Brickbat: High School Cover Up

Students at Arizona’s
Sabino High School didn’t get their yearbooks in time to pass them
around and get each others’ signatures. And when they opened them
up, they found out why. School staff had spent days
using black
tape
 to cover up messages the principal found offensive,
such as “I’m drunk on you and high on summer time” and “Come
getcha’ some.” The principal blames the yearbook adviser for the
mess because he didn’t censor the messages before it went to
print.

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via IFTTT

China’s Largest Gold Company Seeks To Become Kingmaker In Gold Market

DAILY PRICE

Gold added to overnight gains this morning as the dollar weakened after the U.S. Federal Reserve confirmed ultra loose monetary policies are set to continue despite inflation pressures building. Platinum and palladium rose as new hurdles emerged in settling South Africa’s industrial unrest and doubts remain about the viability of Russian supplies.



Oil prices remain near multi month highs on concerns of supply disruption. U.S. inflation figures were worse than expected Wednesday showing that inflation pressures are building which is bullish for gold. Higher oil prices and slowing economic growth is a recipe of stagflation – economic conditions that gold thrives on.



Gold in U.S. Dollars – 5 Days (Thomson Reuters)

In China, the world’s largest physical gold buyer, gold prices were trading either at a discount of about $1 an ounce or on par with the global benchmark, in a sign that buying interest has waned somewhat.


China’s Largest Gold Company Seeks To Become Kingmaker In Gold Industry
China National Gold Group Corporation or China Gold, China’s largest gold conglomerate with primary interests in mining and also refining, is on the hunt for global acquisitions and partnerships, the company’s president said yesterday.

The state owned Chinese gold miner and producer and retailer of custom-designed gold and silver bars, which was founded in 2003, appears to have designs on becoming a kingmaker in the global gold industry.


China is the world’s biggest producer, importer and buyer of gold, giving the country increasing sway over prices, output and the global gold market in general. The country’s official gold consumption increased to 1,176 metric tons last year while its production was 428 metric tons. This is encouraging overseas acquisitions.


China Gold’s President Dr. Xin Song said he believes that long term demand for gold in China will remain strong as a younger generation buys gold online, even if demand falls slightly this quarter from the first.


Acquisitions by China Gold would revive a mostly moribund market for gold mergers and acquisitions. This has been seen in both the mining and investment segments of the gold market. Indeed, the German refinery and bullion wholesaler Degussa’s acquisition of small UK bullion retailer, Sharps Pixley, in November 2013 was one of the only deals seen in the investment sector in recent years.

Mr. Song said that his company is searching for opportunities in the gold and silver markets. “The growing strategy is very clear: We are going out looking at things globally,” he said through an interpreter. “We have a few opportunities, at different stages.”




He said the company’s current preference is for assets in countries near China, such as Mongolia, Russia and in Central Asia. It also is looking for acquisitions in developed countries such as Canada, Australia and the U.S.

A third option is in developing countries, including in Africa and South America. “The political situation has to be stable,” he said.


?Bullion Coin And Bar Global Price Match Guarantee


Mr. Song said he talked last week with Barrick Gold Chairman John Thornton. Barrick is the world’s largest gold producer. Barrick has placed a priority on establishing long-term relationships with Chinese partners. “Both parties are looking for potential opportunities jointly,” Mr. Song said.


China Gold is working on potential partnerships with both Barrick Gold Corp., Newmont Mining Corp. and Kinross Gold Corp its president said on Tuesday.


If China’s largest gold producing company is successful, the alliance would bring one or both of the world’s largest western gold mining companies closer to China. It could mean an important new source of supply for the insatiable demand that is coming from China.

Zhongyuan Gold Smelter Co Ltd, is the largest gold refiner and bar refinery in China and part of China National Gold Group Corporation (CNGGC), is a subsidiary of China Gold Co Ltd (Zhongjin Gold Co Ltd), which is headquartered in Beijing.


The refinery works closely with an associated company, China National Gold Group Gold Jewellery Co Ltd, which is also headquartered in Beijing and responsible for the design and sale of CNGGC-branded gold investment bars and other bars and products for the retail gold market in China.



Gold Kilo Bar

Sanmenxia City, which is built on the west bank of the Yellow River, is known as “Gold City”, in recognition of the importance of the city and Henan Province to China’s gold industry.


For 53 years the Chinese people were banned from owning gold. But that all changed in 2003, and now the enormous demand by 1.3 billion Chinese over the last ten years is causing an important paradigm shift, as gold and silver moves from the West to the East.

Another factor in the paradigm shift is official Chinese demand from the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) who are diversifying some of their massive foreign exchange reserves, some $3 trillion, into the much smaller physical gold market.


The ramifications of that paradigm shift have yet to be appreciated.

? Owning physical gold in the safest way possible remains vital:  7 Key Gold Storage Must Haves




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Japan’s Plan To Freeze Fukushima With An “Ice Wall” Is Melting Down

Who could have possibly foreseen this?

A year ago we wished TEPCO the best of luck with the construction of the “Game of Thrones”-esque 1.4km giant wall of ice that was designed to surround the exploded Fukushima power plant and slow the movement of irradiated water below the damaged reactors, preventing it from flowing over into the ocean and surrounding land. A plan so idiotic we were at a loss for words trying to list the ways it could go wrong (we didn’t bother with how it could go right because it clearly couldn’t).

And, as it turns out, making a project overly complicated and ridiculous doesn’t assure it will be a success. Quite the contrary. As Japan JIJI reports, Tepco said the project, which remains in its early stages, is experiencing a problem with an inner ice wall designed to contain highly radioactive water that is draining from the basements of the wrecked reactors.

A Tepco spokesman added that “We have yet to form an ice plug because we can’t get the temperature low enough to freeze the water.”

Oh, you mean to say that a he plan whose success relies on freezing water may fail because… it is impossible to get the water to freeze? Truly some of the smartest Japanese scientists must have been behind this brilliant strategy, or at least those who were not involved in the planning of the BOJ’s QE program of course.

The underlying idea was simple enough… on paper.

Trenches are being dug for a huge network of pipes under the plant that will have refrigerant pumped through them. If successful, it would freeze the soil and form a physical barrier, significantly slowing the rate at which uncontaminated groundwater flows into the reactor basements and becomes contaminated.

 

The coolant used in the operation is an aqueous solution of calcium chloride, which is cooled to minus 30 degrees. The ice wall employs the same technology as the trench project and involves the same contractor, Kajima Corp.

Alas, the reality is proving to be far more complicated than theory – just ask the Fed:

The idea of freezing a section of the ground was proposed last year. Engineers have used the technique to build tunnels near watercourses. But scientists point out it has never been used on such a large scale, or for the length of time Tepco is proposing.

 

Coping with the huge amount of water at the plant is proving to be a major challenge for Tepco, as it tries to clean up the mess after the worst nuclear disaster in a generation.

 

As well as having to collect vast quantities of water used to cool the melted down reactors, Tepco has been pumping up and storing water that drains down from inland mountains to the sea.

 

Full decommissioning of the plant is expected to take several decades. An exclusion zone remains in place, and experts warn that some former residential areas may have to be abandoned as settlements because of persistently high levels of radiation.

May have to be abandoned? Can’t Japan just raise the minimum safe radiation dosage as it did back in 2011. That way people can assume they are still safe. And after all the whole exercise is to boost confidence, isn’t it.

In conclusion: “We are behind schedule, but have already taken additional measures, including putting in more pipes, so that we can remove contaminated water from the trench starting next month,” a spokesman said.

Wait, wasn’t the issue the temperature of the water, not the number of pipes. Oh who cares anyway, as long as someone pretends to be doing some work to “fix” the world’s worst nuclear accident in history, having long since surpassed Chernobyl in severity. One can’t have the locals realize the government is hopeless and that the Fukushima situation was a complete disaster from the start, and what’s worse, one which can not be fixed. Especially now that Abenomics has failed, and the Nikkei is still down for the year, thus not providing the required dose of distraction from an increasingly irradiated life.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1iIp062 Tyler Durden

Beware Friday’s OPEX, JPMorgan Warns “Volatility Too Low, Disconnected From Fundamentals”

Many market participants are scratching their head as to whether the low VIX levels are an anomaly or some kind of utopian new normal. JPMorgan's Quant Derivatives shop warns the current environment is not similar to the great moderation of 2004-2007 as volatility appears to be disconnected from fundamentals and pressured by structural effects, including central bank intervention, low trading volumes, and pressure from option hedging. Crucially, based on an examination of 'gamma imbalances', the current (low) volatility regime may change significantly after the June expiry.

As JPMorgan explains…

Low Volatility – Anomaly or a New Normal? Many clients have asked us whether the low VIX levels (1M median: 11.7) are an anomaly or a new normal. We have heard analysts arguing that the low volatility is fundamentally justified and the current environment is similar to the 2004-2007 time period. To assess current levels of volatility, we have analyzed the VIX in light of recent Macro data, Volatility of other asset classes, and various structural drivers. Our view is that the current environment is not similar to 2004-2007 as volatility appears to be disconnected from fundamentals, and pressured by structural effects. In our recent report on the VIX, we analyzed the ability of employment, manufacturing, consumer and housing data to forecast the VIX. Most of these macro series indicate that the VIX is about 3 points too low (historical success rate of these forecasts was 60-70%). During the 2004-2007 time period, these same macro models showed the low levels of volatility at the time were fairly priced.

Volatility in other asset classes such as rates, FX, commodities and credit spreads have also been very low. Some of the measures (such as G7 FX, Rates, and Oil volatility) are in fact at absolute all-time lows (VIX is in the 25th percentile of the 2004-2007 low volatility range). The only exception is credit spreads which are moderately higher now than during 2004- 2007. In addition to low levels, most cross-asset volatility time series (85%) have been declining in the last month – a signal that does not point to an imminent increase in volatility.

To further understand the current low volatility levels and compare it to the 2004-2007 time period, we looked at levels of market activity and structural drivers of volatility. Firstly, there is much less trading activity now as compared to the 2004-2007 time period.

Figure 3 below shows a nearly 50% decline of equity share volumes since 2007. Volume and volatility are highly correlated (Figure 4, current low volumes/volatility are denoted with a red dot). Volatility and volumes are linked by a positive feedback loop (lower volumes lead to lower volatility and vice versa).

Lower market activity is likely due to relative decline in activity of levered investors such as hedge funds and prop desks, and relative increase from less active investors such as corporates performing buybacks, or asset managers increasing equity allocations. Relatively high valuation of equities is also not supportive of higher volumes and volatility, as value-driven investors gradually step away from the market. Low realized volatility and the low yield environment further invite volatility sellers of all shapes and forms which is putting further pressure on implied volatility measures such as the VIX.

In addition to low trading activity and option selling, volatility has been under pressure from the hedging of options. Figure 5 above shows the S&P 500 call-put gamma imbalance that has recently reached all-time high levels. Gamma (per 1% S&P 500 move) of call options was $25bn higher than the gamma of put options last week. As investors on average tend to sell call options and buy put options, hedging of these positions puts pressure on realized volatility and this pressure is higher than it has ever been.

In summary, we see the current market environment as different from 2004-2007. Volatility appears to be too low and disconnected from fundamentals. However, the low yield environment and support from central banks is currently keeping volatility low not just in equities but across asset classes.

Additionally, equity volatility has been held down by low trading activity and option hedging pressure. As we will discuss below, some of the option-related pressure on volatility will abate after the June expiry, which could result in higher realized volatility.

One more thing…

Option Expiration: About $900bn of S&P 500 option notional is expiring this Friday.

The current ratio of Put to Call contracts outstanding is ~2 which is near all-time high levels (98th percentile over the past 15 years). The high ratio of Puts to Calls may on the surface suggest that investors are well hedged and bracing for a market decline. However this is not the case as most of the put options are far out of money and ineffective at current market levels. Figure 9 below shows S&P 500 options open interest by strike. Currently, ~80% of put open interest is below the 1850 strike and would not be an effective hedge for a ~100 point market pullback. This is also illustrated by the directional exposure (delta) of put options that is only ~$40bn (on ~$650bn of June Put notional open interest, i.e. the average delta for all June puts outstanding is only ~6%).

While it is hard to forecast if and how investors will roll these put options, the directional impact of rolling protection to higher strikes could have a negative impact on the market. Assuming naively that clients are long puts and short calls and roll all June options (calls and puts) 3 months out and 100 points higher, this would lead to an incremental change in total delta of negative ~$100bn of S&P 500.


Despite the high put-call ratio, the total gamma of calls is currently ~$15bn larger than the gamma of puts, which is pressuring realized volatility lower. However, about $10bn of this call imbalance will expire on Friday, leaving more balanced gamma positions thereafter. In addition, we think that if a significant amount of June puts (~$650bn of put notional) is rolled to higher strikes, it will further increase the put gamma. This in turn would be supportive of higher realized volatility post June expiry compared to realized volatility over the past month.




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1qu81Mr Tyler Durden

Gallup’s Stunning Explanation For America’s Unemployment Epidemic: Obesity

Two things became abundantly clear during today’s Yellen press conference: i) the Fed no longer has any idea what it is doing, or where it is steering the economy, exemplified by the Chairwoman’s response that she has little “confidence” in the Fed’s current set of forecasts (because one can be wrong only for so long about the economy before one indeed loses all confidence in one’s abilities), however since everyone is benefiting for now as the asset bubble is still growing and asset prices are still rising, there is nothing the Fed will change about its current line of action and ii) the Fed has no idea how or why unemployment – as massaged as it may be courtesy of tens of millions of Americans dropping out of the labor force – is as high and as structural as it is.

Of course, all of this should have been quite obvious to everyone else years ago when trillion after trillion in excess liquidity did nothing to stimulate the economy (as can be seen in the -2.0% GDP Q1 GDP is set to print in its final revision), and certainly nothing to boost employment, particularly long-term unemployment – those who are out of work for 12 months or more – to above-consensus levels.

So it appears there is something far more structural with America’s long-term unemployment problem, something not even the “smartest academics in the (Marriner Eccles) room” can diagnose. Surprisingly, earlier today Gallup reported one factor that may be contributing to America’s unemployment malaise – the same problem that is the reason for the insolvent US welfare state coffers: obesity.

According to Gallup, Americans who have been out of work for a year or more are much more likely to be obese than those unemployed for a shorter time. The obesity rate rises from 22.8% among those unemployed for two weeks or less to 32.7% among those unemployed for 52 weeks or more.

How does Gallup keep track of the Body Mass Index of America’s millions of unemployed?

Gallup tracks U.S. obesity levels daily using Americans’ self-reported height and weight to calculate body mass index (BMI) scores as part of the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index. Individuals with BMI scores of 30 or higher are considered obese. The Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index also tracks the percentages of Americans who report that they have ever been diagnosed with various health conditions related to obesity, including high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and diabetes.

 

These results are based on nearly 5,000 interviews throughout 2013 with the long-term unemployed (defined by the Bureau of Labor Statistics as being unemployed for 27 weeks or more) and more than 13,000 interviews with the short-term unemployed (those out of work for less than 27 weeks).

 

Gallup and Healthways also track the percentages of Americans who say they currently have or are being treated for health conditions such as high blood pressure and high cholesterol. In both cases, the differences between the short-term unemployed and the long-term unemployed are striking: Those who have been jobless for 27 weeks or more are nearly twice as likely to say they currently have high blood pressure, and to say they have high cholesterol.

Gallup’s shocking finding: Americans who have been unemployed for less than 27 weeks are somewhat less likely than those with jobs to have each of these conditions.

But is unemployment the cause of obesity, or vice versa, are the obese Americans simply more unwilling to look for work, or are just considered less “attractive”, less hireable, and more of a “health insurance cost” threat to potential employers?

While these results offer evidence of a strong relationship between unemployment and obesity-related health concerns, the causal direction is not clear. Unemployment may cause some people to engage in behaviors that lead to health problems, while pre-existing health conditions may make it harder for others to find and keep work. For many individuals, both dynamics may be at work, perpetuating a negative cycle of declining job prospects and worsening health.

Gallup observes that jobless Americans may be more likely to fall into such a cycle if a higher incidence of health problems hinders their efforts to find a good job. Those out of work for 27 weeks or more report experiencing an average of 4.7 days out of the past 30 when poor health kept them from doing their usual activities. That compares with an average of 2.8 lower-productivity days for those unemployed for a shorter period, and just 1.4 days for full-time workers.

Over the longer term, one of the most worrisome implications of these relationships is that many of those who have been unemployed for a prolonged period may suffer chronic health problems even if they successfully re-enter the workforce. A 2009 study of Pennsylvania workers laid off in the 1970s and 1980s found that even 20 years later, these workers were 10% to 15% more likely to die in a given year than those who had not suffered a job loss.

Gallup’s conclusion:

With record-setting rates of long-term unemployment in most U.S. states, the health consequences of extended periods of joblessness have become a rising concern for policymakers. The Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index makes it possible to examine health and well-being conditions associated with long-term unemployment more closely than is possible using smaller-scale studies. Importantly, the tracking data can be aggregated to produce the large sample sizes necessary for studying well-being among specific employment groups.

One key concern raised by the current analysis is that employers in industries that require manual labor, such as manufacturing and construction, may be less likely to hire candidates who are clearly out of shape. If so, workers in these industries — who already earn lower wages, on average, than those in knowledge-based sectors — may be even more likely to be caught in a negative cycle of joblessness and poor health.

And there is another aspect, one where Obamacare also comes into play: private employers’ high healthcare costs might lead them to avoid taking chances on those who pose greater health risks, particularly in a tenuous economic climate. As a result, candidates who are obese and who have been unemployed for 27 weeks or more may have two strikes against them even before they sit down for an interview.

So perhaps instead of dumping trillions into the stock market in hopes this record “wealth”, already accruing to the wealthiest 1%, will trickle down to the average American, a far better use of the Fed’s cash would be to launch weight-loss initiatives for America’s record obese population: perhaps offering a monthly prize of $1,000 for every 10 pounds that Joe Sixpack manages to lose, and keep off every month. While it is arguable if this will help solve America’s unemployment (and obesity) problems, it certainly will lower US healthcare costs in the long-run, and will also make for a far more fit population… At least until those who are not obese and also can’t find a job accuse the Fed of discriminating against them.

Of course, considering the efficacy of the Fed’s behavioral experiment this could simply backfire and force ever more Americans to become obese in hopes they too will be “subsidized” by free taxpayer money to lose said weight.

Perhaps, in retrospect, there is no fixing these two intertwined problems. Which leads to a sad conclusion: America’s population may be increasingly unemployed, but at least it’s fat…




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

The Fed Just Lost Any Shred of Credibility on Inflation

By EconMatters

 

Those High Chicken Prices are just Noise – Tell that to the Cashier

 

The Fed today in their press conference lost any credibility on a number of issues, and it really goes to show that they have no clue what they are doing at this point. First they called the overheating inflation in the economy Noise, yes you heard right NOISE which is now showing up even in the watered down indexes used to track it by the Fed, and already above their target of 2% on a year over year basis and rising, (wait until you see the next two month`s CPI reports on a spike in gasoline prices as we enter the summer driving season).   

 

45% Appreciation is Normal Price Discovery & In-Line with Historical Norms

 

Then Janet Yellen says she sees no signs of a bubble in equity prices after a 35% appreciation followed by what looks like another 10% plus year of appreciation in the cards for 2014. It is one thing to be dovish, but when one goes out of their way to mischaracterize the data to such an extreme that it makes one lose any credibility just to justify a given monetary policy, that is when the proverbial shit hits the fan.

 

 

No Clue at this Point!

 

We would expect some major market vigilantism and volatility once the next hot Employment report comes in two weeks, and a scorching CPI Report hits the tape in four weeks that only reinforces the fact that the Federal Reserve has no clue what they are doing at this point, and Janet Yellen is basically my Grandmother in charge of the Federal Reserve. 

 

Frankly, that is doing a major disservice to my grandmother who could spot inflation when she sees it, there is no hope right now after hearing Janet Yellen speak in the press conference, she is completely incompetent and the exact worse person for what we are now entering in the inflation era!

 

 

Managing Market Expectations

 

I tried to give her the benefit of the doubt, that she is just trying to talk down the market to keep rates low for as long as possible, and maybe even the hot inflation data recedes a slight bit; but even with the strategy of dropping the tightening monetary bomb all at once versus slowly raising market expectations in an incremental fashion, she still will be setting markets up for a huge disastrous exit event the longer she prolongs the inevitable. 

 

But after listening to her talk in the press conference I am not even sure she is a qualified economist, moreover it is apparent she has no formal timeline for unwinding, and she cannot even properly understand basic economic relationships that any first year econ major has down after mid-terms!

 

 

Go back and look at the inflation data and explain to me why this is not an upward trend for 2014, and an unsettling trend given GDP was actually negative for the first quarter, what happens to inflation when GDP prints a 4 handle later this year? What happens to inflation when the strongest part of the year from a consumption and GDP standpoint comes gushing into the CPI Reports? Janet Yellen didn`t think that UPS and Fed-Ex recently raising their pricing policy to now cover size of packages from a volume standpoint versus strictly weight had anything to do with inflation? Guess when these price increases are going to push through into the economic data sets – a clue – future PPI & CPI Inflation reports! 

 

If you have analysts who track these types of pricing pressures, and you can run forward models, why set yourself up to fail miserably in the future – it’s called managing expectations! She really has set herself up to fail by stubbornly refusing to acknowledge even near-term inflation levels, let alone future inflation pressures that will be much higher than her targeted forecast! These are basic corporate level CEO skills that any competent person in a management role understands, and it is unsettling that she doesn`t get this basic concept, and is managing the most powerful corporate board in the world!



Yellen`s Shelf-Life 2 Years

 

She has got to be the most dovish Fed chairperson in the history of the institution going into the most important policy initiative withdrawal phase ever to be recorded since the inception of the Federal Reserve! 

 

She will probably step down in a year at this rate, as she obviously was the wrong person for the job! President Obama should have chosen Larry Summers for the position, and now this is really going to cause the entire monetary experiment to blow up, it is looking more and more like a foregone conclusion. 

 

We are now going to have to resurrect Paul Volcker`s spirit to the Federal Reserve to dig us out this hyperinflation mess, once inflation I mean Noise gets so unbearable that Janet Yellen is forced to embarrassingly resign by the president as the bond market takes matters into its own hands!


35% Probability of Hyperinflation Cycle

 

With her increasingly dovish incompetence being on full display for market participants instead of the US merely entering an elevated inflation period, we now realize that Janet Yellen and the Federal Reserve are so behind the inflation curve, and many other market implication curves, that we probably are staring at a 35% chance of a Hyper-Inflationary period by the time the Federal Reserve realizes that Noise is actually real inflation!

 

Setting Herself Up to Look Even More Out of Touch with Reality

 

The surprising thing is that she backed herself into a corner on the data, and I expect the inflation and employment data to keep coming in much hotter and well ahead of the Fed`s own forecasts, and she didn`t even leave herself any real wiggle room. With each new data point she and the Fed are going to look increasingly out of touch and well behind the curve that it is going to be shockingly laughable. If they sky is cloudy grey, and you keep saying that the sky is clear blue, people are going to stop listening to what you have to say, it’s called losing credibility, and the entire institution needs all the credibility they can muster at this most difficult time – the unwinding phase! 

 

Loss of Credibility Worse than Actual Policy Decisions at this Crucial Monetary Pivot Point

 

The loss of credibility is by far worse than the actual policy decisions at this point, and after listening to Janet Yellen`s press conference, I am not sure she is a rational, logical, empirical thinking human being with her ridiculous comments regarding the stock market and inflation as she seems borderline senescent and incapable at best, and there is no doubt she is completely over her head at the Fed in this powerful position. I cannot wait to hear the Fed minutes of this latest Fed Meeting!

 

Markets will Dictate Policy for the Fed!

 

There is no hope for an elegant exit now from this monetary experiment, inflation will be at 4.5% before they even start raising rates! The bond market will be so far ahead of the Federal Reserve in terms of bond vigilantism that they are what will bring the Fed to finally realize that they have lost control of financial markets, and then it is endgame for interest rates! 

 

Once the bond vigilantes take control of markets because they have no faith in the Federal Reserve, it is time to seriously reevaluate what the makeup and role the Federal Reserve should play in future monetary decisions going forward! 

 

At this point we need a major overhaul regarding the powers of the Federal Reserve, if after the last Fed inspired bubble, where everybody made a note of the responsibility of not creating future “bubbly conditions” and with what I would called unsustainable artificial prices in many asset classes, it is obvious that the institution has no proper checks and balances and needs a major constitutional overhaul! 

 

P.S. Final thought: 

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The Iraq Turmoil In 10 Simple Questions

Bank of America believes the increasing geopolitical tensions in Iraq risk regional contagion, with the potential for negative spillover to global markets. If Iraq were to see further turmoil, in addition to the civil war in neighbouring Syria, we believe it could destabilize the region further, disrupt oil production and exports, and provide fertile ground for terrorist activity to extend its reach. They review the background of Iraqi turmoil, and discuss the political, economic and market implications in 10 questions; noting that the root of the problem is the central government’s non-inclusive and sectarian policies.

Via BofAML's GEM Economics Team,

So far, Kurds seem to be benefitting from the current situation the most. A rapprochement of a strange kind between secular Sunnis, Shia Arabs, Kurds, Iranians, Turks and the West still remains likely, and may prevent the situation from escalating, in our view.

The main risk is eventual partitioning of Iraq

While the situation has gone from bad to worse for Iraq followers, the wide coverage in mainstream media has amplified the initial negative market reaction. That said, market pricing may still be complacent if Iraq fails to remain nominally united. A breakup of Iraq would raise questions about ownership and timely servicing of external debt, in our view.

10 Questions…

1. What’s going on in Iraq? Failed policies, increased violence

The take-over of Iraq’s second largest city, Mosul, by the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS) portends of a potential widening of sectarian tensions with the possibility of a full-blown sectarian armed conflict. In our view, the deep discontent with the central government’s sectarian policies is the fundamental issue that needs fixing.

ISIS: a rebranded al-Qaeda offshoot

ISIS is an active Sunni jihadist militant group with a stated goal to create an Islamic caliphate state spanning parts of Syria and Iraq, regions where it is currently most active. It is led by Iraqi Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and its fighting strength could be around 10,000 men. The group was formed at the start of the US-led invasion of Iraq and pledged allegiance to al-Qaeda in 2004, originally as an al-Qaida group in Iraq, the Islamic State of Iraq (ISI). With the descent of Syria into civil war and porous borders, ISI expanded its operations into Syria, gaining foothold territory stretching from Eastern Aleppo, Idlib and Raqqa in Syria to Fallujah in Western Iraq. It rebranded itself as ISIS in April 2013. In February 2014, after an intense internal power struggle between ISIS and Jabhat al-Nusra in Syria, al-Qaeda’s leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri, publicly disavowed ISIS.

ISIS first major takeover in Iraq in Jan’14

Its first major takeover of territory in Iraq was its gaining of control over the Iraqi cities of Ramadi and Fallujah in January 2014, using the mismanaged and heavyhanded government dispersal of Sunni Arab Spring-inspired protests camps. Although ISIS’s control of Fallujah is total, its control of Ramadi has been partial given the fact that Ramadi was the epicenter of the “Sunni Awakening” Sons of Iraq tribal movement. The latter armed coalition movement was instrumental in defeating al-Qaeda in Iraq in 2006-07. Being de facto disbanded (rather than integrated into the army, among other promises) by the Shia political leadership, the Sons of Iraq tribal leaders have resented their treatment by the government, complicating efforts by the government to have them fight again fully by its side.

Government’s non-inclusive policies for Sunnis help the rise of ISIS

ISIS’ bold advances feed on wider Sunni disenfranchisement with the rule of PM al-Maliki, in our view. Senior prominent Sunni politicians have distanced themselves from ISIS actions but also blamed PM al-Maliki’s governance. The recent take-over of Mosul appears to have been carefully planned, and appears to have benefited from a population nominally hostile to the federal government’s army, and from support of Sunni Baathist insurgent forces.

After taking over Mosul, ISIS stated its intentions of taking over Baghdad. The Iraqi army has, on paper at least, over 250,000 troops. However, the troop’s morale is reportedly low, could crumble under the weight of sectarian allegiances, and government control is fragile up to Baghdad’s outward skirts. Shia Grand Ayatollah Sistani issued a call to arms while Shia militias have been put on alert and could become increasingly drawn into the fighting, consecrating the breakdown of Iraq into sectarian entities, in our view.

The Kurdish Peshmerga has already taken position to secure disputed territories outside the Kurdistan borders, and its territorial claims may be hard to concede back to the federal government. While a material fighting force to launch into the battle against ISIS, the difficult relations between the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and the federal government preclude use of Kurdish armed forces until a political compromise between the two forces is reached, in our view.

2. Why it matters – Iraq is a major oil producer

Iraq is a strategically important country in the region, with enormous potential to develop into an oil giant, against the backdrop of fragile and volatile ethnosectarian local dynamics (Chart 1 & Chart 2). It is one of the most populous states in the Middle East and borders important regional countries. Its steady and rapid increase in hydrocarbon exports until recently has helped balance global oil markets. A potential increase in turmoil in Iraq, after the civil war in neighbouring Syria, could in our view further destabilize the region, disrupt oil production and exports and provide a fertile ground for terrorist activity to spread further.

An oil giant in the making with ambitious targets

The country sits on 150bn barrels of proven oil reserves, the fifth-largest in the world, but also has been little explored until recently (Chart 3 and Chart 4). It further benefits from a low cost base and market proximity to Asia and Europe. Iraq held two oil licensing rounds in 2009, in which oil majors have pledged production increases of 9.6mbpd within 13 years. The Iraqi Ministry of Oil revised production plateau targets towards 9mn bpd of production capacity by 2020, from the 13mn bpd targeted previously. We see oil production at 6.7mbpd by 2024, assuming the political and security picture stabilizes. An increase in Iraqi oil production on that scale would likely bring about changes to OPEC quotas.

Iraq’s oil production targets remain difficult to achieve in the near term. Kurdish independent oil exports have started, but there has been no willing buyer for now and large scale exports may be discouraged by the launch of international litigation by Baghdad. The relationship between Baghdad and Kurdistan may yet be subject to further changes, in our view. Iraq oil production has disappointed over the past year versus Iraqi goals due to sabotage, political instability, bad weather and technical infrastructure issues. After peaking at 3.2mn bpd in August 2013 and coming down since, Iraq’s crude oil production was 3.1mn bpd in April. Similarly, oil exports peaked at 2.6mn bpd in April 2013 and totalled 2.5mn bpd in April, weighed down by the shutdown of Northern oil exports.

3. Is Iraq splitting up? Tail risks have risen

Sectarian fault lines in Iraq are getting deeper, especially following recent events, increasing the tail risk of the country splitting up, in our view. However, we should keep in mind that Iraqi politics present a constant struggle over power, territory and resources among the country’s feudal political class. And that has been the case for quite a long time even there have been periods of relative calm.

Sectarian fault lines deepen but reconciliation still possible

While the dispute and the split are generally defined along sectarian lines, this contention has gone through many phases and has multiple layers. Many surprising alliances have been built and broken apart over time. If one looks at the even more fragmented sectarian picture in Lebanon, the potential they have for overcoming the differences and forming alliances despite rooted sectarian and feudal hurdles suggest that local dynamics are much more complicated.

Soft federalism gives way to concerns that Iraq will split up

One of the roots of the Iraq split up argument goes to the 2005 constitution, which describes the country as a federal state. Not only Kurdistan is granted a strong autonomy, but also potential future regions are promised to enjoy from that. That’s partly the reason why federation carries different meanings for Kurds and Iraqi Arabs, the latter of which sees it same as partition.

The decentralization view has made a strong comeback in policy circles following the recent events. However, the support for sectarian federalization is weak outside Kurdistan and oil rich southern provinces such as Basra, who think they receive much less than what they contribute to federal budget. Sunni Arabs are in favor of federalization, but that’s more because they have significant discontent over the lack of services and resources from the central government in Baghdad.

The political vacuum in the aftermath of the elections not helping

The political vacuum after the elections is not helping. A wholesale reform and redrafting of the constitution to bridge the gaps between Baghdad and regional and provincial leaders is very difficult in our view. However, a deal on oil between Baghdad and Erbil, a national compromise to amend the constitution to prevent other regions going autonomous a la Kurdistan, and some simultaneous decentralization empowering local governments can help to stop the slide into what’s called soft-partition of Iraq under sectarian regionalization.

4. Is Iraq back to civil war? nOnly if national unity fails

The memories of civil war are quite fresh and bitter for Iraqis, which should act as a social emergency break to stop the recent increased wave of al-Qaeda incidents. Since the US/UK led invasion back in March 2003, Iraq has gone through a roller coaster of high-low intensity armed conflict and Iraqi people have suffered dearly. This collective memory may help to step back from the brink.

The escalated conflict that turned into civil war in 2006 cost Iraq dearly

According to the Iraqi body count, documented civilian deaths from violence in Iraq is close to 140,000 (c.190,000 including combatants). The peak of casualties was in back 2006-2007, just before the US-led “Surge”. Together with successful co-optation of regional tribal leaders along with military might on the ground brought a period of relative security by end-2011, when US forces left the country. That actually marks the trough for causalities and together with the deteriorated situation in Syria and the rise of radical Islamic groups, the security situation has deteriorated sharply since mid-2013.

Iraq needs political reconciliation to counter ISIS

The security situation is far less violent compared to 2006, up until now. However, the recent defections in Iraqi Security forces and the rapid rise of ISIS raises concerns regarding a potential quick turn in security situation to the worse. One of the most concerning signs is that part of the local Sunni population welcomes ISIS, reportedly due to the mistreatment they suffered under PM Maliki’s dominantly Shia security forces.

We believe the security threat posed by ISIS could be countered more easily if local actors leave aside their differences and unite against the common terrorist threat. That could require a great deal of effort, though. External help from countries such as US, Iran, and Turkey could make it relatively easier to counter ISIS. However, in our view the undercurrent of deep discontent from the central government is the fundamental issue that should be fixed.

A soft partition along sectarian may push Iraq into deeper conflict

One way to go forward is an inclusive approach. If we assume the opposite that Sunni Arabs and Shia would enjoy the same autonomy as Kurdistan, the survival of the central government and the Iraqi state could be really difficult. Also given the mixed demographics of the country, a soft partition along the sectarian lines could potentially trigger nationwide violent clashes and ethnic cleansing, in our view. But now it’s also becoming clear that turning a deaf ear to rising discontent by PM Maliki has also brought Iraq close to boiling point, in our view.

Do not underestimate the rising Iraqi nationalism

A notable trend over the last 8 years in Iraq has been Iraq nationalism which may transcend the sectarianism. Regardless of their ethnic background, the shared history, their collective suffering and their concerns over foreign intervention strengthens that nationalist stream. Iraqi nationals think that breakup of Iraq is not best for Iraq, region and the West. Hence rather than a divorce, they want to see a more inclusive central government that will institutionalize a more functional revenue sharing and give local governments a greater say on policies.

5. Will Kurds go independent? Full autonomy more desirable

Kurdistan has always seen as the most likely breakaway region from Iraq given their historical strong desire to do so. This view has especially strengthened as the gap between KRG and central government widened lately. The direct pipeline to Turkey also eased the economic constraint of independence by offering an exit to the landlocked Kurdistan.

Kurdish independence remains very complicated

Even the Kurds’ recent move to control Kirkuk seems another step in the direction of independence, we believe that still remains a very challenging goal for Kurds to achieve. And it might not be desirable at this point for four reasons.

First, with Kurdish minorities spread out in the neighbouring countries and having the only exit through Turkey into the Mediterranean Sea, KRG would be increasingly at the mercy of its neighbours if it goes independent. Second, breaking away from Iraq with the oil and gas riches in disputed areas would possibly trigger violence, not least with Iraqi Arab nationalists. Third, given the fragile geopolitical balances in the region, the West is unlikely to throw its support behind KRG’s independence, the repercussions of which may cause a wider Middle East confrontation. Fourth, the economics of independence barely reach the breakeven for the 17% budget support KRG receives from Baghdad on paper (Chart 9 and Chart 10). Even with the inclusion of Kirkuk that may double KRG production above 500kbd.

Kurds may be better off in the short-term with full autonomy

KRG is likely to be better off in the short-term by staying with federal Iraq as long as it sorts out its problems with the central government, in our view. The recent events have given them a stronger bargaining power to affect Baghdad. And that should not be downplayed. Kurds are likely to prefer a strong lever on Iraqi central government to an independence, in which they may have next to no influence on their gate keepers in Ankara, in our view.

6. Can Iraq pay back its debt? Fiscally sound, politically weak

In the absence of dissolution of the country, Iraq has the ability and the willingness to service its external debt, in our view. The Paris Club deal and bilateral negotiations have brought down the external debt stock to a much more manageable level and the external amortization schedule remains modest. Official gross reserves represent twice our estimated outstanding postrestructuring EXD stock, though we note that the institutional integrity of the Development Fund for Iraq (DFI) may have been recently compromised.

The risk scenario is Iraq’s breakup, which will affect ownership of debt

In case the territorial integrity of Iraq comes under question, and ownership of the external liabilities becomes disputed among the various emerging territorial entities, the timely servicing of external debt may not be guaranteed. Servicing of external debt will essentially be determined by the security situation and a potential institutional breakup, as well as the ownership of Southern crude oil production (located in majority Shia parties) which are sufficient to maintain creditworthiness, in our view.

Paris Club provided Iraq major relief

In terms of the existing external debt stock, Paris Club debt treatment and subsequent bilateral negotiations brought the public external debt stock from US$142bn in 2004 (389% of GDP) to US$34bn in 2012 (15% of GDP). Paris Club (PC) creditors agreed with Iraq in 2004 on a comprehensive debt treatment of public external debt, providing a total amount of debt reduction of 80% in three phases.

The first two phases respectively entered into force on 21 November 2004 and on 23 December 2005 and have lowered the public external stock of debt due to Paris Club creditors by 60%. The remaining third phase of an additional 20% debt reduction, conditional upon the successful completion of the last review of the IMF Stand-By Arrangement, was granted in December 2008.

Iraq’28s only 8% of EXD

The breakdown of external debt is also favourable, as the Iraq 2028 bonds represent just 8% of the total external debt stock. We estimate the bulk of external debt is owed to non-Paris Club creditors (cUS$18bn or 50% of total). Additionally, we exclude a portion of GCC debt to Iraq. This is because a material portion of claims owed to the GCC has not been recognized, nor forgiven, nor serviced, given the political economy implications of such a move and the lack of normalization of regional relations despite the holding of the Arab League Summit in Baghdad for the first time since 1990.

The robust macroeconomic performance of recent years owes much to high oil prices rather than progress towards broad-based structural reforms. The sensitivity of fiscal and external accounts to oil price and export volumes remains large. Fiscal accounts are most vulnerable to a sustained shock given sticky expenditures, high breakeven oil price, small fiscal buffers, in our view.

Fiscal accounts breakeven at 100$/bbl

Fiscal accounts currently breakeven at cUS$100/bbl, one of the highest levels among MENA credits. This is due to the structural rigidities of large, sticky current spending (67% of total) and elevated security-related expenditure (6% of GDP). Oil production at current levels should keep the fiscal breakeven oil price under control, to the extent spending remains prudent. The 2014 budget has still not been approved and we would assume continued underspending. This would not be unusual given that the average underspending was 45% over 2010-12.

The rainy day funds about to rock-bottom, but FX reserves plenty

The DFI balances stood at US$20bn in June 2013 (8.9% of GDP and six months of spending on salaries and pensions), yet surprisingly came down to just US$5bn in March 2014 (Chart 13). While there is no high-frequency fiscal data to corroborate this, DFI cash flow statements appear to show a large increase in transfers to MoF and in letters of credits to Iraqi ministries. Disbursements from the DFI require a double signature (MoF, PM) and both institutions are now essentially reporting to PM al-Maliki, weakening institutional integrity.

The stock of CBI gross foreign assets appears adequate on a number of metrics, in our view. They stood at US$73bn as of early May 2013, up from US$70.3bn in December 2012 (we note that article 26 of CBI 2004 Law prevents Central bank lending to the government).The existing sizeable stock of reserves coupled with a modest amortization schedule suggests that external debt service is unlikely to be a concern going forward, in our view (Chart 12).

The debt amortization of $2bn annually is highly manageable

The EXD amortization schedule appears modest. There is no published timely data on ST EXD, but MT and LT external amortization needs appear to be in the order of around US$2bn annually. This reflects modest payments to the IMF and bondholders, as well as the restructuring of Saddam-era external claims.

7. What are the tail risks? Wider MENA conflict, high oil prices

A potential flare-up in Middle Eastern conflict in the region and shaking up oil prices is one of the 10 risks to spoil your summer. In our view Iraq is a fertile ground for proxies to operate in the country and involve further regional countries in the turmoil. Iran could send IRGC forces to support the Shia-led government, while Sunni militants could obtain support from private sources in the GCC. Unless a counter-offensive is commanded by a united Iraqi army with coordination from the Kurdish Peshmerga, the risk increases that the fighting will increasingly take place across sectarian lines (Sunnis versus Shias) and, potentially eventually, across ethnic lines (Arabs versus Kurds). PM al-Maliki thus holds the key and will need to convince other stakeholders that he can transcend his ethnic and sectarian background and build bridges with other political leaders.

South Iraq holds the key for oil prices

Our commodity research team believes that, in the unlikely event that ISIS invades the South and the entire 2.6 million b/d Southern oil production is lost, oil prices could face $40-50/bbl upside. Immediate further risks to production seem limited. After all, the bulk of Iraq’s oil fields are located in the Shia South, far from where the latest escalation in violence is taking place. Plus most of the recovery in production since 2003 has happened south of the country, with Iraqi output hitting 3.2 mn b/d in 2013, up from 1.3 mn b/d 10 years ago in 2003.

The latest area targeted by ISIS is strategically important for the oil sector due to the Kirkuk-Ceyhan export pipeline. It holds large oil reserves too. Yet the export pipeline has been offline since March 2 when an attack shut it down, so Northern Iraq has been producing fewer than 400 k b/d to supply local refineries for months, down from 630 k b/d in January.

As such, the physical global oil market impact of rising Iraq violence has been modest so far. For now, the violence will likely affect investments into Iraq negatively, suggesting risk of a flatter Iraqi output growth profile and continued support to long-dated oil prices. More long term, should ISIS manage to turn its current foothold in Northern Iraq into a stronghold there, it could compromise the long term integrity of both the KRG and the Southern oil production due to investment cuts by IOCs.

8. What are the trigger points? United response, Baghdad falls

With the situation remaining fluid, we would scrutinize two potential near-term trigger points that could point to the way forward: 1) whether PM al-Maliki manages to obtain wide cross-sectarian support for a counter-offensive; and, 2) whether ISIS makes further territorial gains, particularly into the capital Baghdad.

A national unity sounds good, but hard to deliver

Obtaining a national cover for a robust counter-offensive is likely to be crucial for Iraq to remain nominally united. There are however already worrying signs in our view: 1) PM al-Maliki was not able to obtain parliament to declare a state of emergency and give him full powers (due to the lack of quorum); 2) senior Sunni politicians have already blamed PM al-Maliki’s authoritarian governance style for the crisis; 3) ISIS fighters have been joined reportedly by Sunni former Baathist insurgents; 4) the local population in ISIS occupied cities has grown much more hostile to PM al-Maliki’s rule, and dislodging ISIS fighters may provoke a large number of civilian casualties and increase sectarian tensions; 5) Shia militias have been put on alert; and, 6) Kurds have used the opportunity to de facto seize disputed territories, including oil-rich Kirkuk, which will likely increase tensions with Arabs (both Sunnis and Shias).

Baghdad is not Mosul

Although ISIS may have difficulties operating over large territories of land, it has so far managed to hold territories and increase its ranks and arms. Baghdad remains key, and is some 100km away from current progress of ISIS fighters in the North. Baghdad is also 60km away from Fallujah, which has been controlled by ISIS since January. Baghdad would however likely be a battle that is much more difficult to conduct for ISIS, given the much larger Shia population and heavy fortification and defences, in our view.

9. Who benefits the most from the turmoil? Kurdistan

The current turmoil is likely to help Kurdistan achieve material gains in their core dispute with the federal government. Kurdistan has long been enjoying its autonomy shrined in the constitution but suffering from how central government in Iraq has been interpreting that constitution. Three of the main problems between KRG and federal government have been KRG’s direct oil and gas exports, the faith of disputed regions such as Kirkuk and the payment to Peshmerga from the federal budget.

KRG’s hand getting stronger

It is highly likely that KRG will have a stronger hand on the negotiation table in the next round on all these issues. They have already moved into oil rich Kirkuk and have taken control of it. The rapid fall of Iraqi Security Forces against ISIS compared to Peshmerga’s firm stance has made it clear that the latter serves for the nation in the hour of need and an asset for Iraq. The humanitarian help to those that fled from the areas captured by ISIS also gives a moral higher ground to the KRG in its dealing with the federal government. In our view PM Maliki’s poor handling of the situation and his reduced credibility could also suggest that his brinkmanship is likely to come to an end.

Kurds power grab in the recent conflict should also help to their direct oil exports via Turkey. A cargo of Taq Taq crude (300k boe) from the port of Mersin has been sold to Ruhr Oel, a refining JV between BP (operator) and Rosneft, delivered to Trieste in Italy, and shipped via the Trans-Alpine pipeline destined for a refinery in Germany. We believe this to be a key symbolic step forward for KRG; finding a new buyer in place of the usual purchases from OMV.

Two tankers with c. 1mn barrels of crude each have been loaded in Ceyhan (Turkey), 1st lifting on the United Leadership, with the tanker currently off the coast off Morocco, and the 2nd lifting on the United Emblem, sailing off the coast of Italy with Malta listed as the checkpoint destination. Whilst still reportedly looking for a buyer, a sale could be an important operational catalyst in the near term, though could be overlooked by the market in light of the increased instability in the region.

10. How badly is Turkey affected? Not much

Iraq has become Turkey’s number two export market after Germany. Turkish exports have amounted to $12bn in 2013, some 8% of total. While there is no further official breakdown for further destination of exports in Iraq, the anecdotal reference is that the two thirds of Turkish business in Iraq is with Kurdistan and the rest is dominated by the south. While the troubled West Iraq seems to be the commercially least important region for Turkey, there is likely to be some negative spillover to the Kurdish regions through sentiment and refugees and to the south by trade routes. Needless to say, the impact depends on the duration of the conflict. Assuming that the import dependency of Turkish exports to Iraq is very low, every 10% fall in exports to Iraq will widen the CAD by some 0.2ppt, all else equal.

1/3 of crude imports are from Iraq

A key link in Turkey-Iraq trade is oil. Turkey (i.e. Tupras as the sole refining company of the country) imports almost 90% of its crude need. Sanctions against Iran made Iraq Turkey’s main oil supplier. Iran, Iraq and Saudi Arabia are Turkey’s major oil suppliers. The country mix of crude oil imports has changed in the past three years with the US sanctions against Iran. Turkey was importing almost 50% of its crude needs from Iran in 2011. With the sanctions, this has almost halved and with its increasing output, Iraq has made up for most of lost Iranian supply. Turkey’s total crude imports from Iraq were 6mn tons (120k b/d) in 2013 (2x the level in 2011).

Turkey is able to replace Iraqi crude if needed

Turkey gets Iraqi crude from either Kirkuk via pipeline or Basra through vessels. The crude oil flow from Kirkuk pipeline has seen disruptions from time to time. This year the flow has been disrupted from the Kirkuk-Ceyhan pipeline since March. Accordingly, the weight of crude from Basra would increase. Alternatively, in case of a problem with the crude supply from Iraq totally, Tupras, the sole refining company of Turkey, has a number of suppliers and would likely be able to find replacements.




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The Death Of The Rust Belt

Submitted by Michael Snyder of The Economic Collapse blog,

Their names are familiar to all of us: Cleveland, Flint, Youngstown, Saginaw, Gary, Toledo, Reading, Akron, Flint and Buffalo were all once booming manufacturing cities that were absolutely packed with thriving middle class families.  But now most of the manufacturing jobs are gone and all of those cities are just shadows of their former selves.  When you drive through many of these communities, you will notice that a lot of people have a really hollow look in their eyes.  Decades of slow, steady economic decline have really taken a toll, and even the architecture in these cities looks depressed.  But despite all of the decay, there is still evidence that there was once something truly great about these communities.  Will we be able to recapture that greatness before it is too late?

A lot of writers make economics really complicated, but the truth is that it does not have to be.  For example, if you want your country to have a great economy it has got to produce wealth.  And one of the primary ways to produce wealth is to make stuff.  Immediately after World War II, the United States had the greatest manufacturing base the world had ever seen and we outproduced the rest of the planet combined.  Great manufacturing cities sprouted up all over America and the middle class thrived.  It was truly a great time to be an American.

But then we decided to start shipping in cheaper products from overseas.  At first it didn't create too much of a problem for our massive economy, but eventually the floodgates opened up and we lost tens of thousands of manufacturing facilities and millions upon millions of good paying jobs.  Our labor pool was merged with the labor pool of countries such as communist China where it is legal to pay slave labor wages to manufacturing workers.  Needless to say, our workers could not compete with that and our middle class started to shrink rapidly.

Today, there are many American cities that were once truly great that are now truly frightening to visit.  For example, a recent CNBC article detailed the plight of Reading, Pennsylvania…

In August 2008, factory workers David and Barbara Ludwig treated themselves to new cars—David a Dodge pickup, Barbara a sporty Mazda 3. With David making $22 an hour and Barbara $19, they could easily afford the payments.

 

A month later, Baldwin Hardware, a unit of Stanley Black & Decker, announced layoffs at the Reading plant where they both worked. David was unemployed for 20 months before finding a janitor job that paid $10 an hour, less than half his previous wage. Barbara hung on, but she, too, lost her shipping-dock job of 26 years as Black & Decker shifted production to Mexico. Now she cleans houses for $10 an hour while looking for something permanent.

 

They still have the cars. The other trappings of their middle-class lifestyle? In the rear-view mirror.

I once had an aunt that lived in Reading.  She is dead now, and so is most of the city.  At this point, more than 40 percent of those living in Reading are impoverished and the city government is flat broke.

But similar things could also be said about the rest of the Rust Belt

Perhaps no other region in the country has more eerie examples of urban decay than the once dominant industrial region known as the Rust Belt. Covering the Midwestern states of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and Pennsylvania, the region is plagued by a number of abandoned factories, houses and buildings that lay in crumbling ruins.

You can see some incredible photographs by Seph Lawless of the decay in the Rust Belt right here.  The pictures are incredibly depressing, but it doesn't take too much imagination to see that these cities were once truly impressive.

Just take Gary, Indiana for instance.  It was once known as "the Magic City" because it was doing so well, but now it is a rotting, decaying hellhole.  The following is from an excerpt from a Daily Mail article about Gary…

Gary, a struggling city 30 miles south of Chicago along the shores of Lake Michigan, is a prime example of the trend.

 

Known as the ‘Magic City’ in the roaring 1920s for its spectacular growth, Gary is still home to U.S. Steel's largest plant, but the number of mill jobs has shrunk to 5,000 from 30,000 in the 1970s.

 

Gary's population in 1960 was more than 178,000, but it disintegrated to just 79,000 by 2012.

 

Some one-third of its residents live in poverty and the home and business vacancy rate is about 35 percent. Gary recorded 43 murders in 2012 – three times as many per capita as nearby Chicago.

At one time, Gary was the envy of the rest of the globe.

But now very few people would ever want to willingly live there.

The following is how James Kunstler described what he saw when he traveled through Gary, Indiana…

Between the ghostly remnants of factories stood a score of small cities and neighborhoods where the immigrants settled five generations ago. A lot of it was foreclosed and shuttered. They were places of such stunning, relentless dreariness that you felt depressed just imagining how depressed the remaining denizens of these endless blocks of run-down shoebox houses must feel. Judging from the frequency of taquerias in the 1950s-vintage strip-malls, one inferred that the old Eastern European population had been lately supplanted by a new wave of Mexicans. They had inherited an infrastructure for daily life that was utterly devoid of conscious artistry when it was new, and now had the special patina of supernatural rot over it that only comes from materials not found in nature disintegrating in surprising and unexpected ways, sometimes even sublimely, like the sheen of an oil slick on water at a certain angle to the sun. There was a Chernobyl-like grandeur to it, as of the longed-for end of something enormous that hadn't worked out well.

Sadly, what is happening to Reading and Gary is just a preview of what is slowly happening to the entire nation as a whole.

Since 2001, the United States has lost more than 56,000 manufacturing facilities.

That is absolutely astounding.

Most of those jobs have gone overseas.  That is why it seems like most of our products say "Made in China" these days.  They are getting rich while our communities suffer, and then we have to beg the Chinese to lend our money back to us.

Meanwhile, we have a permanent epidemic of unemployment in this country.  Back in the 1980s, over 20 percent of the jobs in the U.S. were manufacturing jobs.  Today, only about 9 percent of the jobs in the U.S. are manufacturing jobs.

And an astounding number of our young men are just sitting at home instead of doing something productive.  As I wrote about the other day, one out of every six men in their prime working years (25 to 54) do not have a job at this point.

Also, the percentage of working age Americans not participating in the labor force is up to 37.2 percent – a 36 year high.

Not only that, but the quality of our jobs has also steadily declined as we have lost good paying manufacturing jobs to overseas workers.

Right now, half the country makes $27,520 a year or less from their jobs.

No wonder the middle class is dying.

And of course there is so much more that could be said about this.  For even more numbers about our manufacturing decline, please see my previous article entitled "Shocking Facts About The Deindustrialization Of America That Everyone Should Know".

These problems were not created overnight, and they are not going to be solved overnight either.

But as a nation, we have got to understand that we cannot consume our way to prosperity.  That is only going to result in even more debt.

Instead, we have got to make the decision to produce our way to prosperity.

In other words, we have got to start making stuff in this country again.

That may sounds "crazy" to a lot of people, but it is possible.  We have just got to have the willingness to do it.




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Former Drug Czar Likens Legal Marijuana Merchants to Afghan Warlords

John P. Walters, George W. Bush’s drug czar,
provides further evidence of prohibitionists’
intellectual

bankruptcy
: an essay in Politico that
supposedly explains “Why
Libertarians Are Wrong About Drugs
.” His argument is persuasive
as long as you accept two false premises:

1. Drug use is drug abuse.

“There is ample experience that a drug user harms not only
himself, but also many others,” Walters writes. “The association
between drug use and social and economic failure, domestic
violence, pernicious parenting and criminal acts while under the
influence is grounds for prohibition even if we accept no
responsibility for what the drug user does to himself. The drug
user’s freedom to consume costs his community not only their
safety, but also their liberty.”

According to Walters, all illegal drug use, regardless of dose,
administration method, or context, harms both the user and other
people. As I show in my book
Saying Yes: In Defense of Drug Use
, that absolutist
position flies in the face of everyday experience as well as
research on patterns of drug consumption. The vast majority of
illegal drug users, like the vast majority of drinkers, do not
inflict any serious harm on themselves or others.

2. Drugs cause addiction, and addiction is
slavery.

“Libertarians have yet to grasp just how much drug abuse
undermines individual freedom and erodes the very core of the
libertarian ideal,” Walters writes. “If an essential predicate of
libertarian society is the willing, rational actor, capable of
weighing and understanding consequences, what’s left when this
condition is absent?”

As I argue in Saying Yes, addiction is not a chemical
compulsion; it is a pattern of behavior affected by many factors
other than the drug itself, including the user’s personality,
tastes, preferences, intentions, and environment. This much is
obvious to most people (and maybe even to Walters) when it comes to
alcohol; it is equally true of the intoxicants that are currently
illegal.

Contrary to Walters’ description, addicts do not lose all
volition. They respond to incentives, as demonstrated in Carl
Hart’s
research
with heavy crack cocaine and methamphetamine users;
they modify their behavior as circumstances change, as demonstrated
by Vietnam
veterans
who gave up heroin when they returned to the United
States; and they quit or cut back when they have a strong enough
reason to do so, as demonstrated by every former smoker and every
reckless drunk who learned to consume alcohol responsibly. Even if
the possibility of addiction were a good enough reason to ban a
psychoactive substance, the laws Walters is defending, which allow
alcohol while prohibiting many substances that are less commonly
used to excess, still would make no sense. 

These myths have been familiar themes of prohibitionist
propaganda in the United States for at least a century. Walters
also employs a slightly newer rhetorical
trick
, posing a series of supposedly baffling questions about
how the currently illegal drugs would be distributed if prohibition
were repealed, as if Americans have no experience with legal
intoxicant markets. “Management of production and distribution,
some envision, could be commercial,” he writes. “What could go
wrong? Think Afghan warlord with a lobbying arm and a marketing
department.”

I am currently visiting Denver, where I have met a bunch of very
nice people who make a living in Colorado’s newly legal marijuana
industry. Except for an occasional beard, not one of them resembled
an Afghan warlord. Even if the current crop of mom-and-pop
operations eventually gives way to much bigger businesses, the
appropriate analogy will be Anheuser-Busch, or maybe Walmart, not
the Taliban.

Walters is so confused about what is going on in Colorado that
he presents it as an alternative to commercial production and
distribution. “Perhaps, as with marijuana in Colorado,” he says,
“the state itself will run the show.” The state is “run[ning] the
show” in Colorado only in the sense that it is laying down rules
for private businesses to follow, just as it does with every other
industry. Some of those rules are unreasonably restrictive, if not
downright silly, but regulation is not the same as a government-run
monopoly.  

Speaking of silly, Walters claims “there is evidence that, in
some places, suicide bombers, youth warriors, child sex slaves and
even manual laborers are given drugs to keep them captive.” What
does that have to do with the question of whether the government
should use force to prevent free adults from consuming drugs that
John Walters does not like?

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Marc Faber On Gold ‘Bugs’ And Equity ‘Cockroaches’

As he said all along “investors should have some exposure to gold” and Marc Faber has been adding recently as gold (and gold stocks) are so much cheaper than over-inflated stocks. Faber holds around 25% of his assets in gold becaquse he believes eventually the monetary policies of central banks will lead to a further loss of purchasing power in the value of paper money. The CNBC anchor is perturbed as the market is selling gold and buying stocks; to which Faber rebuffs; investors are shunning gold “because the media doesn’t like gold, nobody at CNBC owns gold. Nobody at Bloomberg owns gold. Gold is being constantly talked down by the media, and Fed officials, and economists, who also don’t own any gold. They’re all stocked up in equities.” “When people talk about people who are optimistic about gold, they call them ‘gold bugs.’ A bug is an insect. I don’t call equity bulls ‘cockroaches.’ Do you understand? There is already a negative connotation with the expression of ‘gold bug.’

 




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1pjG5ZV Tyler Durden