food). If energy is cheap, little needs to be given up to obtain the energy. Because of energy’s huge ability to do “work,” the work that is obtained can easily make goods and services that compensate for what has been given up. If energy is expensive, there is much less benefit (or perhaps negative benefit) when what is given up is compared to the work that the energy product provides. As a result, economic growth is held back by high-priced energy products of any kind.

Supply and Demand Leads to Higher Prices and Substitutes  Major obstacles to the standard model working are (a) diminishing returns with respect to oil supply, (b) recession and even government failure of oil importers, when oil prices rise and (c) civil unrest and even government failure in oil exporters, if oil prices don’t keep rising. If there isn’t enough oil supply, oil prices rise, but there are soon so many follow-on effects that oil prices fall back again.

Reserves/ Production This ratio supposedly tells how long we can produce oil (or natural gas or coal) at current extraction rates. This ratio is simply misleading. The real limit is how long the economy can function, given the feedback loops related to diminishing returns. If a person simply looks at investment dollars required, it becomes clear that this model doesn’t work. See my post IEA Investment Report – What is Right; What is Wrong.

IPCC Climate Change Model Estimates of future carbon emissions do not take into the networked nature of the energy system and economy, so tend to be high.  See my post Oil Limits and Climate Change – How They Fit Together.

Energy Payback Period, Energy Return on Energy Invested, and Life Cycle Analysis These approaches look at the efficiency of energy production, comparing energy used in the process to energy produced in the process. In some ways, they work–they show that we are becoming less and less efficient at producing oil, or coal, or natural gas, as we move to more difficult to extract resources. And they can be worthwhile, if a decision is being made as to which of two similar devices to purchase: Wind Turbine A or Wind Turbine B.

Unfortunately, modeling a finite world is virtually impossible. These approaches use narrow boundaries–energy used in pulling oil out of the ground, or making a wind turbine. It doesn’t tell as much as we need to know about new energy generation equipment, together with (a) changes needed elsewhere in the system and (b) whatever financial system is used to pay for the energy generated with that system, will actually work in the economy. To really analyze the situation, broader analyses are needed.

Furthermore, there are the inherent assumptions that (a) we have a long time period to make changes and (b) one energy source can be substituted for another. Neither of these assumptions is really true when we are this close to oil limits.

Where the Peak Oil Model Went Wrong

Part of the Peak Oil story is right: We are reaching oil limits, and those limits are hitting about now. Part of the Peak Oil story is not right, though, at least in  a common version that is prevalent now.  The version that is prevalent is more or less equivalent to the “standard” view of our current situation that I talked about at the beginning of the post. In this standard view, oil supply will not disappear very quickly–approximately 50% of the total amount of oil ever extracted will become available after the peak in oil production. There will be considerable substitution with other fuels, often at higher prices. The financial system may be affected, but it can be replaced, and the economy will continue.

This view is based on writing of M. King Hubbert back in 1957. At that time, it was commonly believed that nuclear energy would provide electricity too cheap to meter. In fact, in a 1962 paper, Hubbert talks about “reversing combustion,” to make liquid fuels. Thus, not only did his story include cheap electricity, it also included cheap liquid fuels, both in huge quantity.

Figure 3. Figure from Hubbert's 1956 paper, Nuclear Energy and the Fossil Fuels.

Figure 3. Figure from Hubbert’s 1956 paper, Nuclear Energy and the Fossil Fuels.

In such a situation, growth could continue indefinitely. There would be no need to replace huge numbers of vehicles with electric vehicles. Governments wouldn’t have a problem with funding. There would be no problem with collapse. The supply of oil and other fossil fuels could decline slowly, as suggested in his papers.

But the story of the cheap, rapid nuclear ramp-up didn’t materialize, and we gradually got closer to the time when limits were beginning to hit. Major changes were needed to Hubbert’s story to reflect the fact that we really didn’t have a fix that would keep business as usual going indefinitely. But these changes never took place. Instead the view of how little change was needed to keep the economy going kept getting downgraded more and more. “Standard” economic views filtered into the story, too.

There is a correct version of the oil limits story to tell. It is the story of the failure of networked systems.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1m7U6nR Tyler Durden

Checkers Versus Chess

Submitted by Jeff Thomas via Doug Casey's International Man blog,

For quite some time, we have been predicting that the Russians and Chinese will, at some point, bring an end to the petrodollar system that has virtually guaranteed the US the position of having its currency be the world's default currency. This position has allowed the US, in recent decades, to go on a borrowing and currency-printing spree, the likes of which the world has never seen.

First, a Little History

It's important that we back up a bit here to have a look at how this came about in the first instance.

In 1971, the US government, under Richard Nixon, took the US off the gold standard. This meant that, from that point on, the dollar was backed by nothing. However, as long as the dollar was accepted as legitimate currency (even though it was now mere paper), not only could the game continue as before, but the US would then be free to print as much "currency" as it wished. It would also be free to borrow as much as it wished, thereby building as large an economic house of cards as it wished.

Of course, the foolhardiness of this decision would not be immediately clear to all and sundry. It would take some time before the chickens would come home to roost.

Enter the Petrodollar

Back in 1971, it was necessary to assure that the dollar would retain its position in world trade as the world's premiere currency, in spite of the fact that it was no longer backed by anything. The US reached an agreement with Saudi Arabia that, in trade for arms and protection, the Saudis would denominate all future oil sales, worldwide, in dollars. The other OPEC countries fell into line, and the "petrodollar" was assured.

Returning to the present, we have stated for some time that the methods by which the US, the Russians, and the Chinese have been playing the game have been very different. The Chinese, for over 4000 years, have played the game of wéiqí, and the wéiqí philosophy is a primary part of Chinese philosophy. The idea is to distract your opponent whilst you subtly surround him. Once he is enclosed, with no support from outside, it's game over.

By contrast, the Russians are perennial chess players. Chess, played correctly, involves the concept of imagining each move that your opponent may possibly make. For each possible move, you imagine each possible move you could make and how your opponent might retaliate. You then select your best move. A good chess player is one who has learned to imagine several moves in advance. Therefore, once your opponent makes his move, you are never taken off-guard. You are prepared for anything he does.

Mister Putin is a consummate chess player, and since he has returned to office, each time the US has made a move, he has been ready. Each of his moves has not only countered the US, but trumped them. At every step that the US gets tough on Russia, Russia immediately says, in effect, "Okay, remember, you brought this on yourselves." Russia then makes a move that puts the US in a far worse position than it was before.

The amazing fact here is that the US method recognises neither wéiqí nor chess. They appear to be playing checkers. The US has, since World War II, used the approach of "The Yanks are Comin'." The US has been the biggest boy in the schoolyard and has, through a combination of bluster and bullying, been able to intimidate the world and, as a result, get virtually everything it wanted for a very long time. Conventional diplomacy has taken a back seat with the US, and, particularly since the administration of George Bush, the US has very much ramped up its "biggest boy in the schoolyard" approach, much to the irritation of the rest of world.

Here Come Those Chickens

But now, the US is broke, and its stature as the biggest boy has begun to wane. The other kids in the schoolyard are playing smart, whilst the US is still playing tough…and it's no longer working.

Claiming that Russia was overstepping its power in the Ukraine (when, in fact, it was the US that was guilty of this move), the US applied economic sanctions to Russia. The US media treated this as a major blow to Russia, from which the Russkies had better back off if they knew what was good for them.

But, in fact, this served as an open invitation for Russia to retaliate. Since the very first thrust by the US, each parry and thrust by the Russians has been both effective and well planned. (It should be borne in mind that the latest announcement that Russia would not accept US dollars in payment for gas could only be enforced if Russia could get its international gas customers to agree. At the time of announcement, nine out of ten customers had, in fact agreed. These decisions were, unquestionably, not reached overnight. This chess move was planned well in advance.)

When Russia announced that Gazprom, the largest gas supplier in the world, would no longer be accepting US dollars from its clients, the West was shaken by the news.

End of the Petrodollar     

So, does this spell the end for the petrodollar? Not just yet. But it does add a nail to the petrodollar coffin, and a rather large nail, at that. It most certainly announces to the world that, if the US continues its schoolyard bully approach, both the Russians and the Chinese are more than ready. They have greater power than the US gave them credit for and, as we are witnessing, are more adept at the game itself.

Time after time, the US announces a flimsy new policy that is half-baked at best, and the US media announce, in effect, "This'll show 'em!" And yet, at every turn, the Sino-Russian tag-team deals blow after blow to US hegemony in the world.

The US is at war with China and Russia. It's an undeclared war, and it's monetary warfare, not military warfare. Yes, there are the military distractions, such as in the Ukraine and the Middle East, but the primary war is being fought monetarily.

If we observe the Asian responses to the US attacks in this war, and assess them objectively, we see that the Asians do not seek to kill off the US. In each battle, they, like skilled bullfighters, deflect the charging bull, then thrust the sword forward, wounding him again and again with every charge.

As this approach is becoming a pattern, it would indicate that the Russians and Chinese, much like a bullfighter, are wearing out the bull and provoking him to lose enough blood that, soon, he will no longer be able to continue the fight.

There will be no H-bomb moment here. No point at which the US, to the entire world's surprise, suddenly self-destructs. Just as Rome wound down 2000 years ago, we shall observe a similar winding down of the US. (Although there will be many sudden crashes along the way, the entire process will stretch out for years.)

And I believe the US will be kept alive by the victors. It will remain in business as a country and will serve the East, particularly as a consumer of Eastern-produced goods.

But it will cease to be the world's empire. Much as the British Empire wound down as a result of the world wars, the US will be greatly diminished in power.

More and more, US residents are coming to realise that the "recovery" that is forever being heralded as "just around the corner" will not arrive. No "green shoots," no "shovel-ready jobs" will materialise. The US are attempting to win a chess game by playing checkers, and they will not succeed. The US's place in the world will be a casualty of that error, as will be the US economy.

Editor’s Note: Unfortunately there’s little any individual can practically do to change the trajectory of this trend in motion. The best you can and should do is to stay informed so that you can protect yourself in the best way possible, and even profit from the situation.

This is what Doug Casey’s International Man is all about: helping you cut through the smoke and mirrors while making the most of your personal freedom and financial opportunities around the world. The free IM Communiqué is a great place to start.




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

Record Stock Buybacks: First In The US, Now In Japan

It was a month ago when Zero Hedge first revealed that as QE was “tapering”, a just as powerful and even more indiscriminate force had stepped in to make up for the loss of Fed buying of last resort: corporations themselves, almost exclusively on a levered basis (issuing debt whose use of proceeds are stock buybacks). Specifically, we showed that the total amount of stock bought back by corporations in Q1 was the highest since the bursting of the last credit bubble. In fact it was the highest ever.

This was promptly noticed by both the WSJ and the FT. What the two financial media outlets likely have not grasped is that based on trading desk commentary, according to which the bulk of “flow” now originates almost exclusively at C-suites ordering banks to continue the buyback activity, the Q2 stock repurchase totals will be even greater than Q1, and likely surpass $200 billion. This means that every month this quarter companies are buying back about $70 billion of their own stock: an amount which at this runrate will surpass the Fed’s original QE(3) amount of $85 billion within a quarter!

But while the “mysterious, indiscriminate” buyer of US stocks has been fully unmasked now, what most likely do not know is that just this is happening at a comparable record pace nowhere else but the place which is mirroring and repeating every single Fed mistake tit for tit.

Japan.

According to Bloomberg, companies in the Topix index are acquiring their own stock at the fastest pace ever, led by NTT Docomo Inc. and Toyota Motor Corp., with $25 billion of announced purchases so far this year, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The buybacks are limiting losses in the world’s worst-performing developed equity market: Companies using the strategy have gained even as the Topix slid.

Only $25 billion you say? Why that is less than a fifth of what their US peers are doing. Well, yes. But remember that on a relative basis, the BOJ’s $75 billion or so in QE is orders of magnitude greater than the Fed’s own QE when one factors in the relative sizes of the US and Japanese stock markets.

Additionally, keep in mind that the net annual bond issuance in Japan is already well below half of the amount monetized every year by the BOJ (which means if you think US bonds are illiquid, just try to buy, or sell a JGB – good luck). This means that vastly more of the BOJ’s intervention ends up in the stock market: either Japan’s or that of the US, courtesy of immediately fungible global fund transfers.

But back to Japanese bond buybacks, which in a far more “concentrated” and illiquid market, are having an impact on stock prices that is orders of magnitude higher than their nominal value would suggest.

Bloomberg then proceeds to give a quick lesson on logic 101: “Share buybacks have the effect of supporting the market when it’s weak,” Daiwa Securities Group Inc. quantitative analyst Masahiro Suzuki wrote in a report on June 10. “Return to shareholders is a big theme.”

Companies’ purchases of their own equity can be seen as a vote of confidence by executives that their stock has room to rise. The buybacks can also suggest a company has run out of things to spend money on, curbing its growth potential.

The problem, whether Japanese corporate executives are merely doing the same as their US peers and cashing out on their equity-linked comp plans at a furious pace thanks to their stocks hitting record highs having used corporate cash to boost the stock price while saddling the company with massive debt which will be some other CEO’s concern down the line (a clear conflict of interest if there ever was one), is irrelevant. What matters is that stock buybacks have zero impact on the economy. Zilch. Nada. Because instead of investing capital in projects, either for maintenance or growth, all that happens is the shareholders get rich here and now, at the expense of economic, and certainly revenue, growth in the future (as we explained two years ago).

Even if buybacks continue, companies need to increase investments at a faster pace, according to Coutts’ Calder, a harder choice compared to improving return on equity with share repurchases in the short term. The amount of cash they hold means companies should able to afford both buybacks and capital investments, he said.

While businesses have boosted capital spending for three straight quarters, their investments in the period ended March remained 31 percent below a 2007 peak, Finance Ministry data show.

 

“Buybacks only result in raising ROE and share prices, so their effect on Japan’s economy is indirect,” said Masaru Hamasaki, a Tokyo-based senior strategist at Sumitomo Mitsui Asset Management Co. “Capital investment directly boosts the economy, so I think for now, they should invest more money there.”

 

Since the start of January, 152 companies on the Topix announced buybacks worth 2.5 trillion yen, data compiled by Bloomberg show. The previous high for an entire year was 1.5 trillion yen in 2008. Companies unveiled an average 567 billion yen in annual buybacks over the decade through 2013, the data show.

And here is where it all comes full circle, because the “economic theory” so to say seeking to reward corporations right now is that these same corporations will, out of the goodness of their heart, turn around and share their profits with their non-stock holding employees, i.e. the rank and file. Because the only way an economy can generate benign inflation is if there are real (not nominal) wage increases. Instead, Japan’s only inflation to date is in import cost, in “non-core” staples such as food and energy, and of course, the stock market.

This is what is also affectionately known as trickle-down economics. It also doesn’t work. Case in point – Japan’s soaring stock market has resulted in exactly zero wage increases in the past 23 months, and soon: straight years of declining wages. Of course, to the Keynesians in charge it simply means that any minute now Japanese wages will increase. Alas, they won’t. Because corporations realize that this emergency liquidity injection measure is merely confirmation by the central banks that the economy is failing and that companies should either be stockpiling cash for whatever comes after the Fed or BOJ withdraw, or, failing that, hand it over to shareholders who can do the same however without a corporate veil, and the money will simply reside in a personal bank account instead of a corporate one.

“The government recognizes that in order to resuscitate Japan’s economy, there needs to be a cycle where corporations profit, then return those profits to the public,” said Hisashi Kuroda, the head of Japanese equities and chief portfolio manager at Meiji Yasuda Asset Management Co. “Even if public finances are used to help companies make more money, it’ll be negative for the economy if the firms just stockpile the cash.”

Not surprisingly, with the BOJ injecting trillions into the market, some of it makes its way to corporations. Sure enough, “Non-financial firms’ holdings of cash and deposits rose to a record 232 trillion yen at the end of March, BOJ data show. Earnings by Topix companies swelled 69 percent last year as unprecedented central bank stimulus drove down the yen, boosting exporters’ profits. That added to balances built by executives to shield their companies amid more than a decade of deflation and economic malaise.”

Alas, as we noted every month, none of that cash is making its way to employees. Instead, in addition to buybacks it also going for other shareholder friendly activities like dividends. “Other types of returns to shareholders are also on the rise. Estimated annual dividends per share for the Topix climbed to 24.4 yen last week, close to the highest since 2008.” And while there has been a modest pick up in CapEx too, it is well below the expected, and certainly well below any level that is required to sustain a virtuous economic cycle. Because what idiot CEO would opt to invest in growth that materializes in 5 to 10 years (the typical peak IRR of CapEx) or when some other CEO is in charge, when there is an quick and easy option to cash out now if said CEO holds stock.

In the meantime, everyone in Japan, and the US, is ignoring the reality and sticking their noise in the sand.

Brokerages are touting stock-picking based on who’s next to buy back shares.

 

Societe Generale SA says investors should seek out cash-rich companies with low leverage and valuations. Top picks include regional lender Tottori Bank Ltd. and homebuilder Mitsui Home Co., analysts led by Vivek Misra wrote in a June 4 report.

 

“Many investors don’t realize that corporate Japan is changing,” said Meiji Yasuda Asset Management’s Kuroda.

It’s changing all right: in less than two years Japan has adopted all the worst qualities of the US financial system. And just like in the US, when the central bank liquidity music stops, the collapse will promptly follow.

Japan could have avoided this if it had merely continued it slow shallow drift into deflation: painful for debtors but sustainable for most, and most importantly, not some insane Ponzi game where the pensions of the population are being invested in overvalued, social-networking stocks. However, with its berserker rush into stimulating inflation at all costs, the next deflationary shock will be epic, and one whose only “fix” will be for the BOJ to go from mere JPY7 trillion liquidity injection per month, to literally pulling out the firehose and proceeding with creating the hyperinflation that results from a collapse in the currency which we have said since March 2009 would be the ultimate endgame of this entire failed economic and monetary experiment.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1yH9ktQ Tyler Durden

China’s Port-Ponzi-Probe Spreads To Entire Warehousing Sector

“The banks still haven’t looked under the hood,” warns one executive as the probe at Qingdao port (centering around the duplication of warehouse certificates in order to use a metal cargo multiple times to raise financing) begins to spread to the entire Chinese warehousing sector. As Reuters reports, even if banks or their customers have insurance for the metal, some warehouse sources said they might struggle to get paid if fraud is uncovered or their agents are implicated. Though many global firms are involved in the warehouse industry in China, there has been outsourcing to local firms to cut overheads and avoid dealing with complex local regulations. That appears to have back-fired. One thing looks certain, however, banks involved in commodity financing in China are set to charge higher fees: “The cost is certainly going to go up, whether it’s going to be from local banks or international.”

 

As Reuters reports,

Shaken by a fraud investigation into metal financing in the world’s seventh-busiest port, banks and trading houses have been made painfully aware of the risks they face storing commodities in China’s sprawling warehouse sector.

 

The probe at Qingdao port centers around a private metals trading firm suspected of duplicating warehouse certificates in order to use a metal cargo multiple times to raise financing.

 

China’s roaring commodity financing business, which has helped drive up stockpiles of commodities at ports to record levels, stored in warehouses not always regulated to the same extent as elsewhere.

And the concerns are spreading…

“The banks still haven’t looked under the hood,” said an executive at a bank involved in commodity financing in China, referring to China’s warehousing sector.

And the legal troubles are growing…

“Warehouse receipts are not title documents, they are documents of entitlement. But they are being used as title documents for sales and purchase and transfer of ownership,” said a person at a warehouse company with operations in Qingdao.

 

Everywhere else outside of China, a warehouse receipt is cut for one party.”

 

A source at a Western bank with direct knowledge of Qingdao said warehouse firms should bear the brunt of responsibility, while a senior official at a warehouse firm at the port said responsibility “remains very much up in the air.”

 

A lawyer, who has previously been involved in litigation over fraudulent warehouse receipts, said banks primary recourse would be against whoever had forged receipts.

 

“But if the fraudster is gone, the bank may decide that it wants to go against the warehouse,” said the lawyer, who did not want to be named because of the sensitivity of the issue.

The relocation of whatever metal there is has started…

Traders said there was a risk the metal could have been already claimed before part of Qingdao Port was sealed off, adding that at least two trading houses had moved metal out as soon as news of the scandal broke.

 

Some banks have asked clients to shift metal, used as collateral for loans, to more regulated London Metal Exchange (LME) warehouses outside China or those owned and operated by a single warehouse firm to limit their exposure.

But the LME appears a little nervous…

the Qingdao probe has prompted some movement of metal to LME-approved warehouses in locations such as South Korea.

 

The LME, which is owned by Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Ltd, has approved more than 700 warehouses and storage facilities in about 40 locations globally.

 

“The extension of the LME’s warehouse network into mainland China is an important issue for the LME and its users and we alongside HKEx put a high priority on this initiative,” said a LME spokeswoman.

 

But the reverberations from the Qingdao probe may not be clear cut, since global warehousing firms potentially exposed to the scandal are licensed by the LME to operate in other ports. The LME declined to comment further.

One thing is sure – credit is tightening and costs are rising…

“The cost is certainly going to go up, whether it’s going to be from local banks or international,” said analyst Colin Hamilton of Macquarie in London.

This is not over.




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