What Are Corporate Insiders Seeing that Makes them Dump their Shares Like This?

Merger Monday evokes fond memories of 2007 and 2008, of mega deals breathlessly reported on CNBC, when everything was still possible, until it all fell apart. But mega deals have been gracing the headlines again, and deal volume has soared, and Merger Monday is back. With the hoopla of IPOs and other wondrous events that are part of the daily circus on Wall Street, what could CEOs, officers, and directors possibly be fretting about?

And apparently, they are fretting. Only 7,181 insiders bought shares of their own companies so far this year through September 12, down 8% from a year ago, while 23,323 sold shares, according to Bloomberg – approaching the worst buy-sell ratio since 2000.

This insider aversion for their companies’ stock is in sharp contrast to stock buybacks that their companies have undertaken. When it comes to using their own money, insiders have become very bearish, diversifying out of their companies, selling hand over fist. When it comes to using other people’s money, they have no such compunction: corporate share buybacks reached a near record in the first half. And for the trailing 12 months, according to FactSet, buybacks jumped 29% to $539 billion.

But insiders know this pace of buybacks isn’t sustainable: free cash flow declined 0.5% while the ratio of buybacks to free cash flow rose to 82%, the highest since, well, Q3 2008. And so in Q2, buybacks actually plunged 27% from Q1, according to CapitalIQ, via Zero Hedge. Alas, buybacks – that $539 billion over 12 months! – have been one of the most important pillars of the stock market rally.

Nothing good happens to stocks when such large, relentless, price-insensitive buyers walk away from the market. Corporate insiders are the first to see when that happens. They don’t have to wait till others gather up the numbers the hard way to release them months behind reality. Insiders know this in advance!

These insiders are also seeing that sales growth in the US has been averaging a mere 2.6% over the last two years, barely above the rate of inflation. GDP has been growing at a languid 2.1% since the Great Recession, never gaining the escape velocity that economists had promised five years in a row. But stocks soared! And insiders might have been scratching their heads about the valuations of their own stocks.

Frank Calderoni, CFO of buyback queen Cisco – which had announced $15 billion in share repurchases late last year – dumped 120,000 shares in September (excluding options-related and automatic sales), Bloomberg reported, the first sale since his eerily prescient sale in 2008.

The stated reason is always the same corporate speak about following “widespread financial advice to diversify their personal portfolios.” But Calderoni wasn’t the only insider who knew when to sell.

Company officials turned pessimistic on their own stock in October 2010, with about seven insiders selling for every two that bought shares. The ratio exceeded three for five straight months, the longest stretch in a decade. The S&P 500 peaked in April 2011 and slumped 19% through October, the closest the market has come to ending the bull market.

 

Executives became optimistic at the end of the financial crisis six years ago. The number of buyers almost tripled that of sellers in November 2008 and stayed higher in each of the following four months. The S&P 500 bottomed at a 12-year low in March 2009.

So they were early, but they were right.

And what else do Calderoni and his ilk know this time? They know first-hand that the buyback frenzy is supported by a credit bubble of historic proportions, and it includes a bond bubble that has spread across much of the world, with even the most dubious government bonds yielding below the rate of inflation, or zero, or even below zero, and even junk bonds yielding so little as to practically guarantee investors a loss over time.

“Bonds are at ridiculous levels,” explained founder of Tiger Management, Julian Robertson, at the Bloomberg Markets Most Influential Summit on Monday. It was “a worldwide phenomenon that governments are buying bonds to keep their countries moving along economically,” he said. A phenomenon that would end “in a very bad way.”

“Very overvalued” is how Omega Advisors founder Leon Cooperman called bonds at the summit. Howard Marks, chairman of Oaktree Capital Group, mused: “If you participate in that enthusiasm, then you’ll also participate in the correction.”

Even the Fed, after years of denying the existence of bubbles, or their visibility if they did indeed exist, is now trying to see bubbles as part of its job under the doctrine of maintaining “financial stability.” So they have created a “financial stability” panel, led by Vice Chair Stanley Fischer. Even super-dove and passionate bubble-blower, New York Fed President William Dudley, is on board. “I think we do need to try to identify asset bubbles in real time,” he told Bloomberg. “You can’t have an effective monetary policy if you have financial instability.”

And these folks at the Fed are seeing the ballooning credit bubble, which includes the bond bubble and the nearly free cash it produced for corporations, cash that supported the near record share buybacks and dividends, which contributed to the soaring stock market. And the Fed, nervous about that credit bubble, nervous that it might implode and cause financial instability, put its hand on the spigot and started turning.

That’s what corporate insiders are seeing. And they’re seeing what’s going on at their companies, and they’re wondering about the sky-high valuations powered by juice that is getting turned off, and so they’ve been dumping shares in their own companies. Once again, they’re early, but the last few times, they were right.

Obscured by the stock market hoopla, and under the leadership of our fearless Treasury Secretary Jack Lew, the G-20 finance honchos fretted about faltering global growth. Read…. OK, I Get It. Things Are Coming Unglued




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China Moves To Dominate Gold Market With Physical Exchange

Submitted by GoldCore

China Moves To Dominate Gold Market With Physical Exchange

China is slowly moving to dominate the global gold market and it is important to join the dots regarding a few key recent developments in China relating to gold.

When the International Board of the Shanghai Gold Exchange (SGE) was launched last Thursday September 18 during an evening trading session, it was notable that the first transactions were put through by a diverse group comprising HSBC, MKS (Switzerland), and the Chinese banks,  ICBC, Bank of China and Bank of Communications.

MKS is the Geneva headquartered precious metals trading group that also owns the large PAMP refinery company in Switzerland. 

There are reportedly 40 international participants signed up to trade on the SGE International Board (SGEI), but the SGE hasn’t specifically confirmed the identities of all participants. 

Like the domestic SGE which counts precious metals refineries as members, the SGEI will have a diverse group of trading participants including a number of international refineries as well as bullion banks and trading houses. 

Precious metals refineries Metalor Technologies and Heraeus have confirmed that they will be participants and along with MKS, this represents three of the largest gold refineries in the world. 

International bullion banks who have already announced their participation include ANZ, Standard Chartered and HSBC, and its also known that Standard Bank, JP Morgan and the Bank of Nova Scotia were said to be interested. The Perth Mint was also said to be interested. 

The presence of international refineries and possibly international mints as possible direct participants within SGEI trading should improve liquidity and price discovery on the new international exchange and help it become a serious competitor to the existing duopoly of gold price discovery carried on in the London OTC market and the New York gold futures market. 

One encouraging factor about the SGE and the SGE international platform is that there is a lot of physical gold flowing through the Exchange. Therefore, price discovery is not just based on an inverted pyramid of mostly unallocated gold as in London or mostly cash-traded futures paper gold as in New York. 

Like everything in China, the SGE thinks big and it currently employs a network of 58 certified vaults, 55 of which are for storing gold and 3 of which store silver. These 58 vaults are located in 36 Chinese cities that are considered important for gold refining and gold consumption and physical delivery can actually occur between the vaults. 

With the launch of the SGEI, the International Board has its own new vault in which international participants can load gold in and out of. The is vault is being managed by Bank of Communications and is strategically located in the Zhabei district, not too far from the Shanghai International Airport. Brinks in Shanghai will be the official transporters of gold for the SGEI.

Shanghai and Hong Kong Gold Markets To Connect

When the Hong Kong based Chinese Gold and Silver Society (CGSE) announced last week that they plan to build a massive new precious metals vault in Qianhai in Shenzhen, the significance of this announcement was not really appreciated, as of yet.

The vault is not a stand alone project and its real purpose is to support a CGSE gold trading platform in Shenzhen and allow this new Shenzhen gold exchange to link up with the Shanghai Gold Exchange. Shenzhen is less than one hour away from Hong Kong by rail or road. 

The CGSE has 171 members and between 50 and 60 of these will be registered to operate on the new Shenzhen gold exchange by as early as next month. 

At the CGSE announcement ceremony last week, Dr. Haywood Cheung the president of the CGSE confirmed that he has begun negotiations with the Shanghai Gold Exchange with the intention of forming a strategic alliance between the new CGSE exchange in Shenzhen and the Shanghai Gold Exchange. 

The main objective said Cheung “was to enable a mutual access between CGSE and the Shanghai Gold Exchange for market participants in the form of a “Shanghai Hong Kong Precious Metals Connect”, which could help the local gold & silver industry to gain access to the mainland market through the Qianhai project.”

The Chinese and Hong Kong Governments and financial authorities are going to model this ‘Precious Metals Connect’ on the soon to be launched “Shanghai – Hong Kong Stock Connect”, which is an initiative between the Shanghai and Hong Kong stock markets to boost liquidity and access between the two stock markets and access between  Chinese A and H shares.

Chinese A shares are shares of mainland Chinese companies traded in yuan/renminbi. H shares are the Hong Kong listing of the dual-listed mainland stocks training on HK dollars. In the ‘Stock Connect’ there will be northbound and southbound daily flows of liquidity within certain limits between the Hong Kong and Shanghai stock markets. The Shanghai – Hong Kong Stock Connect initiative starts next month on October 13.

The CGSE  therefore is planning that their Shenzhen gold platform will become China’s second gold exchange and offer Hong Kong and the international market another route of access to the mainland Chinese gold market. 

This is important news and a very significant development and is worth watching over the coming months.

PBOC and Gold – China Using Gold To Position Yuan As Reserve Currency

Recent comments by David Marsh, the co-founder of the influential advisory and research group, the Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum (OMFIF), illustrate that a paradigm shifts is also occurring within the official Chinese sector as regards gold and the renminbi currency.


Interviewed at this month’s Chinese gold conference in Beijing, Marsh said that “I don’t know if China has been boosting their official gold reserves,” but he added that  “over the past six or seven years the Chinese authorities probably have been adding to their holdings in different ways.”

Marsh’s most recent comments resonate with similar comments he made in January 2013 when he said that “it is likely that the Chinese authorities will carry on purchasing gold in modest amounts and they will do it in a way calculated not to disturb the market.”

Commenting on reserve diversification at the time, Marsh said that “there’s no reason why the Chinese central bank should hold a disproportionate amount of other countries’ reserve  currencies such as the dollar.” 

Just over a week ago, the UK Treasury announced the issuance of its  first ever renminbi sovereign bond, in a move that is seen as a continued boost to the internationalisation of the Chinese currency. The proceeds of HM Treasury’s issue will become part of the UK’s foreign reserves in the Exchange Equalisation Account (EEA). 

Until now the EEA has only held gold, euros, dollars, yen and Canadian dollars. Some other central banks such as the Australian Reserve Bank already hold renminbi as part of their reserves, and others such as the Swiss National Bank are considering adding renminbi as one of their reserve assets.

Last week, to coincide with the British government’s renminbi announcement, David Marsh penned a commentary for the OMFIF on reserve diversification and the Chinese currency titled “A Big Chinese step for Britain: UK moves to forefront of Renminbi internationalisation”.

Marsh high
lights that in 2015, the IMF will review the composition of their Special Drawing Right (SDR) monetary unit, and an important milestone for the Chinese currency will be “the possible inclusion of the renminbi” in the SDR. According to Marsh. “there is a growing belief that the Chinese currency now conforms to a sufficient number of standards for convertibility that it will be become one of the constituent parts along with the dollar, the euro, yen and sterling.”
 
In all aspects of the Chinese gold market, be it the commercial sector or the official sector, the importance of gold as an investment and as a backing to a future currency is being explicitly signalled by the Chinese authorities.

The rest of the world should take note that when the Chinese decide on a plan, they almost invariably see it through. For gold, the Chinese are still planning big and the next phase of this plan is worth watching.

These important developments in the Chinese gold market are bullish for gold in the long term and should reassure jittery investors after recent price falls.




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Secession Cometh to America?

There is much talk about the fragmentation of the international order. The failure of the Doha Round at the WTO, the efforts to make national firewalls are digital information, the decline cross-border movement of capital since 2008, the decline trade, the rise of anti-immigration sentiment all are part of the pessimistic picture painted by some observers.

 

The Scottish referendum also underscored how vulnerable the nation-state itself is to the centrifugal forces that have been unleashed.  Parts of Spain want to leave.  Parts of Italy and Germany have made secessionist noises. Sometimes it appears if it weren’t for Brussels, Belgium might have ceased to be a country.  

 

It turns out the US also may be subject to secessionist sentiment. This Great Graphic is the result of a survey Reuters conducted and Jim Gaines wrote about here.   It was an internet-based survey that included about 9000 people.  It asked a straightforward question:  “Do you support or oppose the idea of your state peacefully withdrawing from the United States of America and the federal government?”

 

 

The results Gaines showed are on a regional basis.   If you click here, you will be able to filter the data by state and numerous demographic categories.  Gaines reports that Republicans favor their state leaving more than Democrats, the right more than the left-leaning independents, younger rather than older, lower income more than higher income and high school educated more than college educated.

 

In aggregate the results showed about a quarter (23.9%) of the respondents answered in the affirmative.    This is greater than the support for most of the anti-EU parties in Europe, like the UKIP and AfD.   Does this mean that next year, the 150th anniversary of the end of the war for Southern independence (Civil War), investors should be concerned about a new secessionist movement?

 

Gaines reports that follow-up conversations with some of the respondents found that the secessionist vote was more a protest vote than a genuine desire to secede.   The sense of aggrievement, Gaines found, was comprehensive, bipartisan, and deeply felt, even if somewhat incoherent.  It is an expression of disapproval of the direction that the country has moved,  or is moving in, rather than a call for independence.  

 

Some surveys in Europe has found, in a similar vein, that many voters of the anti-EU parties were also expressing disapproval and frustration.  In Germany, most recently the AfD won representation in two German state governments on a conservative social agenda, not its anti-EU stance, which it played down, for example.   

 

The political elites in the US and Europe have their work cut out for them.  There may be an economic solution for part of the problem, but it is not just about the pace of growth and historically high level of unemployment in many countries.  The issue of disparity of income and wealth means that aggregate measures of economic activity are no longer sufficient proof that more citizens have access to a better life.  In many high income countries, the crisis is over the social contract, which has fallen into disrepair, and respected primarily in its breach. 




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Does Corporate Capitalism "Exploit Human Beings and the Ecosystem to Exhaustion or Collapse?" Watch Kmele Foster's Fiery Q&A with Chris Hedges

“It’s corporate capitalism that has commodified human beings and
commodified the ecosystem that [it] then exploits to exhaustion or
collapse,” Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Chris Hedges told Kmele
Foster (who was reporting for Reason TV) at yesterday’s Flood Wall
Street protest.

That was the begining off a fiery must-watch exchange between
the two journalists over the merits of free market capitalism. The
debate touched on Reconstruction, Aristotle, factories in
Bangladesh, agribusiness, grocery shopping in New York City, and
much much more. Click above to see the full 12-minute back and
forth!

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Does Corporate Capitalism “Exploit Human Beings and the Ecosystem to Exhaustion or Collapse?” Watch Kmele Foster’s Fiery Q&A with Chris Hedges

“It’s corporate capitalism that has commodified human beings and
commodified the ecosystem that [it] then exploits to exhaustion or
collapse,” Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Chris Hedges told Kmele
Foster (who was reporting for Reason TV) at yesterday’s Flood Wall
Street protest.

That was the begining off a fiery must-watch exchange between
the two journalists over the merits of free market capitalism. The
debate touched on Reconstruction, Aristotle, factories in
Bangladesh, agribusiness, grocery shopping in New York City, and
much much more. Click above to see the full 12-minute back and
forth!

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Active Shooter Inside Birmingham UPS Customer Service, Three People Dead – Live Webcast

What until recently was a surge in tragic and deadly “active shooter” cases mostly affecting various US army bases, shools and shopping malls, has now spread to more commercial structures, such as in this case a UPS Customer Center in Birmingham, Alabama. MyFoxAl reports that three people are confirmed dead in a shooting at the UPS Customer Center in the Inglenook community in north Birmingham.

More:

It is not yet clear if the shooter is one of the three victims.

 

One employee in uniform is confirmed dead, as well as two other victims, Birmingham police Lt. Sean Edwards said.

 

Lt Edwards confirmed there was an active shooter inside the facility on Tuesday morning. He said “we believe there are victims.”

 

The UPS Customer Center is in the 4600 block of Inglenook Lane off of East Lake Boulevard near the Birmingham-Shuttlesworth International Airport.

 

Unconfirmed reports say the suspected shooter was wearing a UPS uniform.

 

FOX6 has a crew headed to the scene and will keep you updated on this developing situation.

Live feed below:




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Syria Is 7th (Muslim) Country Bombed By 2009 Nobel Peace Prize Winner

Authored by Glenn Greenwald, originally posted at The Intercept,

The U.S. today began bombing targets inside Syria, in concert with its lovely and inspiring group of five allied regimes: Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, United Arab Emirates, Qatar, and Jordan.

That means that Syria becomes the 7th predominantly Muslim country bombed by the 2009 Nobel Peace Laureate – after Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia, Libya and Iraq.

The utter lack of interest in what possible legal authority Obama has to bomb Syria is telling indeed: empires bomb who they want, when they want, for whatever reason (indeed, recall that Obama bombed Libya even after Congress explicitly voted against authorization to use force, and very few people seemed to mind that abject act of lawlessness; constitutional constraints are not for warriors and emperors).

It was just over a year ago that Obama officials were insisting that bombing and attacking Assad was a moral and strategic imperative. Instead, Obama is now bombing Assad’s enemies while politely informing his regime of its targets in advance. It seems irrelevant on whom the U.S. wages war; what matters it that it be at war, always and forever.

Six weeks of bombing hasn’t budged ISIS in Iraq, but it has caused ISIS recruitment to soar. That’s all predictable: the U.S. has known for years that what fuels and strengthens anti-American sentiment (and thus anti-American extremism) is exactly what they keep doing: aggression in that region. If you know that, then they know that. At this point, it’s more rational to say they do all of this not despite triggering those outcomes, but because of it. Continuously creating and strengthening enemies is a feature, not a bug, as it is what then justifies the ongoing greasing of the profitable and power-vesting machine of Endless War.

If there is anyone who actually believes that the point of all of this is a moral crusade to vanquish the evil-doers of ISIS (as the U.S. fights alongside its close Saudi friends), please read Professor As’ad AbuKhalil’s explanation today of how Syria is a multi-tiered proxy war. As the disastrous Libya “intervention” should conclusively and permanently demonstrate, the U.S. does not bomb countries for humanitarian objectives. Humanitarianism is the pretense, not the purpose.




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White House Confirms Some American ISIS Fighters Have Returned to U.S.

Shortly before the White House began
dropping
bombs
on Syria yesterday, the White House
confirmed
that some of the estimated 100 Americans who have
gone to the Middle East to join terrorist groups like the Islamic
State (a.k.a. ISIS) have returned to the United States.

Discussing National Counterterrorism Center (NCC) activity, an
unnamed senior administration official said the FBI is looking at
“those who’ve gone, those who’ve tried to go, some who’ve come
back.”

How many are there? The administration official couldn’t say.
But, two weeks ago, Rep. Tim Bishop (D-NY) claimed the FBI is
watching
40 jihadists
in the U.S.

Time points
out
the significance of the official’s statement:

It marked the first official government confirmation that at
least some of the Americans fighting alongside the Islamist
extremist group have returned to the U.S. As late as Monday
morning, Secretary of State John Kerry said on MSNBC that “we have
over 100 fighters there from America,” leaving out any mention of
Americans who have returned.

The Hill
notes
that President Barack Obama will be “chairman of a
Security Council meeting later this week, when the U.N. will seek a
new resolution demanding countries strengthen laws and programs to
prevent the flow of foreign citizens to the Middle East to join
terrorist groups.” Also, the revelation about ISIS fighters
returning to America “could prompt new security concerns about the
prospect that Americans who were radicalized abroad could do damage
to the homeland.”

However, the president has stated that there are no known ISIS
plots against the U.S. Likewise, although ISIS’s threats to the
U.S. are
getting louder
, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), FBI,
and House Foreign Affairs Committee leadership have all stated that
the terrorist group
does not
pose a credible threat to the American homeland.

An estimated 15,000 people total, including 2,000 European
citizens, have traveled to Syria and Iraq to join the fight to
establish a Sunni Islam caliphate. A week ago, a New York man was

charged
 in federal court for trying to recruit
fighters for the Islamic State.

Part of the Obama administration’s plan to prevent more
Americans from radicalizing is by reaching out to the Muslim
community. Attorney General Eric Holder
announced
last week that the NCC, DHS, and FBI would all
participate in an “engagement meeting” pilot program.

DHS Secretary Jeh Johnson, who has been touching base with
Syrian and Somali communities in the Midwest, says he has “enhanced
the visibility” of “programs to engage in outreach to communities
which themselves are able to reach young men who may turn to
violence.” Unfortunately, the DHS’s strategy also includes pushing
retailers to
rat out
people who buy broadly defined “explosive precursors”
(think pressure cookers, fertilizer). 

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Obama on ISIS Strikes in Syria: Has ‘Bipartisan Support,’ But No Sign of Actual Vote

"Americans are united in agreeing that I am right about all things."President Barack Obama gave a
prepared speech this morning about our launch of airstrikes against
ISIS within the borders of Syria. As is typical, his comments
suggest this is something we all as Americans agreed to do together
despite any sort of legal authorization for this action whatsoever.
From his
speech
this morning:

Good morning, everybody.  Last night, on my orders,
America’s armed forces began strikes against ISIL targets in
Syria.  Today, the American people give thanks for the
extraordinary service of our men and women in uniform, including
the pilots who flew these missions with the courage and
professionalism that we’ve come to expect from the finest military
that the world has ever known.

Earlier this month, I outlined for the American people our
strategy to confront the threat posed by the terrorist group known
as ISIL.  I made clear that as part of this campaign the
United States would take action against targets in both Iraq and
Syria so that these terrorists can’t find safe haven
anywhere.  I also made clear that America would act as part of
a broad coalition.  And that’s exactly what we’ve done.

He mentions the bipartisan support for arming and training
Syrian rebels (or rather, the Syrian rebels who aren’t members of
ISIS, who are also rebels, but not the right rebels), which at
least passed with a vote. Later in the speech, he says:

I’ve spoken to leaders in Congress and I’m pleased that there is
bipartisan support for the actions we are taking.  America is
always stronger when we stand united, and that unity sends a
powerful message to the world that we will do what’s necessary to
defend our country.

Well, if there’s bipartisan support for these actions and we’re
all standing united, then it should be a breeze for him to get a
new authorization for the use of military force to combat ISIS in
Syria, right? But no, there’s nothing in the speech that suggests a
Congressional vote is coming.

Read the full speech
here
.

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