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"Tax Me More" Buffett To Finance Burger King's Tax Inversion Deal

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President Obama would have proudly proclaimed Warren Buffett a true patriot in his bailing out of the banking system with expensive loans and his 'realization' that those earning more than $1 million should be tax-tax-taxed. However, the "Buffett Rule" appears to have one caveat... if you are making over a $1 billion, you're good to go with tax-avoidance strategies. In one of his career's most hypocritical moves Warren "tax-me-more" Buffett has decided that putting his money where his mouth is no longer makes sense.. and is funding $3billion of Burger King's "tax-inversion" takeover of Canada-based Tim Hortons. Somewhere on a golf course, a Presidential Putter is being snapped across a knee...

As WSJ notes,

The deal would create the world's third largest quick-service restaurant company, with about $23 billion in system sales and more than 18,000 restaurants in 100 countries.

 

 

The new global company will be based in Canada, though each brand will be managed independently after the deal's completion, the companies said.

But, in what appears a straight up challenge to the Obama administration's "Patriot Defense", Warren "Tax Me More" Buffett has decided it is entirely patriotic and capitalistic to sponsor tax avoidance strategies... (as Bloomberg notes)

Warren Buffett is helping to finance Burger King’s planned takeover of Tim Hortons Inc., according to people familiar with the matter, backing a buyer that would move its headquarters to Canada where corporate taxes are lower.

Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway would invest about $3 billion for a preferred stake, said one of the people, who asked not to be identified because there wasn’t a public announcement. Tim Hortons had a market value of about $10 billion after the stock rallied yesterday on the announcement of talks with the Miami-based hamburger chain.

Buffett's comments on inversions...

“I’m not saying they’re doing anything illegal at all in following the rules on inversion,” Buffett told CNBC, according to a transcript on the business news station’s website. “I would personally change that part of the law. And other people might change the part of the law about wind tax credits, but I’m not attacking Pfizer for following the U.S. tax law.”

And the hypocrisy continues...

President Barack Obama has criticized American companies that move to other nations in search of lower corporate tax bills. Between mid-June and late July, at least five large American companies announced plans to make such a shift -- known as an inversion. That includes AbbVie Inc. and Medtronic Inc.

 

Buffett has supported Obama’s push to increase personal income taxes for the wealthiest individuals while striking deals that reduce Berkshire’s obligations to the government. This year, his company limited taxes on more than $1 billion of gains in Graham Holdings Co. stock by swapping the shares for assets owned by the former Washington Post publisher.

*  *  *

Oh but it's the syngeries...

*  *  *

But it's not just Democratic supporting oracles that are benefitting from Tax Inversion... (as Bloomberg reports)

Two top Republican lawmakers profited from a corporate tax-avoidance maneuver that the U.S. Treasury Department is seeking to curb.

 

While U.S. House Speaker John Boehner and Ways and Means Committee Chairman Dave Camp have resisted calls for a crackdown on companies adopting overseas addresses to pay lower taxes, both have made money off one of the deals. They also have investments at risk of losing value because of government action.

 

The two lawmakers reported the sale of stock in Covidien Plc within nine days of Medtronic Inc. saying it was planning a takeover, an announcement that sent Dublin-based Covidien’s shares near a 52-week high.

 

...

 

Their actions are legal, and spokesmen for both say the congressmen weren’t involved in the financial decisions and that the trades were made by their investment advisers. Still, the two lawmakers, who have more sway over tax policy than any other House members, are invested in deals that Obama and other Democrats say are wrong and unpatriotic.

 

...

 

"The opportunities for being swayed by that are legion,” said Miles Rapoport, president of Common Cause, a Washington-based group that advocates for open government. “This is not a small issue where we wonder whether legislators are acting entirely in the public interest or whether somewhere in their mind it’s about how they will fare themselves.”

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And that's your ruling-elite...


Frontrunning: August 27

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  • Islamic State executes soldiers, takes hostages at Syria base (Reuters)
  • Buffett Burger King Funds Flip Obama’s Inversion Calculus (BBG)
  • Equities Reach Record $66 Trillion as S&P 500 Hits 2,000 (BBG)
  • Central Banks Playing Own Version of Plaza-opoly With FX (BBG)
  • Russia court closes McDonald's branch for 90 days (Reuters)
  • Finland Says NATO an Option After Russia ‘Violates’ Border Laws (BBG)
  • Netanyahu Hit With Domestic Criticism Over Gaza Truce (BBG)
  • Biggest Danish Fund Readies for Rate Shock as Exit Narrows (BBG)
  • Nonprofit Hospitals' Profits Fall (WSJ)
  • Snapchat Fetches $10 Billion Valuation (WSJ), a year after it was valued at $800 million
  • Apple Said to Prepare New 12.9-Inch IPad for Early 2015 (BBG)
  • Demonstrations resume in Missouri over shooting death of black teen (Reuters)
  • China Is Awash in Grain Crops (WSJ)

 

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

* Israel and Hamas agreed to their first open-ended cease-fire after seven weeks of military confrontation and will resume truce talks in Cairo in the coming days. (http://on.wsj.com/1ldqdZE)

* Burger King Worldwide Inc defended its acquisition of Tim Hortons Inc as the hamburger chain came under criticism for its effort, backed by billionaire investor Warren Buffett, to move the quintessential American brand to Canada. (http://on.wsj.com/1ASHDyp)

* Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers agreed to invest in Snapchat at a valuation of close to $10 billion, making it one of the world's most valuable private tech start-ups.(http://on.wsj.com/1qKk2J9)

Big Tobacco is finally making its big push into electronic cigarettes. Altria Group Inc and Reynolds American Inc together have captured about a quarter of convenience-store sales just weeks into national rollouts of the battery-powered devices. In a surprising development, though, e-cigarette sales are falling at these traditional retail outlets, reversing three years of rapid-fire growth. (http://on.wsj.com/XQZ04P)

* American Airlines Group Inc has withdrawn its flights from consumer websites powered by Orbitz Worldwide Inc, following a similar dispute between the airline and the travel website about three years ago. (http://on.wsj.com/1ASIgbc)

* The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is expected to complete rules Wednesday that would require banks and other firms to provide investors with more details about loans pooled into bonds known as asset-backed securities. (http://on.wsj.com/1pfnn7m)

* Islamic State insurgents have planted explosives to stall a Kurdish push to retake the town of Jalawla, an unfolding strategy that foes describe as built on patience, the element of surprise and a willingness to take losses. (http://on.wsj.com/1wzYEib)

* A meeting between the Russian and Ukrainian presidents failed to produce a breakthrough for ending the conflict over eastern Ukraine, as Kiev released videos of captured Russian soldiers and rebels pushed toward a government-held city. (http://on.wsj.com/1zBS7ji)

* Singapore's Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp and its insurance unit have entered exclusive talks to sell their stakes in property and engineering company United Engineers Ltd to Thai billionaire Charoen Sirivadhanabhakdi. (http://on.wsj.com/1qsXYGl)

 

FT

The United States is preparing military options, including surveillance flights, to pressure Islamic State in Syria, U.S. officials said on Monday.

Europe's leaders are set to select Federica Mogherini, Italy's foreign minister, as EU foreign policy chief at a summit on Saturday, despite worries among some EU countries that she is too inexperienced and will not be tough enough on Russia.

Warren Buffett defended his role in Burger King's $11.4 billion acquisition of coffee and doughnuts chain Tim Hortons, that will see the U.S. fast food chain's headquarters move to Canada as part of the tax inversion deal.

The United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority could fine Royal Bank of Scotland about 15 million pounds ($24.82 million) over its mortgage record-keeping and advice to borrowers, according to two people familiar with the matter.

WPP, the world's largest advertising company, said the strong British pound "ravaged" its revenues, wiping more than 400 million pounds $661.72 million) off its net sales in the first half of the year.

 

NYT

* As Detroit prepares to defend its plan next week to exit bankruptcy, city leaders have received an unusual offer: Why not mortgage all the Van Goghs, Picassos and other works in the Detroit Institute of Arts? A company called Art Capital, which makes loans backed by artwork, has told the city it is willing to lend it up to $3 billion, roughly 10 times the exit financing Detroit is now contemplating, using the museum's art as collateral. But the city's response is silence. (http://nyti.ms/1tBtQtM)

* Allergan Inc, the Botox maker fending off a hostile takeover attempt by Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc and Pershing Square Capital Management, has set a date for a special meeting at which shareholders will have the opportunity to vote out a majority of the board. In a filing with the Delaware Chancery Court, Allergan said the meeting would take place on Dec. 18. (http://nyti.ms/1ryIcfQ)

* Google Inc announced Tuesday that it bought Boston-based Zync Inc, the maker of Zync Render, a "cloud-based rendering software." Google wouldn't say how much it paid for Zync. The company will integrate Zync's data and technology into the Google Cloud Platform, and move off Amazon.com Inc Web Services. (http://nyti.ms/1syGo2c)

* A cross-border fast-food deal has united Warren Buffett with one of his favorite investors. Buffett's conglomerate, Berkshire Hathaway, is helping finance Burger King Worldwide Inc's $11.4 billion takeover of the Canadian restaurant chain Tim Hortons Inc by buying $3 billion of preferred shares in the new company. (http://nyti.ms/XQVDee)

* Time Warner Inc's Turner Broadcasting System division said on Tuesday that it was offering buyouts to about 600 employees, the first step in an ambitious effort to overhaul a portfolio of cable networks that have struggled with declining ratings at a time of intense competition for viewers. Layoffs and additional cost-cutting measures will follow, according to an internal memo announcing the buyouts. (http://nyti.ms/YWQEsE)

* Volvo AB on Tuesday introduced its first vehicle designed and built under Chinese ownership. The vehicle, a seven-seat sport utility vehicle known as the XC90 that will go on sale in April, is probably a make-or-break model for Volvo. (http://nyti.ms/1qKeyxX)

* Michael Lucarelli, the director of market intelligence at Lippert/Heilshorn and Associates, was arrested and charged with 13 counts of insider trading for buying and selling stocks based on information in news releases his company had prepared for its clients, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Preet Bharara, the United States attorney in Manhattan, said in a statement. (http://nyti.ms/1zBUTVN)

* The Swiss private bank Pictet Group reported its financial results publicly for the first time in its 209-year history on Tuesday, showing a profit and highlighting continuing changes in Switzerland's traditionally secretive banking culture. (http://nyti.ms/1tEZy8F)

* Governments should ban the use of electronic cigarettes in public places and outlaw tactics to lure young users, the World Health Organization said in a report released on Tuesday that calls for some of the toughest measures yet proposed for the increasingly popular devices. It also expressed "grave concern" about the growing role of the powerful tobacco industry in the e-cigarette market. (http://nyti.ms/1qsW1tG)

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

** Barrick Gold Corp is eliminating its entire corporate development team and more cuts are in the works as the world's top gold miner looks to trim costs, three sources familiar with the situation said on Tuesday. (http://bit.ly/1zDcYml)

** Canada's public health agency is preparing to bring home a trio of scientists who were helping to combat Ebola in Sierra Leone after three people in their hotel complex tested positive for the viral hemorrhagic fever. A Health Canada spokesman confirmed late Tuesday night that the Public Health Agency of Canada is finalizing plans to pull its mobile laboratory team out of the West African country. (http://bit.ly/1tCil5r)

NATIONAL POST

** Cominar Real Estate Investment Trust has signed a deal to buy a portfolio of 15 properties including shopping centres, office buildings and an industrial park in Quebec and Ontario from Ivanhoe Cambridge Inc for C$1.53 billion ($1.40 billion). (http://bit.ly/1qgvNtt)

** Hewlett-Packard Co is recalling more than 6 million personal-computer power cords in the United States and Canada, citing reports of overheating and melting units. The cords, distributed with Hewlett-Packard and Compaq notebooks and related products, were sold from September 2010 to June 2012, the company and U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission said in a statement on Tuesday. (http://bit.ly/1p84Gg4)

** The Canadian Human Rights Tribunal has ordered Human Resources and Skills Development Canada to reimburse former employee Leslie Hicks nearly C$17,000 ($15,606) in expenses after ruling last year the department had engaged in "reckless discrimination" against him. (http://bit.ly/1tCcRHF)

** Drivers in Ontario could soon face much stiffer penalties for texting behind the wheel, as the governing Liberals are set to reintroduce a bill that would boost the maximum fine to C$1,000 ($918). (http://bit.ly/1zD3RSL)

 

Hong Kong

- The president of China Resources Power (CRP) and a Shanxi tycoon, believed to be the biggest beneficiary of a controversial coal investment, have been detained by authorities. CRP said its executive director Wang Yujun was under investigation in Jiangsu province, while sources revealed that Zhang Xinming, once the richest man in Shanxi, had been detained earlier this month. (bit.ly/1wzmdaR)

- Fashion retailer Fujian Nuoqi should have disclosed more information on its two failures to list on the mainland before floating its shares in Hong Kong, and CCB International, the sole sponsor of the share sale, may possibly be disciplined, analysts said. Nuoqi, which listed in Hong Kong in January, reported to police in July that its chairman was missing. (bit.ly/1tSzh5V)

- Homebuyers are increasingly seeking to finance their purchases with loans based on the lower interest rates in the Hong Kong interbank offered rate market. The percentage of mortgage applicants opting for loans priced with reference to Hibor rose from 42 percent in January to 77 percent in June, Hong Kong Monetary Authority data shows. (bit.ly/VMCAAa)

THE STANDARD

- Hopewell Holdings declared a special dividend distribution of one share of Hopewell Highway Infrastructure for every 20 shares of the developer, hoping to boost HHI's market liquidity and shareholder base. (bit.ly/YWM5i7)

- The Urban Renewal Authority's Kwun Tong redevelopment project received six tenders, including Henderson Land , Sun Hung Kai Properties, Wheelock and Great Eagle. It is believed to involve a total investment of HK$18 billion ($2.3 billion). (bit.ly/1luUVhl)

HONG KONG ECONOMIC JOURNAL

- Internet game developer Forgame Holdings Ltd said its net loss narrowed to 2.14 million yuan for the first half of 2014, from a 233 million yuan loss in the year-ago period.

HONG KONG ECONOMIC TIMES

- China Securities Regulatory Commission has approved Shenzhen Stock Exchange's plan to conduct a feasibility study in relation to a trading connection with the Hong Kong stock exchange, according to a Shenzhen municipality official.

MING PAO DAILY NEWS

- Department store operator Golden Eagle Retail Group Ltd , which is under pressure due to keen competition from e-commerce sites, is not in a hurry to develop its own e-commerce business as the company has still not seen a proven profit-making business model so far, according to chairman Roger Wang.

 

Britain

The Times

FRAUD OFFICE ATTACKS FLAWED CRIME REPORTS

The Serious Fraud Office has criticised the recruitment of independent experts to investigate criminal behaviour in companies, warning that the practice risks destroying the evidence needed to put rogue business people and bankers behind bars.

HOUSE PRICES EXPECTED TO RISE BY MORE THAN 25 PCT IN FIVE YEARS

House prices in Britain will be more than 25 percent higher in five years, with London finally being overtaken by other parts of the country.

The Guardian

CAMERON FACES DOUBLE 2015 TROUBLE

UKIP leader Nigel Farage and London Mayor Boris Johnson take steps toward Westminster, causing political headaches for Tory leaders.

SCOTTISH YES VOTE AND BRITISH EU EXIT COULD HIT UK ECONOMY, SAYS SORRELL

WPP boss Sir Martin Sorrell has warned that the prospect of Scotland voting for independence and Britain leaving the European Union could weaken the UK economy, adding to worries over heightened geopolitical tensions in Ukraine and the Middle East.

The Telegraph

GORDON BROWN AND ALISTAIR DARLING PUT ASIDE DIFFERENCES IN FIGHT FOR UK The former Prime Minister and his former chancellor are to share a platform for the first time in the independence referendum debate following Alex Salmond's damaging TV debate victory.

SCOTTISH INDEPENDENCE VOTE COULD PROMPT PENSIONS CRISIS If Scotland votes "yes" this September, EU pension rules could threaten the cash flow of the UK's largest companies, warns JPMorgan.

Sky News

RBS HIT BY 15 MLN STG FCA MORTGAGE ADVICE FINE

Royal Bank of Scotland will on Wednesday add to the list of misconduct for which it has been fined since it was bailed out by British taxpayers when it pays millions of pounds for giving poor advice to mortgage customers.

CALL FOR E-CIGARETTES TO BE BANNED INDOORS The World Health Organisation wants tougher regulation, including a ban on selling to minors and on vending machines in public.

 

Fly On The Wall Pre-market Buzz

ECONOMIC REPORTS

Domestic economic reports today include:
MBA purchase applications for week of Aug. 22--up 2.8%

ANALYST RESEARCH

Upgrades

Aruba Networks (ARUN) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at UBS
Hilltop Holdings (HTH) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at Keefe Bruyette
Rent-A-Center (RCII) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Canaccord
Tim Hortons (THI) upgraded to Neutral from Underperform at Credit Suisse
Waste Management (WM) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Stifel

Downgrades

Bank of Nova Scotia (BNS) downgraded to Neutral from Outperform at Credit Suisse
E-House (EJ) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Goldman
Facebook (FB) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Janney Capital
Laredo Petroleum (LPI) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Canaccord
Leju (LEJU) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Goldman
Pioneer Natural (PXD) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Canaccord
Sturm, Ruger (RGR) downgraded to Fair Value from Buy at CRT Capital
Susser Petroleum downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at Wells Fargo
Tim Hortons (THI) downgraded to Sector Performer from Outperformer at CIBC

Initiations

ASML (ASML) initiated with a Hold at Stifel
Akamai (AKAM)initiated with an Outperform at RW Baird
Alcobra (ADHD) initiated with a Market Perform at FBR Capital
Axcelis (ACLS) initiated with a Buy at Stifel
Bank of the Ozarks (OZRK) initiated with a Buy at Drexel Hamilton
Bristol-Myers (BMY) initiated with a Hold at Deutsche Bank
Concur (CNQR) initiated with a Neutral at DA Davidson
Cornerstone OnDemand (CSOD) initiated with a Neutral at DA Davidson
CyrusOne (CONE) initiated with a Neutral at Citigroup
Eli Lilly (LLY) initiated with a Buy at Deutsche Bank
FCB Financial (FCB) initiated with a Neutral at Guggenheim
First Financial (FFIN) initiated with a Hold at Drexel Hamilton
Garmin (GRMN) initiated with a Neutral at RW Baird
Marketo (MKTO) initiated with a Buy at DA Davidson
Merck (MRK) initiated with a Hold at Deutsche Bank
NetSuite (N) initiated with a Buy at DA Davidson
Oracle (ORCL) initiated with a Neutral at DA Davidson
Oxford Industries (OXM) initiated with a Buy at Wunderlich
Pfizer (PFE) initiated with a Buy at Deutsche Bank
ServiceNow (NOW) initiated with a Buy at DA Davidson
Southside Bancshares (SBSI) initiated with a Hold at Drexel Hamilton
Workday (WDAY) initiated with a Neutral at DA Davidson

COMPANY NEWS

Allergan (AGN) requests block to Ackman, Valeant (VRX) votes, announces Special Meeting date of December 18
Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), NatWest fined GBP14.47M by FCA
Mario Gabelli told CNBC that Chemtura (CHMT) has limited downside, can double in next five years; Gabelli also said he thinks Diebold (DBD) is "in the beginning of a major turnaround"
Aruba Networks (ARUN) announced a 3.7% workforce reduction
Cooper Tire (CTB) said Chengshan JV valued at around $440M
CFTC ordered Merrill Lynch (BAC) to pay $1.2M fine for supervision failures
Lakes Entertainment (LACO) engaged financial advisor to explore strategic alternatives
Chiquita Brands (CQB), Fyffes now see $60M of annualized pre-tax cost savings
EARNINGS
Companies that beat consensus earnings expectations last night and today include:
Donaldson (DCI), Seadrill (SDRL), Globe Specialty Metals (GSM), HEICO (HEI), Dycom (DY), TiVo (TIVO), TubeMogul (tube), Smith & Wesson (SWHC), Nimble Storage (NMBL), Aruba Networks (ARUN)

Companies that missed consensus earnings expectations include:

SQM (SQM), Solera (SLH)

Companies that matched consensus earnings expectations include:

Bob Evans (BOBE), Analog Devices (ADI)

NEWSPAPERS/WEBSITES

Apple (AAPL) readying larger iPad for 2015 launch, Bloomberg reports
Shell-led (RDS.A) group close to selling Nigeria oilfields for $5B, FT reports (TOT, E)
AT&T's (T) Ralph de la Vega to oversee enterprise and mobile, Re/code reports
Apple (AAPL) may introduce a thinner MacBook as early as this year, Digitimes says
Intel (INTC) working on luxury smart bracelet with curved glass display, Business Insider reports
Amazon (AMZN) steps point to digital health entry, VentureBeat says
Repsol (REPYY), Talisman (TLM) talks on oil and natural gas assets stall, WSJ reports
Time Warner Cable (TWC) customers reporting outages nationwide, Business Insider reports

SYNDICATE

Air Industries (AIRI) files $12.14M mixed securities shelf
Ardmore Shipping (ASC) files $300M mixed securities shelf
BNC Bancorp (BNCN) files $150M mixed securities shelf
Carver Bancorp (CARV) requests withdrawal of registration statement
Compugen (CGEN) files $200M mixed securities shelf
Gabelli Equity Trust announces rights offering
Quest Resource Holding (QRHC) files $50M mixed securities shelf

Leverage, Derivatives, And The Heresy Of Opposing The 'Status Quo Institutions'

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Submitted by Ben Hunt via Salient Partners' Epsilon Theory blog,

If names be not correct, language is not in accordance with the truth of things.
Confucius, “The Analects of Confucius” (551 - 479 BC)

Give me a lever long enough and a fulcrum on which to place it, and I shall move the world.
Archimedes (287 - 212 BC)

Call him Voldemort, Harry. Always use the proper name for things. Fear of a name increases fear of the thing itself.
J.K. Rowling, “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone” (1997)

Do you know why hurricanes have names instead of numbers? To keep the killing personal. No one cares about a bunch of people killed by a number. '200 Dead as Number Three Slams Ashore' is not nearly as interesting a headline as 'Charlie kills 200.' Death is much more satisfying and entertaining if you personalize it.

Me, I'm still waitin' for Hurricane Ed. Old Ed wouldn't hurt ya, would he? Sounds kinda friendly. 'Hell no, we ain't evacuatin'. Ed's comin'!
George Carlin, “Brain Droppings” (1998)

I have been pronounced by the Holy Office to be vehemently suspected of heresy, that is to say, of having held and believed that the Sun is the center of the world and immovable, and that the earth is not the center and moves.

Therefore, desiring to remove from the minds of your Eminences, and of all faithful Christians, this vehement suspicion, justly conceived against me, with sincere heart and unfeigned faith I abjure, curse, and detest the aforesaid errors and heresies, … and I swear that in the future I will never again say or assert, verbally or in writing, anything that might furnish occasion for a similar suspicion regarding me.
Galileo Galilei (1564 – 1642)

William of Baskerville:

I, too, was an Inquisitor, but in the early days, when the Inquisition strove to guide, not to punish. And once I had to preside at a trial of a man whose only crime was to have translated a Greek book that conflicted with the Holy Scriptures. Bernardo Gui wanted him condemned as a heretic; I … acquitted the man. Then Bernardo Gui accused *me* of heresy, for having defended him. I appealed to the Pope. I … I was put in prison, tortured, and ... and I recanted.

Adso of Melk:

What happened then?

William of Baskerville:

The man was burned at the stake and I am still alive.

“The Name of the Rose” (1986)

Adso of Melk:

And what was the word you both kept mentioning?

William of Baskerville:

Penitenziagite.

Adso of Melk:

What does it mean?

William of Baskerville:

It means that the hunchback undoubtedly was once a heretic. Penitenziagite was a rallying cry of the Dolcinites.

Adso of Melk:

Dolcinites? Who were they, master?

William of Baskerville:

Those who believed in the poverty of Christ.

Adso of Melk:

So do we Franciscans.

William of Baskerville:

But they also declared that everyone must be poor, so they slaughtered the rich. Ha! You see, Adso, the step between ecstatic vision and sinful frenzy is all too brief.

“The Name of the Rose” (1986)

Every battle against heresy wants only this: to keep the leper as he is.
Umberto Eco, “The Name of the Rose” (1980)

“The Name of the Rose” was an under-rated movie in the mid-1980’s with an in-his-prime Sean Connery and a young Christian Slater (not to mention some great scene-stealing by Ron Perlman), based on an under-rated novel by one of my favorite authors, Umberto Eco. To be sure, Eco is prone to the occasional bout of overwrought ego-stoking prose (but aren’t we all!), and my take on “The Name of the Rose” is that while Eco intended it as a work of great literature masquerading as a murder mystery, it’s really a great murder mystery masquerading as literature. But as a highly entertaining yet wise examination of the power of ideas, the implacable opposition of status quo institutions to “heresy”, and the role of language in that struggle, “The Name of the Rose” has no equal in my library.

I thought of Eco’s book last week when I read the WSJ’s breathless article about the San Diego County pension fund (SDCERA), Salient Partners, and the use of … gasp! … “leverage” and “derivatives” as part of Salient’s recommended allocation strategy. In terms of public Narrative, the words “leverage” and “derivative” have become so mushy and ill-used that they have lost almost all meaning except as a weapon, as a tool to cast doubt on someone’s motives, competency, and ethics. It’s the modern equivalent of accusing someone of witchcraft or heresy, and it’s what status quo institutions and their apologists have done for centuries with insurgent ideas. They use language – or rather, they intentionally misuse language– to paint the insurgent idea as heretical. It’s like Dana Carvey’s Church Lady interviewing someone on Saturday Night Live, only with the tagline shifted from “Could it be … Satan?” to “Could it be … Leverage?”.

Anyone with public accountability or transparency bears the brunt of this linguistic warfare, particularly the investment board or staff of any public pension plan. In my experience these are almost always very smart people who are “there for the right reasons” to use the catch-phrase of “The Bachelorette”. But like William of Baskerville, they find themselves in an untenable position, where even considering an unorthodox idea, much less defending it, is cause for public attack, ridicule, and excommunication. At least being raked over the coals today is a figurative rather than literal punishment, but frankly I think I might prefer the latter.

Modern torture-by-comment may be more psychological than physical, but it’s no less vicious, and it’s growing exponentially in power and scope. How many of you, like me, go straight to the comment area of an ESPN article? It’s not that I care at all what any single commenter says about Johnny Manziel or Tim Tebow, but I am fascinated by the outpouring of effort, the tens of thousands of voices who apparently believe that others really do care about their opinion. It’s entertainment for me. But imagine that you’re the target of this outpouring of know-nothing vitriol, that you’re a pension board member who hears a virtual mob saying that you’re obviously either an idiot or a criminal to use “leverage” – whatever that means– in your investment strategy. It is very difficult to maintain the courage of your convictions or even an open mind to consider new ideas under the onslaught of this modern day Inquisition, and that’s the real damage that’s done here. William of Baskerville recanted. Galileo recanted. And we expect anything more from public pension officials than CYA?

The unfortunate truth in all this is that, as Eco wrote, “every battle against heresy wants only this: to keep the leper as he is.” There are many status quo institutions – particularly political institutions like parties and media institutions like newspapers, but also more than a few large market institutions – who are delighted to keep public pension funds in this perpetual state of retributive fear and defensive under-performance. It has nothing to do with “keeping them honest” or whatever other bromide is trotted out for public consumption. It has everything to do with maintaining a mute whipping boy for political or economic gain.

This is why newspaper hacks and political wannabes all over the country lick their chops whenever some new idea is proposed by a public agency, whether it’s a local zoning board in a small town or a multi-billion dollar pension investment board. There is zero downside to making these attacks, no matter how simple-minded or misleading. The target is usually defenseless. The political upside is usually significant. And the economic beneficiaries, of course, other than the stalwart media defenders of orthodoxy, are the entrenched financial service providers.

We’re all familiar with the Indiana Jones knife fight, where a fierce turbaned warrior dressed all in black challenges Harrison Ford with his sword, only for Ford to pull out his gun and shoot the guy cold. Our current political and media system forces public pension funds into the turbaned warrior role. They are competing directly with the most advanced institutional investment firms in the world, firms that have an arsenal of weapons at their disposal. But God forbid that a public pension fund use “leverage” – again, whatever that means– in its investment strategy. Oh no, can’t have that. Better to fail conventionally than to succeed unconventionally. Better to arm yourself with that simple sword and be gunned down before the fight even starts.

 

Enough. Leverage and derivatives are not inherently demonic and aren’t exclusively the purview of dark wizards. If you say the words out loud I promise you won’t call forth a horde of Deatheaters.

Can leverage, however defined, be used in Voldemort-ian fashion for evil rather than good? Of course. As Eco writes in one of my favorite quotes, “the step between ecstatic vision and sinful frenzy is all too brief”, and as a risk manager that’s certainly something I watch for in any strategy or any investment manager. Can derivatives, however defined, be used as “financial weapons of mass destruction”, to quote Warren Buffett? You bet, although I find this quote mighty odd for a guy who wrote close to $15 billion of equity index puts and credit default swaps in 2006 to help fund Berkshire Hathaway. It all depends on what actual activity is being described by the words “leverage” and “derivatives”. It all depends on calling things by their proper names. To use the same word – “derivative” – for both exchange-traded futures in gigantically deep markets and a bespoke swap on some highly structured mortgage securitization is ludicrous, but that’s exactly what the modern Inquisition does intentionally for its own political and economic interests.   

Properly understood – which means properly named – many common uses of leverage and derivatives aren’t that scary. They’re also not inherently instruments of risk creation. On the contrary – and this is the entire point of the risk-balancing “heresy” within the public pension world – using leverage and derivatives wisely can reduce the risk of an unlevered portfolio without reducing its long-term potential return or conversely may increase the long-term potential return of the portfolio without increasing its risk.

How? By using the age-old investment idea of balance, of not putting all of your eggs in one basket like the stock market. A risk-balancing strategy argues that you should put your money into multiple baskets – stocks, corporate bonds, commodities, and government bonds – and that you should balance between those baskets on the basis of historical risk, not simple dollar amounts. Also, most risk-balancing strategies have some mechanism to adapt to changing market conditions by letting the market tell you when something is working or not working. There, that’s it. Pretty scary, huh?

But you can’t execute a risk-balancing strategy without using leverage (properly defined) and derivatives (properly defined). Three reasons. First, to be adaptive you need to be quick on your feet. Not millisecond fast, but one or two days fast. With the massive amounts of money that pension funds invest today, it’s impossible to be sufficiently nimble if you’re locked into individual stocks and bonds. Second, if you want to put some of your investment eggs into the commodity basket, you have to use leverage and derivatives because that’s the only way to control them directly. Third, to balance out the risk between the baskets, as opposed to simply the dollars, you’re going to need to control a lot more dollars in your bond baskets than in the stock basket. Why? Because the historical risk to bonds, particularly government bonds, is so much less than the historical risk to stocks. To get an equivalent amount of risk you either have to get rid of almost all of your stocks, which would be a mathematically correct but financially ill-advised solution, or you have to control a lot more bonds. I think it’s wise to choose the latter … with limits, within reason, and constantly adapting to changing market conditions.

What a risk-balancing strategy means by “leverage” is the same as Archimedes meant the word 2,500 years ago, or that generals on the battlefield mean the word today: it’s controlling a lot with a little by using a force multiplier. It’s not borrowed money. It’s not “doubling down” or “turbo-charging” or whatever other misleading phrase your local genius columnist or comment troll throws out there as Gospel. It’s buying an exchange-traded, liquid contract that controls a lot of stocks or bonds or commodities for a little bit of money for a defined amount of time. These contracts are necessary because they are by far the most effective way of implementing what I think is an important new twist on an important old idea – balance your investments across several different asset baskets, but balance by risk (not dollars) and adapt to a changing market.

Does the use of leverage (properly defined) and derivatives (properly defined) create trading risks that wouldn’t be there if you just bought the Vanguard 60/40 fund and called it a day? Sure. But I believe risk-balancing strategies mitigate far more dangerous risks to a public pension portfolio – particularly an over-reliance on equity markets. Public pensions are complex entities whose liability structures are often many times greater than the size of their investment portfolios. The common practice to resolve this dilemma has been to pursue an equity-dominated asset structure that has greater chances of achieving the required return to make the entire structure work. The problem is that equities are themselves leveraged, but it’s hidden leverage and thus hidden risk.

What does this mean, to say that equities embody hidden leverage? It means that the assets of S&P 500 operating companies are nearly five times as large as the equity that finances them. It means that, by definition, the gulf between assets and equity can only be bridged by various forms of leverage. This is the alchemy that transformed a paltry 3.27% return-on-assets for S&P 500 operating companies in 2013 to an impressive 15.01% return-on-equity. For all the equity enthusiasts out there who shake their heads and tut-tut the idea of a few turns of leverage on a liquid portfolio of government bonds, I’d ask why you’re so confident in a 5x equity leverage on the 3.27% unlevered ROA of the S&P 500, but so fearful of, say, a 2x leverage on the 3.44% average interest paid on 30-year government bonds. That’s not a slam on equities. I love equities. Nor is it to say that there’s no risk in government bonds. My point is simply that as an investor you must take risk to achieve a return that is higher than the risk-free rate. There is no way around this, no free lunch, no way to get something for nothing. The question, at least for an investor like most public pensions, is not how to eliminate risk. The relevant questions are: do you know what risks exist in your portfolio, and which of these risks do you want to embrace?

Maybe you just don’t like a risk-balancing allocation strategy, for whatever reason. That’s fine. Or maybe you have a concern or an objection to the strategy or its implementation. That’s fine, too, and believe me, there are plenty of reasonable concerns you could raise or I could raise about ANY investment strategy. But don’t just shout out “Leverage!” as if it were a self-evident condemnation of the strategy or its adopters. It’s like the scene in Steve Martin’s wonderful movie Roxanne, where a heckler in a crowded bar shouts out “Big nose!”. Martin’s response? He’s insulted by the triviality of the insult, and proceeds to whip out 20 superior insults that the heckler could have made (my personal fave – “Obscure: whoa! I’d hate to see the grindstone.”). In this case, I would suggest “Looming: if you thought your leverage and derivative exposures were big, just wait till you see your liabilities.” or “Clairvoyant: if you’re so smart, why use diversification at all?”.

 

I’ll close with two quotes from Will Rogers, who not only never met a man he didn’t like but also had an amazing knack for communicating advanced investment insights without resorting to three syllable words or mathematical equations.

You’ve got to go out on a limb sometimes because that’s where the fruit is.

Don't gamble; take all your savings and buy some good stock and hold it till it goes up, then sell it. If it don't go up, don't buy it.
Will Rogers (1879 – 1935)

I love these quotes because they encapsulate why Salient recommends a risk-balancing core allocation strategy. We want to embrace risk as an ally rather than treat it as the Great Satan. We do it for the same reason, as Will Rogers said, that you go out on a limb. Because that’s where the fruit is. Risk and reward are entirely inseparable. They are two sides of an unsplittable coin, and you can’t have one without the other. But you need to think about that relationship between risk and reward smartly. More importantly, you need to think about that relationship wisely. What’s the difference? Smart thinks that he can model the future. Wise knows that she doesn’t know what the future holds. Smart is intellectually sharp. Wise is intellectually honest.

Being wise about risk and reward means you don’t claim to own a magical crystal ball that predicts where risk will be low and reward will be high in the future. It means being intellectually honest enough to say that you don’t know. That’s the hardest thing in the investment world to admit, because there is no shortage of smart people who will tell you that they have just such a crystal ball. And maybe they’re right. If you have that crystal ball or you know someone who does … if you are able, as Will Rogers advised, to avoid buying stocks that don’t go up in the future … then you don’t need a risk balancing strategy. Otherwise, let’s have a conversation, or at least listen in by reading Epsilon Theory.

I’m not suggesting that we have a monopoly on new ideas for investing – we don’t – or that our ideas are right for everyone – they’re not. But we believe we are part of an insurgent movement to change the way investors think about asset allocation, and we are buoyed by a consistent lesson from history. The struggle between status quo and insurgent ideas can take a long time and it’s never an easy road for the truth-seekers caught in the middle, but eventually… the Inquisition always loses.

Martin Armstrong Fears "Pension Funds Will Be Taken To Fund Infrastructure"

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Submitted by Martin Armstrong via Armstrong Economics blog,

The G20 Central Bankers and Finance Ministers met in CAIRNS, Australia, Sept 21st, 2014. This Summit reflects the attitudes about manipulating the economy where they just do not get it.

Largarde

 

Christine Largarde, head of the IMF, announced  “I congratulate the G20 for significant progress in strategies for medium-term growth.”

[ZH: Hint - they're not working...]

 

However, Lagarde is a lawyer – not a trader, economist, money manager or anything that has any experience whatsoever to do with the economy. It amounts to me trying to be a obstetrician, gynecologist, or a divorce lawyer no less a brain surgeon. Yet she would be the first to say anyone without a law degree cannot understand the law. I dare say the same to her – you are not qualified. Such positions should be reserved for ONLY people with experience – not even university professors.

*  *  *

I warned what Obama was up to with the pension funds in trying to create a Infrastructure Fund.

Calpers, California pension fund, is selling off $4 billion of hedge funds to divert that money to be wasted in Obama’s dream project – infrastructure fund.

This idea was floated and endorsed at CAIRNS. “We have agreed to come away from government-financed growth measures to more private investment,” said Australia’s Finance Minister Joe Hockey. These are being called Public Private Partnerships (PPP), and will be extremely critical in the future for here lies the final destruction of the pension funds precisely as Japan bankrupted the Japanese Postal Saving Fund using that private money for political purposes to try to stimulate the economy, which failed. With PPP, public funds will be sold to the public as being a highly professional long-term investment that will further shrink economic growth and liquidity. They cannot possibly work.

Those in government think that is they simply spend money that will “stimulate” the economy.

These people will simply NEVER just reduce regulation and taxes to encourage people to start their own business. Small business employs 70% of the civil work forced yet banks will lend only to big companies and the real economic engine has been slowing turning down for years since 2009. It is down in Europe sharply. Even in Europe, 2 out of 3 jobs are small business (defined as 50 employees or less). Nonetheless, the numbers appear to be far better than they are. As unemployment rises, many are simply fending for themselves in various manners but this is really the micro business market defined as less than 10 employees.

Obama’s idea of a Global Infrastructure Initiative to increase quality investment, particularly in infrastructure is merely to displace government spending with using pension money. In this way, government will not have to do the work and hopefully any tax increases will go to just filling their pockets.  

How do pension funds make money on repairing infrastructure unless tolls will pop up everywhere.

They are using pension from to avoid the image that someone like Goldman Sachs or Berkshire Hathaway will be collecting tolls.

Frontrunning: October 3

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  • How you know it is all a lie: Pelosi Presses Obama to Talk Up Stronger U.S. Economy (BBG)
  • Secret Goldman Sachs Tapes Put Pressure on New York Fed (NYT), Uh, no they don't
  • Clashes Break Out at Hong Kong Protest Site (WSJ)
  • N.Y. Fed Lawyer Says AIG Got Billions Without Paperwork (BBG)
  • Ebola’s Disease Detectives Race to Track Others Exposed (BBG)
  • UPS, FedEx Want Retailers to Get Real on Holiday Shipping (WSJ)
  • No more mailman at the door under U.S. Postal Service plan (Reuters)
  • UBS faces fine of up to $6.3 billion in French tax probe (Reuters)
  • Albert Edwards Says Watch Japanese Yen and Be Very Afraid (BBG)
  • Google to launch own mobile chat app: Economic Times (Reuters)
  • Hong Kong Stocks Climb Most in Two Weeks on Developers (BBG)
  • Khodorkovsky Sees 1917-Like Crisis Nearing Under Putin (BBG)
  • Yen’s Steepest Decline in 20 Months Spreads Unease in Japan (BBG)

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

* Student protesters in Hong Kong agreed to hold talks with the city's No. 2 government official, averting a potentially violent confrontation overnight as demonstrators surrounded the office of Hong Kong's embattled chief executive. (http://on.wsj.com/1uibazO)

* The number of people in Texas who are being screened for potential exposure to Ebola expanded on Thursday to roughly 100, as health officials cast a wide net to try to prevent the one confirmed case of the disease from sparking an outbreak. (http://on.wsj.com/1CI2PYO)

* President Barack Obama on Thursday told Hispanic lawmakers and community leaders he shares their frustration on stalled plans to reform the U.S. immigration policy, and promised to take steps to on his own to fix a "broken" system before the end of the year. (http://on.wsj.com/1x5io9U)

* Federal Reserve Bank of New York President William Dudley pushed back Thursday against allegations his institution has been a weak and deferential regulator of big financial firms. (http://on.wsj.com/1r60wpZ)

* Billionaire investor Warren Buffet on Thursday agreed to buy America's fifth-largest auto retailer and use it to launch a consolidation of the highly fragmented business. His Berkshire Hathaway Inc would acquire an about $8 billion retail business with operations from Florida to California, and use it to snap up family-owned dealerships elsewhere. (http://on.wsj.com/1rCBncB)

* The head of Pratt & Whitney's commercial aircraft engine business is leaving the company, at a time when the United Technologies Corp unit is ramping up production of its newest engine model in an escalating competition with rival General Electric Co. David Brantner is joining GKN Aerospace, according to a person familiar with the matter. (http://on.wsj.com/1rPMKwF)

 

FT

* Mike Ashley's Sports Direct said it acquired a further 4.6 percent stake in Debenhams for 33 million pounds ($53.29 million). This takes the company's stake in Debenhams to 11.22 percent.

* Warren Buffett has admitted that his holding in Tesco Plc was a "huge mistake". Buffet's Berkshire Hathaway is Tesco's fourth-largest investor.

* Wonga is writing off the debt of 330,000 customers worth 220 million pounds after agreeing with UK's Financial Conduct Authority. The decision prompted a response from politicians who said the bank would be called to appear before the Treasury Select Committee to explain its business practices.

* Turkish conglomerate Anadolu Group has offered to buy a 40.25 percent stake in supermarket chain Migros from BC Partners, according to a notification on the Borsa Istanbul stock exchange.

* Royal Bank of Scotland has hired Goldman Sachs to find buyers for Coutts International and is expected to tell potential bidders that they will not be allowed to use the Coutts brand.

 

NYT

* The European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan plan to increase efforts to stimulate their economies. Mario Draghi, the head of the European Central Bank, said that it would begin a new round of bond purchases. (http://nyti.ms/1vCVQxf)

* A cyberattack this summer on JPMorgan Chase compromised the accounts of 76 million households and seven million small businesses, a tally that dwarfs previous estimates by the bank and puts the intrusion among the largest ever. (http://nyti.ms/1yBwVyH)

* Lawmakers are scrutinizing allegations that the Federal Reserve Bank of New York went easy on one of the most prominent banks under its watch, Goldman Sachs, despite concerns voiced by those inside the Fed that a deal Goldman was pursuing was "legal, but shady." (http://nyti.ms/10nLWF0)

* Facebook said on Thursday that future research on its 1.3 billion users would be subjected to greater internal scrutiny from top managers, particularly if it focused on "deeply personal topics" or specific groups of people. (http://nyti.ms/1rCE5yV)

* Allergan Inc's attempt to acquire Salix Pharmaceuticals Inc in an all-cash deal has stalled, according to people with knowledge of the matter. Allergan, the maker of Botox, wanted a deal for Salix for more than $10 billion without using stock, a move that would not have required shareholder approval. (http://nyti.ms/1rHKh6b)

* It is not all bad news at Pimco. The firm, which manages $2 trillion in assets, said on Thursday that its Pimco Enhanced Short Maturity exchange-traded fund had taken in $71 million in new investor money since the firm's co-founder, Bill Gross, resigned abruptly last week. (http://nyti.ms/1tm5oZG)

* General Motors is recalling almost 118,000 of its 2013-14 model vehicles because they may stall or fail to start, the company said on Thursday. The action includes almost 98,000 vehicles in the United States, Alan Adler, a GM spokesman, wrote in an email. (http://nyti.ms/1yBxrN0)

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

** Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper will outline in Parliament on Friday the military contribution Canada is prepared to make to the fight against Islamic State militants, setting the state for a vote on this combat deployment Monday. The Prime Minister's Office made the announcement on Thursday evening. Canada has been asked by the United States to provide fighters and other aircraft to join air strikes against jihadist forces that have wreaked havoc in Iraq. (http://bit.ly/1pvHz0n)

** The Conservative government will post a dramatically smaller deficit for the most recent fiscal year, a $5.2 billion shortfall that represents an $11 billion improvement over the latest budget estimate. (http://bit.ly/1x5Kcer)

** After failing to find a buyer for Sears Canada Inc , its U.S. parent now is trying to shed most of its stake in a $380 million rights offering, raising questions about the fate of the struggling Canadian retail operation. (http://bit.ly/1nT4EPI)

NATIONAL POST

** Canada could soon be sending its military into a combat mission in Iraq over the objections of both opposition parties, as Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau issued broad hints on Thursday that his party, like the New Democratic Party, wouldn't be on-side with the government. (http://bit.ly/1pKZXlb)

** The sale of TransCanada Corp's remaining 30 percent interest in Bison Pipeline LLC to its master limited partnership, TC PipeLines LP, for $215 million on Wednesday is the first step in delivering long-term value to core shareholders, says RBC Capital Markets analyst Robert Kwan. (http://bit.ly/1rQmZwf)

 

Britain

The Times

David Cameron's multibillion-pound tax cuts for Britain have propelled the Conservative party back into its first opinion poll lead for almost three years. In a dramatic vindication of the prime minister's 7 billion pound ($11.30 billion) pledge to families at the end of the Tory conference on Wednesday, a YouGov poll last night showed that he had knocked Labour off the top spot. (http://thetim.es/1BCzHQk)

Managing director of John Lewis, Andy Street has described France as "sclerotic, hopeless and downbeat" and advised British entrepreneurs with investments in the country to "get them out quickly". "I have never been to a country more ill at ease . . . nothing works and worse, nobody cares about it." Street said, who was in Paris this week to receive a retail award on behalf of the department store chain. (http://thetim.es/10n3W2f)

The Guardian

Rulings by the European court of human rights (ECHR) would no longer be enforceable in the UK under radical plans by the Conservatives. Under proposals to be included in the party's general election manifesto, the Tories would reverse more than half a century's tradition of human rights authority residing in Europe by giving parliament the right to veto judgments. (http://bit.ly/1sPTGMA)

David Cameron has flown to the RAF base in Akrotiri, Cyprus, from which British pilots are launching air strikes against Islamic State targets in Iraq, announcing that he was to send a further two Tornado GR4 planes to supplement the six currently operating. (http://bit.ly/10n7zFF)

The Telegraph

There is a 'nightmare' chance that the Ebola virus could become airborne if the epidemic is not brought under control fast enough, the chief of the UN's Ebola mission has warned. (http://bit.ly/1pt7zt8)

Warren Buffett, the veteran U.S. investor, has admitted that buying shares in Tesco was a "huge mistake." Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway started buying shares in Tesco in 2006 and built a 5 pct stake, making it his biggest investment outside of the US. (http://bit.ly/1uEfQl0)

Sky News

Hong Kong's Chief Executive CY Leung has said his top official will meet protest leaders in a last-minute olive branch to avoid protesters taking over government offices. Leung told the media he would not be quitting and warned of serious repercussions if protesters followed through with their threat. (http://bit.ly/1rQUPl2)

Morrisons has announced a new price match system, which is set to exacerbate Britain's brutal supermarket war. The fourth-biggest grocery chain said that in addition to price matching Tesco, Asda and Sainsbury's, it would now do the same with discounters Aldi and Lidl . (http://bit.ly/1vd7oWx)

The Independent

Troubled payday lender Wonga has been forced to write off an estimated 220 million pound ($355.23 million)-worth of debt after the Financial Conduct Authority accused it of irresponsible lending. (http://ind.pn/1rQVYZR)

The demand for Emirates flights from Asia to Africa has fallen due to fears over the Ebola virus, the airline's President Tim Clark said on Thursday. (http://ind.pn/1ufXRzW)

 

Fly On The Wall Pre-Market Buzz

ECONOMIC REPORTS

Domestic economic reports scheduled for today include:
Nonfarm payrolls for September at 8:30--consensus up 215K
Unemployment rate for September at 8:30--consensus 6.1%
International trade balance for August at 8:30--consensus deficit $40.6B
Markit services PMI for September at 9:45--consensus 58.5
ISM non-manufacturing composite for September at 10:00--consensus 58.5

ANALYST RESEARCH

Upgrades

Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF) upgraded to Equal Weight from Underweight at Barclays
Allegion (ALLE) upgraded to Outperform from In-Line at Imperial Capital
Atlas Financial (AFH) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Janney Capital
CDW Corporation (CDW) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at Raymond James
Coca-Cola Femsa (KOF) upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at JPMorgan
Cullen/Frost (CFR) upgraded to Equal Weight from Underweight at Barclays
Halliburton (HAL) upgraded to Equal Weight from Underweight at Morgan Stanley
Halliburton (HAL) upgraded to Equal Weight from Underweight at Morgan Stanley
IHS Inc. (IHS) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at SunTrust
Insight Enterprises (NSIT) upgraded to Market Perform at Raymond James
JD Wetherspoon (jdwpy) upgraded to Neutral from Underweight at HSBC
Lear (LEA) upgraded to Outperform from Sector Perform at RBC Capital
Proto Labs (PRLB) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Canaccord
Salix (SLXP) upgraded to Neutral from Underperform at Credit Suisse
Solera (SLH) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at Wells Fargo
SunPower (SPWR) upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at JPMorgan
Violin Memory (VMEM) upgraded to Equal Weight from Underweight at Barclays
Yadkin Financial (YDKN) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Sterne Agee

Downgrades

Apple (AAPL) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Deutsche Bank
Cliffs Natural (CLF) downgraded to Reduce from Buy at Nomura
Cree (CREE) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Needham
EverBank (EVER) downgraded to Equal Weight from Overweight at Barclays
People's United (PBCT) downgraded to Underweight from Equal Weight at Barclays
Quanex (NX) downgraded to In-Line from Outperform at Imperial Capital
Teekay LNG (TGP) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at Raymond James
Ternium (TX) downgraded to Neutral from Outperform at Credit Suisse
Vale (VALE) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Canaccord

Initiations

Affymetrix (AFFX) initiated with a Neutral at BTIG
Agilent (A) initiated with a Neutral at BTIG
Alere (ALR) initiated with a Buy at BTIG
Ann Inc. (ANN) initiated with an Equal Weight at Barclays
Applied Genetic (AGTC) initiated with a Buy at Stifel
Arlington Asset Investment (AI) initiated with an Equal Weight at Barclays
Avigilon (AIOCF) initiated with an Outperform at Imperial Capital
Booz Allen (BAH) initiated with an Outperform at RBC Capital
Callaway Golf (ELY) initiated with an In-Line at Imperial Capital
Danaher (DHR) initiated with a Buy at BTIG
Flowserve (FLS) initiated with a Buy at DA Davidson
Illumina (ILMN) initiated with a Buy at BTIG
New York Mortgage (NYMT) initiated with an Equal Weight at Barclays
Pilgrim's Pride (PPC) initiated with a Neutral at Goldman
Salesforce.com (CRM) initiated with a Buy at Sterne Agee
Silver Spring Network (SSNI) initiated with an Outperform at Raymond James
Stage Stores (SSI) initiated with a Neutral at Sterne Agee
Thermo Fisher (TMO) initiated with a Neutral at BTIG
Warren Resources (WRES) initiated with an In-Line at Imperial Capital
WhiteWave Foods (WWAV) initiated with an Outperform at Imperial Capital

COMPANY NEWS

JPMorgan (JPM) confirmed data breach affected 76M households, 7M small businesses
EU approved Facebook's (FB) acquisition of WhatsApp
Salix (SLXP), Cosmo Technologies announced termination of merger agreement
Constellium (CSTM) to acquire Wise Metals for $1.4B 
Halozyme's (HALO) PEGylated recombinant human hyaluronidase PH20 was granted orphan designation by FDA
Occidental Petroleum (OXY) board approved spin-off of California Resources and increased share repurchase authorization by 60M shares

EARNINGS

Companies that beat consensus earnings expectations last night and today include:
Resources Connection (RECN)

ADTRAN (ADTN) revises Q3 estimates, sees Q3 adjusted EPS 23c-24c, consensus 27c
CatchMark Timber (CTT) raises FY14 EBITDA view to $22M-$23M

NEWSPAPERS/WEBSITES

Salix (SLXP) in talks to sell to Actavis (ACT) as Allergan (AGN) deal stalls, Bloomberg reports
Facebook (FB) devising plans to enter into healthcare industry, Reuters reports
iPhone 6 Plus (AAPL) may account for 60% of iPhone 6 shipments, DigiTimes says
Retrophin (RTRX) ex-CEO fired over stock irregularities, Bloomberg reports
Apple (AAPL) asks music labels for streaming subscription price cut, Re/code says
GoPro (GPRO) CEO's foundation does not intend to sell shares, WSJ reports
JPMorgan (JPM) found more evidence of hacking, not second breach, NYT corrected

SYNDICATE

Portola Pharmaceuticals (PTLA) 6.2M share Secondary priced at $26.00
Vital Therapies (VTL) 2M share Secondary priced at $17.50
Yodlee (YDLE) 6.25M share IPO priced at $12.00

Frontrunning: October 16

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  • Dallas County May Declare State of Disaster From Ebola Virus (BBG)
  • Markets on edge after worst turmoil in four years (Reuters)
  • Central bankers may have no quick fix as markets swoon, economy weakens (Reuters)
  • Risk of Deflation Feeds Global Fears  (Hilsenrath)
  • U.S. health official allowed new Ebola patient on plane with slight fever (Reuters)
  • Texas Hospital Fights Allegations About Ebola Protocols (BBG)
  • Treasuries Gain as Oil Drops Below $80 While Stocks Slide (BBG)
  • Greek Bonds Slump on Bailout Concern as Spain Misses Sale Target (BBG)
  • White House shifts into crisis mode on Ebola response (Reuters)
  • Obama Confronts Slippery Slope as Islamic State Advances (BBG)
  • Cocktail of Trouble for Liquor Makers Diageo, Rémy Cointreau and LVMH (WSJ)
  • Dark Pools Said to Rebuff Orders Amid U.S. Volume Surge (BBG)
  • EU Starts Two-Week Austerity Scrutiny as Crisis Reawakens (BBG)
  • U.S. foreclosure activity falls to eight-year low (Reuters)
  • Well that was fun: AbbVie board ditches planned $55 billion Shire acquisition (Reuters)
  • Lockheed says makes breakthrough on fusion energy project (Reuters)
  • Paris’s `Squalor Pit’ Gare du Nord Becomes French Decline Symbol (BBG)

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

* Concerns grew about containing the spread of Ebola in the United States after federal health officials disclosed Wednesday that the second Texas nurse infected with the virus flew from Dallas to Cleveland and back in the days before reporting her symptoms. (http://on.wsj.com/1rdCg5N)

* U.S. officials said they weren't seeking to extend nuclear negotiations with Iran beyond a Nov. 24 deadline, as Secretary of State John Kerry met with his Iranian counterpart on Wednesday. (http://on.wsj.com/1zcfyVu)

* AbbVie Inc said on Wednesday its board is recommending stockholders vote against the drug maker's proposed $54 billion takeover of Shire Plc. (http://on.wsj.com/ZvJBH7)

* Mexico's banking regulator fined Banamex, the local unit of Citigroup Inc a little more than $2 million for failing to prevent an alleged fraud against the bank by a client, oil-services firm Oceanografia. (http://on.wsj.com/1npL4tN)

* Sierra Nevada Corp, the losing bidder in NASA's recent multibillion-dollar "space taxi" competition, has gone to court seeking to block winners Boeing Co and SpaceX from proceeding with work until its pending contract protest is resolved. (http://on.wsj.com/1twUx5q)

* Amazon Inc plans to hire 80,000 seasonal workers for its warehouse network in the United States, representing a 14 percent increase from last year as the company brings its massive distribution facilities closer to urban centers. (http://on.wsj.com/1vfPlBn)

* Google Inc unveiled three Nexus-branded devices on Wednesday, signaling plans to compete with Apple Inc for high-end consumers. Google's new Nexus 6 smartphone, Nexus 9 tablet and Nexus Player set-top box are priced slightly below, or in line with, competing devices from Apple. In the past, Google has priced new models significantly below Apple products. That is a departure for Google, which in the past has priced new models significantly below Apple products. (http://on.wsj.com/1xTlqyl)

* McDonald's Corp has hired back a second former executive as it tries to stabilize its U.S. business. Karen King, retired east division president for McDonald's USA, returned to the company this week as its chief people officer for the U.S. (http://on.wsj.com/1w9OZuk)

 

FT

Russian billionaire Mikhail Fridman's attempt to buy RWE Dea, the oil and gas arm of German utility RWE AG for about 5.1 billion euros was blocked by the UK government, a move that indicates that even private Russian companies will have to bear the impact of U.S. and EU sanctions.

Japan's Toyota Motor Corp said it would recall 1.75 million vehicles globally to address three separate defects, relating to brake master cylinders, fuel delivery pipes and the fuel suction plate.

Statoil ASA's long-serving chief executive Helge Lund unexpectedly quit to take on the top role at smaller rival BG Group PLC where he has been promised a big pay rise if he can turn round the flagging British gas and oil producer.

Tata Steel Ltd said it was in talks with the Klesch Group to sell its long products business in Europe that employs about 6,500 people including those at its distribution facilities.

 

NYT

* The Obama administration may have killed the biggest corporate takeover of the year. AbbVie Inc, the Illinois-based drugmaker that had agreed to pay $54 billion for the Irish pharmaceutical company Shire Plc, now has cold feet. AbbVie's abrupt reconsideration of the deal sent Shire's stock price plummeting on Wednesday and provided the clearest evidence yet that the Treasury Department had succeeded in cracking down on corporate inversions. (http://nyti.ms/1sUEqww)

* The first two drugs that can slow the progression of a fatal lung disease won approval from the Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday, a decision that could open a new era for patients but also a new chapter in the controversy over high drug prices. Roche Holding AG's drugs Esbriet and Boehringer Ingelheim's Ofev, are meant to treat idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, a scarring of the lungs that affects roughly 100,000 Americans and kills many of them in three to five years. (http://nyti.ms/ZFNaL9)

* Waves of nervous selling buffeted the stock market in the United States on Wednesday, after a steep sell-off in Europe. At one point, the Dow Jones industrial average had plunged 460 points, or 2.8 percent, though it later swung higher to close down 1.1 percent, or 173.45 points. The Standard & Poor's 500-stock index fell 0.8 percent, or 15.21 points. Since their peak a month ago, American stocks have lost over $2 trillion in value, losses that may ripple through the wider economy. (http://nyti.ms/1yG2bvz)

* During an event at its Cupertino, California, headquarters on Thursday, Apple Inc is set to unveil new iPads that are expected to include fingerprint sensors for each model. A major revision of the full-size tablet, the iPad Air, is also expected. (http://nyti.ms/1sW3Yu9)

* JPMorgan & Chase corporate race website, which is managed by an outside vendor, has been conspicuously inaccessible since early August, with visitors to the site seeing only a lonely list of coming races. The link between the breach on that website and the broader attack, which the bank said did not compromise any financial information, has not been previously reported. (http://nyti.ms/1rwp6R8)

* SolarCity Corp, installer of rooftop solar systems, began selling bonds online to ordinary investors on Wednesday, joining a handful of companies that are using crowdfunding to finance solar development. The company will issue up to $200 million in the bonds, whose maturities range from one to seven years and carry interest rates of 2 percent to 4 percent. (http://nyti.ms/1sKZEwr)

 

China

CHINA SECURITIES JOURNAL

- Chinese insurance firms will need to run tests to monitor and measure liquidity risks, according to a circular from the China Insurance Regulatory Commission (CIRC) on Wednesday.

SHANGHAI SECURITIES NEWS

- Chinese brokerages need to ratify a three-year capital replenishment plan before the end of the year and make use of at least one funding channel within three years, according to Zhang Yujun, assistant chairman at the China Securities Regulatory Commission (CSRC).

SECURITIES TIMES

- China's Ministry of Environmental Protection has launched a programme to monitor air pollution discharged by companies through winter, typically a time of high pollutant levels.

CHINA DAILY

- Some Chinese companies operating in Africa are taking measures to protect employees against a deadly outbreak of Ebola in the region, the official paper said. China has thousands of people working in the worst affected regions in West Africa.

SHANGHAI DAILY

- Eight people in southwest China have been killed during a clash between local villagers and construction workers over a land dispute, local officials said on Wednesday.

PEOPLE'S DAILY
- Chinese artists should reflect the country's socialist values in their work, China's president Xi Jinping said on Wednesday. Art works should not be "slaves" to the market or bear the "stench of money", he added.

 

Britain

The Times

29 MLN STG PACKAGE HELPS BG TO LURE NEW BOSS

BG Group PLC has been forced to pay top dollar to recruit one of the oil and gas sector's most well-respected figures, Helge Lund from Statoil ASA to lead the company after seven months without a chief executive, offering Lund a package of up to 29 million pounds. (http://thetim.es/100jg55)

PANIC GRIPS INVESTORS AMID VOLATILE MARKETS

Investors succumbed to the biggest bout of jitters since the nadir of the eurozone crisis two years ago, prompting wild swings in equities and government bonds. Volatility took hold and the Dow Jones swung by almost 450 points over the course of a turbulent day. The S&P 500 VIX index has doubled in the space of a fortnight and hit a peak of 31, higher than in the summer of 2012. (http://thetim.es/1yFr8aq)

The Guardian

BANKS FACE CRACKDOWN OVER EU BONUS CAP

Europe's top banking regulator has warned banks they should not hand their staff top-up payments to avoid the EU bonus cap in a move that could have implications for dozens of banks and thousands of bankers. (http://bit.ly/1w9CqRP)

UK UNEMPLOYMENT FALLS TO 6 PERCENT

UK unemployment has fallen below the 2 million mark for the first time since the global financial system was on the brink of collapse six years ago. (http://bit.ly/1w9CkJO)

The Telegraph

SHIRE TAKEOVER HANGS IN THE BALANCE AS 13 BLN STG WIPED OFF SHARES

The 36 billion pounds takeover of Shire Plc was hanging in the balance on Wednesday night after U.S. drugmaker AbbVie Inc said it was reconsidering the deal in the wake of US tax reforms. (http://bit.ly/11pitem)

TATA STEEL TO SELL OFF LONG PRODUCTS BUSINESS, AFFECTING THOUSANDS OF BRITISH JOBS

Tata Steel Ltd is planning to sell its Long Products division, which employs thousands of workers at several sites in the UK. The steel giant said it had signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Klesch Group, an industrial company which operates across Europe. (http://bit.ly/1sUdvAT)

Sky News

EX-RSA EXECUTIVE MILES TO JOIN TROUBLED WONGA

The chairman of troubled payday lender Wonga is recruiting another former colleague from the insurer RSA Insurance Group Plc. Paul Miles, the chief financial officer of Capquest, a debt recovery firm, will join Wonga to take on the same role. (http://bit.ly/1sffYUM)

SAINSBURY'S ENDURES BACKLASH ON NECTAR CUTS

J Sainsbury Plc's customers have threatened to shop elsewhere after the supermarket chain confirmed it was planning cuts to its Nectar reward points. (http://bit.ly/1w9ihcF)

The Independent

UBER RIVAL HAILO QUITS NORTH AMERICAN BUSINESS

Taxi hailing app Hailo is to pull out of North America as the London-based company struggles to make a profit amid "astronomical" marketing costs. (http://ind.pn/1vxagkW)

BALFOUR BEATTY NAMES LEO QUINN NEW CHIEF EXECUTIVE

Balfour Beatty has appointed a new chief executive just weeks after fending off a takeover by rival Carillion Plc . Leo Quinn is poised to join in January after five years as group chief executive of defence research firm QinetiQ, following four years as the boss of banknote printer De La Rue. (http://ind.pn/1zbRX7k)

 

Fly On The Wall Pre-market Buzz

ECONOMIC REPORTS

Domestic reports scheduled for today include:
Jobless claims for week of October 11 at 8:30--consensus 290K
Industrial production for September at 9:15--consensus up 0.4%
Philadelphia Fed manufacturing survey for October at 10:00--consensus 20.0
Housing market index for October at 10:00--consensus 59

ANALYST RESEARCH

Upgrades

Air Products (APD) upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at Credit Suisse
American Express (AXP) upgraded to Neutral from Underweight at JPMorgan
Baidu (BIDU) upgraded to Outperform from Perform at Oppenheimer
Bank of America (BAC) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at FBR Capital
Bank of the Ozarks (OZRK) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Wunderlich
Bristol-Myers (BMY) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at BMO Capital
CSX (CSX) upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at Credit Suisse
Cloud Peak (CLD) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Brean Capital
Cullen/Frost (CFR) upgraded to Market Perform from Underperform at BMO Capital
FireEye (FEYE) upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at JPMorgan
FleetCor (FLT) upgraded to Overweight from Equal Weight at Morgan Stanley
Gulfport Energy (GPOR) upgraded to Outperform from Sector Perform at RBC Capital
Host Hotels (HST) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at FBR Capital
Illumina (ILMN) upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at Piper Jaffray
L Brands (LB) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at Wells Fargo
LifePoint Hospitals (LPNT) upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at RW Baird
Magellan Midstream (MMP) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Ladenburg
Netflix (NFLX) upgraded to Hold from Underperform at Jefferies
Sibanye Gold (SBGL) upgraded to Neutral from Sell at UBS
Targa Resources (TRGP) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at UBS
Tiffany (TIF) upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at Macquarie
Time Warner (TWX) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at BofA/Merrill

Downgrades

Akamai (AKAM) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at Wells Fargo
Francesca's (FRAN) downgraded to Underperform from Outperform at Macquarie
lululemon (LULU) downgraded to Underperform from Neutral at Macquarie
Netflix (NFLX) downgraded to Fair Value from Buy at CRT Capital
Nordstrom (JWN) downgraded to Neutral from Outperform at Macquarie
Norfolk Southern (NSC) downgraded to Neutral from Outperform at Credit Suisse
Rio Tinto (RIO) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at Cowen
Seadrill (SDRL) downgraded to Reduce from Neutral at Nomura
Ternium (TX) downgraded to Neutral from Overweight at JPMorgan
Urban Outfitters (URBN) downgraded to Neutral from Outperform at Macquarie
Viacom (VIAB) downgraded to Underperform from Neutral at BofA/Merrill

Initiations

Aquinox (AQXP) initiated with a Buy at Canaccord
Starwood Waypoint (SWAY) initiated with an Outperform at JMP Securities
Teck Resources (TCK) initiated with an Equal Weight at Barclays
Western Asset Mortgage (WMC) initiated with a Market Perform at Wells Fargo

COMPANY NEWS

Following Shire's (SHPG) waiver of the three-day notice period, AbbVie (ABBV) announced its board withdrew its recommendation made on July 18 regarding the proposed Shire transaction and recommended that stockholders vote against the transaction
Amazon (AMZN) announced it is creating 80,000 seasonal positions across its U.S. network of fulfillment and sortation centers this holiday season
Google (GOOG) unveiled Android 5.0 Lollipop, new Nexus phone, tablet, set-top player
Microsoft (MSFT) said working with YouTube (GOOG) to reinstate content inadvertently removed
Las Vegas Sands (LVS) said its board authorized an additional $2B to the company's stock repurchase program
Meredith (MDP) secured rights to license Martha Stewart Living (MSO) Magazine, website
Insys Therapeutics (INSY) received a Refusal to File Letter from the FDA for its proprietary Dronabinol Oral Solution
Michigan bill blocked Tesla (TSLA) from selling directly to consumers

EARNINGS

Companies that beat consensus earnings expectations last night and today include: eBay (EBAY), Netflix (NFLX), Orbital (ORB), WNS Holdings (WNS), Danaher (DHR), UnitedHealth (UNH), Briggs & Stratton (BGG), HNI Corporation (HNI), HCA Holdings (HCA), Intellipharmaceutics (IPCI), C1 Financial (BNK), Astoria Financial (AF), Umpqua Holdings (UMPQ), United Rentals (URI), BankMutual (BKMU), Boston Private Financial (BPFH), RLI Corp. (RLI), Badger Meter (BMI), American Express (AXP)

Companies that missed consensus earnings expectations include:
Fifth Third Bancorp (FITB), Baker Hughes (BHI), Mattel (MAT), Cohen & Steers (CNS), Universal Forest (UFPI), Central Valley Community (CVCY), Platinum Underwriters (PTP), Las Vegas Sands (LVS)

Companies that matched consensus earnings expectations include:
First Cash Financial (FCFS), BB&T (BBT), Navient (NAVI), Guaranty Bancorp (GBNK)

eBay (EBAY) sees FY14 EPS at low end of $2.95-$3.00, consensus $2.97
Danaher (DHR) sees Q4 EPS $1.00-$1.04, consensus $1.04
WNS Holdings (WNS) raises FY15 adjusted EPS to $1.56-$1.63 from 1.44-$1.56
Orbital (ORB) raises 2014 adjusted EPS view to $1.20-$1.25 from $1.10-$1.20

NEWSPAPERS/WEBSITES

EU antitrust chief criticizes 'irrational' response by politicians to Google (GOOG) probe, WSJ reports
Boeing (BA) mulls potential helicopter deal with Brazilian Army, Reuters reports
American Apparel (APP) to make interest payment on bonds, Bloomberg reports
Mexican regulators fine Citigroup's (C) Banamex unit 30M pesos, Bloomberg reports
Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A) cuts Tesco (TSCDY) stake to less than 3%, Telegraph reports
AbbVie (ABBV), Shire (SHPG) both look like buys no matter what, Barron's says

SYNDICATE

Esperion (ESPR) 4.25M share Secondary priced at $20.00
NeuroMetrix (NURO) files to sell 3.3M shares for holders
Southern Missouri Bancorp (SMBC) files to sell 345,893 shares for holders
Tetraphase (TTPH) files to sell $75M of common stock

Frontrunning: October 17

$
0
0
  • Obama open to appointing Ebola 'czar', opposes travel ban (Reuters)
  • Schools Close as Nurse’s Ebola Infection Ignites Concern (BBG)
  • How the World's Top Health Body Allowed Ebola to Spiral Out of Control (BBG)
  • European Stocks Rise Amid Growing Pressure for Stimulus (BBG)
  • Putin Threatens EU Gas Squeeze Raising Stakes for Ukraine (BBG)
  • ECB to Start Asset Purchases Within Days, Says Central Banker Coeuré (WSJ)
  • Investors search for signs of end to stock market correction (Reuters)
  • Putin's talks with EU and Poroshenko 'difficult, full of misunderstandings': Kremlin (Reuters)
  • Monaco Murders Reveal Six Hidden Real Estate Billionaires (BBG)
  • In Liberia, U.S. Soldiers Race Ebola (WSJ)
  • Islamic State training pilots to fly in three jets: Syria monitor (Reuters)
  • Venezuela Goes From Bad to Worse as Oil Prices Plummets (BBG)
  • Luxury Shoemaker Jimmy Choo Rises on London Trading Debut (BBG)

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

* President Barack Obama, after a day of withering criticism over the government's handling of the Ebola virus, said Thursday he may name a point person to oversee the administration's response and is open to a travel ban but isn't planning one. (http://on.wsj.com/11xafkr)

* Chiquita Brands International Inc said its board rejected a sweetened takeover offer from Cutrale-Safra, saying the new bid isn't adequate and isn't in the best interest of shareholders. (http://on.wsj.com/1vCEt20)

* Sam Nunn, one of the last Georgia Democrats to serve a full term in the Senate, had just finished watching his granddaughter win a soccer game when he turned his attention to a more pressing family contest: his daughter Michelle's run for U.S. senator. (http://on.wsj.com/1CtIVPv)

* Vice President Joe Biden's son Hunter was discharged from the Navy Reserve this year after testing positive for cocaine, according to people familiar with the matter. (http://on.wsj.com/ZH89x5)

* The likely collapse of AbbVie Inc's $54 billion agreement to buy Shire PLC leaves two global drug companies in need of new, independent courses and investors and Wall Street bankers smarting from losses and fees they won't collect. (http://on.wsj.com/1vkY6dw)

 

FT

State-owned Russian oil company NK Rosneft OAO and Arkady Rotenberg, judo partner of Russian President Vladimir Putin, have launched legal challenges against sanctions imposed by the European Union's European Council over Russia's actions in Ukraine.

Advertising group WPP PLC's unit has taken legal actions against the UK government to stop it from passing a four-year advertising contract worth 400 million stg to WPP's rival Carat, an agency owned by rival Dentsu Aegis.

Royal Bank of Scotland said it will talk to its customers about the higher interest rates, making the process transparent, after it was fined for mis-selling home loans.

Britain's bankers have been warned by officials from the International Monetary Fund on Thursday that a battle between national and regional regulators will increase costs for banks and stop capital flowing between subsidiaries in different countries.

Bank of England countered the EU cap on banker bonuses saying the debate over bonuses was "misguided" and that variable pay should play a significant role in banker remuneration.

NYT

* BHP Billiton Plc said on Thursday it would proceed with a new listing in London for its planned spinoff of several assets into a new global metals and mining company. (http://nyti.ms/1xXl1uV)

* MMX Mineracao & Metalicos SA, a mining company owned by the troubled Brazilian businessman Eike Batista, filed for bankruptcy protection on Thursday, the third of his companies to do so. (http://nyti.ms/1wa3Upx)

* The ambitions of the Russian tycoon Mikhail Fridman to build a new oil and natural gas company are being frustrated by the British government, which is declining to bless his purchase of a large gas field in the North Sea and other assets in British waters. (http://nyti.ms/1xXlHjR)

* Financial experts warn that a small group of giant asset managers that have amassed high-risk, high-yield bonds could find themselves unable to raise enough cash during a sell-off. (http://nyti.ms/1vkRsnN)

* Just one day after HBO said it would start an Internet-only offering, CBS Corp announced on Thursday its own subscription streaming service that lets people watch its live programming and thousands of current and past shows on demand. The moves signal a watershed moment for web-delivered television, where viewers have more options to pay only for the networks or programs they want to watch - and to decide how, when and where to watch them. (http://nyti.ms/1stYpjO)

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

** Former Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien is defending Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau's controversial decision to oppose Canada's air combat mission in Iraq, saying the fighter planes the Harper government is deploying are a "very marginal" response to the crisis caused by Islamic State militants. (http://bit.ly/1yJhfbD)

** Two employees at the Toronto hospital where Rob Ford is undergoing cancer treatment inappropriately accessed the mayor's confidential medical records, a breach that led the hospital to mete out unspecified "action" against the staff members. (http://bit.ly/1sYX4V1)

** Thirty minutes into the 45th debate of Toronto's race for mayor, front-runner John Tory squared off against rival Doug Ford, who until the most recent opinion poll had been nipping at his heels since he stepped into the race as a last-minute substitute for his brother Rob Ford. (http://bit.ly/Zxbwqc)

NATIONAL POST

** A new report by HSBC Global Research argues Canada's oil and gas boom remains on course. The 20-page report, authored by HSBC Bank Canada chief economist David Watt, says the unprecedented boom in capital spending in Canada's natural resources sector is here to stay, with major projects currently under way or planned in the next decade worth C$675-billion ($600.11 billion). (http://bit.ly/1qGZIJi)

** One year out from a scheduled October 2015 federal elections in Canada, none of the main federal parties has nominated even half of its candidates, although the opposition says it is preparing for the possibility of a snap spring campaign. (http://bit.ly/1waniCB)

** A Canadian survivor of the Nepal avalanche that killed at least 27 people has described a harrowing tale of being buried waist-high in thick, heavy snow on a "nightmare" of a day. Quebecer Sonia Leveque said she thought she was going to die and that she and her fellow trekkers are fortunate to be alive. (http://bit.ly/1sPkV8n)

 

China

CHINA SECURITIES JOURNAL

- China's related government departments are studying several policies to support the logistics industry, including the reduction of administrative fees and halving land taxes for building warehousing facilities.

- The National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) has approved three railway construction and expansion projects with an investment value of 95.9 billion yuan ($15.66 billion).

SHANGHAI SECURITIES NEWS

- The China Insurance Regulatory Commission is looking to introduce a rating system to improve corporate governance of the country's insurance firms, the newspaper said citing sources.

CHINA DAILY

- Apple Inc on Thursday appealed a Beijing court ruling, which said the country's intellectual property authority's grant of a patent for an intelligent robot to a Shanghai technology firm was valid.

- Prices of smuggled iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus units have almost halved in Beijing as Apple prepares to deliver authorised handsets on Friday.

Britain

The Times

MARKET TURMOIL PUTS EUROPE IN SPOTLIGHT

The threat of stagnation in Europe, a potential new eurozone crisis and weaker growth in the United States rattled markets for a second day, sending prices for everything from government debt to equities into convulsions worldwide. (http://thetim.es/ZwGPkN)

BUFFETT SELLS DOWN 'HUGE MISTAKE' TESCO HOLDING

Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway has revealed that it sold shares in supermarket chain Tesco Corp on Monday, reducing its stake from 3.6 percent to below the 3 percent threshold at which investors are obliged to declare their ownership. (http://thetim.es/1ucRFF6)

The Guardian

ABBVIE WITHDRAWS BID FOR SHIRE AFTER U.S. GETS TOUGH ON TAX

U.S. drugs group AbbVie Inc has pulled out of its proposed $54 billion (42.14 billion euro) takeover of Britain's Shire Plc after the Obama administration introduced rules to clamp down on overseas acquisitions driven by tax avoidance. (http://bit.ly/1CsDsbC)

U.S. FACTORY FIGURES HELP BRING CALM TO MARKETS AFTER DAYS OF TURMOIL

Strong U.S. factory output growth and the intervention by James Bullard, the hawkish president of the St. Louis Federal Reserve, brought some relief to markets following three days of turmoil that have knocked billions of pounds off the value of the FTSE 100. (http://bit.ly/1sWhM6V)

The Telegraph

WORLD BRACES AS DEFLATION TREMORS HIT EUROZONE BOND MARKETS

Eurozone fears have returned with a vengeance as deepening deflation across southern Europe and fresh turmoil in Greece set off wild moves on the European bond markets. Yields on 10-year German Bund plummeted to an all-time low on 0.72 percent on flight to safety, touching levels never seen before in any major European country in recorded history. (http://bit.ly/1DgybWI)

ANDREW BAILEY THROWS WEIGHT BEHIND GEORGE OSBORNE OVER BONUS CAP

Andrew Bailey, chief executive of the Prudential Regulation Authority, told senior bankers that the bonus cap is "the wrong policy" which would lead to unintended consequences. His comments come just a day after the European Banking Authority launched a clampdown on banks using "role-based allowances" to get around the cap. (http://bit.ly/1F79vSz)

Sky News

BANK RAISES FIXED PAY AS CRACKDOWN LOOMS

Sky News has learnt that Nomura Holdings Inc, the Japanese bank which acquired the European operations of Lehman Brothers after its collapse in 2008, is poised to award backdated fixed salary increases to a handful of its most senior City-based employees. (http://bit.ly/1F31pdw)

PM APPEALS FOR 'ONE LAST GO' ON EU IMMIGRATION

British Prime Minister David Cameron has said the immigration system is not working and he wants "one more go" at negotiating a better deal with the EU to limit the number of incomers. (http://bit.ly/ZwInva)

The Independent

BP LOSES COURT BATTLE OVER MEXICO GULF OIL SPILL CLAIMS

BP Plc is facing a flood of legal claims from big British investors over the Gulf of Mexico spill after it lost a crucial courtroom battle in Texas to get their cases thrown out. The investors, which include pension funds for several London boroughs and BP's arch rival, Shell, are suing in the United States, where they are likely to win far-bigger payouts than they could in Britain. (http://ind.pn/1sXX8V7)

BSKYB'S GERMAN STAKE COULD GET BIGGER ON EURO ZONE JITTERS

BSkyB Chief Executive Jeremy Darroch has signalled the British pay-TV firm could end up with a larger-than-expected stake in Sky Deutschland as concerns about the German economy may encourage shareholders to sell. (http://ind.pn/ZGPx0g)

 

Fly On The Wall Pre-market Buzz

ECONOMIC REPORTS

Domestic economic reports scheduled for today include:
Housing starts for September at 8:30--consensus up 5.4% to 1.01M rate
Housing permits for September at 8:30--consensus up 2.7% to 1.03M rate
University of Michigan consumer sentiment index for October at 9:55--consensus 84.0

ANALYST RESEARCH

Upgrades

AK Steel (AKS) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Nomura
AMD (AMD) upgraded to Sector Perform from Underperform at Pacific Crest
Atmos Energy (ATO) upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at JPMorgan
BorgWarner (BWA) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Deutsche Bank
CA Technologies (CA) upgraded to Overweight from Equal Weight at Barclays
Calumet Specialty Products (CLMT) upgraded to Outperform at Wells Fargo
DHT Holdings (DHT) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Evercore
E-House (EJ) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Goldman
Exelon (EXC) upgraded to Neutral from Sell at Citigroup
Fabrinet (FN) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at B. Riley
Fifth Third Bancorp (FITB) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Citigroup
Foundation Medicine (FMI) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at William Blair
Goldman Sachs (GS) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at Keefe Bruyette
Helmerich & Payne (HP) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at UBS
Hilton (HLT) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at SunTrust
Hyatt Hotels (H) upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at Macquarie
IPG Photonics (IPGP) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Stifel
ITC Holdings (ITC) upgraded to Neutral from Underperform at Credit Suisse
Intuitive Surgical (ISRG) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at Leerink
Leju (LEJU) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Goldman
Mattress Firm (MFRM) upgraded to Buy from Hold at KeyBanc
Nabors Industries (NBR) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at UBS
Old Dominion (ODFL) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Longbow
PDC Energy (PDCE) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at SunTrust
Patterson-UTI (PTEN) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at UBS
PrivateBancorp (PVTB) upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at Macquarie
QLogic (QLGC) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Summit Research
Reliance Steel (RS) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Topeka
Southwestern Energy (SWN) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at Raymond James
SunEdison (SUNE) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at Cowen
Toronto-Dominion (TD) upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at Credit Suisse
Triangle Capital (TCAP) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at JMP Securities
UnitedHealth (UNH) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at Leerink
Viper Energy (VNOM) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at Northland
Xilinx (XLNX) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at Wells Fargo

Downgrades

AMD (AMD) downgraded downgraded to Hold from Buy at Canaccord
Urban Outfitters (URBN) downgraded to Equal Weight from Overweight at Morgan Stanley
Urban Outfitters (URBN) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Goldman
Yara (YARIY) downgraded to Sell from Neutral at UBS

Initiations

Alibaba (BABA) initiated with a Buy at Brean Capital
AmerisourceBergen (ABC) initiated with an Outperform at RBC Capital
Arctic Cat (ACAT) initiated with a Hold at Wunderlich
Brean starts Alibaba (BABA) at Buy, calls core China Internet holding
Cardinal Health (CAH) initiated with an Outperform at RBC Capital
Clean Energy (CLNE) initiated with a Hold at MLV & Co.
Dot Hill Systems (HILL) initiated with an Overweight at Piper Jaffray
McKesson (MCK) initiated with an Outperform at RBC Capital
Nautilus (NLS) initiated with a Buy at Wunderlich
Polypore (PPO) initiated with a Buy at MLV & Co.
Quantum (QTWW) initiated with a Buy at MLV & Co.
Radiant Logistics (RLGT) initiated with a Buy at Sterne Agee
Signet Jewelers (SIG) initiated with an Overweight at Barclays
Smith & Wesson (SWHC) initiated with a Buy at Wunderlich
Tesla (TSLA) initiated with a Buy at MLV & Co.
Thor Industries (THO) initiated with a Buy at Wunderlich
Tiffany (TIF) initiated with an Equal Weight at Barclays

COMPANY NEWS

Yara (YARIY) announced termination of merger discussions with CF Industries (CF)
AMD (AMD) announced global headcount reduction of 7%
General Electric (GE) said on track to meet goal or $1B in structural cost-out for year, said on track to close sale of GE Money Bank in Q4
Sarepta Therapeutics (SRPT) announced the publication of results from two single ascending-dose studies that demonstrated no clinical or toxicologic safety concerns with the company’s drug candidates for the treatment of Ebola and Marburg virus, respectively
Ampio (AMPE) announced results of open label portion of multiple injections study
Airbus (EADSY) cut production rate of A330 aircrafts to 9 from 10 per month
Cliffs Natural (CLF) said expects to record non-cash impairment of about $6B in Q3

EARNINGS

Companies that beat consensus earnings expectations last night and today include:
General Electric (GE), BNY Mellon (BK), Heritage-Crystal Clean (HCCI), Fidelity Southern (LION), Crown Holdings (CCK), Western Alliance (WAL), BancFirst (BANF), Xilinx (XLNX), QLogic (QLGC), WD-40 (WDFC), Associated Banc-Corp (ASBC), First Financial (FFIN), Cytec Industries (CYT), Schlumberger (SLB), SanDisk (SNDK), Independent Bank (INDB), Wintrust Financial (WTFC), Bridge Capital Holdings (BBNK), Stryker (SYK)

Companies that missed consensus earnings expectations include:
Google (GOOG), AMD (AMD), Fabrinet (FN), Capital One (COF)

Companies that matched consensus earnings expectations include:
People's United (PBCT)

Textron (TXT) raises FY14 EPS cont ops to $2.05-$2.15 from $1.92-$2.12
Rolls-Royce (RYCEY) sees FY14 revenue 3.5%-4% lower vs. last year
AMD (AMD) sees Q4 revenue down 13%, plus or minus 3%, consensus $1.48B
SanDisk (SNDK) sees Q4 revenue $1.8B-$1.85B, consensus $1.88B

NEWSPAPERS/WEBSITES

Clinton group urges Atlantic Power (AT) to restart sale process, Reuters reports
LVMH (LVMUY) could pair with a tech company to launch smartwatch, WSJ reports
Wells Fargo (WFC) to shut 'dark pool' as demand drops, Reuters reports
HP (HPQ) dismisses concerns about drop in global notebook market share, DigiTimes reports
NPD: Sony PlayStation4 (SNE) outsells XBox One (MSFT) in September, GameSpot reports
Goldman Sachs (GS) looks like a buy, Barron's says

SYNDICATE

Tetraphase (TTPH) 3.95M share Secondary priced at $19.00
Zayo Group (ZAYO) 21.052M share IPO priced at $19.00

Frontrunning: October 24

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  • Doctor with Ebola in New York hospital after return from Guinea (Reuters)
  • Ebola Puts Spotlight on Bellevue, Key NYC Trauma Center (WSJ)
  • Uber Driver Transported Ebola-Positive Doctor in New York (BBG)
  • GOP Gains in Key Senate Races as Gender Gap Narrows (WSJ)
  • ECB Tries for Third Time Lucky in European Stress Tests (BBG)
  • Security tight in Canada as police probe Parliament gunman's ties (Reuters)
  • Why Madrid's poor fear Goldman Sachs and Blackstone (Reuters)
  • Fed’s $4 Trillion Holdings Keep Boosting Growth Beyond End of QE (BBG)
  • Cold War Banker to Putin Billionaires Walks Sanction Wire (BBG)
  • Ground offensive against Islamic State months away in Iraq (Reuters)
  • Bank Breakup Plan Hits More EU Hurdles as Danes Reject Idea (BBG)
  • Servicing JFK Airliners for Decades, Now There’s Ebola (BBG)
  • New York police officer critically wounded in hatchet attack (Reuters)
  • China Scores Cheap Oil 14,000 Miles Away as Glut Deepens (BBG)

 

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

* A doctor who had returned to New York City recently after treating Ebola patients in West Africa tested positive for the virus on Thursday, officials said, setting up a new test for the nation's ability to control the spread of the deadly disease. (http://on.wsj.com/1wvvsql)

* A number of details about Michael Zehaf-Bibeau, who killed a Canadian soldier and thrust the government into a terrified lockdown on Wednesday, emerged that began to fill in a picture of a middle-class suburban youth who grew estranged from his family and descended into a string of petty crimes. (http://on.wsj.com/1z2Sebz)

* In a warning flag for Democrats, recent polls suggest the party is failing to draw enough support from women in three key Senate races - in Iowa, Arkansas and Colorado - to offset the strong backing that men are giving to Republicans. (http://on.wsj.com/1nBCDf0)

* The travails at Gucci are emblematic of the problems afflicting fashion's big power houses. (http://on.wsj.com/1uNAjyR)

* Amazon.com Inc's soaring ambitions are coming at a steep cost, dragging the e-commerce giant to its largest quarterly loss in 14 years. (http://on.wsj.com/1wnXRxD)

* Canada's chief energy regulator said Thursday a municipality along the route of a crude-oil pipeline cannot stop an affiliate of Kinder Morgan Energy Partners from accessing areas for a proposed expansion. (http://on.wsj.com/10r3YGO)

* Primark, the U.K. fast-fashion chain that sells T-shirts for a couple of pounds and doesn't believe in online retailing, wants to make it big in the U.S. Its big selling point to America will be price. (http://on.wsj.com/1znoNSF)

* Famed billionaire Warren Buffett has doubled down on renewables - and wind power in particular - in his energy strategy. Through a majority-owned subsidiary, Berkshire Hathaway Energy, Buffett plans to double the $15 billion already committed to renewable-energy projects through early this year, and he is on the hunt for more utility acquisitions. (http://on.wsj.com/1wsZY2d)

* KKR & Co LP signaled buying opportunities ahead, as choppy markets create conditions that can scare off other investors. Echoing sentiment from other private-equity executives, one of the top lieutenants to KKR co-founders Henry Kravis and George Roberts on Thursday said recent whipsawing markets could work to the firm's advantage. (http://on.wsj.com/1nBF6WP)

 

FT

Overview Bank of England would fire a lender's management over a weekend, impose losses on investors and halt bond trading in a move aimed at preventing taxpayers bailing out banks and to provide more clarity to investors and bank chiefs. EU has told Britain to pay an extra 2.1 billion euros ($2.66 billion) to the EU budget within weeks due to its relative prosperity, a subcharge that will add to Prime Minister David Cameron's domestic worries over Europe. BP Plc and Chevron Corp have disclosed an oil find in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico. The companies said the oil well drilled by Chevron in the Guadalupe prospect in 1,200 metres of water needed more tests to establish its size but had found "significant oil pay."

Uber's head start in Britain has shadowed over the planned Addison Lee's sale after potential bidders raised questions over the impact it could have on Addison Lee's long-term prospects.

 

NYT

* Bankers are jockeying for the next sovereign debt deal in Africa, a continent that foreign investors have long been wary of for its economic woes, rampant poverty and political instability. Sub-Saharan countries have raised nearly $7 billion this year, more than in all of 2013, and yields on many bonds have fallen, even with the Ebola outbreak. (http://nyti.ms/1z2NUJx)

* Comcast Corp, the country's largest cable operator, predicts that television groups like HBO and CBS will face steep challenges introducing streaming services that do not require cable subscriptions and that people will continue to pay for a bundle of television and Internet services in the years to come. (http://nyti.ms/1wsUbJW)

* Amazon Inc on Thursday reported disappointing third-quarter results. The company saw a wider net loss of 95 cents a share and revenue came in $260 million less than analysts' projections. Amazon said it might lose money again in the fourth quarter, which in the old days was when retailers made all their profit for the year. (http://nyti.ms/12mXitV)

* Microsoft Corp on Thursday offered tantalizing signs of progress in the transformation of its business. In the last quarter, the company had a 25 percent increase in sales, largely because of its acquisition of Nokia Oyj's mobile phone business. The results impressed investors, especially when compared with weak results from other technology bellwethers like IBM Corp. (http://nyti.ms/1znnlQu)

* General Motors' quarterly earnings report on Thursday was noteworthy mostly for what it lacked: another big financial charge for safety recalls. After running up special charges of nearly $3 billion in the first half of the year for safety problems, the nation's biggest automaker avoided additional charges for recalls in the third quarter. (http://nyti.ms/1thOnFw)

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

** Chinese authorities have subjected two detained Canadians, Kevin and Julia Garratt, who have now been held by China's State Security Bureau for 81 days, to intensive questioning while refusing their access to legal counsel, raising fears about what the couple might be pressured into admitting. (http://bit.ly/1nBUeU3)

** Royal Canadian Mounted Police Commissioner Bob Paulson, the nation's top police officer, says the job of keeping tabs on Canadian extremists was draining police budgets, violence had become almost impossible to foresee and police needed tools to react "decisively, quickly, preventatively." (http://bit.ly/ZPGVV2)

** Rogers Communications Inc Chief Executive Guy Laurence is striking a new aggressive tone, directly calling out his competitors as he strives to convince investors his strategy to turn around the fortunes of the wireless, cable and media company is on the right track. (http://bit.ly/1wvKuMU)

NATIONAL POST

** The Conservatives are understood to be considering new legislation that would make it an offence to condone terrorist acts online. Sources suggest the government is likely to bring in new hate speech legislation that would make it illegal to claim terrorist acts are justified online. (http://bit.ly/1rr8NWS)

** Conservative members of Parliament inside their caucus room were determined to go out fighting, if worst came to worst. As they heard the cannonade of shots outside the historic Reading Room, in Parliament's Hall of Honour, they barricaded the doors and armed themselves. The only weapons at hand were a rolled up Maple Leaf flag, replete with sharp points. (http://bit.ly/1rpKrNg)

** Despite a bear market for oil, two of Canada's largest producers, Husky Energy Inc and its oil sands peer Cenovus Energy Inc, said on Tuesday that their growth plans had not yet been derailed. (http://bit.ly/1znUVFQ)

 

China

SHANGHAI SECURITIES NEWS

- The Shenzhen Stock Exchange is accelerating its launch of options, with the second testing phase set to take place as early as next week, the newspaper said, citing sources.

21ST CENTURY HERALD

- China Telecom and China Unicom have been in talks for the past six months to jointly establish a content delivery network firm, the newspaper reported, citing a source in China Telecom.

 
SHANGHAI DAILY

- Recent fibre content and labelling tests by Shanghai's quality watchdog have failed batches of clothing from brands such as Armani, Ralph Lauren and Fendi. Retailers were told to remove the items from their shelves immediately.

- More than 20 tonnes of industrial salt is believed to be on the market as normal edible salt in central China's Henan province, officials said after raiding an underground workshop in the provincial capital of Zhengzhou.

CHINA DAILY

- Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg conducted a half-hour public dialogue in the Chinese language at Tsinghua University, receiving cheers and applause from the audience.

- China plans to cooperate with several countries, including Mexico, Israel and Sweden, to expand the reach of its Beidou navigation satellite system.

Britain

Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.

The Times TESCO CHAIRMAN QUITS AS PROFITS CRUMBLE BY 92 PCT Richard Broadbent, chairman of Tesco Plc is to stand down after a collapse in the supermarket chain's half-year profit and an increase in the bill for a bookkeeping scandal from 250 million pounds to 263 million pounds ($400.80 million to $421.64 million).

(thetim.es/1wm4W1G)

The Guardian

SPIRIT PUB BARS MAGNERS OWNER'S MOVE TO GATECRASH TAKEOVER Spirit Pub Co Plc has rejected an attempt by the company behind Magners cider to gatecrash its 750 million pound takeover by brewer Greene King Plc. Irish cider company C&C Group Plc is understood to have made a new 760 million pound approach for the chain of 1,200 pubs in an effort to trump Greene King's offer - which the Spirit board has indicated it is willing to recommend to shareholders.

(bit.ly/1ws4Dlb)

CENTRICA BOSS ATTACKS 'CONTRADICTORY' UK POWER POLICY Sam Laidlaw, chief executive of Centrica Plc, has urged the government to reconsider its support for offshore wind and other costly low-carbon technologies because it will raise the cost for energy consumers at a time of lower wholesale power prices. The energy boss and former government adviser also attacked ministers for allowing energy companies to propose coal-fired power stations for a new subsidy scheme when Britain was trying to cut carbon emissions.

(bit.ly/1vUO17y) BP'S NORTH SEA OIL FIND COULD YIELD 50 MLN BARRELS

BP Plc has reawakened hopes for the continuing potential of the North Sea by making a significant oil strike that industry experts believe could yield about 50 million barrels. The find was made in partnership with GDF Suez of France, and the British government said the successful well underlined the benefits that could be achieved if companies worked more closely together.

(bit.ly/1zmzSmY)

The Telegraph

BANK OF ENGLAND TARGETS END OF BANK BAILOUT ERA Bank of England could fire bank bosses on the spot and replace them with outside executives should the bank collapse under new rules designed to prevent taxpayers bailing out banks.

(bit.ly/ZOFg2e)

CUADRILLA FRACKING PLANS SUFFER FURTHER DELAY Cuadrilla's plans to frack for shale gas in Lancashire have suffered further delay after council planners requested an extra two months to consider its proposals. The energy company submitted a planning application to Lancashire County Council in late May to frack at a site at Preston New Road, near Little Plumpton, followed in mid-June with plans for a second site at Roseacre Wood.

(bit.ly/1uM1Nox) Sky News

JOHNSON QUITS METRO BANK OVER TIME DEMANDS Luke Johnson, one of the Britain's most successful entrepreneurs has resigned from the board of Metro Bank as growing regulatory scrutiny increases the time commitment required from bank directors.

(bit.ly/1owSI6w)

 

 

Fly On The Wall Pre-Market Buzz

ECONOMIC REPORTS

Domestic economic reports scheduled for today include:
New home sales for September at 10:00--consensus down 6.9% to 469K rate

ANALYST RESEARCH

Upgrades

Brandywine Realty (BDN) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Stifel
Check Point (CHKP) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Needham
EQT Corporation (EQT) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at SunTrust
Halliburton (HAL) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Citigroup
Invacare (IVC) upgraded to Buy from Hold at KeyBanc
Lorillard (LO) upgraded to Market Perform from Underperform at Cowen
Maxim Integrated (MXIM) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Deutsche Bank
NCR Corp. (NCR) upgraded to Neutral from Sell at Goldman
Plexus (PLXS) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at Raymond James
Reliance Steel (RS) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Jefferies
ResMed (RMD) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at William Blair
Royal Dutch Shell (RDS.A) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at UBS
Vulcan Materials (VMC) upgraded to Overweight from Equal Weight at Stephens
Weatherford (WFT) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Citigroup

Downgrades

AG Mortgage (MITT) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at JMP Securities
Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at BMO Capital
Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF) downgraded to Sell from Neutral at Goldman
Amazon.com (AMZN) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at Cowen
American Eagle (AEO) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Goldman
Colfax (CFX) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Goldman
Equinix (EQIX) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at Cowen
Gartner (IT) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Stifel
Hub Group (HUBG) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Longbow
JAKKS Pacific (JAKK) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at B. Riley
KLA-Tencor (KLAC) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at B. Riley
KLA-Tencor (KLAC) downgraded to Neutral from Outperform at Credit Suisse
NIC Inc. (EGOV) downgraded to Market Perform from Strong Buy at Raymond James
Pacific Continental (PCBK) downgraded to Market Perform at Keefe Bruyette
Premiere Global (PGI) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at Raymond James
QIWI (QIWI) downgraded to Sell from Buy at Goldman
Safe Bulkers (SB) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Evercore

Initiations

Alibaba (BABA) initiated with an Outperform at BMO Capital
GoPro (GPRO) initiated with an Underperform at Oppenheimer
Jones Energy (JONE) initiated with an In-Line at Imperial Capital
Marathon Oil (MRO) initiated with a Buy at Mizuho
Mattress Firm (MFRM) initiated with an Overweight at Barclays
Medley Management (MDLY) initiated with a Buy at MLV & Co.
Physicians Realty Trust (DOC) initiated with an Outperform at Raymond James
Rosetta Genomics (ROSG) initiated with a Hold at Cantor
Surgical Care Affiliates (SCAI) initiated with a Hold at Jefferies
Tempur Sealy (TPX) initiated with an Equal Weight at Barclays

COMPANY NEWS

Pfizer (PFE) announced a new $11B share repurchase program
Amazon (AMZN) said it recorded charges of $170M for unsold Fire Phones, other costs
Juniper Networks (JNPR) announced a $1.1B increase to its share repurchase authorization
Digital River (DRIV) agreed to be acquired by investor group led by Siris Capital Group for $26 per share, or $840M
NPS Pharmaceuticals' (NPSP) PDUFA date for Natpara extended three months to January 24, 2015
Wyndham (WYN) approved $1B increase to share repurchase authorization
Vitae Pharmaceuticals (VTAE) reported positive top-line results from two Phase 1 clinical trials of BI1181181/VTP-37948
AMC Networks (AMCX), BBC Worldwide entered long-term partnership, under which AMC will invest $200M to acquire a 49.9% equity stake in BBC America

EARNINGS

Companies that beat consensus earnings expectations last night and today include:

Microsoft (MSFT), Barnes Group (B), Wyndham (WYN), LyondellBasell (LYB), Forum Energy (FET), Gulf Island Fabrication (GIFI),  OceanFirst Financial (OCFC), Minerals Technologies (MTX), Strattec Security (STRT), Hancock Holding (HBHC), First Internet Bancorp (INBK), Universal Truckload (UACL), Southern National Bancorp (SONA), Sensient (SXT), Rubicon Project (RUBI), Dime Community (DCOM), Callaway Golf (ELY), Premiere Global (PGI), Compuware (CPWR), LogMeln (LOGM), Clean Energy (CLNE), ShoreTel (SHOR), 1st Source (SRCE), PolyOne (POL), Altera (ALTR), IGI Laboratories (IG), SPS Commerce (SPSC), City National (CYN), Gigamon (GIMO), Mattson (MTSN), NetSuite (N), Federated Investors (FII), KLA-Tencor (KLAC), Maxwell (MXWL), Dolby (DLB), PC Connection (PCCC), Constant Contact (CTCT), Informatica (INFA), Qlik Technologies (QLIK), Freescale (FSL), BJ's Restaurants (BJRI), Greenhill & Co. (GHL), Chubb (CB), Edwards Lifesciences (EW), Deckers Outdoor (DECK), Stericycle (SRCL), BioMarin (BMRN), Uroplasty (UPI), Juniper (JNPR), Maxim Integrated (MXIM), FCB Financial (FCB), Principal Financial (PFG), Spectranetics (SPNC), PDF Solutions (PDFS), Calamos (CLMS), Netgear (NTGR), Chicago Bridge & Iron (CBI), CONMED (CNMD), VeriSign (VRSN), Merit Medical (MMSI), MainSource Financial (MSFG), Swift Transport (SWFT), W. R. Berkley (WRB), Pacific Biosciences (PACB), Pandora (P), VCA Inc. (WOOF), Echo Global (ECHO), Lattice Semiconductor (LSCC), Lattice Semiconductor (LSCC)

Companies that missed consensus earnings expectations include:

Amazon.com (AMZN), ImmunoGen (IMGN), New Oriental Education (EDU), Heritage Financial (hfwa), Basic Energy (BAS), Olin Corp. (OLN), Southwestern Energy (SWN), Simpson Manufacturing (SSD), Builders FirstSource (BLDR), Cape Bancorp (CBNJ), National Bank (NBHC), Bryn Mawr Bank (BMTC), TESSCO (TESS), OFG Bancorp  (OFG), SVB Financial (SIVB), Synaptics (SYNA), Shore Bancshares (SHBI), Flowserve (FLS), Forward Air (fwrd), Hub Group (HUBG), NCR Corp. (NCR), Covisint (COVS), Micrel (MCRL)

Companies that matched consensus earnings expectations include:

First Niagara (FNFG), Heritage Commerce (HTBK), Glacier Bancorp (GBCI), Macatawa Bank (MCBC), NewBridge Bancorp (NBBC), ResMed (RMD), Proofpoint (PFPT), Riverbed (RVBD), Cerner (CERN), Ingram Micro (IM), Healthways (HWAY)

NEWSPAPERS/WEBSITES

Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) found 'not liable' in all-metal hip implant suit, WSJ reports
Apple (AAPL) responds to GT Advanced's (GTAT) sapphire business exit, said will continue evaluating GTAT's progress on larger sapphire boule development, Re/code reports
RealPage (RP) draws interest from prospective buyers, FT reports
Glenview Capital acquires stake in Actavis (ACT), Bloomberg reports (AGN, SLXP, PFE)
Lockheed (LMT) comes to $4B agreement with Pentagon for more F-35s, Reuters says
Google (GOOG) won't make additional investments in Himax Display (HIMX), DigiTimes reports

SYNDICATE
DryShips (DRYS) files automatic common stock shelf


ECB Stress Test Fails To Inspire Confidence Again As Euro Stocks Slide After Early Rally; Monte Paschi Crashes

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It started off so well: the day after the ECB said that despite a gargantuan €879 billion in bad loans, of which €136 billion were previously undisclosed, only 25 European banks had failed its stress test and had to raised capital, 17 of which had already remedied their capital deficiency confirming that absolutely nothing would change (conveniently the ECB reported that private sector loan issuance declined once again by 1.2% Y/Y), Europe started off with a bang as stocks across the Atlantic jumped, which in turn pushed US equity futures to fresh multi-week highs putting the early October market drubbing well into the rear view mirror. Then things turned sour.

Whether as a result of the re-election of incumbent Brazilian president Dilma Russeff, which is expected to lead to a greater than 10% plunge in the Bovespa when it opens later, or the latest disappointment out of Germany, when the October IFO confidence declined again from 104.5 to 103.2, or because "failing" Italian bank Monte Paschi was not only repeatedly halted after crashing 20% but which saw yet another "transitory" short-selling ban by the Italian regulator, and the mood in Europe suddenly turned quite sour, which in turn dragged both the EURUSD and the USDJPY lower, and with it US equity futures which at last check were red.

So here is where we are now in the markets: European shares fluctuate, currently down having just touched session lows with the travel & leisure and food & beverage sectors outperforming and banks, autos underperforming. Banks index falls having risen earlier on results of ECB stress tests yesterday. Brazilian stocks fall after Rousseff wins election. The Dutch and Swiss markets are the best-performing larger bourses, Italian the worst. The euro is stronger against the dollar. Irish 10yr bond yields fall; Spanish yields decline. Commodities decline, with nickel, corn underperforming and natural gas outperforming. U.S. Dallas Fed index, pending home sales, Markit U.S. composite PMI, Markit U.S. services PMI due later.

And while today attention turns towards the US pending home sales release and a host of tier 1 US earnings including Merck at 1100GMT and Twitter after-market, the biggest event by far takes place at 11:00 am when the Fed monetizes some $0.85 - $1.05 billion in 2036-2044 bonds, after which POMO, and QE3, are officially over!

Market wrap

  • S&P 500 futures down 0.1% to 1959.1
  • Stoxx 600 down 0.5% to 327.3
  • US 10Yr yield down 1bps to 2.27%
  • German 10Yr yield down 0bps to 0.89%
  • MSCI Asia Pacific up 0.6% to 138.4
  • Gold spot down 0% to $1230.5/oz

Bulletin Headline Summary from Bloomberg and RanSquawk

  • European equities pare their initial gains as participant’s book profits and a disappointing German IFO survey returns focus back towards the dreary outlook for the Eurozone economy
  • EUR/USD trades higher albeit off its best levels alongside the turnaround in Eurozone sentiment with large expires at 1.2680-90 (2.25bln) and 1.2700 (1.3bln) also said to be anchoring price action
  • Looking ahead, attention turns towards the US pending home sales release and a host of tier 1 US earnings including Merck at 1100GMT and Twitter after-market.
  • Treasuries decline amid expectations Fed will end bond-buying program at two-day meeting starting tomorrow; week’s auction cycle also begins tomorrow with $29b 2Y notes.
  • Fed to buy $850m to $1.05b in 2036-2044 sector today, last purchase scheduled for October
  • Ifo institute’s index of German business confidence fell to 103.2 in October from 104.7 in September, lowest since December 2012 and below 104.5 median estimate in Bloomberg survey
  • Twenty-five banks including Italy’s Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena SpA failed a stress test led by the ECB, which said almost half of them must act to raise more capital
  • Most of the lenders that failed have been let off for good behavior; only eight banks out of the 25 found with shortfall haven’t already plugged capital gaps or satisfied the ECB with plans to shrink
  • China’s economic growth will slow to 7.2% in 4Q as domestic demand weakens, said Song Guoqing, an academic member of the People’s Bank of China monetary policy advisory committee
  • Pro-European parties are set to control Ukraine’s parliament and form a coalition government after trouncing the Russian- leaning political forces popular in the nation’s war-torn east
  • The Obama administration is concerned that required quarantines of health workers returning from West Africa to New York and New Jersey may have unintended consequences and is preparing new directives, a senior administration official said
  • ETFs tracking Brazilian shares slid as President Dilma Rousseff’s re-election damped speculation for a change in policies that wiped out $553b of stock market value and left the economy in recession
  • Sovereign yields mostly higher. Asian stocks mixed, with Nikkei higher, Shanghai lower; European stocks mostly lower, U.S. equity-index futures decline. Brent  crude falls 0.2%; copper, gold little changed

US Event Calendar

  • 9:45am: Markit US Services PMI, Oct. preliminary, 57.8 (prior 58.9); Markit US Composite PMI, Oct. preliminary (prior 59)
  • 10:00am: Pending Home Sales m/m, Sept., est. 1% (prior -1%)
  • Pending Home Sales y/y, Sept., est. 2.2% (prior -4.1%)
  • 10:30am: Dallas Fed Manufacturing Activity, Oct., est. 11 (prior 10.8)
  • Last Ever POMO: 11:00am: Fed to buy $0.85 - $1.05 billion in bonds due 02/15/2036 - 08/15/2044

ASIA

JGBs traded up 4 ticks at 146.50 underpinned by the BoJ who unexpectedly increased their purchasing operation in the 10yr-25yr sector by JPY 10bln. Asian equity markets kicked-off the week mostly higher with the exception of Hk and Chinese bourses, weighed on by reports of a delay in the HK-Shanghai cross border trading link. Consequently, the Shanghai Comp traded down 0.5% while the Hang Seng index trades lower by 0.7%. The Nikkei 225 traded up 0.6%, supported by improved risk appetite from Friday’s positive Wall Street close and news that most European banks passed the ECB/EBA stress tests.

FIXED INCOME & EQUITIES

European equities traded in the green from the get-go as participants digested the ECB stress test results with outperformance in the periphery as despite the disappointing findings for Banca Carige/Monte Paschi, the stress tests painted a better than expected picture for Spain and Italy. The main takeaway from the release was that the EUR 25bln capital hole was towards the lower end of analyst expectations and when capital raising exercises that are already underway are taken into account, this figure falls to EUR 9.5bln. Elsewhere, Commerzbank were one of the major outperformers in Europe (up as much as 9%) after any potential concerns regarding the German lender were alleviated.

However, following the open, participants then began to book profits with attention returning back to the current outlook for the Eurozone economy. This sentiment was further buoyed by the German IFO survey which was expected to reveal a 6th consecutive monthly decline, an outcome which was confirmed by the release (Business Climate 103.2 vs. Exp. 104.5). This subsequently saw European equities move into the red, with notable underperformance in the periphery, with Banca Monte dei Paschi (-17%) who initially failed to set an opening price, weighing on the FTSE MIB. This investor caution subsequently saw a flight to quality with Bunds then moving into relatively neutral territory, with the European spreads against the German benchmark unwinding their initial tightness.

FX

In FX markets, EUR/USD is currently trading with modest gains after coming off its highs in-line with the turnaround in European equities, with large option expires in EUR/USD at 1.2680-90 and 1.2700 said to be anchoring the pair’s price action. Furthermore, sentiment for EUR was also buoyed by the disappointing IFO release, with IFO economist Wohlrabe saying he sees no growth in Q4 for Germany. Elsewhere, USD-index (-0.15%) remains on the back foot after breaking below support seen at Friday's lows, spurring leveraged hedge funds to reduce JPY short positions and in-turn send USD/JPY back below the 108.00
handle.

Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff was re-elected by a narrow margin, after securing 51.6% of the valid votes cast, having fought off a strong challenge by pro-business challenger Aécio Neves who finished with 48.5%. (Guardian)

COMMODITIES

Heading into the North American open, WTI and Brent crude futures trade in the red, with further negative sentiment stemming from Goldman Sachs cutting their forecasts for Brent and WTI prices for 2015. GS also said OPEC was losing its pricing power as US shale output increases and forecast Brent to avg. USD 85/bbl (Prev. USD 100/bbl), and WTI USD 75/bbl (Prev. USD 90/bbl). Elsewhere, precious metals trade with little overall direction with markets looking ahead to the prospect of the Fed ending QE at their meeting on Wednesday.

* * *

DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight recap

In terms of nail biting events this week, the FOMC probably doesn't look as likely to be a cliff hanger that it perhaps looked 10 days ago when markets were spiralling lower and the ECB comprehensive assessment (stress tests) was broadly in line with expectations although most people's first reactions have generally been positive towards the exercise. Before we preview the FOMC, lets review some of the key details of the stress test results released yesterday. 25 of the 130 euro-area banks covered in the assessment ‘failed’ with a total gross capital shortfall amounting to €24.6bn as of the end of 2013. However if we take into account for capital already raised this year, the actual capital shortfall amounts to just €9.5bn. The capital needs are concentrated in a few countries (Italy, Greece, Austria, Portugal and Ireland) with these five countries accounting for EUR8.9bn of the above net EUR9.5bn. Overall the results are largely in line with DB economists’ expectations of €8-25bn. As they pointed out, it is also worth noting that the aggregate capital shortfall is fairly small relative to either the total CET1 capital of banks included in the stress test (nearly EUR1trillion) or euro-area GDP (nearly EUR10trillion). The banks included in this exercise have raised over EUR200bn between 2008 and 2013 and an additional EUR57bn has also been raised in the first 9 months of 2014.

One of the key things to look out for was how the market would perceive the credibility of the tests after earlier worries that the tests would largely be a wash. Most reports have been favourable of this front with some citing the Bank of Italy's reaction that the tests were harsh on Italian banks as evidence that it wasn't too easy to pass. However an early criticism has already come from the President of Germany’s IFO Institute, Hans-Werner Sinn who was quoted in Bloomberg overnight saying that the exercise lost credibility given the lack of a deflation stress scenario and that ‚with its assumptions, the ECB has set an inflationary scenario on average for the euro area so that not too many banks would fall under the red line?. Perhaps the ECB feel that they have the ability to avert deflation and therefore didn't stress this as aggressively as other variables. The implied adverse inflation rates put through the stress test looks to be 1.0% in 2014, 0.6% in 2015 and 0.3% in 2016 - not particularly stressful, especially in light of recent numbers. However notwithstanding this DB’s economists and equity strategists believe the latest stress test is more credible than previous exercises in the past and most reports over the weekend expect a positive performance today from European financials.

Markets have reacted with a slightly positive bias overnight with most Asian equity bourses in the green as we type. The Nikkei, the KOSPI, and the ASX 200 are +0.8%, +0.3% and +0.8%, respectively. The S&P 500 Futures are also marginally higher (+0.09%) whilst the EUR is now 1.2705 against the Dollar (up from 1.2671 last Friday). The Hang Seng is down though on concerns that the HK-Shanghai Stock Connect programme will be delayed. Credit spreads are also tighter in Asia although in reality some of that also reflects a solid US session on Friday. The Asia and Australia iTraxx indices are around 3bp and 2bp tighter, respectively. Treasuries are a little softer with the 10yr yield around nearly 2bps higher at 2.29%.

Moving our focus to emerging markets the latest from Brazil’s weekend elections is that Dilma Rousseff has been re-elected following victory over rival Aecio Neves by just an incredibly marrow margin of around 3ppt - supposedly the tightest margin in an election race since at least 1945. Given Friday's market action reflected a Neves turnaround (CDS: -10bp; BRL: +1.5%; Jan-21: -30bp), our EM strategists expect the market to move in the opposite direction today. With the re-election of President Rousseff, our EM colleagues also think that the market will immediately focus on to a possible announcement on the president’s new economic team, especially the finance minister appointment, although it is far from clear how long it would take her to make the announcement (the longer it takes, the more jittery markets will be). Indeed a Brazilian stock ETF plunged by nearly 8% overnight in Tokyo on what is supposedly its biggest decline in 3 years.

Previewing the FOMC meeting this week, we won't have a press conference this time round when the 2 day meeting ends on Wednesday. Joe Lavorgna expects little changes in the committee's assessment of the economy and as indicated at the September meeting the Fed will likely conclude its asset purchase program and will continue to reinvest maturing securities on its balance sheet. Importantly he expects the Fed to maintain the current forward guidance on the fed funds rate by keeping the 'considerable time' language in the meeting statement. Whilst we won't hear from Yellen at the FOMC press briefing, she will speak in Washington on Thursday on Diversity in the Economics Profession but as she will be speaking from her prepared remarks with no Q&A we can perhaps expect less fireworks from that. In terms of other Fed speakers, San Francisco Fed President Williams will be giving a keynote speech to the South African Reserve Bank's 5th biennial conference on Friday although the event seems to be closed to the media.

Besides the FOMC and looking at the other data/events for rest of the week we kick off today with September's pending home sales, the Dallas Fed  Manufacturing Survey and a round off of the Markit Services/Composite PMIs. Euro M3 data for September is also due today alongside the German IFO survey for October. On Tuesday durable goods orders will be the key release in the US along with the Richmond Fed survey and the Case-Shiller home price index. The durable goods headline is expected to get a boost from Boeing aircraft orders (+1.5% v -18.4% last month) although this is an extremely volatile series. Our US economists expect ex-transportation orders to improve as well. Wednesday's main event will be the FOMC statement although we also have the ECB's Bank Lending Survey (Q3) from the other side of the pond. Thursday's highlights will include the first reading of the US Q3 real GDP from the BEA, the usual weekly jobless claims, as well as CPI readings from both Spain and Germany. As for the US Q3 GDP, market consensus is currently looking for +3.0% growth for Q3, down from 4.6% in Q2. Data aside we also note that Bank of Spain's Governor Linde will speak in Madrid on Thursday as part of a debate on the role of central banks in the euro region. Friday will see the release of US personal income and spending stats but the focus will likely be on the latest Chicago PMI ahead of next week's ISM report. Friday's core PCE inflation data will also be interesting in light of the recent declines in breakeven inflation rates. Speaking of which we also  have the Euro area inflation report for October due on Friday.

If that wasn't enough company analysts will be busy covering the 160 S&P 500 earnings reports this week with European earnings also picking up with 85 Stoxx600 results due over the same period. Pfizer, Facebook, Exxon Mobile and Berkshire Hathaway are just some of the big US names this week whilst in Europe we do have the major financials such as UBS, BBVA, Barclays, BNP Paribas, and RBS lined up. Before we wrap up for today we'll quickly take a look at how US and European companies are faring in Q3 relative to street estimates. In the US we have seen a total of 188 companies reported so far and as it has been the case for many years quarterly earnings beat:miss ratios (79%:20%, 1% in line) are performing much better than sales beat:miss ratios (60%:40%). Both look decent relative to recent quarters though. The beat/miss ratios between earnings and sales are more balanced in Europe with about 62% and 61% of those reported so far coming above analysts’ EPS and revenue estimates, respectively. Our usual earnings tracker table updated in today's PDF.

Frontrunning: November 10

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0
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  • Obama urges China to be partner in ensuring world order (Reuters)
  • China Sees Itself at Center of New Asian Order (WSJ)
  • Xi Dangles $1.25 Trillion as China Counters U.S. Refocus (BBG)
  • China's Xi, Japan's Abe hold landmark meeting after awkward handshake (Reuters)
  • Revenue Softness Worries Stock Investors (WSJ)
  • Dendreon Files for Ch 11 Bankruptcy Reorganization (AP)
  • How BOJ’s Kuroda Won the Vote for Stimulus Expansion (WSJ)
  • Bonus Season Brings More Pain for Traders (WSJ)
  • Russia’s Military Encounters Risk Clash in Europe (BBG)
  • Mexican president condemns violent protests after attack on palace (Reuters)
  • China Factory-Gate Prices Decline for Record 32nd Month (BBG)
  • Qatar bid for Canary Wharf deemed 'too low' and is 'unanimously' rejected (Independent)
  • China’s $9 Trillion Untapped Market Spurs U.S. ETF Frenzy (BBG)
  • New rules proposed to put an end 'too big to fail' banks (Reuters)
  • Newest Toy for China’s Rich Is the SUV Lined in Sharkskin (BBG)
  • BlackBerry CEO sees fewer new devices, focus on profitability (Reuters)
  • Who’s Afraid of Fed Raising Rates? Not These Bond Buyers (BBG)
  • The master who teaches the Merrill herd to graze on wheatgrass and chia (Reuters)

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

* General Motors Co ordered a half-million replacement ignition switches to fix Chevrolet Cobalts and other small cars almost two months before it alerted federal safety regulators to the problem. (http://on.wsj.com/1xkn1xI)

* Wal-Mart Stores Inc said it was feeling the effect of China's austerity campaign that has taken a toll on sales of high-end handbags and expensive jewelry. (http://on.wsj.com/10JfwEo)

* E-commerce company Alibaba Group Holding Ltd for weeks has been offering rock-bottom prices on everything from coats to couches on its websites, in preparation for this Tuesday, which is China's biggest day of the year for online sales. (http://on.wsj.com/1tZyjaQ)

* China's vision for a reconfigured Asian order, centered on Beijing and underpinned by new infrastructure, forms the backdrop to a regional summit in Beijing this week. (http://on.wsj.com/1xcDI0k)

* Iran sent signals that it was open to overtures in a recent letter from U.S. President Barack Obama as talks kicked off, but tensions in both nations' capitals are complicating attempts to rein in Tehran's nuclear program as a diplomatic deadline approaches. (http://on.wsj.com/1yoguRZ)

* The Commodity Futures Trading Commission plans to start steering some of its cases against trading firms, brokers and others to administrative law judges appointed by federal agencies, instead of trials in federal court. (http://on.wsj.com/10Jhuol)

* China's central bank has said it had tapped Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Ltd as the clearing bank for Chinese currency transactions in the Canadian market. (http://on.wsj.com/1tZe5hx)

* Flight attendants from the former US Airways Inc and American Airlines Group Inc have narrowly rejected a joint labor contract covering the combined workforce of nearly 24,000 cabin-crew workers, giving the merged American Airlines an unexpected setback in its massive integration process. (http://on.wsj.com/10Jiysn)

* Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp has emerged as the strongest contender among the bidders in the second round of an auction for Citigroup Inc's Japan retail unit and its credit-card business. (http://on.wsj.com/1xA2yUA)

* Uber Technologies Inc, already one of the world's most highly valued ride-sharing startups, has informed investors it is preparing to raise more than $1 billion in funding. (http://on.wsj.com/1xkrQqL)

* Dollar Tree Inc has agreed not to close its planned purchase of Family Dollar Stores Inc for $8.5 billion before Dec. 30 to facilitate a Federal Trade Commission review, unless the FTC completes the review and ends a waiting period earlier. (http://on.wsj.com/1z9wY12)

* Investors and regulators are burrowing into the causes of the plunge in yields to try to understand whether electronic trading and new regulations are fueling sudden price swings in a market that acts as a key benchmark for interest rates, investments and U.S. home loans. (http://on.wsj.com/1tZFtvD)

 

FT

More than 5,000 investors have decided to join a class-action lawsuit against Lloyds Banking Group PLC, claiming that the ill-fated takeover of HBOS in 2008 made them lose 400 million pounds (635.44 million US dollar).

Swiss banker UBS AG is expected to strike a settlement over allegations of trader misbehaviour at its precious metals trading desk with at least one regulatory authority from the UK or US, people familiar with the matter said.

The UK is facing its worst driver shortage crisis in a year where e-commerce deliveries are expected to be a record 180 million for November and December. The Freight Transport Association, a body which represents the transport industry, said that 20,000 drivers have quit since the EU regulation, the Driver Certificate of Professional Competence, was introduced to standardise safety training procedures across the region. It requires that drivers undergo an additional 35 hours of training at a cost of about 500 pounds.

Despite a court ruling to suspend the exercise, more than 2 million Catalans participated in a symbolic voting on the political future of northern Spain's Catalonia region on Sunday. According to results released by the regional government, more than 80 percent of Catalans voted for an independent Catalonia.

 

NYT

* The year-end payouts could drop as much as 10 percent for the trading desks and hedge funds on Wall Street, according to a survey by the compensation consulting firm Johnson Associates. But investment bankers and employees at private equity firms involved in mergers and acquisitions will see their bonuses rise 10 to 15 percent, the survey found. (http://nyti.ms/1xcwJED)

* Lawrence Baldwin, the owner of the cyber investigations firm myNetWatchman is one of the well-known and valuable allies of financial institutions in their fight against online crime, but the nature of his work means he keeps a very low profile. Those familiar with his work say he is one of the consultants used by banks like JPMorgan Chase & Company, which is still dealing with the fallout from an intrusion that compromised some information for 76 million households and seven million small businesses. (http://nyti.ms/1pGrMSo)

* President Xi Jinping told a gathering of Asia-Pacific business executives not to worry about the Chinese economy, saying there were risks but not so many as to lose sleep over. Jinping described a lower growth rate as the "new normal" saying that annual growth above 7 percent still placed China among the world's top-performing countries in speed and size. (http://nyti.ms/1oAuLuJ)

* U.S. President Barack Obama is returning to Asia as Russia pulls closer to China, presenting a profound challenge to the United States and Europe. President of Russia Vladimir Putin has been strengthening ties with the East and will be in Beijing this coming week, as will President Obama. (http://nyti.ms/142vCLS)

* The British government said it would create a sovereign wealth fund to invest future proceeds from oil and gas extracted from shale deposits. The announcement is a step by the government of Prime Minister David Cameron to encourage development of a shale gas industry and to overcome public opposition to hydraulic fracturing. (http://nyti.ms/1udLwwt)

* Australia, much like the United States, is about to test how much employers can ask young workers to do without paying them before facing fines for breaching Australia's labor laws. A benefit test showing whether the intern or the employer gains the most from the work completed is one factor that determines whether a worker should be paid. (http://nyti.ms/1yodCnU)

* With heads of state and corporate chieftains in Beijing for a major economic summit this week, China's increasing economic nationalism is expected to be heavily debated. The squeeze on multinationals has coincided with President Xi Jinping's consolidation of power and his increasingly nationalistic and sometimes confrontational stance toward China's neighbors and the West. (http://nyti.ms/1qzdrSI)

* Though Ireland has been under international pressure to close loopholes that have drawn companies like Google Inc and Microsoft Corp, the country is still touting its low-tax appeal. (http://nyti.ms/11a27GT)

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

** Stephen Harper, Barack Obama and the leaders of 10 other countries bordering the Pacific Ocean have announced they are nearing a major agreement to liberalize trade between their economies - an agreement expected to eclipse the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in importance for Canada. (http://bit.ly/1xqPzql)

** Federal authorities have taken steps to impose 'preventive' conditions on two suspected extremists in Canada as security officials resort to an array of seldom-used legal methods to fight domestic terrorism. (http://bit.ly/10KJcRF)

** Photo-sharing service Instagram, owned by Facebook Inc , is bringing advertising to its Canadian users, starting on Monday. (http://bit.ly/1uRQP6u)

NATIONAL POST

** Prime Minister Stephen Harper met current China President Xi Jinping on Sunday for the first time in private, and raised "every single" issue in the areas of "consular issues, human rights, governance, the rights of minorities", including the case of Kevin and Julia Garratt, a Canadian couple imprisoned in China since August without charge on suspicion of espionage. (http://bit.ly/1tSMz3t)

** Last week's federal government announcement contained various measures that will put more money into the hands of families with kids under the age of 18. While much of the attention and discussion has focused on the "income splitting" proposal, there were a few other measures of some significance, such as family tax cut credit, enhanced universal child care benefit and child care expenses. (http://bit.ly/1qzRp2b)

** One person is dead and at least eight injured following a collision between a public transit bus and a car in west-end Toronto. (http://bit.ly/1u0CNhi)

 

Hong Kong

SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST

-- The mainland is struggling with a horrid pollution problem but the crisis may provide new opportunities in green bonds issued in yuan, according to Credit Agricole, the world's largest green bond arranger. (bit.ly/1xpOYoK)

-- The "Singles Day" promotions of Alibaba Group Holding's Taobao and other e-commerce giants have boosted express parcel volumes this month, but also opened a loophole for tax avoidance that presents a challenge to customs authorities in the region. (bit.ly/1xzI6mY)

-- Landlords in the prime districts of Central and Admiralty are being urged by Italian brands to offer short-term rent cuts as foot traffic has been hit by the prolonged Occupy Central protests, according to Fabio De Rosa, the president of the Italian Chamber of Commerce. (bit.ly/1ynOSw2)

THE STANDARD

-- Chinese President Xi Jinping's apparent support for Hong Kong Chief Executive Leung Chun-ying puts the next move in the political impasse firmly in the court of students, said a political analyst. City University's James Sung Lap-kung said that by praising the Hong Kong government's response to Occupy Central, Xi had sent a clear message to Leung's opponents. (bit.ly/1tZ01V3)

-- Many foreign investors are worried about the unrest caused by Occupy Central, said Trade Development Council Chairman Jack So Chak-kwong, warning it may have a significant impact on the economy if it continues. So said there were no substantial indications of withdrawal of foreign investment since Occupy Central began. (bit.ly/1xpVoUP)

-- Hong Kong has asked Beijing for expanded quotas to invest in China, receiving a "positive response," Financial Secretary John Tsang Chun-wah said, as all 270 billion yuan ($44.10 billion) had basically been allotted to Hong Kong's 79 institutional investors as of Sept. 30. (bit.ly/1EtF4ov)

HONG KONG ECONOMIC TIMES

-- Lai Sun Garment International and Lai Sun Development said they would buy an office property in the financial district of the City of London for HK$1.32 billion

 

Britain

The Times

UBER FACES DRIVER MUTINY OVER PAY

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

A group of drivers, styled the Uber Drivers Network, held protests two weeks ago against Uber in several cities, including London, and briefly went on strike. Uber is now guaranteeing earnings of 3,500 pounds (5,559.75 US dollar) per month to those who work about 50 hours a week and accept more than 85 percent of jobs, which equates to 42,000 pounds a year. The earnings are before any petrol and other car-related costs the drivers incur.

STORES CUT PETROL PRICES AFTER TREASURY WARNING

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

Britain's biggest petrol retailers cut prices on Sunday after the government warned that they would be monitored to ensure that benefits of falling oil prices were passed on to motorists.

The Guardian

OSBORNE CRITICISED FOR CLAIMS OVER EU 1.7 BLN POUND BILL

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

UK Chancellor George Osborne's claim that he had halved the 1.7 billion pound (2.70 billion US dollar) bill that Britain owed the EU was challenged by the European Commission saying that the UK has long enjoyed a system of budgetary rebates, so a discount on the controversial surcharge was always going to be applied.

TESCO HOPES SPARKLY TV AD WILL LIGHT UP ITS FESTIVE FORTUNES

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

UK's biggest retailer Tesco has pinned high hopes on its Christmas advert, which debuts on the finale of Downtown Abbey on ITV, aiming to attract holiday shoppers. Tesco will join other UK companies in spending as much as 1.5 bln pounds on advertising campaigns, which will see social media targeted heavily as well as TV and print.

The Telegraph

TESCO LOSES TOP SPOT IN ENTERTAINMENT SALES TO AMAZON

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

According to retail data provider Kantar Worldpanel, Tesco's share of the multibillion-pound entertainment market plunged from 20.6 pct between June and Sept 2013 to 15.1 pct in the same period this year. In a further setback, Tesco surrendered the number one spot to U.S. retail juggernaut Amazon, which saw its share leap from 17.6 pct to 22.5 pct year-on-year, as customers continue to buy more items online.

SAINSBURY'S TO CUT STORES AND DIVIDEND

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

J Sainsbury is to scrap a giant programme of store openings and slash its dividend, as part of a dramatic overhaul drawn up to fight falling sales. The supermarket giant will this week unveil the results of a strategic review, which is expected to reveal that Sainsbury's is reining in costs in an effort to save cash and shore up its balance sheet.

Sky News

ARCULUS TO CHAIR LOBBYING GROUP ENERGY UK

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

Sir David Arculus may replace Lord Spicer as the chairman of energy sector's main lobbying group Energy UK, just months before a general election campaign in which the industry will come under fire from across the political spectrum. His appointment is understood to have been approved at a board meeting of the industry body last Thursday, and could be announced as soon as this week.

ROYAL MAIL IN STAND-OFF OVER MPS' INQUIRY

(http://bit.ly/1xcXdU5)

Royal Mail has been secretly resisting pressure from MPs for it to appear alongside rival postal operators as part of a new probe into competition in the industry. Royal Mail made representations to the Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS) Select Committee requesting that it should not be forced to give evidence during the same session as Whistl and UK Mail. (http://bit.ly/1xcXdU5)

The Independent

QATAR BID FOR CANARY WHARF REJECTED

(http://ind.pn/1zdsE0W)

Songbird Estates, the owners of Canary Wharf, have "unanimously" rejected a takeover bid from Qatar, saying it undervalues the company. Qatar already owns a 28.6 percent stake in Songbird but the joint venture's opening 295p a share pitch was immediately dismissed by the Songbird board and the City.

 

Fly On The Wall Premarket Buzz

ECONOMIC REPORTS

No major domestic economic reports scheduled for today.

ANALYST RESEARCH

Upgrades

ASML (ASML) upgraded to Positive from Neutral at Susquehanna
AuRico Gold (AUQ) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Canaccord
BioMarin (BMRN) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Goldman
Boulder Brands (BDBD) upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at Piper Jaffray
Nationstar (NSM) upgraded to Market Perform from Underperform at Keefe Bruyette
Natural Gas Services (NGS) upgraded to Buy from Accumulate at Global Hunter
Newfield Exploration (NFX) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Deutsche Bank
PulteGroup (PHM) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at BofA/Merrill
Royal Dutch Shell (RDS.A) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at Cowen
Spirit AeroSystems (SPR) upgraded to Outperform from Sector Perform at RBC Capital
Target (TGT) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Stifel

Downgrades

Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Janney Capital
Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF) downgraded to Perform from Outperform at Oppenheimer
American Eagle (AEO) downgraded to Equal Weight from Overweight at Barclays
American Eagle (AEO) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at B. Riley
BP (BP) downgraded to Neutral from Overweight at JPMorgan
Callon Petroleum (CPE) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at SunTrust
EP Energy (EPE) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Deutsche Bank
Eaton Vance (EV) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Sterne Agee
General Mills (GIS) downgraded to Sector Perform from Outperform at RBC Capital
Genworth (GNW) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at Keefe Bruyette
Grainger (GWW) downgraded to Sell from Hold at Deutsche Bank
Ocean Rig UDW (ORIG) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Guggenheim
Performant Financial (PFMT) downgraded to Equal Weight from Overweight at Morgan Stanley
Petrobras (PBR) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at Cowen
Rex Energy (REXX) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at BMO Capital
Salix (SLXP) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Mizuho
Siemens (SIEGY) downgraded to Neutral from Overweight at JPMorgan
Solazyme (SZYM) downgraded to Equal Weight from Overweight at Morgan Stanley
ViaSat (VSAT) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Needham
Walter Investment (WAC) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Sterne Agee
WesBanco (WSBC) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at Keefe Bruyette
Whiting USA Trust II (WHZ) downgraded to Underperform at Raymond James
Wipro (WIT) downgraded to Sell from Buy at UBS
Yanzhou Coal (YZC) downgraded to Sell from Hold at Deutsche Bank

Initiations

Atara Biotherapeutics (ATRA) initiated with a Buy at Citigroup
Atara Biotherapeutics (ATRA) initiated with a Buy at Jefferies
Atara Biotherapeutics (ATRA) initiated with a Neutral at Goldman
CoStar Group (CSGP) initiated with an Overweight at JPMorgan
Dominion Midstream (DM) initiated with a Buy at Citigroup
Dominion Midstream (DM) initiated with a Buy at UBS
Dominion Midstream (DM) initiated with a Neutral at Goldman
Dominion Midstream (DM) initiated with an Overweight at Barclays
Dominion Midstream (DM) initiated with an Overweight at JPMorgan
Dominion (D) resumed with an Overweight at Barclays
Forward Pharma (FWP) initiated with a Buy at Jefferies
Forward Pharma (FWP) initiated with an Outperform at JMP Securities
Forward Pharma (FWP) initiated with an Outperform at JMP Securities
Great Western (GWB) initiated with an Outperform at Keefe Bruyette
Great Western (GWB) initiated with an Outperform at Macquarie
Great Western (GWB) initiated with an Outperform at RBC Capital
Inogen (ingn) initiated with a Strong Buy at Needham
Myriad Genetics (MYGN) initiated with an Underweight at Morgan Stanley
NanoString (NSTG) initiated with an Overweight at Morgan Stanley
PolyOne (POL) initiated with a Neutral at RW Baird
Veracyte (VCYT) initiated with an Equal Weight at Morgan Stanley

COMPANY NEWS

Dendreon (DNDN) filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
Campus Crest (CCG) announced resignation of CEO Ted Rolling and CFO Donald Bobbitt, Jr. The board of the company appointed Richard S. Kahlbaugh, the company’s lead independent director, as executive chairman and interim CEO, and named Scott R. Rochon, the company’s Chief Accounting Officer, as acting CFO.
AT&T (T) said it would acquire lusacell for $2.5B and reaffirmed FY14 capex guidance in $21B range

EARNINGS

Companies that beat consensus earnings expectations last night and today include:

EV Energy (EVEP), Motorcar Parts (MPAA), Cheetah Mobile (CMCM), ImmunoCellular (IMUC), Inovio (INO), Nordic American Tankers (NAT), Transocean (RIG), Kronos Worldwide (KRO)

Companies that missed consensus earnings expectations include:

Hydrogenics (HYGS), Sterling Construction (STRL), Hawaiian Telcom (HCOM), Magic Software (MGIC), GAMCO Investors (GBL), Conversant (CNVR), Ignyta (RXDX)

Companies that matched consensus earnings expectations include:
Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A), CorEnergy (CORR)

NEWSPAPERS/WEBSITES

GM (GM) ordered new switches months before recall, WSJ reports (DLPH)
RadioShack (RSH) said to add DW Investment as white knight lender, Bloomberg reports
GT Advanced (GTAT) accuses Apple (AAPL) of 'bait-and-switch' in unsealed documents, WSJ says
UBS (UBS) to settle misconduct allegations at precious metals trading unit, FT reports
Petrobras (PBR) being probed by U.S. authorities, FT says
BlackBerry (BBRY) plans few devices as it focuses on profitability, Reuters reports
BofA (BAC) looks for additional SEC sanctions to be waved, Bloomberg reports
J.C. Penney (JCP) could drop 35%, Barron's says
Norfolk Southern (NSC) shares could climb 12%, Barron's says
Kellogg (K) shares could underperform for a while, Barron's says

SYNDICATE

DexCom (DXCM) files to sell 89,300 shares for holders
Endurance (EIGI) files to sell 11.95M shares of common stock for holders
General Electric (GE) files to sell 75M shares of common stock
Inphi (IPHI) files to sell 5.28M shares of common stock for holders
Moelis (MC) files to 1.5M shares, 2.5M shares for shareholders
Pernix Therapeutics (PTX) files to sell 17.61M shares for holders
Sagent Pharmaceuticals (SGNT) files to sell 12.57M shares for holders
TransEnterix (TRXC) files to sell 19.52M shares for holders

Frontrunning: November 14

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  • "The hate us for our..." Americans’ Cellphones Targeted in Secret U.S. Spy Program (WSJ)
  • Ukraine and Russia take center stage as leaders gather for G20 (Reuters)
  • Moscow and Kiev trade accusations; U.S. warns Russia against escalation (Reuters)
  • Heartland Central Banker Calls Asset Bubbles Top Concern (BBG)
  • U.S. Said to Give Banks December Deadline in FX Probe (BBG)
  • Series of Failures Enabled White House Breach, Report Finds (WSJ)
  • Yen plumbs seven-year trough on likely Japan sales tax delay (Reuters)
  • JPMorgan Chase Bankers Said to Lead Moscow Departure (BBG)
  • How Health Law’s Medicaid Enrollees Strain the System (WSJ)
  • John Major calls UKIP the 'anti-everything' party (Reuters)
  • Swiss Demand for Currency Automation Seen Reshaping Trading (BBG)
  • Islamic State leader urges attacks in Saudi Arabia: speech (Reuters)
  • ECB's Noyer - 'no problem' buying government bonds if needed (Reuters)
  • Greece Exits Recession After Crisis That Put Euro at Risk (BBG)

 

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

* The Justice Department is scooping up data from thousands of mobile phones through fake communications towers deployed on airplanes, a high-tech hunt for criminal suspects that is snagging a large number of innocent Americans. (http://on.wsj.com/1tNYyf7)

* President Obama could announce executive actions overhauling the immigration system as early as next week, though officials keep debating the best timing for a move that the GOP protests. (http://on.wsj.com/11mWbu5)

* A New Mexico county shows how Medicaid's growth under the Affordable Care Act has created a paradox: Many low-income Americans have gained coverage, but their numbers are straining some healthcare systems. (http://on.wsj.com/114MMXi)

* China's CGN Power Co Ltd plans to launch a US$3 billion initial public offering next week in Hong Kong, where it would be among the first companies to gauge investor appetite after the start of a stock-trading link between Shanghai and Hong Kong. (http://on.wsj.com/1ECclvM)

* Halliburton Co is in talks to buy Baker Hughes Inc , a deal that would help the big oil-field services companies contend with falling oil prices. (http://on.wsj.com/1zRO9HD)

* FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler is getting boxed in as the debate continues over net neutrality - the idea that all Internet traffic should be treated the same. (http://on.wsj.com/1v7HCHP)

* Lockheed Martin Corp, the world's largest defense company with some $45.4 billion in revenue, is pursuing new markets as far-flung as aquaculture equipment and compact fusion reactors amid declining spending on defense equipment. (http://on.wsj.com/14krxTb)

* An intruder was able to get over the White House fence and into the mansion in September because of a series of failures, including unclear radio transmissions and bushes that did not provide the barrier the Secret Service thought they would, a report has found. (http://on.wsj.com/1uiuKN6)

* Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway Inc agreed to buy Duracell, taking advantage of its long-standing ties with the battery maker's owner in a deal that reduces taxes for both sides. (http://on.wsj.com/1yCESPQ)

* Moody's Corp and Kroll are sparring over an unsolicited credit rating Moody's issued on the debt of National Penn Bancshares. Kroll, which was hired by the bank to rate the debt, contends Moody's lowballed its rating to scare other banks into hiring it. (http://on.wsj.com/1xD8iil)

* Activist investors are increasingly seeking to advance their agendas at companies by pushing for a role in selecting new management. (http://on.wsj.com/1u858AZ)

* State securities regulators are drawing up plans to allow information on problem stockbroker firms to be shared more effectively among them. (http://on.wsj.com/1wZpYow)

* Amazon.com Inc reached a new multi-year publishing contract with Hachette Book Group Inc covering print and digital books, bringing to an end a bitter dispute that showed how the online retailer's growing clout is roiling the book industry. (http://on.wsj.com/1vaCSRg)

* Ocwen Financial Corp will not buy the rights to service $39 billion in mortgages for Wells Fargo & Co, the companies said, officially terminating a deal that New York's financial regulator had put on hold. (http://on.wsj.com/1pXxgbH)

* Honda Motor Co Ltd said it identified the first case outside the United States of a death linked to faulty air bags made by Takata Corp, a development that broadens the scope of a safety alarm that is already roiling North America. (http://on.wsj.com/1Bl0GFk)

* Twitter Inc's debt was rated as junk by Standard & Poor's Ratings Services, a sobering grade that comes a day after executives of the social media service tried to reassure skeptics on Wall Street of its long-term growth plan. (http://on.wsj.com/1xmIDMp)

* Since Nov. 4, collectors have flocked to the world's chief auction houses in New York to buy more than $2 billion of art, a historic high in which 23 works sold for more than $20 million apiece. (http://on.wsj.com/1xmIDMp)

* Google Inc has teamed up with mapping company SkyTruth and marine-advocacy group Oceana to create a new tool aimed at reining in illegal fishing world-wide. (http://on.wsj.com/1zSGxEP)

* BlackBerry Ltd and Samsung Electronics Co Ltd agreed to sell each other's mobile-security technology, a partnership that could help them win more enterprise customers. (http://on.wsj.com/1znQLKj)

* Oracle Corp and SAP SE have agreed to settle a long-running legal battle over software copyrights, the companies said. SAP will pay Oracle $359 million to settle the case. (http://on.wsj.com/1tOVxeJ)

* The social news site Reddit said that Chief Executive Yishan Wong had abruptly resigned, apparently over a dispute involving office space and the company's chief operating officer, Ellen Pao, will act as interim CEO. (http://on.wsj.com/1xmKJvA)

 

FT

According to a European Commission investigative report, due to be published on Friday, the Netherlands illegally understated coffee group Starbucks' taxable income. The U.S.-based company is already in the middle of a controversy over tax deals in Ireland.

In view of falling oil prices, Premier Oil has decided to scale back its plans to explore the disputed waters of the Falkland Islands. The FTSE 250 group said it will reduce its estimated $2 billion capital expenditure requirement as it will develop fewer wells in the northern part of the disputed islands.

Sir Richard Branson sold a 15 percent stake in Virgin Money , a company he owns partly, as he earned at least 70 million pounds (109.84 million US dollar) from the bank's flotation on the London Stock Market. If the over-allotment option is triggered and new shares are released, Branson as well as Wilbur Ross, a billionaire co-owner of the bank, are poised to reap as much as 85 million pounds.

Paintings by Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein and Ed Ruscha helped Christie's create a world auction record of $852.9 mln at a contemporary and postwar evening in New York.

 

NYT

* The steepening drop in gasoline prices in recent weeks, spurred by soaring domestic energy production and Saudi discounts for crude oil at a time of faltering global demand is set to provide the United States economy with a multibillion-dollar boost through the holiday season and beyond. (http://nyti.ms/1wt0fk6)

* President Obama will ignore angry protests from Republicans and announce as soon as next week a broad overhaul of the nation's immigration enforcement system that will protect up to five million unauthorized immigrants from the threat of deportation and provide many of them with work permits, officials said. (http://nyti.ms/114NjZg)

* Daniel Loeb, the activist hedge fund manager, unveiled a new website that takes aim at Dow Chemical Co after months of trying to persuade it to take further steps to increase shareholder value. Loeb's firm, Third Point, lists on the website several instances of what it called "broken promises" by Dow and its chief executive, Andrew Liveris. (http://nyti.ms/1v8dRqm)

* India and the United States reached an agreement over food stockpiles, removing a major obstacle to a global trade deal that has been stalled for months. The pact, which precedes a meeting this weekend of the Group of 20 major economies, allows India to continue its extensive food subsidy program. (http://nyti.ms/1tOGAtd)

* Hachette won an important victory in its battle with Amazon.Com Inc to set its own prices for e-books, which it sees as critical to its survival. Amazon's supporters publicly questioned the need for Hachette, the fourth largest publisher, to exist in an era when authors can publish themselves digitally. (http://nyti.ms/1EIr4XQ)

* Berkshire Hathaway Inc, the conglomerate run by Warren Buffett, will acquire Duracell from Procter & Gamble using a transaction aimed at lowering the tax bill. By agreeing to swap his firm's holdings in Procter & Gamble, worth about $4.7 billion in exchange for Duracell, Buffett will gain one of the best-known battery companies in the world. (http://nyti.ms/1GUSThN)

* A panel of Goldman Sachs Group Inc employees spent a night at the Columbia University faculty club trying to convince a packed room of potential recruits that Wall Street, not Silicon Valley, was the place to be for computer scientists. Their argument to the technologically inclined students was that Wall Street was where they could find far more challenging jobs working on some of the world's most difficult technical problems. (http://nyti.ms/1qGPitq)

* Virgin America Inc raised about $305.9 million in its initial public offering, at the offering's price of $23 a share, as the low-cost airline prepares for a new life as a publicly traded company. The stock sale values the airline at about $972.9 million. (http://nyti.ms/1xUdmNA)

* Halliburton Co is in talks to buy Baker Hughes Inc , the deal would unite two of the biggest oil field services providers in what would be one of the largest energy deals in years, Baker Hughes confirmed. (http://nyti.ms/1sLgOpk)

* Comcast Corp's acquisition of Time Warner Cable Inc has already drawn many heated detractors to urge the Federal Communications Commission to reject the deal. It has been hit yet again by United States President Barack Obama's endorsement of net neutrality. (http://nyti.ms/1GULCyA)

* The Dubai port operator DP World agreed to acquire Economic Zones World, a developer and operator of industrial parks, giving it access to the Jebel Ali Free Zone for $2.6 billion in cash, including debt. (http://nyti.ms/1sLqX5j)

* Dutch financial services company ING Groep NV said that it planned to further reduce its stake in Voya Financial, its former United States business, through a sale of shares to the public. ING said that it planned to sell about 34.5 million shares, reducing its stake in Voya to about 19 percent from the current 32.5 percent. (http://nyti.ms/1ww4F9T)

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

** Senior Canadian government officials say Canada will under no circumstances be purchasing F-35s on an expedited basis and that no decision has been made on which new warplane to buy. In the face of a U.S. military report that Ottawa has made a secret decision to buy U.S. F-35 stealth fighters, officials say the lack of firm details on cost and capabilities has not instilled confidence. (http://bit.ly/11nennk)

** Prime Minister Stephen Harper welcomed a deal between China and the United States to cut greenhouse gas emissions but gave no indication he would commit to bigger reductions on behalf of Canada. (http://bit.ly/1xnoyph)

** The federal government plans to punish mining and energy companies that run afoul of its new corporate social responsibility policy by withdrawing support they receive from agencies such as Export Development Canada and embassies abroad. (http://bit.ly/1zTutU3)

NATIONAL POST

** The Bank of Canada is raising the alarm over the risks of electronic money, which is growing in popularity but not yet highly regulated and provides "no user protection." (http://bit.ly/1wZuX8t)

** Toronto-Dominion Bank will be compensating thousands of clients to the tune of more than C$13.5 million ($11.9 million) for a series of instances in which they were charged excess fees on investments. On Thursday, TD settled the matter that affected at least 10,000 accounts of clients and former clients through a rare "no contest" settlement with regulators. (http://bit.ly/1GVtSDh)

** Gunman Michael Zehaf-Bibeau, who was shot dead on Parliament Hill Oct. 22 after killing a soldier, had toured the Centre Block as an ordinary member of the public in the days before his destructive rampage, the Ottawa Citizen has learned. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police's working theory of his actions is that Zehaf-Bibeau planned to behead a Canadian politician once he made it onto the Hill after killing Corporal Nathan Cirillo at the National War Memorial. (http://bit.ly/1vbCaTN)

 

China

CHINA SECURITIES JOURNAL

- Chinese brokerages need to submit to the regulator by year-end their plans to replenish capital over the next three-years, as part of the regulator's broader efforts to improve the fund management mechanism and widen capital sources.

SHANGHAI DAILY

- Shanghai's housing authority unveiled on Thursday a revised criteria for "normal" homes, to help buyers qualify for preferental policies and boost sales of residential property. The city government will raise the price threshold to allow more homebuyers, particularly end-users, to be eligible for preferential tax policies.

CHINA DAILY

- China will soon put its first domestically developed electric-powered aircraft into mass production, and designers expect a huge market at home and abroad. The paper said the two-seater, light-duty plane will run on electric motors, with electricity coming from fuel cells, solar cells, ultracapacitors, power beaming or batteries.

SECURITIES TIMES

- Shanghai Metersbonwe Fashion & Accessories has announced that it will invest 52.5 million yuan ($8.57 million) for a 15 percent stake in a private bank that will be jointly set up with other investors. It did not give details on the bank or who the other investors are.

PEOPLE'S DAILY

- China's economy is undergoing structural adjustment and the recent slowdown in its growth momentum is pragmatic and necessary to ensure efficiency.

 

Britain

The Times

* British American Tobacco fined for oversupplying cigarettes to Belgium

British American Tobacco Plc has been fined by HM Revenue & Customs for oversupplying cigarettes into Belgium which can be smuggled back into the UK. The fine from the taxman follows pressure from politicians who have complained HMRC has been too soft on tobacco companies. (http://thetim.es/1wYGIMx)

* Eurostar upgrade on fast track to reach Amsterdam and Germany

Eurostar has unveiled its biggest upgrade in 20 years of running high-speed trains under the Channel between London and Paris with the presentation at St Pancras International of its e320 German-built trains. (http://thetim.es/1znp30o)

The Guardian

* Lloyds to cut 1,250 jobs in insurance

Lloyds Banking Group is shedding 1,250 jobs as it cuts costs and changes the way it sells insurance products in its branches. The cutbacks - described as devastating news by union officials - are the latest to take place at the 24 percent taxpayer-owned bank. (http://bit.ly/1qFkVUi)

* Standard Chartered boss hails 'constructive' investor talks

The boss of Standard Chartered Plc ended three days of crucial talks with investors on Thursday, insisting the discussions had been "constructive" as he battles to keep his job at the emerging markets bank. (http://bit.ly/1xxlHri)

The Telegraph

* BT plans to scrap 2.4 bln pounds Wholesale division

BT is planning to scrap its Wholesale unit and fold the multi-billion-pound business into Openreach, the monopoly division that controls Britain's national telecoms infrastructure, in a move that will concern rivals who already fear its power. (http://bit.ly/1xm5o38)

* Asda hits out at price gimmicks by 'desperate' rivals

Asda, the British arm of U.S. supermarket group Wal-Mart Stores Inc has launched a ferocious attack on its supermarket rivals, accusing them of being "desperate" and misleading customers with price gimmicks. (http://bit.ly/1EAUZzi)

Sky News

* Discounter B&M in talks over Homebase stores

The fast-growing discount chain B&M is in talks over a multimillion pound bid to take on dozens of Homebase DIY stores in a move that would underline the changing landscape of UK retailing. (http://bit.ly/1sIJr7z)

* Buffett spends $3 bln on Duracell purchase

Berkshire Hathaway Inc investment vehicle is to pay $3 billion to Procter & Gamble Co for Duracell battery business. The consumer goods firm, which took control of Duracell when it bought Gillette in 2005, had previously announced its intention to slim down. (http://bit.ly/1yCZA24)

The Independent

* Hasbro 'in talks' to buy Hollywood studio DreamWorks Animation

Toymaker Hasbro Inc is in talks to buy Hollywood studio DreamWorks Animation as chief executive Brian Goldner moves to build up an entertainment arm. (http://ind.pn/1xTxzTT).

* 'Shell was told to replace pipeline six years before Nigeria oil spills'

Royal Dutch Shell Plc failed to act on its own internal advice to replace a 30-year-old pipeline years before it wreaked havoc on the Niger Delta by rupturing and spilling thousands of barrels of oil into the area, according to court documents. (http://ind.pn/1oSZ5km)

 

 

Fly On The Wall Pre-Market Buzz

ECONOMIC REPORTS

Domestic economic reports scheduled for today include:
Retail sales for October at 8:30--consensus up 0.2%
Consumer sentiment index for November at 9:55--consensus 87.5
Business inventories for September at 10:00--consensus up 0.3%

ANALYST RESEARCH

Upgrades

CEVA (CEVA) upgraded to Outperform from Perform at Oppenheimer
Empire State Realty (ESRT) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Stifel
Fly Leasing (FLY) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at BofA/Merrill
Global Partners (GLP) upgraded to Outperform from Sector Perform at RBC Capital
Harley-Davidson (HOG) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Goldman
IAMGOLD (IAG) upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at HSBC
NetEase.com (NTES) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at UBS
NetEase.com (NTES) upgraded to Overweight from Underweight at HSBC
Raytheon (RTN) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at Cowen
Rofin-Sinar (RSTI) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Longbow
Salix (SLXP) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at UBS
Teekay Tankers (TNK) upgraded to Neutral from Underweight at JPMorgan

Downgrades

Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF) downgraded to Neutral from Outperform at Credit Suisse
AmeriGas (APU) downgraded to Underperform from Neutral at Credit Suisse
Hersha Hospitality (HT) downgraded to Hold from Buy at MLV & Co.
Immune Design (IMDZ) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Jefferies
Meritor (MTOR) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Goldman
Nike (NKE) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Sterne Agee
Ross Stores (ROST) downgraded to Sell from Hold at Canaccord
Suburban Propane (SPH) downgraded to Underperform from Neutral at Credit Suisse
TJX (TJX) downgraded to Sell from Hold at Canaccord
Total System (TSS) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at JMP Securities
Universal Display (OLED) downgraded to Perform from Outperform at Oppenheimer
Urban Outfitters (URBN) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Mizuho
Wal-Mart (WMT) downgraded to Underperform from Market Perform at BMO Capital
lululemon (LULU) downgraded to Underperform from Neutral at Sterne Agee

Initiations

AbbVie (ABBV) initiated with a Buy at Deutsche Bank
Advance Auto Parts (AAP) initiated with a Buy at Sterne Agee
AutoZone (AZO) initiated with an Underperform at Sterne Agee
Carter's (CRI) initiated with a Buy at Sterne Agee
Children's Place (PLCE) initiated with a Neutral at Sterne Agee
Container Store (TCS) initiated with a Fair Value at CRT Capital
DHT Holdings (DHT) initiated with a Buy at UBS
Diana Shipping (DSX) initiated with a Neutral at UBS
Genuine Parts (GPC) initiated with a Neutral at Sterne Agee
National Oilwell (NOV) initiated with a Neutral at UBS
Navios Acquisition (NNA) initiated with a Buy at UBS
O'Reilly Automotive (ORLY) initiated with a Neutral at Sterne Agee
Scorpio Bulkers (SALT) initiated with a Neutral at UBS
Scorpio Tankers (STNG) initiated with a Buy at UBS
Star Bulk Carriers (SBLK) initiated with a Neutral at UBS
Teekay Tankers (TNK) initiated with a Buy at UBS
TriplePoint Venture (TPVG) initiated with a Buy at UBS
Tsakos Energy (TNP) initiated with a Buy at UBS
USD Partners (USDP) initiated with an Outperform at Credit Suisse

COMPANY NEWS

Baker Hughes (BHI) confirmed preliminary discussions with Halliburton (HAL)
Nestle (NSRGY) to explore strategic options for development of Davigel
Google (GOOG) to retire Google Wallet for digital goods API on March 2, 2015
Geron (GERN) announced a global strategic collaboration with Janssen Biotech (JNJ)
AmerisourceBergen (ABC) was awarded an estimated $4.06B firm-fixed-price contract for prime vendor pharmaceutical and pharmaceutical-related products and support for worldwide distribution
Puma Biotechnology (PBYI) announced positive top line results from PB272 Phase II Trial

EARNINGS

Companies that beat consensus earnings expectations last night and today include:
Bitauto (BITA), Hollysys Automation (HOLI), Bona Film (BONA), Agile Therapeutics (AGRX), StarTek (SRT), SINA (SINA), Penford (PENX), Matthews (MATW), Ocera Therapeutics (OCRX), TubeMogul (tube), Cerulean (CERU), Flexion (FLXN), SMART Technologies (SMT), Kingstone Companies (KINS), Pfenex (PFNX), Vital Therapies (VTL), Evoke Pharma (EVOK), Cinedigm (CIDM), ZBB Energy (ZBB), Papa Murphy's (FRSH), Onconova (ONTX), Nordstrom (JWN), Reed's (REED), RE/MAX Holdings (RMAX)

Companies that missed consensus earnings expectations include:
B2Gold (BTG), Pan American Silver (PAAS), Intrexon (XON), Catalyst Pharmaceutical (CPRX), Trinseo S.A. (TSE), StoneCastle (BANX), Argos Therapeutics (ARGS), CafePress (PRSS), Catalent (CTLT), Montage Technology (MONT), Veracyte (VCYT), ESCO Technologies (ESE), Mandalay Digital (MNDL), WidePoint (WYY), Century Communities (CCS), Charles & Colvard (CTHR), Cesca Therapeutics (KOOL)

Companies that matched consensus earnings expectations include:
Medley Management (MDLY), U.S. Geothermal (htm), Weibo (WB), Celator Pharmaceuticals (CPXX), Applied Materials (AMAT)

NEWSPAPERS/WEBSITES

EU says Starbucks (SBUX) tax deal in Netherlands may be illegal state aid, WSJ reports
FTC asking Apple (AAPL) about health data protection, Reuters reports
Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) to exit U.S. mortgage business, Reuters reports
SAP (SAP) to pay Oracle (ORCL) $359M to settle legal battle, WSJ reports
Alibaba (BABA) plans to raise up to $8B in bond offering, Bloomberg reports
BP (BP) loses bid for new trial regarding negligence in oil spill, Bloomberg says

SYNDICATE

Cheniere Energy Partners (CQH) files to sell 10.1M common shares
Covenant Transportation (CVTI) files to sell 2.2M shares of Class A common stock
EnLink Midstream (ENLK) files to sell 10.5M units representing limited partners
FibroGen (FGEN) 8.1M share IPO priced at $18.00
Landmarket Infrastructure (LMRK) 2.65M share IPO priced at $19.00
NeuroDerm (NDRM) 4.5M share IPO priced at $10.00
Premier (PINC) 3.7M share Secondary priced at $32.35
TRI Pointe Homes (TPH) files automatic common stock shelf for holders
Tiptree Financial (TIPT) files to sell 21.2M shares for holders
Virgin America (VA) 13.337M share IPO priced at $23.00
Zoe's Kitchen (ZOES) 3.8M share Secondary priced at $32.00

Another Hedge Fund Legend Calls It Quits: Phil Falcone Leaves Harbinger Group, Gets $20.5 Million Severance

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Another day, another (former) hedge fund legend calls it quits, this time embattled one-time hedge fund legend (until that whole Securities Fraud charge appeared) Phil Falcone, whose Harbinger hedge fund was a decade ago the dream venue for most hedge fund traders and analysts, and who as of December 1, will no longer be CEO and Chairman of the Harbinger Group. But don't cry for Falcone: he will depart with a $20.5 Million lump sum payment. His replacement: the man who has already been intimately involved with Harbinger - Leucadia's Joe Steinberg, who on numerous previous occasions has provided critical funding to the embattled conglomerate.

From the release:

Harbinger Group Inc. today announced that Philip Falcone, HGI's Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the board of directors (the "Board") will, effective December 1, 2014, resign from his positions with the Company. Joseph S. Steinberg, an independent member of the Board, will become Chairman of the BoardHGI will name a Chief Executive Officer upon the completion of a search process.

 

Mr. Steinberg, the incoming Board Chairman, commented that, "During Mr. Falcone's tenure as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, the Company experienced significant growth and success, beginning as a company with approximately $140 million market capitalization in 2009 rising to today's market capitalization of approximately $2.6 billion. We thank Phil for his many years of hard work and leading HGI." 

 

Simultaneously with Mr. Falcone's resignation, Mr. Keith Hladek, an HGI director, will also resign from the Board.  Mr. Falcone and Mr. Hladek are expected to dedicate their efforts to HC2 Holdings, Inc. and Harbinger Capital Partners, LLC. In connection with his resignation, the Company will pay Mr. Falcone a lump sum payment consisting of $20,500,000 one-time payment, $16,500,000 in respect of Mr. Falcone's previously earned and awarded annual bonus for fiscal year 2014 and $3,300,000 as a pro-rata bonus for fiscal year 2015.  In addition, the warrants to acquire common stock of HGI that were previously awarded to Mr. Falcone will continue to vest in accordance with their existing vesting schedule.

Congratulations to Joe Steinberg, who with the recent addition of Jefferies, is building a financial conglomerate empire which according to some is starting to become a Berkshire Hathaway lite.

Frontrunning: December 15

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  • Sydney Siege Sparks Muslim Call for Calm Amid Backlash Fear (BBG)
  • Oil Spilling Over Into Central Bank Policy as Fed Enters Fray (BBG)
  • Biggest LBO of 2014: BC Partners to acquire PetSmart for $8.7 billion (Reuters)
  • Tremble algos: the SEC has hired... "QUANTS" (WSJ)
  • When the bubble just isn't bubbly enough: There’s $1.7 Trillion Locked Out of China’s Stock Rally (BBG)
  • Oil price slide roils emerging markets, yen rises (Reuters) - may want to hit F5 on that
  • Libya Imposes Force Majeure on 2 Oil Ports After Clashes (BBG) ... and will resume production in days
  • Amid Crisis, Pimco Steadies Itself (WSJ)
  • Japan’s Abe Vows to Push for Wage Increases (WSJ)
  • Republicans Subpoena MIT Economist for Obamacare Records (Bloomberg)
  • France Blocks Uber ‘Ride-Sharing’ Service (WSJ)
  • Author of interrogation memo says CIA maybe went too far (Reuters)
  • The Rise and Fall of a Rainmaker (NYT)
  • Sony demands halt to reporting from leaked documents (Reuters)

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

* Large parts of central Sydney were in lockdown after at least one gunman took hostages in a cafe and placed an Islamic flag in the window, sparking concerns a terrorist attack was under way. (http://on.wsj.com/135etjz)

* Since bond titan Bill Gross bolted, aggressive maneuvers by remaining Pimco executives have helped slow an investor exodus, fend off hedge funds hoping to profit from the turmoil and give Pimco more breathing room. (http://on.wsj.com/1xjmhM6)

* PetSmart Inc agreed to be bought by a group led by BC Partners Inc for more than $8.2 billion, the largest private-equity buyout in an otherwise lackluster year for such deals. (http://on.wsj.com/1w8k44v)

* Facing potential shortages of airline pilots and dramatic advances in automation, industry and government researchers have begun the most serious look yet at the idea of enabling jetliners to be flown by a single pilot. (http://on.wsj.com/1GnU6wN)

* Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi Inc has invested 1.26 billion yuan ($203.7 million) in local home appliances maker Midea Group Co Ltd, in a deal aimed at boosting its presence in the market for Internet-connected home electronics. (http://on.wsj.com/1wuA4hg)

* Document-management and data-storage company Recall Holdings Ltd has rejected Iron Mountain Inc's 2.2 billion Australian dollar ($1.81 billion) takeover bid as too low. (http://on.wsj.com/1BGPv6g)

* Sony Pictures has retained attorney David Boies in an effort to stop news publications from using stolen documents that have been leaked online. (http://on.wsj.com/1IRQdm0)

* American Airlines Group Inc plans to stick with distance-based bonuses while competitors like Delta Airlines and United Airlines are switching to fare-based bonuses. (http://on.wsj.com/1ssOlWo)

* A group of large money-management firms are valuing SurveyMonkey at close to $2 billion in a new round of funding that will help fuel the online questionnaire service's expansion into corporate software, said a person familiar with the matter. (http://on.wsj.com/1GGe58o)

* Bob Evans Farms Inc's longtime CEO resigned as the firm's board stepped up a push to revamp the restaurant-and-food company after an activist-led proxy fight. (http://on.wsj.com/1uHaErf)

 

FT

In the year's largest leveraged buyout, U.S. pet supply retailer PetSmart agreed to be bought by a private equity consortium led by BC Partners for $8.7 bln. The investors agreed to acquire PetSmart for $83 per share, representing a premium of 9.1 pct.

PayPal is extending its alternative lending services to merchants. In recent times, non-bank lending has gained acceptance in the market as startups innovate with new business models. PayPal is gearing itself up to operate as a standalone company after it spins-off from its parent eBay next year.

Trading desks of London's biggest banks including Credit Suisse, Citigroup, Barclays and Goldman Sachs suffered from holding large stakes in UK's Shire Plc, after pharma major AbbVie withdrew its bid to acquire Shire in October. Citi and Credit Suisse lost about $20 mln and $6 mln respectively, according to the people familiar with the positions.

China's largest nuclear power generator China General Nuclear Corporation has bought an 80 pct stake in three UK wind farms from France's EDF for more than 100 million pounds ($157.21 million). EDF will retain the 20 pct stake, operate the turbines and also buy the electricity produced.

 

NYT

* Sony Pictures Entertainment has warned media outlets against using the mountains of corporate data revealed by hackers who raided the studio's computer systems in an attack that became public last month. (http://nyti.ms/1DyrjYw)

* Armed police officers have surrounded a cafe in Sydney after one or more gunmen took hostages and displayed a black flag with Arabic script. (http://nyti.ms/1vPOtPW)

* A new bonanza of resources could improve Israel's ties with Egypt, Jordan and even the Palestinian Authority. The linchpin of this diplomatic push: a Texas oil company. (http://nyti.ms/1uKvBTl)

* Top officials from nearly 200 nations have agreed to the first deal committing every country in the world to reducing the fossil fuel emissions that cause global warming. (http://nyti.ms/1wxCI4l)

* The Italian fashion house Gucci which is among luxury brands struggling to cope with an uncertain global economy as tastes change and smaller rivals gain, has announced the departure of its creative and business heads. (http://nyti.ms/1zTg7BF)

* A dispute between China and South Korea scuttled a deal that would have reduced global tariffs on $1 trillion in information technology goods. (http://nyti.ms/1yPTyKg)

* The swoon in oil prices has led to a steep decline in equities, as investors feared that the declining energy demand meant that the global economy was slowing. (http://nyti.ms/12QKGLr)

* A local judge in Paris has decided not to ban the low-cost service of the American ride-booking company Uber, which has increasingly faced a global backlash against its mobile application-based business. (http://nyti.ms/1vPU34U)

* The American benchmark price for crude oil has broken the symbolically important $60 a barrel mark for the first time in over five years, underscoring a remarkable drop of over 40 percent since early June. (http://nyti.ms/1DyyM9O)

* The Bank of England has announced a sweeping set of changes to increase transparency in how it operates and how it discloses the decisions it makes. (http://nyti.ms/1BFRw2x)

* Private equity firm Permira, which acquired the German fashion brand Hugo Boss AG in 2007, plans to sell 4.9 million shares in a private placement, representing a 7 percent stake. It will be left with a 32 percent stake. (http://nyti.ms/1AaOa6E)

* Banks have showed only moderate interest in a second round of cheap loans that the European Central Bank is offering in hopes of restoring commercial bank lending and combating low inflation. (http://nyti.ms/1wmKa2l)

* Russia's central bank has raised its key interest rate in an effort to curb inflation and slow the plunge of the ruble. (http://nyti.ms/1IRjwFk)

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

** Canada's competition watchdog says the contracts Apple Inc strikes with wireless carriers to distribute its iPhone could impose conditions that effectively increase the price retail customers pay for handsets and cellular service in general. The Competition Bureau alleges obligations Apple imposes around the sale and marketing of iPhones to consumers could be reducing competition and increasing prices in several ways. (http://bit.ly/1zMMFxe)

** Revelations of a secret deal to carve up Ontario's beer market between the big-brewer-owned Beer Store and the provincially owned Liquor Control Board of Ontario have spawned a proposed class-action lawsuit demanding C$1.4 billion ($1.21 billion) in damages on behalf of beer drinkers. The notice of action filed in Toronto in Ontario Superior Court alleges the retail outlets engaged in a "conspiracy to fix, raise, maintain or stabilize prices of beer in Ontario". (http://bit.ly/1GE5vqz)

** The federal government is threatening to invoke a rarely used anti-sanctions law to block the United States from imposing Buy America rules in Canada. Outraged that Washington has banned Canadian steel from a ferry terminal overhaul in Prince Rupert, British Columbia, Ottawa is considering using the Foreign Extraterritorial Measures Act to prohibit suppliers from bowing to a foreign law on Canadian soil, according to industry sources. (http://bit.ly/12SHdfn)

NATIONAL POST

** A new report from Moody's Analytics suggests the Canadian housing market has seen some "structural changes" that might justify today's prices. The Bank of Canada caused a stir this week when it suggested that housing may be anywhere from 10 percent to 30 percent overvalued although it downplayed talk of a crash. (http://bit.ly/1wnEmqp)

** Despite the rise of streaming video platforms like Netflix Inc, U.S.-based vending machine company Outerwall Inc is betting Canadian consumers are still interested in renting Blu-rays and DVDs the traditional way. Redbox's president Mark Horak sees this as an opportunity for his company's Redbox DVD and Blu-ray vending machines to gain a foothold in the Canadian market. (http://bit.ly/1DA0umB)

 

China

CHINA SECURITIES JOURNAL

- Funds from China's wealth management products have been flowing into the country's stock market, which has rallied around 30 percent over the past few weeks on expectations of monetary policy easing to lift a slowing economy, industry sources said.

- China's main stock index, the Shanghai Composite Index , is likely to continue rising, even though at a slower pace, in coming months as Beijing eases monetary policy and conducts large-scale economic reforms, which create hot stocks for the market, analysts said.

SHANGHAI SECURITIES NEWS

- China may announce comprehensive plans to reform its state-owned companies in the first quarter of next year, with the aim to allow the private sector to play a bigger role in the country's economy, sources said.

PEOPLE'S DAILY

- Chinese leader Xi Jinping will take part in the ceremony of the 15th anniversary of Macao's return to China to be held on Dec. 19 and 20 in the Chinese Special Administration Region.

CHINA DAILY

- The extension of tourist visa between the United States and China, from one year to 10 years, will provide a huge boost to travel industries of both countries, Jiang Yiyi, director of the international tourism development at the China Tourism Academy, a top Chinese tourism think-tank, said.

CHINA BUSINESS NEWS

- Chinese banks are expected to be able to meet the official target to extend a record 10 trillion yuan ($1.62 trillion) in new loans this year, industry sources said. The target is part of the government's efforts to curb the slowdown of China's economic growth.

 

Britain

The Times

BT POISED TO MAKE FINAL CALL ON ITS CHOSEN PARTNER FOR MOBILE FUTURE

BT Group could announce as early as Monday that it has chosen O2 over EE as its preferred route back into mobile phones. The telecoms group spent the weekend weighing which network to acquire as the foundation for a 9 billion pound ($14.15 billion) assault on the mobile market next year. (http://thetim.es/1yOVDWO)

BALFOUR BEATTY SEEKS 1 BLN STG DEAL

Balfour Beatty is to receive a renewed more than 1 billion pounds offer in the new year for its portfolio of roads, schools and hospitals investments, in a proposal to be led by Paul Lester. John Laing Infrastructure Fund, the listed investment vehicle, has confirmed that it believes troubled Balfour should sell its portfolio of public private partnership investments built up during the construction spree overseen by the last British Labour government. (http://thetim.es/1zmbIG5)

MIKE ASHLEY SPREADS 40 MLN STG OF CHRISTMAS CHEER AT SPORTS DIRECT The billionaire owner of Newcastle United, Mike Ashley, has bankrolled Christmas at Sports Direct by providing a 40 million pound loan to help the company to buy jeans, hoodies and tracksuit bottoms. (http://thetim.es/1xiI1Yz)

The Guardian BRITAIN'S BANKS BRACE FOR A SERIOUS STRESS TEST

Britain's big banks are struggling to fund themselves on international financial markets as they face the prospect of a wave of homebuyers and big companies defaulting on their debts. The Bank of England is running a stress test on seven banks and one building society to assess their financial strength, with the results to be released Tuesday morning. (http://bit.ly/134DpHM)

EDF STANDS TO RAKE IN 3.3 BLN STG WINDFALL FROM EXISTING POWER PLANTS EDF, one of Britain's big six energy suppliers, could be in line for an annual 1 billion pound windfall each year for three years from its existing coal and nuclear power stations under a controversial government-designed auction that starts on Tuesday. (http://bit.ly/1sqQUxQ)

The Telegraph

HSBC FEARS HORRIBLE END TO JAPAN'S QE BLITZ AS ABE WINS LANDSLIDE

HSBC Holdings Plc has warned that Japan's barely-disguised attempt to drive down the yen is becoming dangerous and may spin out of control, leading to an exchange rate crisis next year and a worldwide currency storm. David Bloom and Paul Mackel, HSBC's currency strategists, voiced growing concern that Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe is backing away from fiscal retrenchment and may pressure the Bank of Japan to fund policies aimed at boosting household spending. (http://bit.ly/1BETrV7)

LLOYDS QUIETLY REVIVES BANK OF WALES NAME

Lloyds Banking Group has quietly brought back the Bank of Wales name, in the hope that the 42-year-old brand will help bring in new customers to its savings products at a time of increasing competition in the industry. (http://bit.ly/1wt4kJc)

Sky News

GLITCH CAUSES ITEMS TO BE SOLD ON AMAZON FOR 1P Businesses are furious after a piece of software used by retailers on Amazon.com Inc malfunctioned, causing hundreds of items to be sold for 1 pence. Some firms which use RepricerExpress say they risk going bankrupt because the problem has resulted in them losing so much money. (http://bit.ly/1qKoY77)

The Independent

AIR TRAFFIC CONTROL BOSS' 600,000 STG BONUS CRITICISED AFTER IT GLITCH CAUSES MAJOR TRAVEL CHAOS

The chief of British air traffic control, who receives an annual wage of more than 1 million pounds, has had his bonus questioned after a computer meltdown severely disrupted flights over the weekend. (http://ind.pn/1zSHL1z)

 

Fly On The Wall Pre-Market Buzz

ECONOMIC REPORTS
Domestic economic reports scheduled for today include:
Empire State manufacturing survey for December at 8:30--consensus 12.0
Industrial production for November at 9:15--consensus up 0.7%
NAHB housing market index for December at 10:00--consensus 59

ANALYST RESEARCH

Upgrades

Allison Transmission (ALSN) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Deutsche Bank
Cirrus Logic (CRUS) upgraded to Overweight from Underweight at Barclays
Compass Minerals (CMP) upgraded to Buy from Hold at KeyBanc
Darden (DRI) upgraded to Market Perform from Underperform at Telsey Advisory
Eclipse Resources (ECR) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at SunTrust
Encore Capital (ECPG) upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at Piper Jaffray
Entergy (ETR) upgraded to Equal Weight from Underweight at Morgan Stanley
Entergy (ETR) upgraded to Neutral from Sell at Citigroup
Exxon Mobil (XOM) upgraded to Market Perform from Underperform at BMO Capital
Gigamon (GIMO) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at Raymond James
Oracle (ORCL) upgraded to Overweight from Equal Weight at Morgan Stanley
PG&E (PCG) upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at JPMorgan
Select Comfort (SCSS) upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at Piper Jaffray
ServiceNow (NOW) upgraded to Top Pick from Outperform at RBC Capital
Sohu.com (SOHU) upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at JPMorgan
Sunesis (SNSS) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Roth Capital
Tronox (TROX) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at B. Riley
Willis Group (WSH) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at UBS

Downgrades

CGG SA (CGG) downgraded to Underperform from Market Perform at Raymond James
Cenovus Energy (CVE) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at BMO Capital
Cobalt (CIE) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Goldman
Delek US (DK) downgraded to Underperform from Neutral at BofA/Merrill
Ford (F) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Deutsche Bank
Gastar Exploration (GST) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at SunTrust
Itau Unitbanco (ITUB) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Goldman
Methanex (MEOH) downgraded to Outperform from Strong Buy at Raymond James
OGE Energy (OGE) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Jefferies
SandRidge Energy (SD) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at SunTrust
UPS (UPS) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Deutsche Bank
WisdomTree (WETF) downgraded to Neutral from Overweight at Piper Jaffray

Initiations

ANI Pharmaceuticals (ANIP) initiated with a Buy at Guggenheim
Accuray (ARAY) initiated with a Neutral at SunTrust
Cachet Financial (CAFN) initiated with an Outperform at Northland
Corporate Office Properties (OFC) initiated with a Neutral at Mizuho
Habit Restaurants (HABT) initiated with a Hold at Stifel
Habit Restaurants (HABT) initiated with a Neutral at RW Baird
Habit Restaurants (HABT) initiated with an Overweight at Piper Jaffray
eHi Car Service (EHIC) initiated with a Neutral at Goldman
Media General (MEG) initiated with a Buy at Evercore ISI
Neothetics (NEOT) initiated with an Overweight at Piper Jaffray
NetSuite (N) initiated with a Neutral at BofA/Merrill
NetSuite (N) initiated with a Neutral at BofA/Merrill
Paramount Group (PGRE) initiated with a Buy at BofA/Merrill
Paramount Group (PGRE) initiated with a Buy at Deutsche Bank
Paramount Group (PGRE) initiated with a Buy at Evercore ISI
STORE Capital (STOR) initiated with a Buy at Goldman
STORE Capital (STOR) initiated with a Buy at Stifel
STORE Capital (STOR) initiated with a Hold at KeyBanc
Santander Brasil (bsbr) reinstated with a Sell at Goldman
Sky Solar (SKYS) initiated with an Outperform at Northland
Twitter (TWTR) initiated with an Outperform at JMP Securities
Varonis (VRNS) initiated with a Buy at Summit Research
Western Gas Equity (WGP) initiated with a Buy at MLV & Co.

COMPANY NEWS
PetSmart (PETM) to be acquired by BC Partners-led consortium for $83 per share in cash
Bob Evans Farms (BOBE) announced that Steve Davis, by mutual agreement with the Bob Evans board, has stepped down as CEO and a director of the company. While the official change will take place immediately, Davis will remain with the company through the end of the year to assist with the transition process. The company also announced that its board has established an interim Office of the CEO
Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A) acquired Charter Brokerage from Arsenal Capital Partners
Ocwen (OCN) announced $253M early buyout of mortgages from Ginnie Mae pools
Exelixis (EXEL) announced collaborator Genentech (RHHBY) filed NDA for cobimetinib, vemurafenib combination

EARNINGS
Petrobras (PBR) reports certain Q3 financial results, delays complete report  
Theravance Biopharma (TBPH) sees FY15 operating loss ($160M)-($150M), consensus ($6.83)

NEWSPAPERS/WEBSITES

Juniper (JNPR) and Elliott in talks on board additions, WSJ reports
Facebook (FB) stops including results from Bing (MSFT) on site, Reuters reports
Alleged Sony (SNE) hackers offer to selectively withhold stolen data, Re/code reports
PayPal (EBAY) expanding lending program to merchants, FT reports
Keurig Green Mountain (GMCR) transferring coffee buying to Switzerland, Reuters says
Family Dollar (FDO) 'likely' to postpone investor vote on Dollar Tree (DLTR) deal, NYP reports
GoPro (GPRO)  shares look expensive, Barron's reports
Carnival (CCL), Royal Caribbean (RCL) could climb 20%, Barron's says
FMC Corporation (FMC) could rally 50%, Barron's says

SYNDICATE

CASI Pharmaceuticals (CASI) files to sell 5.4M shares for holders
Charles Schwab (SCHW) files automatic mixed securities shelf
Devon Energy (DVN) files automatic mixed securities shelf
Endurance Specialty (ENH) files $500M mixed securities shelf
Getty Realty (GTY) files $350M mixed securities shelf
Harvard Apparatus (HART) files $20M mixed securities shelf
Kilroy Realty (KRC) files $300M common stock offering
Quotient (QTNT) files to sell 2.85M shares for holders
RadioShack (RSH) files to sell 150,000 convertible preferred shares
Saul Centers (BFS) files to sell 515,389 shares for holders

2014 Year In Review (Part 1): The Final Throes Of A Geopolitical Game Of Tetris

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Submitted by David Collum via Peak Prosperity,

Background

“I don't write about what I know: I write to find out what I know.”

~Patricia Hampl

Every December, I write a Year in Reviewref 1–7 first posted on Chris Martenson’s website Peak Prosperityref 2 with a secondary posting at Zero Hedge.ref 3 What started as a brief introspective shared with a handful of e-quaintances has mutated into a detailed account that has accrued as many as 100,000 clicks. Each year I try to identify themes in events that evolve. As the title suggests, I have not seen a year in which so many risks—some truly existential—piled up so quickly. Each risk has its own, often unknown, probability of morphing into a destructive force. Groping for a metaphor—I love metaphors and similes—I feel like we’re in the final throes of a geopolitical Game of Tetris as financial and political authorities race to place the pieces correctly. But the acceleration is palpable. The proximate trigger for pain and ultimately a collapse can be small, as anyone who’s ever stepped barefoot on a Lego knows.

“If the world seems to be turning ’round faster than ever, you’re not alone. Grab hold of something, it shows no sign of abating.”

~Josh Brown, CEO of Ritholtz Wealth Management

My lack of credentials is absolute—the Paris Hilton of finance—but has not prevented me from being a poseur in the Wall Street Journalref 8 and The Guardianref 9 and on Russia Today,ref 10,11 and a host of podcasts.ref 1 On the heels of a threesome with Bob Lehman and Grant Williams on BTFD.tv following last year's review,ref 12 2014 started with a bang on BTFD.tv in a New Year’s Eve hexabox shared with a trader who cut his chops selling dime bags on street corners and a person who on close inspection appears to trade the trannies.ref 13 Subsequent interviews on Peak Prosperity,ref 14Wall Street for Main Street,ref 15Kunstlercast,ref 16Stansberry Radio,ref 17 and Red Pill Radioref 18 offered more opportunities to Milli Vanilli my way through finance and politics. I shared the podium with T. Boone Pickens and Alex Jones as an invited speaker at the Stansberry Investment Conference: “Boone. I agree with you. That first billion is being a bitch.”ref 19 (I took another swipe at the Roth IRA.) I almost made Rolling Stone, but Matt left me at the altar. (I still can't get that tune out of my head.) As this review is being uploaded to the web, I’m doing an interview with Erin Ade on Boom Bust (Russia Today), which will be posted on YouTube.ref 20

“Risk means more things can happen than will happen.”

~Elroy Dimsen, London Business School

Contents

Footnotes appear as superscripts, with the full reference for each provided in the Links section. The whole enchilada can be downloaded as a single PDF here or viewed in parts via the hot-linked contents as follows:

Part 1:

Part 2:

Each review begins with an account of my efforts to get to a financially secure retirement. I continue to cling doggedly to my belief in the Austrian business cycle theory and the need for a hard-asset-rich portfolio despite two consecutive years of decidedly lousy returns. The bulk of the review, however, describes thoughts and observations—just the year’s events told as a narrative. The links are copious, albeit not comprehensive. Some are flagged with enthusiasm (must see). I am a quote junkie: quotations capture people’s thoughts in their own voices, and they do the intellectual heavy lifting.

I try to avoid themes covered amply in previous reviews. Some topics seem to go into quiescence, whereas others move to center stage without warning. Precious metals are a personal favorite. Every year seems to pick up a theme, possibly reflecting the news cycle (although my sources are anything but mainstream). Geopolitics were huge this year. Sections titled Baptists and Bootleggers, Bankers, and the Federal Reserve cover the gamut of human folly. Owing largely to central banking largesse, the system seems to be wound tighter than a golf ball. The third and hopefully final leg of a secular bear market that began in 2000 may be visible—but record debt, bank interventions, low interest rates, and the onset of global currency wars may simply be bricks in the Wall of Worry. Naysayers relentlessly remind us how many terrible things have not happened. All year I kept thinking of a poignant declaration:

“Hey guys: It's a dud!”

~Lt. Red Winkle en route to becoming pink mist in Pearl Harbor

I finish with synopses of the books that shaped my thinking. You will not find any new releases from Geithner or Clinton: I am selective.

Sources and the Fourth Estate

“There are people that don’t see the use in Twitter, and I get that. Who wants to mentally joust with the smartest, most relevant, and most connected people in the world?”

~Tony Greer, Buckingham Research Group

Before laying out a heap of content myself, a few comments about sources are warranted. Despite occasional bursts of glory and some serious journalism salted throughout the mainstream media, we have witnessed rot. The only commentary on TV worth expending ATP on is The Daily Show and its spawn. I do not need right- or left-wing propaganda. It is nauseating, especially given that so many reporters and academicians feigning impartiality are said to be on the payroll of political parties.ref 21 The former editor of one of Germany’s main dailiesref 22 admitted to being “bribed by [American] billionaires,” and a CIA operative referred to journalists as “cheaper than a good call girl.”ref 23 The once-illustrious CNBC ratings are now plummeting for a simple reason: it sucks. Simon Hobbs and Steve Sedgwick can put a sock in it. Mandy suggested that “over indebtedness comes from financial illiteracy.” Steve Liesman illustrated it by stating that “debt is the great bridge between working hard and playing hard in this country.” I can feel my IQ dropping. Wayne Rogers of Mash fame hammered a Fox host by noting, “You're a moron because you talk too much, and you don't think through it.”ref 24 Well said, Wayne.

‏@DavidBCollum Ask Fisher why a committee of bureaucrats sets the price of capital.

‏@steveliesman Because the alternative is the vagaries of the supply of gold.

My primary sources are an eclectic gaggle of bloggers—guys like Michael Kriegerref 25 and Charles Hugh Smithref 26—and select news consolidators. My actions speak to my enthusiasm for Peak Prosperity.ref 27 The 500-pound gorilla is Zero Hedge—edgy, ahead of the curve, and accurate enough. Newcomers this year include David Stockman's ContraCornerref 28 and a new Internet news network called RealVisionref 29 created by Grant Williams and Raoul Pal. Twitter may or may not be a good investment, but a good Twitter feed is a gateway to the world. You never know what you'll find:

“@zerohedge Ha ha, you are such a dickhead . . . it's wonderful.”

~David Andolfatto (@dandolfa), senior vice president, director of research, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

“I still think we should buy them. He is on your schedule for Dec 15 or 16—we will need to sell him. I have a plan.”

~Anthony Noto (@anthonynoto), CFO of Twitter, struggling to keep tweets and direct messages separate

On Conspiracy Theorizing

“I’m not going to censor myself to comfort your ignorance.”

~Jon Stewart

These markets are making me a little schizophrenic—like Jerry (Mel Gibson) in Conspiracy Theory—so this blog is really a group effort. But I vehemently denounce those who claim there are no conspiracies and who try to protect their beliefs by labeling the rest of us conspiracy theorists. I could cite famous folks who share my views, but on this one I stand alone: Men and women of wealth and power conspire. Period/full stop. If a market can be rigged, it is being rigged. If numbers can be cooked to advance an agenda they probably are being cooked. It is usually the glib intellectuals—guys like Cass Sunsteinref 30—who denounce conspiracy theories as intellectually childish and those who consider them as diseased. You are trying to shut me up with a pejorative label. I will let one of the iconic educators of our time respond:

Investing

“You have to decide whether to look like an idiot before the crash or an idiot after it.”

~John Hussman, Founder of Hussman Funds

I have changed little in my portfolio since last year. The only consequential change is that I resumed purchasing physical gold after a decade-long hiatus, increasing the total tonnage by approximately 20%. Owing to life's events, I have a dramatically enhanced cash position and a relatively small standard equity index. I am in no rush to alter the cash position. Rebalancing continues to occur primarily through market forces and by splitting my retirement contributions into equal portions cash and energy equities.

Precious metals etc:            21%

Energy:                                10%

Cash equiv (short term):      60%

Standard equities:                 9%

My net change in wealth at the time of this writing (12/15/14) of -1.2% is poor when compared to the S&P 500 (+8%) and Berkshire Hathaway (23%) for the third year in a row. Also for the third year in a row, the return on the S&P gains arose largely from p/e expansion fueled by gargantuan leveraged stock buybacks (see below). Those crazy enough to challenge the investor flash mob by shorting this market have absorbent Pampers slapped on what used to be their faces. Corrections elicited phrases like “levels not seen in two weeks.”

Despite a very large cash and physical gold (+1%) positions, a small but strong standard equity position, and some added savings keeping me near even for the year, the carnage inflicted by vicious selloffs in the commodities smarted. At the time of this writing, my year-to-date results were influenced by gold (1%), silver (-12%), the XAU (-18%), the XLE (-16%) as a proxy for the energy sector, and the XNG as a proxy for the natural gas sector (-15%). Metal investors were bludgeoned by a late season sell-off and self-doubts and were berated by pretty much everybody on the planet, prompting CNBC to underscore the “vomiting camel” chart pattern (Figure 1). As social indicators go, that one could have called the gold market bottom.

Figure 1. Emetic dromedary pattern.

In a longer-term view, the total gain in personal wealth (including savings but excluding a large, positive one-time item) of 335% since January 1, 2000—the very challenging 15 years that followed the good times—compares favorably to the S&P (40%; ex-dividends) and Berkshire (329%, which includes accrued savings). It is going to take a crushing market event to regain a large lead I had on Buffett at one point. I remain a believer in the secular precious metal bull (albeit with white knuckles and self-loathing) for a rather simple reason: I think central bankers will destroy us. I see a secular equity low in our future, and the only way to exploit it is to park on cash and wait and wait and wait some more. In fact, that's one of the great advantages amateurs have over the temporally sensitive pros. I can stay irrational longer than the markets can stay liquid. I hope someday to exploit the hell out of opportunities in the energy sector that are being offered to us on a platter by the Saudis and the Obama administration. Until then, the Saudis can keep crushing the domestic energy markets (see below), and I will continue to white-knuckle my way through this mess.

King Arthur: Look, you stupid bastard, you've got no arms left!

Black Knight: Yes I have.

King Arthur: Look!

Black Knight: It's just a flesh wound.

~Monty Python and the Holy Grail

The Economy

“By 2011, it was clear—at least to me—that the Great Recession was no longer an accurate moniker. It was time to begin calling this episode the Lesser Depression.”

~Bard Delong, economist at UC Berkeley, channeling James Rickards

“I am delighted to join you at a time when, despite the effects of the severe winter weather, the economy is on the firmest footing it has been on since the recovery began.”

~Charles Plosser, Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, channeling David Lereah

We have the best economy money can buy. Fed governor John Williams suggested that “we are actually getting closer to getting at a normal economy.” How would we know with you Fed plonkers in the way? According to David Stockman, total revenue has grown by just 31% since 2009 while profits have skyrocketed by 253%.ref 31 We either did some serious regression to the mean from '09 to the present or will be doing so going forward. World-record profit marginsref 32 suggest regression to the mean is in our future. I did a quick survey of the Forbes 100 and estimate that 17% are explicitly in finance. Others are called “diversified.” I've gotta wonder if the economic gains are from various unconstructive economic pursuits (cf. Japan in the 1980s). Caveat aequitas emptor: if left unchecked, business cycles die of old age, and we are in the sixth longest (of 34) since 1854.ref 33 If you want some serious doom porn, check out a few of Michael Snyder's Listicles of Horror (my moniker) posted at The Economic Collapse Blog and secondarily at Zero Hedge.ref 34,35,36 The guy sees dead people.

As always, the difficulty is culling fact from fiction. In May, the ISM manufacturing indicators dropped precipitously and unexpectedly. A few hours after starching some more socks, ISM announced “my bad” and said that recalculations show that the economy is accelerating.ref 37 Nonetheless, economic indicators began missing estimates by wide margins.

Maxim: Facts miss pundit estimates rather than vice versa.

Mavens in the US blamed bad weather for their complete inability to hit the dartboard. Oddly, German pundits blamed their joblessness on good weather,ref 38 whereas Goldman suggested that the Germans actually have strong growth . . . because of the weather.ref 39 Fed governor Plosser says the economy is great “despite the effects of severe weather.”ref 40 The CEO of Walmart doubts the weather argument altogether, instead suggesting that everybody is unemployed and broke.ref 41Charles Dudley Warner insightfully noted, “Everybody complains about the weather, but nobody does anything about it.” I suspect the vital signs of the economy are stable, albeit with help from a high-capacity monetary respirator.

The weather is whacking California. One of our breadbaskets is going bone dry owing to a multiyear, high-sigma (500-year) drought. Analogies to the Dust Bowl are inescapable.ref 42 Some towns are shipping in all water by truck.ref 43 California will soon run out of Nevada and Oregon's water. One orange grower bulldozed 400 acres of trees (why?), suggesting that “if this persists in the next year, the devastation . . . will be biblical.”ref 44 California halted fracking because it may be contaminating aquifers.ref 45 (I must confess that of all the risks of fracking, destroying a big aquifer tops the list.)

Of course, housing is considered central to our economy. Maybe I have Assburger's syndrome or 80HD, but I go nuts trying to figure out whether housing is strong or weak. Choose an indicator and make any case you want. Owens Corning reported a weakness in roofing materials: the corporate numbers don't lie.ref 46 (Just kidding. Sure they do.) Some plots show existing home sales rising; others show existing home purchases rising. Dudes: they're the same numbers—a kind of housing velocity that may offer evidence that the market is loosening finally. That said, 20 million homeowners are still underwater,ref 47 rendering them professionally immobile. A nice list of the riskiest real estate markets in country shows Hartford, Connecticut, leading the pack with a potential downside of 35%.ref 48 (Canada and England now make us look like pikers, however, given that their busts remain prospective.)ref 49,50 And remember that iconic plot of mortgage resets foreshadowing (to those paying attention) the '08–'09 crisis?ref 51 Well the resets are back—$200 billion worth of resetting home equity lines of credit (HELOCs).ref 52 When the Fed finally normalizes rates, price discovery is gonna be a real bitch. The Fed never had an exit strategy.

Some argue that labor numbers are cooked like every other stat. That gets you labeled a conspiracy theorist (and got me labeled “pathetic”). John Crudele cites a Bureau of Labor Statistics whistle-blower claiming “I wouldn’t trust any data from the Census Bureau.”ref 53 Who knows, but they seem contrived. Government indicators of employment aside, the labor participation rate continues to plummet (Figure 2). We appear to be unwinding the gains from the feminist revolution, except it's men hitting the sofa with pork rinds and a remote in hand.ref 54 It was claimed and broadly disseminated that 11 states had more people on welfare than employed (despite rising numbers staffing welfare offices), but it might not be that simple.ref 55 The rallying cry of the boomers—”I'll work till I drop”—needs to include “or until I lose my job.” That said, the aging boomers are Hoovering up most of the new jobs (Figure 3).ref 56 Gotta wonder whose couch the millennials will crash on when their parents go to the light with unpaid mortgages. The dichotomy of part-time versus full-time jobs continues to distort perception. By example, the 800K part-time jobs gained in June were offset by 500K full-time jobs lost.ref 57 Total hours worked in this instance is crudely a wash (which is evidence of stagnation), but the lost benefits are definitely bad, and it has been disastrous long term (Figure 4). Walmart just cut health insurance for some 30,000 part-time employees,ref 58 causing serious angst among those who hate Walmart out of principle. At least we have Obamacare.

Figure 2. Labor participation rate.

Figure 3. Joblessness by age.

Figure 4. Total hours worked.

Attempts to wrap my brain around the economy sometimes reveals moments of hilarity and absurdity. A “highly regarded study” found that children entering the job market today have the same chance of climbing the income ladder as children born in the 1970s.ref 59 There is nothing quite like a decades-out extrapolation unguided by actual data. Prominent economist Justin Wolfers posted very cool plots showing that happiness correlates with earning power.ref 60 OK. Money makes me happier too, but I am surprised that earning $500K gives you a 100% chance of being happy. As Einhorn said to Bernanke, “ How do you get to 100 percent certainty about anything?”ref 61 Graphically slick charts like Wolfer's can seem very compelling and still be dubious (Figure 5).ref 62 A Pew Foundation study concluded that teen pregnancies are good for the economy and wealth creation.ref 63 They hedge their euphoria by noting that “it's obviously unrealistic to hope that the U.S. can return to the teenage birth rate of the Baby Boom.” One can only hope. As the cops often say, “spread 'em.”

Figure 5. Obviously strong causal relationship between Miss America and deadly hot vapors.ref 62

Bending, Breaking, and Broken Markets

“Looking at Wall Street stock and bond trader screens, the world looks like a model of stability.”

~Jon Hilsenrath

“Given how sensitive markets are to headlines at the moment, there are no charts to send today.”

~Citi technical analysts

IPOs are always great entertainment because 80% of these nuggets of speculative bliss don't have earnings.ref 64 Alibaba (BABA), the Amazon of China, opened at the monumental 20× sales and puttered around for a while until it caught a late-year ramp. The shares, however, are a derivative—they offer no direct claim to ownership or a stream of revenue—suggesting that any measure of valuation is meaningless.ref 65 Twitter opened with a lot of fanfare, sloshed around, and finished the year marginally up. Peter Thiel noted that Twitter is a “horribly mismanaged company—probably a lot of pot-smoking going on there. But it’s such a solid franchise it may even work with all that.”ref 66 Put in tight stops, Peter. The IPO of Vascular Biogenics opened, tanked, and was unwound—they took a mulligan.ref 67 Presumably the wrong people got hurt. Soon after their IPO, the founders of GoPro cameras, circumvented the lockout period by placing shares in a family trust and selling them.ref 68 Irritated investors sold the news but soon forgave them. Pre-IPO Snapchat looks like a real gem with no business model, no revenue, no profits, and a $10 billion valuation.ref 69

“Sorry if you missed your IPO window. Don’t worry, we’ll blow up another one of these bad boys soon enough.”

~Josh Brown (@reformedbroker), CEO of Ritholtz Wealth Management

Stock buybacks have dominated the market. According to the most recent Capital IQ data, the single biggest buyers of stocks in the first quarter were none other than the companies of the S&P 500 itself—$600 billion this year alone—simultaneously driving equity prices up and capital expenditures (Capex) down.ref 70 How ironic. Years ago Peter Lynch used share buybacks as evidence insiders knew their shares were underpriced. Those were quaint times. Now they are used to boost share price by eroding balance sheets; investors profess to understand p/e ratios but are oblivious to balance sheet rot. Some estimate that, accounting for leverage, all earnings of the S&P are being plowed back into repurchase programs.

IBM is the poster child, buying back almost $40 billion while nuking its balance sheet with debt.ref 71 Apple completely gutted its huge cash hoard buying back shares,ref 72 which should stress holders of 30-year Apple debt issued when the balance sheet was strong.ref 73 Oracle missed earnings and revenues but borrowed $10 billion to buy back shares.ref 74 Oracle “returned” $21 billion of borrowed money in two years via buybacks and spent only $1.2 billion on Capex,ref 75 making it essentially the largest royalty trust in the universe. Ford has $90 billion in net debt (debt minus cash) and is buying back shares—the functional equivalent of a leverage buyout . . . by the owners.ref 76 Jonathan Glionna of Barclays explains: “There are a couple of reasons why companies do buybacks. One is that it seems to work; it makes stocks go up.”ref 77 Yes, Jonathan, and so did stock splits in the late '90s. This consequence of ultra-loose credit will unwind someday and inflict medieval pain on investors. One Zero Hedge poster suggested the FASB should allow buybacks to be categorized as Capex. Pure genius.

“Few are ready to curb financial booms that make everyone feel illusively richer. . . . The temptation to go for shortcuts is simply too strong, even if these shortcuts lead nowhere in the end.”

~Bank of International Settlements, June 2014

CYNK was the epitome of nuts. Only Zero Hedge was on this story at the outset.ref 78 CYNK is a small media company—one employee, no business model, no revenue, possibly a post office box—that ran up 100-fold in months to a market cap of over $1 billion. Traders were monitoring its price relative to the four-second moving average. During the manic phase I tweeted that CYNK could “drop 50% in microseconds.” Ten minutes later it dropped 30% in 30 minutes. Not a bad call for being off by three orders of magnitude. This one got embarrassing to the regulators, so they shut it down, trapping some traders.ref 79 One poor fool—a seriously poor fool—had all his retirement savings in it. Two weeks later CYNK reopened at a humbling 86% lower price.ref 80 It seems to have found strong support at $0.10. It's now a contrarian value play. The major risk is that the employee might quit.

The markets were interrupted daily by mini flash crashes—”meltups” or "meltdowns" owing to algos on 'roids. One of the biggest was the October 15th treasury meltup in which the yield on the 10 year dropped 0.4% in a few minutes—a testament to the stunning illiquidity of a once-bottomless market that finds its roots in Fed and central bank intervention (see below).ref 81

Concerns about valuation started to gurgle into the public consciousness. Buffet's favorite indicator—stock capitalization-to-GDP ratio—is now second only to that accompanying the 2000 bubble (Figure 6).ref 82 Serious debates began as the Case-Shiller p/e ratio (CAPE) began to soar with the eagles—40% above the mean—prompting Robert Shiller to exclaim with his legendary histrionic flare “the US stock market looks very expensive right now.”ref 83 Henry Blodget, despite his reputation from the past, has become decidedly bearish—Hussman bearish—noting that he is “still nervous about stock prices” and suggesting that “stocks are likely to deliver lousy returns over the next seven to 10 years.”ref 84 James Montier says the market is 50–70% overvalued.ref 85 John Hussman continues to hunker down for horrible prospective returns.ref 86 He evaluates stocks like a state function—a path-independent analysis of where we are now and where we ought to be in 10 years, assuming mean regression. Because everybody is planning to sell at the top, Hussman astutely notes that somebody must own these assets on the way back down. For them it will be a mean regression indeed.

Figure 6. Stock capitalization-to-GDP ratio.

Of course, as valuations get high, the metrics soon come into question. Recall the eyeball and click-count alternatives? Articles began questioning the merits of CAPE.ref 87 Alas, Lance Roberts, an analyst of considerable insight, noted that in his experience, the end is near when valuation metrics come under question. The Russell 2000 is sporting a p/e of 80. Michael Sincere's article “Why the Market Will Never Go Down” was satire at its finest,ref 88 eliciting scathing reviews from those who didn't get it.

“Negative earnings are excluded, extraordinary items are excluded, and P/E ratios over 60 are set to 60.”

~Disclaimer in a biotech exchange-traded fund that reports a p/e of 41

Many watch for absurd signs of a top—magazine covers, Dennis Gartman going bullish, etc.—and they were there if you looked. Facebook bought WhatsApp for $19 billion, paying the equivalent of four years of user fees that are charged after a free trial year.ref 89 It makes me wonder WhatsUp. Articles recommending using HELOCs to buy equities appeared,ref 90 which is more evidence of a zombie apocalypse or the last days of disco than a market top. As a dog returneth to its vomit, pro forma earnings are being embraced again (sigh). The S&P 500 price has increased five times faster than GDP.ref 90

As of mid-September, 47% of S&P equities were in a bear market.ref 91 With indices reaching new highs, this looks like the “market narrowing” observed in 2000 and again in 2007. There are planet-wide stretched carry trades—imbalances overtly engineered to generate profits for a select group. I detest the whole notion of carry trades. They are the root cause of many problems. The system is now so leveraged that abrupt moves in any direction by any market are high risk. Recall that a Russian bond default was the flapping butterfly triggering the market's fall to its knees in 1998 (mixed metaphorically speaking).ref 92

“It is hard to avoid the sense of a puzzling disconnect between the markets’ buoyancy and underlying economic developments globally.”

~84th Annual Report of the Bank of International Settlements

“Please make sure you have made the right decision.”

~Warning on a 110-volt electric bath toy sold on Alibaba

Michael Lewis's interest in the Aleynikov witch trialref 93 morphed into a story about high-frequency trading (HFT) that became the bestseller Flashboys (see Books). This story is not new: Joe Saluzzi and Sal Arnuk detailed it in Broken Markets in 2012, but Lewis's gravitas and the cute subplots gave it legs. Soon it was fight night. Insider Haim Bodek took on HFTer Manoj Narang.ref 94 Saluzzi took on an exceedingly annoying Irene Aldridge.ref 95 The Katsuyama–O’Brien brawl on CNBC was the Thrilla in Manila, with Katsuyama landing the haymaker: “I believe the markets are rigged, and I also think you are a part of the rigging.”ref 96 Boom! O’Brien counterpunched, and CNBC bloviated for the remainder of the day that the markets are not rigged (as though they would know). O’Brien's counters were retracted under pressure from the authorities the next day.ref 97 CNBC bloviation continues to this day.

“Wall Street at its most socially useless.”

~The Atlantic on HFT

This form of digital Marco Polo enabled by the trade routing firms skims money, but I am unconvinced that the retail consumer is paying the rake. What has my undies in a bunch is the role of the “algos” in the legendary flash crash of May 6, 2010 and numerous micro flash crashes documented daily by Eric Hunsader and crew at Nanex. The mouth-breathing regulators completely ignored them, declaring “quote stuffing doesn't exist.” The HFTers claim to provide liquidity, but they are destabilizing the system. An 80-car pileup seems inevitable and will elicit endless ineffectual congressional investigations, a few fines, and no convictions. There is no better evidence that the risk–reward of HFT is tapering than Goldman's exit from the game as described in Flashboys.

“I've been pleased with the transparency of the investment banking industry in my lifetime”

~Senator Ron Johnson during a hearing on HFT

Precious Metals

“If you’re capable of understanding the world, you have a moral obligation to become rational. And I don’t see how you become rational hoarding gold. Even if it works, you’re a jerk.”

~Charlie Munger, 2011

Andrew Ross Sorkin: Warren Buffet won't touch gold. Do you think he is wrong?

Ray Dalio: I think he is making a big mistake.

“There is no more important challenge facing us than this issue—the restoration of your freedom to secure gold in exchange for the fruits of your labors.”

~Howard Buffet

As gold appeared to be headed south, I was asked by a prominent Keynesian and money manager, Mark Dow, what gold price would tell me I was wrong. Good question. The price action has made this an unpleasant ride for the last two of my 15 years of ownership, but it is not about price for me. I am a reluctant gold enthusiast and will remain so as long as political and monetary events dictate. In this section, I discuss a few that transpired this year. None has knocked me off my commitment to gold fostered by the folks at the Fed.

The market was not as savage (wildly sold) as it was in 2013, but there was no shortage of volatility. After a strong first-half start, I began to smell possible trouble when Goldman, Bank of America, and the World Gold Council began talking down gold in early summer. Of course, the former two are talking their books. The World Gold Council, despite its name, appears to bash the metal routinely. Soon thereafter, suspiciously large (billion-dollar) trades began appearing in the wee hours of the morning when poor liquidity leaves the market vulnerable.ref 98 Of course, all of this was accompanied by schadenfreude from those who regret missing the first 10 years of the gold bull market. You could write volumes on the tits for tats between bugs and bears. Many of us simply trying to mitigate the perceived currency risk imparted by central banks find the attacks a little tiring.

“The idea that the world is ending and the accompanying demand for guns, canned food, bottled water and gold is having difficulty attracting new adherents.”

~Barry Ritholtz in the “Rules of Goldbuggery”, The Big Picture blog

India was a bit schizophrenic. At first they took their foot off the throats of gold importers by removing 2013 import restrictions imposed ostensibly to control their balance of trade. I asked a prominent economist on the relative impact of importing gold and buying shares of Intel on the trade deficit; there is none. Alas, there were too many smugglers with too many body cavities to control. As the year progressed, however, restrictions reappeared, and smugglers got out the K-Y once again.

Gold repatriation continues to be a hot topic. In 2013 the Germans announced they would repatriate 700 tons of gold, but they retrieved only 5 tons from the US and 32 tons from France.ref 99 Lo and behold, the Germans decided that they didn't really want it (sour grapes), with a spokesman declaring, “There's no reason for mistrust.”ref 100 Subtle hints to the contrary came from Bundesbank President Jens Weidmann: “[The US] will not transfer gold to Germany because we doubt whether it is really there.”ref 101 Seems clear enough. In a surprise announcement, the Netherlands managed to quietly repatriate 122 tons from the US to safety behind the dikes.ref 102 France has expressed interest in repatriation now that Germany absconded with theirs.ref 103 Belgium is pondering a similar move.ref 104

“For central banks [gold] is a reserve of safety; it’s viewed by the country as such. In the case of non-dollar countries it gives them value protection against fluctuations with the dollar.”

~Mario Draghi, President of the European Central Bank

The Swiss peasants decided they wanted to take a crack at getting their gold back after the majority was sold off a decade ago under pressure from the IMF. (Pakistan, under similar pressure, told the IMF to ???? ??, which Google translates to “bite me.”) The overt 10% overnight putsch on the Swiss franc last year left a bad taste in their mouths. Thus, a Swiss referendum to mandate gold repatriation, maintain at least 20% of its reserves in gold, and never sell any of it (the latter being decidedly too rigid) loomed large. If passed, the Swiss would be repatriating at least 700 tons back to the Alps. “Not a problem,” said an analyst at Deutsche Bank who noted that the Swiss can use gold swaps to move paper gold on and off the balance sheet every month. I’m not sure that's what the Swiss peasants were yodeling about. Of course, the referendum was violently opposed by the Swiss National Bank because it has a currency to debase. The week before the vote, Willem Buiter of Citigroup penned a report describing gold as a ridiculous reserve asset (Figure 7).

Figure 7. Screenshot of a Citigroup report on gold days before the Swiss referendum.

Buiter has been critical of the Federal Reserve's reckless policies, so this one came out of the blue for many of us, prompting a brief email exchange ending with this:

Collum: “Your email box must be filled with detractors.”

Buiter: “It is indeed.”

On the last trading day preceding the referendum—November 28th (Black Friday, ironically)—gold got bonked by 2.5%, silver by 6.5%, and oil by 10%—the Thanksgiving Turkey Massacre. It was a classic “swan dive” chart pattern (Figure 8).

Figure 8. Routine example of price discovery in the gold market.

I topped my personal best that day for “flushing money down a rat hole.” Like the Scottish vote for independence, the Swiss referendum didn't pass. Whether the selloff was in anticipation of a negative vote, engineered to elicit a negative vote, or unrelated to the vote is unknowable. Generally, however, voting power away from the powerful will run into opposition. The first trading day after the failed referendum was wild. The night the vote failed, gold tanked almost 4% and silver dropped 10%. Apparently, all that price appreciation before the vote—there was none—was getting unwound. I also didn’t realize the Swiss rejected a silver referendum too. (Actually, Brevan Howard announced the closing of its commodity hedge fund that weekend too, possibly liquidating a large silver position.ref 105) Regardless of proximate cause, the shorts were putting on a full-court press. Gold investors were seeing nothing but bus axles.

Strange restoring forces were at work, however, causing gold bugs to get a strange feeling (like when climbing the ropes in gym class.) That same weekend—it was a busy weekend—India made a major policy reversal (again), removing mandated gold exports.ref 106 Also, the gold forward offered rate (GOFO), touted as an indicator of demand for physical gold, had gone markedly negative and was now diving,ref 107 evidencing short supplies of the metal. By the end of trading on Monday, gold and silver had massively reversed, closing with bold gains. Another sure bet bites the dust. By December 3, the grifters at the London Bullion Metals Exchange stopped reporting the GOFO.ref 108 I'm sure it was for some macroprudential reason.

China and Russia continue to suck up gold by the pallet. Russia was selling treasuries to buy gold (see below).ref 109 China is rumored to have imported 2,000 tonsref 110—the equivalent of 25% of the US's entire unaudited gold stash. The CPM group, another one of those gold-bashing gold organizations, suggested that the Chinese demand for gold is speculative hearsay,ref 111 but guys like Koos Jansen—a new breed of gold analysts who understand the Asian market—enthusiastically disagree.ref 112 Both China and South Korea are said to be building new vaults to hold this fictitious gold.ref 113,114 China's gold demand prompted a shocking article by Alan Greenspan—that Alan Greenspan—describing China's motives for buying gold and the merits of gold.ref 115 The man may have a marble or two left and is trying to disembarrass himself. This resurrected version of the much younger Greenspan is, once again, touting the virtues of gold as the only defense against central bankers like, well, Alan Greenspan:

“If, in the words of the British economist John Maynard Keynes, gold were a ‘barbarous relic,’ central banks around the world would not have so much of an asset whose rate of return, including storage costs, is negative.”

~Alan Greenspan, Foreign Affairs

A lot of guys with suspiciously strong Chinese affiliations and bold resumes are also advocating for gold:

“China should now rapidly increase its gold reserves, without pushing up prices of the precious metal excessively.”

~China Times

“Currently, there are more and more people recognizing that the ‘gold is useless’ story contains too many lies. Gold now suffers from a ‘smokescreen’ designed by the US . . . to maintain the US Dollar hegemony.”

~Sun Zhaoxue, Former President of the China Gold Association

“China should increase its gold reserves appropriately, and China must take every chance to buy, especially when gold prices fall.”

~Li Yining, a senior economist at Peking University and a member of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Committee

We continued to witness the drop in gold inventories in GLD.ref 116 Ignore those (of us) who think GLD is fractional reserve gold—rehypothecation at its finest—and ask a simple question: Why would GLD liquidate any gold in a sell off? If I owned a housing real estate investment trust, for example, a market selloff would reduce the price of the trust without a requisite liquidation of inventory. Provisions for arbitraging the price of GLD versus the price of physical gold in theory causes some adjustments in GLD around the margins,ref 117 but the directions of what should be razor-thin adjustments could be up or down. This is amply illustrated by SLV, the analogous silver trust, in which a vicious two-year selloff caused inflows of silver.ref 118 Given that only the multinational investment banks, the TBTF group, can trade GLD shares for physical gold—this is trueref 119—I've got two theories:

           (1) The TBTF banks traded shares for the physical metal, presumably owing to demand for the clinky stuff in Asia.

           (2) The collateral underlying the share price of GLD was vaporizing (going to China), causing the share price to drop. This idea is a little kinky but has been lurking on the Internet.ref 120

In a sense, the two theories are two sides of a push–pull argument. Either way, bullion rushing out of GLD and shipping off to Asia seems bullish for the future price of the metal. The volume of gold imports relative to the price of GLD shows a nice supply–demand relationship (Figure 9), but a correlation of demand going up with price—a Giffen goodref 121—wouldn't be nuts either.

Figure 9. Gold imports through Hong Kong versus gold price.

Those accusing JPM of market rigging got a hoot when the London Gold Fix—the group of bankers that sit around fixing the price of gold each morning (duh)—was shown to be fixing the price of gold.ref 122 They moved the rigging onto computers this year hoping that we could never imagine rigging a market with a computer.ref 123 Soon precious metal riggers were jumping ship (from the rigging). The Queen of Darkness, Blythe Masters, resigned from JPM to become a market regulator at the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.ref 124 No, really! She had claimed that “manipulating the metals market is not part of our business model. It would be wrong, and we don't do it,” but nobody believed that.ref 125 Going from rigger to regulator was way too much irony, causing her to reverse course within the week.ref 126 Soon the five banks overseeing the century-old rig-a-thon—Barclays, Deutsche Bank, Bank of Nova Scotia, HSBC, and Société Générale—were formally accused by authorities of participating in the con.ref 127 A Financial Times article on the scandal claiming the market was crooked as hell got yanked, but it had been saved. E-permanence is a bitch.ref 128 Barclays offered up a sacrificial lamb, accusing Daniel Plunkett of the early morning spankings designed to make Barclays' customers “puke up their positions.”ref 129 The cockroach model says that Plunkett did not work alone. We are told the silver fix was a fix also.ref 130

So where do we stand? Many claim gold and silver inventories are tight, as reflected by backwardation, a linguistic abortion describing greater demand for physical in the near term. Inventories at the Shanghai Metals Exchange have plummeted.ref 131 Our newest sovereign state, the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), is about to release a gold currency—the dinar.ref 132 Kiev (Ukraine) got IMF blood money (a loan) and bought gold with it,ref 133 but more recent rumors suggest it is gone (South Park style).ref 134 Ecuador pawned its gold to Goldman Sachs for a collateralized loan,ref 135 which will likely turn into a net purchase at default.

The barbequed relic may have some life left in it. I think we are at the beginning of a seismic change in the global currency system, and gold will move to center stage in the new Bretton Woods Whatever. With other asset classes priced for perfection—all gains pulled forward—there may be serious price risk in gold medium term, but the opportunity costs of owning gold seem modest.

“I did a lot of things at times with people on Wall Street, and I don’t trust them. . . . Gold is always going to have a value and there will always be something there.”

~Michael Franzese, former mafia boss (ba-da-bing)

Energy

“If oil prices stay below $90 per barrel for any length of time, we will witness massive fiscal squeezes and regime changes in one or more of the following countries: Iran, Bahrain, Ecuador, Venezuela, Algeria, Nigeria, Iraq, or Libya. It will be a movie we have seen before.”

~Steve Hanke, Johns Hopkins University and the Cato Institute

At the time of this writing, oil is hovering near $60 (Figure 10). The energy sector took a serious beating in the second half of 2014 owing to geopolitics, not geology. Goldman says the market is saturated (despite the rising price preceding the bloodbath),ref 136 but interpreting Goldman reports is very difficult because Goldman always has a book being talked up. The CEO of Marathon Oil says he had been seriously underestimating the company’s reserves.ref 137 The CEO of Continental Resources, Harold Hamm, says the notion that the market is in a glut is nuts.ref 138 He says it's all geopolitical. Others view it as a global economy in stress. Again, it seems likely (to me, at least) the global game of Tetris is accelerating to a finale.

Figure 10. Crude oil price.

Meet the Frackers. The massive (40%) plummet in global crude prices has inflicted carnage on the marginal producers. Most are riddled with junk debt—supposedly over 25% of the entire junk bond marketref 139—and likely to serially fail. Before the collapse, the seven major producers were already witnessing falling liquids production.ref 140 The good news is that once located in a big shale field, the frackers never hit dry wells. The bad news is that fracked wells have the life expectancies of gnats. The increasing output derives from an exponentially growing well count (Figure 11).ref 141

Figure 11 Output versus fracking well count.ref 141

I return to the geopolitics of oil in the section on Russia. I suspect, however, that the enthusiasm of the Saudis for low oil prices is temporary. Once they are done fracking my brokerage account, there could be an excellent entry into the energy sector as an investment. I am holding a large and growing position in energy and am tied to the mast. This time next year, I may be writing a lot more about the energy sector. At least we won't be suffering bogus announcements of strategic petroleum releases anytime soon.

Personal Savings, and Retirement

“[Malls] are trying to change; they’re trying to get different kinds of anchors, discount stores. . . . What’s going on is the customers don’t have the fucking money. That’s it. This isn’t rocket science.”

~Howard Davidowitz, flamboyant retail analyst

Every year I write about the dire situation in personal savings and retirement. This is as painful as watching a Nicholas Cage movie. I will keep it short this year because nothing has changed, it's not gonna change, and I'm starting to sound like Crazy Eddie. We have a large group of people who will spend their twilight years marinating in a grinding poverty that is altogether unfamiliar. After years of not saving—regardless of why or whose fault it might be—they are heading down the Niagara River in a barrel: they are going over the falls. Let's reconsider a few numbers.

The median retirement savings is $2,000.ref 142 That is not a typo: 200 rolls of quarters. The assets in existing retirement accounts are broken down by age in Figure 12.ref 143 Charles Schwab's numbers are more dire.ref 144 One-third of the boomers over 65 still have mortgages.ref 145 Those with equity in their houses are being pushed into treacherous reverse mortgages.ref 146 Fidelity estimates that 48% of boomers report that they are not on track to cover the basics in retirement.ref 146 Most of the others suffer self-delusion. It is said the average retirement age is 62, which is way too low. You eat what you kill. Few have created enough wealth to live another 35 years on the fruits of their labor. Boomers looking to retire early from a good job intending to pick up money on the side should reconsider.

Figure 12. Balances of existing retirement accounts by age.ref 143

Let's take a deep breath and push forward. More than 30% of all new loans are subprime, which suggests that the debtors can't really afford the payments.ref 147 Credit cards issued to subprime borrowers rose 39% in the first quarter alone.ref 148 HELOCs are on the rise again.ref 149 An estimated 60% of working-age Americans have less than $25,000 saved.ref 150 One in six Americans depends on food stamps.ref 151

The self-deception has been institutionalized within the financial industry. Ya know those commercials that ask, “What's your number?” Well, the answer is a lot bigger than the numbers carried around in the commercial. Optimistic returns going forward—returns ignoring Hussman's dire analyses completely—suggest you can remove 4% of your retirement money without serious risk of running out. A million dollars spins out $40K per year. Now go look at what it takes to accrue a million dollars.ref 152 It's a scary scenario for most. A mathematically challenged pundit rhetorically asked us to “consider a [50-year-old] worker making $50,000 a year, and saving 5 percent of it, with accumulated savings of $500,000.”ref 153 Can somebody tell me where that $500,000 came from?

Those overwhelmed by debt may not have screwed up. Maybe it was odious debtref 154—debt incurred under conditions awful enough to provide a moral backstop to repudiation. Regardless, overwhelmed debtors have a binary choice that is gonna hurt either way: suck it up or default. The free market solution to default would cause the creditors to lose a lot of money. They will call for bailouts, which comes from savers and is most definitely not a market solution. I like the idea of branding bankers' foreheads with a $ (Inglorious Bastards) and dropping them in the middle of an ISIS stronghold. They would beheaded for trouble. Maybe that's too extreme.

“You have a 25% chance of living 'til 93 years old, and you're going to need like $3 million to live on. Totally go to Starbucks now, it's fine.”

~Josh Brown (@reformedbroker), CEO of Ritholtz Wealth Management

“If You Don't Need It, DON'T BUY IT”

~1943 War Rationing Card

States and Municipalities

“Detroit's industrial ruins are picturesque, like crumbling Rome in an 18th-century etching.”

~P. J. O'Rourke

States and municipalities are still deeply underfunded—the situation will necessarily rectify over the coming years—but there were not many fireworks this year. The underfunded pensions continue to make news, with Illinois always at center stage. The Chicago firemen's pension fund is a $50,000 liability per Chicago household—probably far higher for households that are net payers of taxes.ref 155 Illinois passed a reform bill to ease the state's burden,ref 156 but who picked up that bar tab? Some of it may have been put back on the pensioners. Kankakee, Illinois, is in dire straights with a pension plan that is only 18% funded.ref 157

Michigan's auto woes continue to fester. Flint's pension plan is estimated to consume 32 percent of the $55 million general fund.ref 158 The ultimate disaster zone—Fallujah on the Lake—is obviously Detroit. The cost to clear Detroit's blight using bulldozers (literally) is said to top $850 million.ref 159 Even as a small government guy, I could endorse such conversions of crack houses to green space. Montages of Detroit's blight are legion. One shows decay over merely the last half-dozen years.ref 160 Detroit was planning to shut off water to 150K mostly black residents owing to lack of bill payment.ref 161 This is a no-win situation. Detroit thought it might pawn its art for $3 billion (below market price),ref 162 although the legality of doing so while in bankruptcy proceedings is doubtful. I'm sure some wealthy Wall Street folks would gladly sign a rent-to-own agreement using profits from Detroit's debt restructurings. Detroit politicians—on the dole no doubt—tried to sign a crappy debt restructuring deal (again), and a judge said no.ref 163 People often forget, however, that the primary function of bankruptcy is to distribute assets in cases in which there is simply not enough to go around. Maybe in prospective years Illinois will attack Michigan, eliciting some serious Krugman-esque stimulation of their respective economies.

Defaults on pensioners seem likely to be the horror story of the next decade or two. A Kentucky ruling on whether bankruptcy can negate pensions could change contract law by determining whether pension funds can be elevated to most senior creditors.ref 164 A judge in the Stockton, California, bankruptcy will rule whether CalPERS is merely a servicing agency (moving it out of harm's way) and whether it can reduce payouts to the pensioners.ref 165 Precedent is being set while pensioners are possibly being set up.

Sixteen counties in Northern California want to secede from California.ref 166 Sounds like another brother-against-brother fight brewing. CalPERS is dumping its hedge funds, which made for great headlines.ref 167 The fine print, however, reveals that hedge funds and private equity moneys constitute only 1% of its portfolio.

The Bond Caldera

“The Fed has somehow managed to take the income out of fixed income and the yield out of high yield. . . . There are no interest rates to observe.”

~Jim Grant, editor of Grant's Interest Rate Observer

“Successful financial repression requires a widespread belief that conventional government bonds are safe.”

~Peter Warburton, Director at Economic Perspectives Ltd and author of Debt and Delusion

I obsessed over the bond market all year long. It appears that central bankers have pumped up a bond bubble—a Bond CalderaTM—so hunormous that you can see it only from space. The global bond market is all trade, no investment. Try this exercise: Imagine buying bonds to clip the coupon for the duration of the bond—a real commitment to bonds as an investment. Would you park on treasuries returning 2.0% for 10 years? How about 2.9% for 30 years? Didn't think so. A lot can happen in 30 years.

Let's go way out over our skis: how about reaching for yield? That's always a brilliant idea endorsed by central banks the world over. With a little timing, you could have snarfed up the following portfolio:

Source                        Duration (yrs)           Yield

Cyprus                                5                      4.8%

France                                10                    1.3%

Germany                             10                    0.8%

Greece                                10                    6.4%

Ireland                                10                    3.2%

Italy                                    10                    2.3%

Kazakhstan                        10                    4.0%

Mexico                               100                  5.5%

Nigeria                               1                      11%

Portugal                            10                    3.0%

Puerto Rico                       10                    7.0%

Rwanda                            10                    6.0%

Spain                                10                    2.2%

Spain                               50                    4.0%

*Japanese JGBs at 0.4% for 10 yr were excluded because the market no longer exists; the Bank of Japan buys 100% of the new issue.

Do any of those look good? Most are basket cases. Others are decent credit risks but offer pathetic returns. All are results of unfettered central bank credit. The only high-yield bonds in the bunch—possibly even the most attractive—were email-marketed by Nigerian princes. As Mark Gilbert of Bloomberg says, “You might want to dance near the door.” Everyone is betting they can top-call this market and get out. I'd rather pick up nickels on the Autobahn. To reiterate Hussman's Truism: “somebody must own these assets” as trillions of dollars of risk morph into billions of dollars of detritus.

“Junk bonds have really gone to levels which under our analysis are pretty much the most overvalued in history.”

~Jeff Gundlach, The New Bond King

“In my 20 years of managing high-yield bond investments, I’ve never seen so many signals that scream caution.

~Steve Blumenthal in Forbes

“For too long, markets failed to raise funding costs for countries with unsustainable policies. “

~Mario Draghi, hours before Portugal defaulted on a bond

China and Russia both backed away from the US treasury market this year: who picked up the slack? The Belgians! Yes. Those crazy waffleheads supposedly committed half of their GDP to buy $141 billion of US treasuries, becoming the third largest holder.ref 168 If Belgium can bail out the US, then why doesn't Possum Trot, Kentucky bail out Detroit? Of course, somebody used Belgium as a proxy buyer because Belgium is also a basket case. I'm guessing the Fed was doing it; some say China. It could be any central bank, given that they are really one gigantic interconnected web of quantitative easing (QE).

2014 was the year of the taper—the Fed’s long-awaited exit (Fexit) from grotesque QE monetizations. The bond trade of the century was on: short US treasuries! Problem is that somebody forgot to tell the bond market: the taper ended (sort of), treasuries soared, and interest rates went even lower. Excuse me while I kiss the sky. Maybe the Belgians blew through the stops. Or, better yet, maybe it was those two Japanese guys caught carrying $134 billion in bonds over the Italian-Swiss border back in 2009.ref 169 This one wasn't a dud for those who front-ran the taper by shorting bonds. That'll teach them to bet on a sure thing.

“If I traded bonds, I'd have been bankrupt seven years in a row. I just don't geddit.”

~Mark Gilbert, Bloomberg

How is it possible to pull off the taper without event? I have a theory that is without support—a hunch of the highest order: The Fed was able to decouple temporally headline risk—the Fear Factor—from actual liquidity risk. It would require help from other central banks. Curiously, within hours of the US-centric QE coming to a close, Bank of Japan (BOJ) governor Kuroda surprised the markets (and other BOJ governorsref 170 apparently) by announcing a huge QE. Soon thereafter, Mario Draghi announced the Eurowanker variant.ref 171

Bill Gross stunned the world and the bond market when he moved from Pimco to the two-faced Janus.ref 172 (Nice truth-in-logo, guys.) Apparently, that sweet old man who wrote the folksy monthly reports was actually a bit demonic at the office, noting wryly to Mohamed El-Erian, “I have a 41-year track record of investing excellence. What do you have?”ref 173 Ouch. I wouldn't be shocked if Gross's divorce from Pimco was akin to Sam Zell marking the top of the real estate market almost to the minute by selling his $38 billion real estate empire. For a while, it looked like Pimco liquidations by Gross's groupies might eviscerate some bond indices, but price-insensitive central banks can buy up any slack.

Corporations continued a record bond-issuing spree. Examples of unappealing offerings include Caterpillar (50 yrs at 4.8%), Hasbro (30 yrs at 5%), and Target (10 yrs at 3.5%). If these and other large-cap companies are such stellar credit risks, why did they need to borrow money? Stock buybacks—almost $1 trillion of stock buybacks!ref 174 This form of bond-denominated stock monetization (BDSM) is a modern day variant of a leveraged buyout. Clearly the equity buyers find per-share rises in earnings well worth rotting their balance sheets. Stock buybacks are the new stock splits.

Telltale signs that the bond market is unglued are legion. State tobacco bonds were used to pull tobacco settlements forward, but buyers failed to anticipate drops in cigarette sales.ref 175 An index reflecting Mexican corporate junk bonds dipped to a 5.2% annualized rate.ref 176 How do you pass on those? It appeared as though the junk bond market was about to crack open in the summer, but paroxysms gave way to renewed tranquility. US junk bond indices dropped below 5% yield. As my fingers prepare to release the keys, however, the junk bond market is being crushed by the energy sector. The Fed also wants more high-quality assets for stability in a crisis and has inexplicably excluded munis from that category.ref 177 Muni crisis in 3...2...1...

The big story receiving no attention is that the Fed is considering exit fees—penalties—for removing assets from bond funds and some money market funds during times of stress.ref 178 Nobody bought into those funds with that rule in place. You would think that such fees would cause the bond market to collapse. You pass that law, and it will be a time of stress. Restricted withdrawal on just one fund—akin to breaking the buck—could cause a global contagion.

I've run into seemingly savvy investors who swear off bond funds, instead buying the bonds. They defiantly declare that they can't lose principal because they won't sell them. This baffles me to no end: aren't they just failing to mark their portfolios to market, whereas the bond funds have no such luxury? If rates double, dudes, you've lost a lot of principle. You just aren't calculating it. Cliff Asness pointed me toward his comparable analysis.ref 179

Why do I think it's a bond bubble—a Bond Caldera? Because short-term interest rates (some now negative), quantitative easing, and mountains of affiliated carry trades necessarily inflated it. Normalization of first-world sovereign overnight rates to, say, 4%—not exactly a Volcker-esque nightmare scenario—would demand a stunning reduction in principal.

So how is this going to play out? Jack Bogle says, “The best estimate of returns of bonds going forward is today's interest rate . . . with a 0.91 correlation.”ref 180 Sounds easy enough, but this is the nominal return and, as noted above, 2% nominal return on treasuries won't cut it. We have pulled all imaginable returns forward. Is it good news if the bond market holds steady and we earn dismal nominal returns for eternity? If so, projected returns on 60:40 equity-bond portfolios will stink unless equities soar, and that is not going to happen with current nosebleed valuations (see Broken Markets). The best-case scenario for future bond buyers and the worst-case scenario for current bondholders is a bond rout—serious repricing and affiliated rising yields. In the event of a bond crisis, equities will not be very perky either. Thus, unlike in '08–'09, when soaring bond funds offset tanking stock funds, the market will experience simultaneous paroxysms. It's unclear whether cow blowing or jawboning by fluffers Draghi, Bullard, Yellen, or Kuroda will put Humpty back together again.

“The age of getting rich quickly is over as is (most likely) the age of getting rich slowly.”

~Bill Gross, former bond king, Janus

“We sympathize with traditional stock and bond investors, who are faced with extremely poor choices today.”

~Paul Singer, Elliot Capital Management

To silence those who will bleat that nobody saw an epic bond crisis coming, I leave you with a few more warnings from some of the old mossbacks of finance:

“Leveraged loans to private equity are not just flashing red but have a wailing siren.”

~Financial Times

“A skeptic would have to be blind not to see bubbles inflating in junk bond issuance, credit quality, and yields”

~Seth Klarman, Baupost Group

“I can’t recommend buying any long-term bond as the yields stink relative to inflation.”

~Peter Boockvar, Lindsey Group

“This is a game we won’t even bother playing.”

~Tim Price, PFP Group, on the bond market

“Most government bondholders are unlikely to achieve a positive real return over the medium-to-long-term from this starting point.”

~Jim Reid, Deutsch Bank

Argentina Versus the Bond Vultures

“The Argentine Republic will meet its obligations, pay off its debts, and honor its commitments.”

~Axel Kicillof, economic minister of Argentina

“If I were the Argentine government, I would make all participants believe that I was willing to push everyone over the proverbial cliff at the end of July to improve my negotiating position.”

~Kyle Bass, Hayman Capital

There are always nuggets of folly in Argentina. The day the Argentine Central Bank's reserves accounting was questioned publicly, a massive fire destroyed a warehouse archiving documents from the entire banking system.ref 181 That's funny stuff. Alas, just like Obama's benefactor-turned-ambassador who has never even visited the place,ref 182 South America doesn't do it for me.

What caught my attention, however, was Paul Singer of Elliot Capital Management and a cadre of “vulture funds” raiding Argentina's debt markets like pox-riddled conquistadors.ref 183 The media excoriated Singer et al.ref 184,185 This battle would be the end of capitalism, they decried. How will we ever repeatedly bail out poor third-world countries (read: global banking cartel) ever again? The media was clueless and wrong.

The backstory: Argentina has been defaulting on debts since 1824.ref 186 Economist Steve Hanke estimates that it has been in default for 35% of its history.ref 187 A rolling loan gathers no loss. The default in question, however, occurred in 2002 on bonds issued in 2001. Whoever lent them that money has the intellectual firepower of an empanada. Singer and the Gouchos bought mucho cheap debt, waited for the banks to restructure it, and then told Argentina no way were they settling for a few pesos on the dollar. Argentina said, “Yes way!” but that didn't work. Normally, a collective action clause allows a majority of creditors—the banks—to force all creditors including the “holdouts” to accept the new terms. Argentina's bonds, however, did not include this clause. Oops. Specifically, the rights upon future offers (RUFO) or “pari passu” clause mandated that Argentina could not settle with the holdouts without paying all creditors off at the same rate.ref 188

So why not just cut the crap and default? It's not like it would tarnish their stellar Fico score. Of course, that's just crazy talk because the banks wouldn't get paid, and the banks bought a lot of politicians to get paid. US courts, however, ruled that any form of settlement would be in violation of RUFO. Apparently, the bankers should have budgeted more for the judges (an unforced error). Argentina protested that the court ruling “is merely a sophisticated way of trying to bring us down to our knees before global usurpers.”ref 189 And your point is?

Argentina went jurisdiction shopping. It considered having the investment banks pay Singer, but this was deemed RUFO forbidden.ref 190 Argentina tried to get the court to order payment so as to claim that such a mandate negated RUFO. The Bitcoin guys were champing at the Bit to offer their services. Alas, payments of any kind in any way would trigger RUFO. Singer bet that the global banking cartel would find a way to pay them: they bet on moral hazard.

Only Hanke seemed to get it right by accusing Argentina of serial defaults and giving a thumbs-up to a default.ref 191 The upside of a default is that everybody—Argentina, the banks, and Singer—would get schooled on risk. There was no solution, and on July 30th Argentina defaulted.ref 192 The high-yield bond market at large didn't really like it. The St. Louis Fed (@stlouisfed) tweeted “Why did the Argentine peso fall following Argentina’s default?” (They are actually paid to say stuff like this?) Meanwhile, the world continued rotating on its axis. Rumor has it that Singer has his sites on some hard assets.

Bottom line: If you lend to countries like Argentina in a free-market-driven credit system, you will quite justifiably lose your shirt. Because it's probably not actually your shirt, you should also lose your job, your freedom, and possibly your genitalia. Repeatedly lending to third-world countries aided and abetted by bribed third-world politicians destroys more lives than the collective efforts of serial killers. You should probably have your ass colocated with a prison cell.

“Argentina’s professed willingness to negotiate with its creditors has proven to be just another broken promise.”

~Jay Newman, spokesman for Elliot Capital Management

Inflation Versus Deflation

“Perhaps it is one secret of their power that, having studied the fluctuations of prices, the [bankers] know that history is inflationary.”

~Will Durant

I was positive a determined central banker could trigger inflation, and contemporary central bankers are a determined bunch. Austrian economists predicting rampant inflation were eviscerated this year, however, as the deflation drumbeat became deafening. Central bankers are wracked with apoplithorismosphobia (irrational fear of deflation). I am still very much afraid of inflation but began to wonder: Can you jam money into the system without triggering serious inflation? Can huge volumes of dormant money with low velocity be sopped up before it becomes high-velocity inflation?

Now for the confession: I don't understand the inflation–deflation debate at the most rudimentary level. How can you describe something so extraordinarily complex using binary language? Try describing the weather or the Great Barrier Reef using only two terms. Not easy, eh? Possibly for this reason, the inflation–deflation debate has elicited some of the most bizarre financial analyses I've ever read. Let's begin with a couple deflationary warnings from two very smart and respect-worthy guys:

“The new reality is that we currently stand face-to-face with the very deflation risk that just about everyone denied could ever happen.”

~Steen Jakobsen, Saxo Bank

“The Fed and the ECB have failed to prevent a dreaded replay of Japan’s deflationary template a decade earlier in the West. The Ice Age is once again about to exert its frosty embrace on markets as investors wake up to a new and colder reality.”

~Albert Edwards, Société Générale

Europe is said to be staring into the abyss occupied by Japan. US central bankers are developing nervous ticks. This all sounds so macroprudential (a content-free Yellen term). The dialog spans the gamut of pensive to inane. Let's begin with some of the Masters of the Universe—mostly central bankers—in their own words.

Bullard is “forecast[ing] rising inflation,” which is why he is “concerned about declining inflation expectations.” Mmm-kay. Whatever you say, Jim. Kocherlakota tells us we should be concerned about “below-target inflation” without clarifying from what dark place the Fed pulls its target. From recently released Fed minutes, we find that Bernanke thinks “low inflation is generally good” but that a “2% inflation target may be too low.” Fed governor Charles Evans declares “2% is not the right number.” I agree with Chuck, but I doubt we would agree on why 2% is not my number. With deflation risk in mind, a Fed report warned us that “consumers have decided to hoard money,” presumably in small banks called “hoardings and loans.” Krugman—a central banker in his dreams—warns that “the great danger facing advanced economies is that governments and central banks will do too little,” which is a complete 360 for him. He also noted that “inflation redistributes wealth down the scale of both wealth and age, while deflation does the reverse.” Poor folks love rising prices at Walmart. Adam Posen, president of the Petersen Institute, explains this odd consumer preference: “Food is one component of consumption. A rise in its cost is not inflation.”

Whether journalists are duplicitous or merely duped by macroeconomists is unclear, but they take in these nuggets of ambiguity from the authorities and spit out some seriously content-free content. Let's start with The Economist—the gateway to higher economic reasoning—by blowing right through an extraordinary flowing montage of quotes: “the biggest problem facing the rich world’s central banks today is that inflation is too low. . . . Politicians and central bankers are not providing the world with the inflation it needs. . . . The perversity of the low-inflation world is shown by the fact that the catalyst for the latest deflation scare is in itself a largely positive development. . . . The belief that goods bought tomorrow will be cheaper than goods bought today chokes consumption.” And then there was this little treasure: “You can have too much of a good thing, including low inflation. Very low inflation may benefit important segments of the population, notably net savers.” I respectfully suggest you guys step back and take a deep breath or change your name to one that better reflects your content.

Other media outlets had their 10 minutes of glory. The Financial Times warned that “it can be extremely difficult to increase the rate at which prices rise.” God forbid. Bloomberg noted that “an inflation rate approaching zero is bad for the economy because . . . companies’ inability to raise prices hurts profits.” So if profits need inflation, are they real? The Wall Street Journal worried that “the recent period of very low inflation could persist longer than first thought and may threaten the currency area's economic recovery.” It was a Yahoo Finance headline, however, that captured the weapons-grade stupidity of the discourse on deflation:

“Golden Years look dark as lower inflation eats into Social Security.”

Wait . . . what? Jeepers. It astonishes me that people actually penned these ideas. I know bats spewing shit less crazy than that. I personally don't need any inflation whatsoever. I like dropping prices, living large on less, boosting the GDP like an Italian (blow and hookers). Here's a simple sanity check: name one example of a good that fails to sell because it has gotten too cheap (besides equities, that is.) Raoul Paul Ilargi of Automatic Earth asserted that real deflation is not about dropping prices but about how much you have to spend. That's a keeper.

Let's bring a single member of the opposing team—the Sultan of Swat—off the bench:

“I remember sitting in class at Harvard being told by a fiscal policy expert that a little inflation was good for the economy. All I can remember after that was a word flashing in my brain like a yellow caution: bullshit. . . . This kind of stuff that you’re being taught at Princeton disturbs me.”

~Paul Volcker, former FOMC Chair

Some argue the definitive resolution to the inflation–deflation debate comes from the Billion Price Project (BPP) of Roberto Rigobon and big-brained economists at MIT.ref 193 By monitoring over a billion prices using NSA-quality robotic software, they amass a sample size on daily price fluctuations so enormous that no sane person could contest the final read on inflation. Not so fast, Bucko. How do they statistically weight the prices? How do you compare the price of toothpicks to college tuition? Soaring toothpick prices are never going to trouble me; I'll use my fingernail. A billion prices need a billion statistical weightings to reflect the magnitude of the prices, the percentage of one's income dedicated to the purchases, and the optionality of the purchases. That is where error and even chicanery could lurk. I asked Rigobon how they weight the prices, and he courteously told me that info is “proprietary,” which is a euphemism for ???? ??. In chemistry, a manuscript that describes a new method without providing any methodology gets rejected. The Billion Fudge Factor Project (BFFP) is a nonstarter without details.

Curiously, when I posted my concerns about the Billion Price Project online, somebody said the index went live, came in way too hot relative to the consumer price index (CPI), was brought back to the shop for a tune-up, and was re-released in the new CPI-friendly form. This, at present, is an unsubstantiated rumor, but back-testing to the CPI would be very tempting and would completely negate the basic premise. Also, I can name 50 items whose prices have profoundly influenced my lifetime of consumption; the other 999,999,950 are largely white noise. According to Daniel Kahneman (Thinking Fast and Slow), we must ignore the white noise.

Consumers deeply understand that which eludes central bankers and maybe even MIT economists: CPI inflation is very real. Prices are going up and package sizes are shrinking. John Williams of Shadowstats would argue that inflation is seriously underestimated.ref 194 I don't know if he's right, but his methodology is clean and simple. Oddly, even data from the Fed suggest high consumer inflation.ref 195 Paul Singer of Elliott Asset Management suggests that “the arithmetic of government statistics (jobs, growth, and inflation) is distorted and dishonest almost beyond measure.” Philippa Malmgren, former member of the President's Working Group on Financial Markets, refers to “a growing gap between what central banks are telling us about inflation versus what people are really experiencing.” The technical term for those who doubt government inflation numbers is “inflation truther,” which roughly translates to “ignorant peasant with a walnut-size brain.” Someone who uses “inflation truther” pejoratively is technically referred to as an “asshat.”

Lets call a spade a spade. Contemporary central bankers care deeply about CPI inflation because consumers must get less than expected somehow to exit this morasse of debt. What the bankers fear, however, is the deflation of assets on member banks' balance sheets. They fear the bad deflation—the kind that leads to defaults on loans rather than just cheaper goods—because of bank failures and because it shows that the central banks royally screwed the pooch. According to Austrian business cycle theory, the bigger the boom the bigger the bust. We are now at the end of a monumental bank-sponsored credit boom; brace for the Red Bull-sponsored bust. The inflationary credit boom is the disease; deflation is a symptom. We are being relentlessly waterboarded with liquidity by central bankers and fed propaganda with rectal feeding tubes. Charles Kindleberger, the world's expert on bubbles in his day, noted that bubbles arise when excess credit is jammed into a system with decaying fundamentals.ref 196 Decaying fundamentals? Sound familiar? If somehow all this money hoarded at the Fed escapes into the wild, take cover. Either way, proclamations that “it's a dud” seem premature. I highly recommend Banking and the Business Cycle (1937) for a compelling description of what happened the last time we hit this bridge abutment.

*  *  *

Given the length of David's letter, we will publish part 2 tomorrow (along with a full PDF).

2014 Year In Review (Part 2): Will 2015 Be The Year It All Comes Tumbling Down?

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Authored by David Collum, originally posted at Peak Prosperity,

If you've not yet read Part 1, click here to do so. The whole enchilada can be downloaded as a single PDF here, or read below, or viewed in parts via the hot-linked contents as follows:

Part 1:

Part 2:

Wealth Disparity

“Printing money out of thin air does not increase wealth, it only increases claims on existing wealth.”

~Charles Hugh Smith

In the olden days, claims that the rich were getting richer and the poor were getting poorer were a thinly veiled rallying cry for class warfare. Thomas Sowell reminds us that a growing economy lifts all boats, and those at the bottom strata percolate up generationally from garment worker to bookkeeper to doctors and lawyers (well, maybe just doctors). It feels different now, and the angst over wealth disparity resonates with growing numbers of adherents. It is no longer just the dregs of society but the increasingly struggling middle class, or what I prefer to call “the median class.”

“Only the wealthy can afford a middle-class lifestyle.”

~Zero Hedge

The contrasts are stunning. While 53% of adults earn less than $30,000 per year,ref 197 the rentier class—big-gun money managers—are muffin topping out at $3 billion.ref 198,199 David Tepper earned almost $500K per hour. Stevie Cohen ranked second in earnings as a full-time defendant for insider trading. The median retirement savings of a working-age adult is $2,000, yet we've got folks with the cash to pay for brain surgery on goldfish,ref 200 $60 million Steve Martin–like balloon art,ref 201 $500K watches,ref 202 and $2,000 glamburgers (“gluttonburgers”).ref 203 A full 47% of millennials are using >50% of their paychecks to pay down debt.ref 204 Twenty percent of US families have no employed family members.ref 205 This is a problem demanding solutions for which none are obvious. The elite billionaire society, Beta Kappa Phi,ref 206 is dominated by the rentiers rather than wealth-creating capitalists. This is not about Bill Gates or Michael Dell. Wealth inequality is about the inordinately high pay for those who don't actually create wealth and the inordinately low pay for those whose toils do. We have reached the apex of another gilded age.

“It's not just enough to fly in first class; I have to know my friends are flying in coach.”

~Jeremy Frommer, Carlin's chief executive

Seven Habits of Highly Successful People: skiing, yachting, snorkeling, golf, polo, dinner parties, and shopping.

We will be tempted to redistribute. But ramping up the minimum wage by fiat quickly ushers in the 360-burger-per-hour robot.ref 207“Our device isn’t meant to make employees more efficient,” said Momentum co-founder Alexandros Vardakostas. “It’s meant to completely obviate them.” (Note the careful use of “obviate” rather than “replace.”) Debates about whether we should throw money to the rich or money to the poor, however, beg the key question: why are we throwing money at all?

“A smoothly operating financial system promotes efficient allocation of saving and investment.”

~Janet Yellen

Killin' it Janet! But then she went on to make some unfortunate comments suggesting that the poor need to own more assets. Oh well. It is ironic that some (including me) attribute the wild disparity squarely on the Fed.

The economy has been financialized to dysfunction, a hallmark of a failing empire according to Kevin Phillips in American Theocracy. By flooding the market with capital, central bankers have made it difficult for workers to compete with capital-intensive technology. (I hasten to add that I’m unsure where I stand on this point given that creative destruction is central to growth.) The excess capital, however, also renders our hard-earned savings—our capital—worthless. I know where I stand on this point. Why pay savers for use of their capital when the Fed hands it out for free? By driving down rates to zero, the Fed is impoverishing savers unwilling to step out on the risk curve. Those of the median class who spent time out on that risk curve have been generationally wounded and, more important, are broke. They lack the capital to close the gap. Despite claims of impending deflation, the spending power of paychecks for the staples—food, energy, health care, and education—has tanked. Alliance Bernstein does a remarkable job of laying out the almost unattainable goal of a stable retirement.ref 208

“I would say [Fed policy] has been in some sense reverse Robin Hood.”

~Kevin Warsh, Stanford University and former Federal Reserve governor

“Maybe the Fed is delusional about the effects of its policy . . . in widening the gulf between rich and poor in this country.”

~William Cohan

“Part of the impact of these very, very low interest rates is that we've created this disparity. The wealthy are benefiting from government policy and the non-wealthy aren't. We have a president who says we've got to fight this disparity, and we have a Fed who's encouraging it everyday.”

~Sam Zell, former real estate mogul

History shows that ugly things happen when classes start battling for their share of the pie. A McShitstorm hit the McDonalds annual meeting from clashes of cops and protestors.ref 209 Ferguson (see below) is not just about a dead black guy. Models show a high correlation of global riots with global food prices.ref 210 We are there again. Nick Hanauer, a guy who is quite familiar with wealth creation, suggests that the billionaires of the world should be nervous:ref 211

“What everyone wants to believe is that when things reach a tipping point and go from being merely crappy for the masses to dangerous and socially destabilizing, that we’re somehow going to know about that shift ahead of time. Any student of history knows that’s not the way it happens. Revolutions, like bankruptcies, come gradually, and then suddenly. One day, somebody sets himself on fire, then thousands of people are in the streets, and before you know it, the country is burning. And then there’s no time for us to get to the airport and jump on our Gulfstream and fly to New Zealand. That’s the way it always happens. If inequality keeps rising as it has been, eventually it will happen. We will not be able to predict when, and it will be terrible—for everybody. But especially for us.”

~Nick Hanauer, to his fellow billionaires

Nick sees pitchforks in the future. The Hanauer editorial posted in Politico generated upward of 10,000 comments from 10,000 pitchfork wielders. This plotline—a possible Fourth Turning—is just coming into focus.

Banks and Bankers

“The Bank never ‘goes broke.’ If the Bank runs out of money, the Banker may issue as much more as needed by writing on any ordinary paper.”

~Monopoly board game rule book

Simon Johnson noted that six years after the crisis, the big banks are still only 5% capitalized (20:1 leveraged).ref 212 Twenty-five European banks failed the stress test, which will force them to recapitalize.ref 213 The largest banks were mandated by the Dodd–Frank Bill to “put their affairs together” with formal plans to ensure stability: the Federal Reserve and FDIC rejected all of them—a 100% failure rate.ref 214 JPM has total assets of $2 trillion and a total derivative exposure of $71 trillion.ref 215 Beware of flappy-winged butterflies. If the Fed taps the brakes, those guys are headed right through the windshield. If we hit a bump in the road, it's out through the moonroof.

“The tragedy is not that things are broken. The tragedy is that they are not mended again.”

~Alan Paton, Cry, the Beloved Country

Let's ignore the awkward question of why you recapitalize insolvent banks—you're not supposed to according to Bagehot.ref 216How do you recapitalize them? Best I can tell, banks clean up their risk (a) through a grinding, multiyear balance sheet rehabilitation (a good ground game), (b) by getting their friends at central banks to engineer highly profitable carry trades, or (c) by simply selling their garbage to taxpayers way above market value. The Fed chose the latter two for US banks. They set up “good” banks and “bad” banks. The good banks hold good assets—heads they win—and the bad banks are like state-run Ebola clinics (tails we lose). The banks are also using more traditional methods; they are stepping away from the mortgage market, leaving it to the shadow banking industry. Get ready for good shadow banks and bad shadow banks.

The banks amassed almost $200 billion in fines,ref 217 paradoxically without any convictions of major bankers. (Actually, Iceland just hurled a banker in jail.ref 218 Go Vikings!) There are several nice summaries of JPM's and BofA's illegal activities.ref 219 The tenacious Matt Taibbi describes how the system was corrupted by backdoor dealings to avoid any jail time in The Divide (see Books). Taibbi tells us the no-jail policy was indeed a written policy by Eric Holder and the Obama DOJ. It is said that as you age you tend toward one of two paths: altruism or narcissism. Holder chose the latter. Barry Ritholtz claims that the fines are cleaning up the corporate culture despite the lack of satisfaction.ref 220 I like Barry but wholly disagree: the bill for this legal and moral lapse has yet to arrive.

“The behaviour of the financial sector has not changed fundamentally in a number of dimensions since the crisis . . . some prominent firms have even been mired in scandals that violate the most basic ethical norms.”

~Christine Lagarde, managing director of the IMF

Nothing gets through those beer goggles, Columbo. The details of this year's shenanigans warrant some comment. Credit Suisse admitted to helping wealthy US folks evade taxes but claimed that management was unaware they were running a crime syndicate.ref 221 The Gnomes of Zurich chronically aided and abetted tax evaders. Deutsche Bank and Barclays were in on the scam too.ref 222 (Don't take me too seriously; I understand arguments for the evasion.) We found that JPM was complicit in the Madoff case, and the DOJ knew it.ref 223 (One should assume the same for Worldcom and Enron.) JPM's Asian CEO was brought up on corruption charges because traders cooked the books to conceal losing trades.ref 224 Of course, the whistleblower was denied whistleblower status by the regulators because of the DOJ's zero-tolerance whistleblower policy.ref 225 JPM also helped BNP launder money to sanctioned countries.ref 226 Preet Bharara, Prosecutor of the Stars and head of his own Rainbow Coalition, went after BNP shareholders for almost $10 billion because you never help sanctioned countries. The actual criminals within BNP were left unscathed. JPM paid only $88.3 million to settle similar unlawful dealings with Cuba, Iran, and Sudan.ref 227 Apparently, you get a two-decimal discount if you are domiciled in the United States. Even Bharara has his tolerance limits; he got majorly pissed at Jamie Dimon for giving himself a 74% raise.ref 228 I'm guessing it will make Jamie's huge campaign donation to help Preet crowd source his political career harder to explain. I have a suggestion, Preet: Stop fining shareholders and start jailing criminals. Convict somebody—anybody. Blythe Masters, after narrowly escaping a prison sentenceref 229 (not even close), left JPM and accepted a job as Regulator for a Day at the CFTC.ref 230 That’s how quickly her detractors processed the absurdity and stopped it.ref 231 Blythe will be played by Julianne Moore in the sequel to Catch Me If You Can.

HSBC overstated its assets by what some might call a rounding error ($92 billion),ref 232 which forced it to restrict withdrawals by demanding proof that you need cash (bank run).ref 233 Do grocery receipts count? It also recruited the former head of MI5 (British CIA clone) to join its board, which seems oddly consistent with suggestions that HSBC was laundering money to Hezbollah.ref 234 This also squares nicely with my previous assertionref 2 that HSBC is a retread of the profoundly corrupt and now defunct BCCI. After the next bailout—there will be another—Goldman will underwrite the IPO of HSBCCI.

RBS losses since '08 were shown to top £40 billion since '08,ref 235 an amount oddly comparable to that dumped into it by the taxpayers of one or more countries.ref 236 Fortunately, RBS managed to scrape together executive bonuses totaling 200% of base pay.ref 237 CEO Ross McEwan apologized. All was forgiven. . . . at least forgotten.

Citigroup got hit with a $10 billion tax from the DOJ for its role in the crime spree.ref 238 On a more humorous note, it inadvertently paid out $400 million in fake invoices sent by Banamex (Mexican princes).ref 239 Trolling for payments using fake invoices to huge corporations is a provocative business model.

“Regulators are starting to ask: Is there something rotten in bank culture?”

~New York Times news flash

The punitive qualities of all these fines are often muted by their tax deductibility. And, by the way, where does this $200 billion garnered by the Big Shakedown go? State and federal governments have found a number of worthy causes that are also politically expedientref 240—”a wealth redistribution scheme disguised as a lawsuit.”ref 241 Andrew Cuomo threatened to withdraw BNP's license to operate on Wall Street if they didn't up his vig by $1 billion.ref 242 I can taste vomit in my mouth.

The relief was palpable when MF Global officers and directors were allowed to use insurance money to defend officers and directors rather than give it to creditors.ref 243 A judge ruled that Goldman's shell game, in which they moved aluminum from warehouse to warehouse, was unintentional.ref 244 It was just the tip, your honor! It was just the tip! The actor who played McGruff the crime dog got 20 years for pot and weapons charges,ref 245 the former being legal in some states and the latter a constitutionally protected right. A spoof article describing Holder's departure to JPM was outlandish but so believable that I had to confirm with the source that it was actually satire.ref 246

“When you won, you divided the profits amongst you, and when you lost, you charged it to the [central] bank.”

~Andrew Jackson, former president of the United States

There are a few lawsuits weaving through the courts, and nothing terrifies bankers more than the discovery phase of a trial. Thirteen global banks were sued by Alaska Fund for ISDA fix rigging.ref 247 I'm not sure how you rig a fix or fix a rig or whatever. The nonprofit Better Markets has alleged that the DOJ violated the Constitution (shocking) by acting as the investigator, prosecutor, judge, jury, sentencer, and collector, without any check on its authority or actions.ref 248 A Freedom of Information Act suit showed that the SEC colluded with banks to ensure that they were prosecuted for only a single credit default obligation (CDO) charge and that the rest were covertly included in the settlement.ref 249 Barclays' court battles over Libor rigging could produce some interesting discovery about “fantasy rates.”ref 250 The AIG trial seemed sufficiently consequential as a window into this huge heist that it gets its own section.

The charter of the Export-Import Bank (Ex-Im Bank) is up for congressional renewal.ref 251 Ex-Im bank is, according to Wikipedia, “the official export credit agency of the United States federal government . . . for the purposes of financing and insuring foreign purchases of United States goods for customers unable or unwilling to accept credit risk.”ref 252 It lends money to foreign debtors who cannot get credit through normal channels (credit being so tight and all).ref 253 Who might they be? Well, sovereigns who buy lots of Boeing jets presumably to bomb other countries who also buy lots of Boeing jets.ref 254 Lobbying—quite possibly illegal foreign lobbying—will ensure that the bill is passed. Why not let private banks fund these guys? They've been instigating and then funding foreign wars since antiquity. Congressional opponents risk an airstrike on their next campaign.

Is there any hope that the system will correct itself? In Vietnam, they execute bankers who egregiously screw up by “binding perpetrators to a wooden post, stuffing their mouths with lemons, and calling in a firing squad.” That's making lemonade out of lemons. I suspect that the next crisis may see some punishment meted out extralegally in the US. There appears to be some already.

Zero Hedge was the first to pick up on a rash of dead bankers that stopped short of inspiring a Whack-O-Meter based on the bank Implode-O-Meter from 2009.ref 255 I lost count at about 20 and was shocked to find it is now 36.ref 256 Unfortunately, the guys most likely to make everybody's short lists are not the ones heading off to the ultimate gated community. It's possible that bankers suffer from the Werther effect—the tendency of suicides to come in waves.ref 257 It may simply be the Baader–Meinhof phenomenon,ref 258 or what I’ve always called the “green van effect”—buy a green van and then notice how many are already on the road. Nassim Taleb would likely tell us we are being fooled by randomness: 36 suicides in the large sample size may be normal . . . but I doubt it. Some of the subplots were curious. One was accidentally shot by two guys on a motorcycle. Another, according to the Denver Post, offed himself with eight shots from a pneumatic nail gun.ref 259 It read like satire given that this Final Exit was likely assisted by the Kevorkian brothers. We know there was at least one twisted bastard in the room. One banker went to the light with his whole family, which strikes me as over the top even for a banker. Although JPM’s payroll contained several who met untimely deaths, JPM had taken out $680 billion worth of life insurance policies (curtains default swaps) on their employeesref 260 presumably as a precaution against unfortunate accidents. A Chinese banker both died and fell from a fourth-story window, although the translation is unclear about the order in which the two occurred.ref 261 Even the head of a Bitcoin exchange cashed out.ref 262

“Perhaps sometimes it is easiest if the weakest links, those whose knowledge can implicate the people all the way at the top, quietly commit suicide in the middle of the night.”

~Zerohedge

AIG

Hank Greenberg's lawsuit against the Fed proved the Rosetta Stone of the bailouts. The world was aghast when the Fed bailed out the insurance behemoth to the tune of $187 billion, ostensibly to save AIG but really to save its counterparties (read: Goldman Sachs). The world subsequently blew a collective snot bubble when gazillionaire and former head of AIG, Hank Greenberg, sued the Fed for the bailout.ref 263 Greenberg's suit asserted that the Fed had no right to confiscate 92% of the company without formal proceedings of any kind. Hmmm. It does sound a little sketchy when put that way.ref 264 Well, the lawsuit reached the discovery phase this summer, and the media were all over it:

“The government never sought to couch AIG’s lifeline as a way to push money into the hands of Goldman Sachs, Deutsche Bank, Société Générale and the dozens of other banks around the world. . . . The problem is that so many people don’t like the answers.”

~Andrew Ross Sorkin, Wall Street darling and putative journalist

Not so fast, Andy. Last year I alluded to David Stockman’s assertion that the dominant insurance component of AIG was cordoned off by state insurance statutes—legal tourniquets—from the rotten part of the corpse: the risk of collapse was nil.ref 2 New York's superintendent of insurance (Dinallo) testified as such in the trial.ref 265 Tim Geithner, Hank Paulson, Ben Bernanke, and anyone else intimately involved seemed to have truth issues along with very bad memories. Matt Stoller wrote some great pieces on the AIG case.ref 266,267

“I would be guessing, but I guess I would guess sometime in '08—but I'm not sure.”

~Timothy Geithner under oath, recalling squat about AIG

That is some seriously evasive mumbling. Bernanke was said to have two moods while on the witness stand with David Boies bearing down on him: “annoyed and really annoyed.” Records show he used the pseudonym “Edward Quince” in emails (to Linda Green?) during the crisis,ref 268 presumably to be secret to all except those with a Jekyll Island decoder ring. Key witness and Fed lawyer Scott Alvarez was clear that Paulson had done some serious fibbing to Congress while pushing the TARP (i.e., AIG bailout) through Congress under false pretenses. Alvarez's use of “I don't know” 36 times and “I don't recall” 17 times in one day made for riveting testimony.

Boies: Would you agree as a general proposition that the market generally considers investment-grade debt securities safer than non-investment-grade debt securities?

Alvarez: I don’t know.

Judge Wheeler was smart and easily irritated at Alvarez's bad memory. And unlike Congressional hearings, Boies had all . . . day . . . long.

We heard about the numerous potential suitors wanting to buy up the company as a distressed asset and how Geithner and the gang wanted nothing to do with that: none would pay Goldman back 100 cents on the dollar.

“...Geithner and company shot AIG in the head, and then let other banks feast on its rotting carcass.”

~Matt Stoller, journalist, channeling Matt Taibbi

Will anything come of this? I don't know. Many prominent journalists wrote scathing indictments of those bringing the suit. Some called it laughable, frivolous, ludicrous, absurd. I, however, am rooting for Kappa Beta Phi alum Hank Greenberg. The Fed should not have commandeered AIG the way it did. It should have let the counterparties eat their mistakes rather than carrion. AIG wasn't the only organization that left the reservation. MF Global is suing Price Waterhouse for the bad accounting that led to its demise.ref 269 Maybe somebody will yank Corzine from the Hamptons long enough to take the stand. Watch out for guys on motorcycles, Jon.

The Federal Reserve

“I found myself doing extraordinary things that aren’t in the textbooks. Then the IMF asked the U.S. to please print money. The whole world is now practicing what they have been saying I should not. I decided that God had been on my side and had come to vindicate me.”

~Gideon Gono, governor of the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe

“We have [made] a colossal muddle. . . having blundered in the control of a delicate machine we do not understand.”

~John Maynard Keynes

The Fed's dual mandate as both arsonist and firefighter puts it in the untenable situation of relentlessly fighting blazes it lights. It spent most of 2014 trying to convert one zero-interest-rate policy (ZIRP; Figure 13) via the so-called taper to another (ZIRP-lite), the whole time babbling incoherently to maximize its flexibility to use data of its choosing at times of its choosing. Phrases like “macroprudential” and “central tendency outcomes” are all designed to conceal the real purpose behind their sado-monetary policy.

Figure 13. Graphical view of financial repression.

ZIRP is praised by some as a means of providing cheap funding for public and private debt, allowing equity withdrawal from appreciating assets—kind of like an ATM. Hmmm . . . how'd that work for homeowners? The cost of the Fed's No Banker Left Behind financial repression program is estimated by Bloomberg at more than $1 trillion to the savers (errata: money hoarders). I know I've been repressed. It takes a balance of $480,000 in my checking account for the interest to pay my $4 monthly account fee.

“Savers are figuratively on their hands and knees and rooting around in bushes and between sofa seats for loose change on which to sustain themselves.”

~James Grant, editor of Grant's Interest Rate Observer

The Fed's primary justification for the risk and high cost of their latrogenic ZIRP, however, is to jack up asset markets to all-time highs. Yellen noted that “the channels by which monetary policy works is asset prices . . . I think it is fair to say that our monetary policy has had an effect of boosting asset prices.” Richard Fisher concurred: “We juiced the trading and risk markets so extensively that they became somewhat addicted to our accommodation.”

“We make ?money the old-fashioned way. We print it.”

~Art Rolnick, chief economist for the Minneapolis Fed

Life According to ZIRP seemed pretty good, but $4 trillion is a lotta scratch. A less aggressive approach would have been to monetize it more gradually at, say, $5 million of debt per day, but that would have required starting at the birth of Christ to hit the $4 trillion target. In the midst of the '09 crisis, the Fed needed it fast—Damn the Torpedoes . . . Shock and Awe . . . Surge! Unfortunately, the notion that you cannot print your way to prosperity is gaining traction.

There was a lot of chatter about the Fed scarfing up all the high-quality collateral, causing stress in the repo market.ref 270 Anyone professing to understand the repo market is smarter or more dishonest than I. What I do know is that if the Fed buys up the good stuff—relatively speaking, of course—that leaves only the riskier crap for the rest of the fixed-income buyers, which seems to be the Fed's motive. There's also endless debate about the size and quality of the Fed's balance sheet. Some say it doesn't matter if their balance sheet looks like a yard sale (worthless shit everywhere). The Fed is even talking about an expanded balance sheet in perpetuity. Benn Steil, author of Battle of Bretton Woods and a fellow at the CFR, noted that the Fed must have quality assets in case it ever needs to fight inflation.ref 271 In short, you cannot sop up inflationary liquidity by selling CPDOs and credit default swaps into the market. I am a Benn groupie, but there is no evidence whatsoever that this Fed gives a hoot about inflation.

“But why do I care about some archaic money-market malarkey? Simple. Without collateral to fund repo, there is no repo; without repo, there is no leveraged positioning in financial markets; without leverage and the constant hypothecation there is nothing to maintain the stock market's exuberance.”

~James Bullard, president of the St. Louis Fed, on the role of the repo markets in blowing bubbles

The media got aroused by the Segarra Sex Tapes,ref 272 in which a former regulator-turned-whistleblower recorded more than 40 hours of royal screwing she received trying to uncover nefarious activities at Goldman. At some level, they weren't very salacious in the context of the triple-X performance by the banks and regulators over the years, but this one still left a bad taste. The judge's insensitivity to Segarra's claims weren't so shocking given that Mr. Judge (the judge’s husband) had previously consulted with Goldman.ref 273 All of this occurred under the watchful eyes of the Federal Reserveref 274 but was promptly forgotten until a ProPublica story shoved it back in the public's eye.ref 275 Of course, that was several months ago, and nobody cares now.

The recently released 2008 Fed minutesref 276 offered another window into the crisis. The Fed clearly understood that the banks were rigging the credit markets . . . but so was the Fed. In 2008 Yellen was “worried about the possibility of a credit crunch if higher job losses begin to make lenders pull back credit.” I started writing to folks about it in '02, Dudette, while you guys were making forts out of pillows and blankets.ref 277 Fisher noted, “None of the 30 CEOs to whom I talked, outside of housing, see the economy trending into negative territory.” Bernanke suggested that “one of the lessons is that we [may] need to take the accommodation back.” We're still waiting for that one. Fisher also expressed stress over the “rising cost of hops and barley . . . I am a beer lover.” (The Fed humor was roundly criticized, but that is neuropsychologically sound behavior under stress.) The most contentious part was probably Kevin Warsh declaring, “We are not clueless.” Some would disagree.

I suspect the Fed orchestrates public debate like a comedy improv group. The result is entertaining and, at times, rather garbled. Let's look at some temporally separate quotes that I've reattached with the ol' “. . .” thingie:

“More jobs have now been created in the recovery than were lost in the downturn. . . . Five years after the end of the recession, the labor market has yet to fully recover.”

~Janet Yellen

“The FED needs to be clear; rates will be low for a long time. . . . We need to let the market work.”

~Charles Evans, president of the Chicago Fed

“Inflation expectations are dropping in the U.S., and that is something that a central bank cannot abide. . . . Without leverage and the constant hypothecation there is nothing to maintain the stock market's exuberance. . . . I think you should quit numbering the QEs.”

~James Bullard, president of the St. Louis Fed

The Fed's second tactic was to feign concern that moral hazard (over-reliance on backstops) had fostered too many animal spirits. Are you kidding me? The Fed is admonishing us for going out on the risk curve? Now whose fault is that? As Mark Gilbert of Bloomberg noted, “It's an odd world indeed where the major central banks have all adopted the mantra of 'lower for longer' on interest rates, and are now berating the financial community for listening.” Some compare QE to alcoholism, but that is not really valid: One is a terrible addiction with devastating withdrawal symptoms, the other is merely a drinking problem.

“There is some evidence of reach for yield behavior.”

~Janet Yellen, June 18, 2014

I think they dropped Janet on her head when they were competing to see who could throw the Fed chair the furthest. (Hey. Back off! At least I laid off the “flat head” joke. That would have been tasteless.)

As Caligula once said, every orgy must end and always with a bang. It seemed to be time. The Fed began to foam the runway for a decrease in QE, even possibly raising Fed funds rates (albeit much later than any rational person could imagine.) The Fed seemed to believe that if it hiked rates with ample warning—if it pulled the trigger really, really, really slowly—it wouldn't blow the global economy's head off. The Fed began the Green Mile toward the dreaded taper. As described and critiqued in the section on bonds (see above), not much happened. It began coercing credit-addicted investors into rehab, but the stay at the Betty Ford Clinic was short-lived. In the fall, a 10% drop in equity markets spread fear in the Fed—OMG!—prompting Bullard to declare, “We could go on pause . . . and wait until we see how the data shakes out.” An ensuing immaculate rally was dubbed the Bullard Rally (Fed cat bounce). Damn, another dud.

Careful Red. The Fed may have kept rates too low for too long (again), causing serious malinvestment (again). Loose credit has kept the losers in the game (again), causing the economy to rot (some more). The Fed suffers acute Hayekian Fatal Conceit—the belief that a committee of a dozen mid-level bureaucrats of moderate intelligence can control something as unimaginably complex as the global economy better than Darwinian selection and the Wisdom of Crowds (free markets). If the Soviets were still around—they went broke trying to control markets—I think they would agree. Let's listen to the voices of just a few more detractors with serious gravitas before moving on:

“The number of times that the Federal Reserve has hiked interest rates without a negative economic or market impact has been exactly zero.”

~Lance Roberts, STA Wealth Management

“This time is different . . . because the Federal Reserve’s zero-interest rate policy has starved investors of all sources of safe return, forcing them to accept risk at increasingly higher prices and progressively dismal long-term prospective returns.”

~John Hussman

“There is agreement in the Fed that QE is about the worst thing you can do. . . . These guys are painting themselves into a corner . . . with great, great negative possibilities. . . . The Fed wants to get out of the QE business because it has brought no success and a great deal of criticism.”

~Art Cashin

“I don't really like the Fed very much . . . I wish the Fed were not manipulating the market the way it is.”

~Jeffrey E. Gundlach, Doubleline Capital

“A key flaw in US policy is the Fed's linear thinking—believing that the shock therapy of QE could not only save the patient in the depths of crisis but also foster sustained recovery.”

~Stephen Roach, Yale University and former Morgan Stanley chief economist

“[Yellen] won’t raise rates to fight incipient bubbles. For all of our sakes, we really wish she would.”

~Seth Klarman, Baupost Group

“Where does their confidence come from?”

~Stan Druckenmiller, legendary hedge fund manager, on central bankers

“No one has ever seen anything like this . . . if you look at the details of what these central banks are doing, it’s all very experimental. . . . There is something fundamentally wrong.”

~William White, former chief economist of the Bank for International Settlements

“You will see a system primed for a rerun of 2008, perhaps even faster and more intense this time.”

~Paul Singer, Elliot Management

“We don’t understand fully how large-scale asset purchase programs work to ease financial market conditions.”

~Bill Dudley, president of the New York Fed

Baptists

“Sell everything and run for your lives.”

~Albert Edwards, Société Générale

Every year I include collections of comments that seem prescient (Baptists) or off-kilter (Bootleggers)—always in their own voices (quotes) and often suffering well-reasoned paranoia. This year I even have a couple who switched teams or showed bi-curiosity. I begin with the Baptists.

“We’re in a world where there are very few unambiguously cheap assets.”

~Russ Koesterich, chief investment strategist at BlackRock

In all likelihood, this manipulation will fail as every attempt at price manipulation since Diocletian’s Edict on Maximum Prices in the 3rd century. The only outstanding question is one of timing.”

~Louis-Vincent Gave, CIO of Gavekal

“Living in a largely peaceful world with 2% GDP growth has some big advantages that you don’t get with 4% growth and many more war deaths.”

~Tyler Cowen after discussing the stimulative effect of war

“The stock market does not reflect what's going on in the economy. . . . Holding cash is a better than investing in an over-valued stock market.”

~Sam Zell, largest real estate tycoon in the universe

“On almost any metric the US equity market is historically quite expensive. . . . Can we say when it will end? No. Can we say that it will end? Yes. And when it ends and the trend reverses, here is what we can say for sure. Few will be ready. Few will be prepared.”

~Seth Klarman, Baupost Group

“Collapses of even advanced civilizations have occurred many times in the past five thousand years, and they were frequently followed by centuries of population and cultural decline and economic regression.”

~NASA scientists channeling Joseph Tainter

“Our tinkering artificially short-circuits the fundamental capacity of the system to allocate its limited resources, correct its errors, and find its own balance through the internal communication of information that no forestry manager could ever possibly possess . . . homeostasis ultimately wins through a raging inferno.”

~Mark Spitznagel, Founder Universa Investments

“It takes character to sit there with all that cash and do nothing. I didn't get to where I am today by going after mediocre opportunities.”

~Charlie T. Munger, Berkshire Hathaway

“You’re screwed and even though they say it’s in your best interest because zero rates and money printing will help the economy, don’t believe them anymore because the strategy has failed.”

~Peter Boockvar in an open letter to savers

“This market intervention and manipulation has fostered the greatest-ever speculation in global securities markets, which has motivated only greater central control . . . central bankers believe that they have no choice but to dominate markets—to dominate seemingly everything.”

~Doug Noland, Federated Investors

“There's no argument—you have to worry about the excessive printing of money!”

~George Soros, Soros Fund Management

“Today’s levels of interest rates and stock prices offer a historically unacceptable level of risk relative to return unless the policy rate is kept low—now and in the future.”

~Bill Gross, manger at Janus and founder of Pimco

“What we have never had before, at least in my reading of financial history, is governmentally sponsored bull markets superimposed on a structure of low interest rates.”

~James Grant

“Advanced economies with financial markets at risk for runs and fire sales may need to put in place mechanisms to unwind funds should they come under substantial pressure that threatens wider financial stability.”

~IMF

“...when it changes it does so quickly, and the impossible becomes the inevitable without ever having been probable.”

~Bill Fleckenstein, Fleckenstein Capital

“Paul [Krugman] will continue to be mostly wrong, mostly dishonest about it, incredibly rude, and in a crass class by himself.”

~Cliff Asness, founder of AQR Capital

“QE hasn’t been a success in the demand side because the [banks] just let it sit. . . . When that starts, all things can happen, and not all of them are good.”

~Alan Greenspan (post-baptism)

Bootleggers

“I barely made it from the desk to the bed, where I lay curled up in a hallucinatory state for the next eight hours. I was thirsty but couldn’t move to get water. Or even turn off the lights. I was panting and paranoid, sure that when the room-service waiter knocked and I didn’t answer, he’d call the police and have me arrested for being unable to handle my candy.”

~Timothy Geithner, former head of the New York Federal Reserve, after consuming pot during the financial crisis

“I'm going to test your numerology skills by asking you to think about the magic seven. Most of you will know that seven is quite a number in all sorts of themes, religions. If we think about 2014—alright I'm just giving you 2014—you drop the zero, fourteen . . . two times seven!”

~Christine Lagarde, former head of the IMF, unaltered by pot

The bootleggers are an eclectic mix. Some are reasonable souls saying what I think are unreasonable things. Others seem less benign, espousing stunted and vapid ideas. They share the common trait that what they say seems so unmemorable, yet I'm driven to archive it. The bootleggers are, unlike Geithner and Lagarde, more than capable of expressing what is going on in their skulls. Last year I gave Krugman his own section, so I went light this year.

“This is when you’re supposed to think about preserving some of your money. I am nervous. I think it’s nervous time [5/15/14] . . . all of those things [that made me nervous] alleviated, one by one [6/1/14].”

~David Tepper, May 15, 2014

“When the Austrian brain-worm invades, you start believing things like: (1) Federal Reserve money-printing is a government plot to boost big banks, (2) prices are rising much faster than anyone thinks, (3) real ‘inflation’ means money-printing, not an increase in prices, (4) printing money can never boost the economy, (5) academic economics is a plot to use mathematical mumbo-jumbo to cover up government giveaways to big banks, etc., etc.”

~Noah Smith on Austrian economicsref 278

“Noah Smith should really be getting out his papers instead of blogging. I think my career choice would be for him to publish.”

~Paul Krugman

“But insiders also understand one unbreakable rule: they don’t criticize other insiders.”

~Larry Summers, former president of Harvard and former secretary of the Treasury, to Elizabeth Warren

“Future profitability is better than what we were expecting.”

~Analysts at Citigroup in the Crystal Ball Division

“The cyclically adjusted P/E ratio suggests S&P 500 is now 30%–45% overvalued compared with the average since 1928 . . . we lift our year-end 2014 S&P 500 price target to 2050 (from 1900) and 12-month target to 2075.”

~David Kostin, Goldman Sachs

Europe

“I say to all those who bet against Greece and against Europe: You lost and Greece won. You lost and Europe won.”

~Jean-Claude Juncker

“I (and others I talk to) are having an ever-harder time seeing how this ends—or rather, how it ends non-catastrophically.”

~Paul Krugman, that Paul Krugman, on Europe

I submitted last year that Cyprus—a clunky beta test for bank “bail-ins”—would “eventually become part of a huge story,” and I stand by that. The bail-ins involve shareholders and creditors—creditors including depositors (aka you)—bailing out banks instead of taxpayers (aka you). Not to worry, Yanks. This is a European story. (Just kidding; it's global.) You should read GoldCore's superior discussion of the bank bail-in,ref 279 which is a euphemism for good ole-fashioned bank failure (but without the lines at teller windows). Don't have time to read it? Hooey. You’ve obviously run out of valid reading materials. The message is clear: choose your bank carefully, diversify by institution, keep balances low, choose carefully the sovereigns in which your banks are domiciled, and quite possibly put your head between your knees. Some are predicting a pan-European bail-in.ref 280 Germany proposes a wealth tax on southern Europe—Club Med countries.ref 281 It has been suggested that “the savings of the European Union's 500 million citizens could be used to fund long-term investments to boost the economy and help plug the gap left by banks since the financial crisis.”

On the confiscation front this year, the Austrians passed legislation for a bail-in of Hypo Alpe Adria bank that does not exempt the first 100K euros on deposit.ref 282 In short, they whacked the proletariat, prompting one bank analyst to call it “a really stupid idea.” It was also a retrospective bail-in involving events before the legislative acts—a claw back—suggesting that expropriations were coming. Spain imposed a “state tax on bank deposits.” The accounts were said to be sacred—wrong religion I guess. Catalonia voted overwhelmingly to secede from Spain.ref 283 I can't imagine why (and all I hear are spanish crickets.) Confiscations took on a new-era flair with a negative interest rate policy. In this world you pay to keep your money in those pillars of stability, the European banks, which were said to be way under-capitalized owing to $800 billionref 284 to $2 trillionref 285 of unwritten-down bad debt. I have mixed emotions on whether slow recapitalization is good or bad because of the wealth transfers associated with flash recapitalizations (see Banks).

As though on queue, twenty-five European banks failed the highly handicapped stress tests, prompting immediate questioning of the veracity of the tests.ref 286 (I suspect they are worthless.) Bulgaria had to seize one of its biggest banks to “avoid” a bankruptcy (whatever that means).ref 287 Austria's Erste Bank took a 40% write-down because of legislation in Hungary forcing transparency.ref 288 Portuguese Banco Espirito Santo hit the rocks and was forced to use its own finance arm to lend itself money—liquefying by drinking its own urine.ref 289 Other attempts to save it included banning short sellers. Always blame the short sellers. Of course, the shares eventually found their equilibrium price of zero—Banco Espiece O' Shito. Saxo Bank's Peter Garnry says the “event has hit European financials like a torpedo and has revived investors’ darkest nightmares about Europe.” During a garbage strike, the fun-loving Portuguese left their garbage at banks.

On the economic front, Europe is a basket case. They talk about austerity like it's some bad thing, like the ice bucket challenge. Austerity is an effect not a cause, and it is transitory only if you get on it early. Austerity can't wake a cadaver. Germany looks to be OK because it's vendor financing Club Med to buy German goods. In the 17th century, Europe vendor-financed Spain as Spain ran out of New World gold. That didn't work either. For every 100 residents of Belgium, 28 are working in the private sector.ref 290 European unemployment is soaring, especially among youth (who are notorious for not being that emotionally resilient.)ref 291 Household debt in England is 170% of disposable income, while the Great Danes are at 265%.ref 292 Italy is insolvent to the point of not paying suppliers,ref 293 and Greece's 2,000-year lost decade continues unabated.ref 294

While the Euromess was playing out, equities soared and the bond yields plumbed century lows (see The Bond Caldera) owing to the subversion of price discovery by Mario “Whatever It Takes” Draghi and European central bankers. Meanwhile, those charged with pumping asset prices to maintain world peace continued to chastise investors for chasing risk:

“Asset values [are] at their highest ever . . . at the other end, we see a real economy where recovery is not really strong . . . that discrepancy between the two is quite worrying.”

~Christine Lagarde, head of the IMF

When credit spreads began to widen and price discovery loomed, the unholy trinity—the so-called Troika (EC, IMF, and ECB)—began passing pickles. The G20 announced it wanted $2 trillion in increased economic activity (and a pony). But as one Bloomberg reporter noted by email, “There's a real sense of revenge running thru Europe's apparatchiks presently. Not helpful.” The Hessians were stirring:

“The ECB has reached the limit in helping the Euro Area.”

~Wolfgang Schäuble, German minister of finance

Enter Mario Draghi with guns blazing, locking and loading a weaponized printing press, to create hundred of billions of euros designed to blow up on impact. In a sneak attack, Draghi dragged Europe into the global currency wars.ref 295 For those hoping to invest in the Europe's future at fair prices, Mario's coin in the fuse box was a donkey punch.

“The fundamental problems are not solved and everybody knows it . . . the euro crisis is not over.”

~Maximilian Zimmerer, CIO of Allianz SE

In other news, Europe is also hanging on the precipice of global energy shortages if Russia decides to play the energy card—and looking at something even worse if Russia pulls the military card. Venice voted to secede from Italy by refusing to send taxes to Rome.ref 296 Spanish planes illegally challenged a British airliner in a fight over . . . fish.ref 297 The UK is close to full energy dependence as North Sea oil falters.ref 298 It seems likely to me that energy dependence eventually leads to debt crises. Scotland voted not to secede from Great Britain (or England or whatever). But as Stalin wryly noted, “People who cast the votes decide nothing. The people who count the votes decide everything.” A few hanging chads maybe? And if all that weren’t enough, somebody leaked embarrassing nude photos of a young Angela Merkel.ref 299

In a world of perfectly efficient stock, bond, and housing markets, investors seem to be yelling, “Hey Guys: it's a dud!”

“It isn't our job to go out hunting for rigging of markets.”

~Governor Mark Carney, Bank of England

“People usually get angry when they are afraid, and Mario looked furious yesterday.”

~Mark Gilbert, Bloomberg, email

Asia

“Asia is in a holding pattern with troubles in the queue waiting to make headlines.”

~David B. Collum, 2013 Year in Review

Once I figured out which countries are actually parts of Asia, I was feeling prophetic. We've got pro-democracy riots in Hong Kong and martial law in Thailand. The action, however, was in China, Japan, Russia, and the Middle East. We have some seriously existential risk brewing in these regions, so let's reverse-crack our knuckles and get into it before somebody releases the launch codes.

China

China is starting to crash

Building ghost-cities was rash

So now they must pay

For debt gone astray

The assets they built are now trash

~@TheLimerickKing

As economic tensions mount, so do political tensions. The big issue looks to be a battle royale brewing between the US and China. China warned the US against a “Crimea-style land grab,” although I'm not sure what that would entail.ref 300 Our DOJ has accused China of cyberspying.ref 301 Shocking.

The real clashes will be economic and monetary. The early battles are fought using bilateral trade agreements. China is setting up direct deals that explicitly exclude the US dollar. They have signed bilateral trade agreements with the UK;ref 301 currency swaps with Switzerland,ref 303 Singapore,ref 304 and Canada;ref 305 direct trade of energy for yen with Gazprom and Qatar;ref 306 and yuan-clearing banks in Luxembourg and Paris.ref 307 All of these arrangements chip away at dollar hegemony, although I wouldn't call them causal; a dollar demise finds its roots in US policy. Triffin's dilemma says that a reserve currency fails owing to a ballooning trade deficit.

One could be forgiven thinking that the Chinese variant of state capitalism somehow makes the country less sensitive to credit busts. However, the housing market is said to have 50 million unoccupied houses and 70 million unoccupied apartments.ref 308 Maybe building unoccupied “ghost cities” equivalent to 50 Manhattans between 2008 and 2012 is OK.ref 309

Alas, China is vulnerable to the vicissitudes of the credit markets just like everybody else. The bust has begun, and with debt estimated at 250% of GDP, this landing will be tough to stick.ref 310 The banks are beginning to falter. Famed short seller and China bear Jim Chanos notes that “the Chinese banking system is built on quicksand.” Lack of deposit insurance adds a special flare to bank runs. Gazillions of yuan in loans have turned out to be backed by relentlessly rehypothecated physical collateral (industrial metals).ref 311 These guys really are fast learners. Loan guarantors appear to be totally insolvent.ref 312 Companies are finding that payments from their counterparties are taking longer to arrive,ref 313 prompting one businessman to note: “If you don't pay me and I pay others, aren't I just a sucker? I'm not that stupid.” Counterparty risk is a bitch, ain't it?

Of course, these nouveau capitalists with Western PhDs have discovered the miraculous cures available from bailouts. China Development Bank lent 2 billion yuan to coal company Shanxi Liansheng.ref 314 The People's Bank of China cut rates to 5.6% on November 21.ref 315 China displays a notable difference in its response to bank crises, however, compared with that of the Western world: they hang bankers.ref 316 There is a second difference: their one-child policy has left them with millions of single—presumably sex-crazed—young men that can be recruited by General Tsao for when the Szechuan hits the fan. This plot is just beginning to thicken.

“While we believe Chinese banks’ credit woes will unfold gradually, the disturbing thing is that the end is nowhere in sight.”

~Liao Qiang, Beijing-based director at Standard & Poor’s.

Japan

“I've never really wanted to go to Japan, simply because I don't like eating fish, and I know that's very popular out there in Africa.”

~Britney Spears

Fukushima continues to smolder. Be wary of the news reports, however. Becquerels are tiny units so the radiation leakage is easy to state hyperbolically, and reports of cancer clusters are notoriously dubious, as outlined in The Drunkard's Walk (see Books). Meanwhile, Japan's economy is about to go critical, as summarized masterfully by Grant Williams.ref 317 In short, their sovereign debt has soared, the personal savings rate is plumbing post-war lows, the current account balance has tanked in the face of unstimulating Abenomics (monetary camel toe), and the population will continue to age for decades.

The basic premise of Abenomics—the seemingly cockeyed Keynesian construct that has failed for 25 years now (always because it was not enough)—seems to be based on the idea that one can bid up the price of assets and declare enhanced wealth regardless of per-capita output. It didn't work during the pre-bust '80s. It didn't work during the subsequent 25 years. It seems unlikely to work now. Almost 50% of Japan's tax revenues go to paying debt service at interest rates that are at record lows. Rising rates would crush them; monetization will continue. Kuroda's latest announced QE was shocking in its magnitude, timing, and dubious support (ministers voted 5 to 4). The market went on a 'roid rage, but that won't last. The yen was crushed so much and so fast that it spooked the BOJ into jawboning the decay rate.

“There are no limits to our policy tools . . . to completely overcome the chronic disease of deflation, you need to take all your medicine. Half-baked medical treatment will only worsen the symptoms.”

~Haruhiko Kuroda, governor of the BOJ on QE

A little odd that Kuroda thinks that is how you “take all your medicine.” Japan’s Bugger Thy Neighbor monetary policy—a currency war—includes seriously dubious interventions into the equity market. The BOJ is now going to pile monetized Japanese equities on top of Japanese pensions loaded with horrifically dubious Japanese debt. The serpent is eating its tail. Abe is working on a plan to give everybody gift cards to spur spending (no joke).ref 318

The justification for Japan's monetary policy is that Japan is said to be in the throes of a deflation despite a steadily growing money supplyref 319 and rising prices of goods and services.ref 320 Japan is in a depression—a very long one. Depressions are simply serial recessions, the latest starting in October. The pessimists say that it is already game over; demographics and foolhardy malinvestment are so deep-seated that a catharsis is in the future. Kyle Bass is still predicting a bloodbath, a “transformative” moment.ref 321

“Kuroda knows when to go all in. The BOJ is basically declaring that Japan will need to fix its long-term problems by 2018, or risk becoming a failed nation.”

Takuji Okubo, chief economist at Japan Macro Advisors

Speculation that the Japanese have developed a process to convert sewage into foodref 322 sounded “transformative”, but the suspicion that sewage has been depleted of nutrients is correct; the technology is Internet legend. What a shame. I was really looking forward to a Sewage BurgerTM and some SewshiTM.

ISIS

“If a jayvee team puts on Lakers uniforms that doesn’t make them Kobe Bryant.”

~Barack Obama on ISIS

“They are as sophisticated and well-funded as any group that we have seen. They're beyond just a terrorist group . . . an imminent threat to every interest we have.”

~Robert Gates, former Director of Central Intelligence, on ISIS

“ISIS is not Islamic.”

~Barack Obama imitating George W. Bush

This plotline goes disturbingly far back. Eleventh- and 12th-century crusaders went looking for salvation and found little. Twentieth-century imperialists went looking for oil and hit the jackpot. But what an incredible mess. Frontline offered an excellent overview;ref 323 the explanation in Figure 14 is even better.

Figure 14. Concise explanation of US Middle East policy.

“That child should be playing with other kids, not holding a severed head.”

~Senator John Kerry, master of the obvious

There were some extraordinary moments during this Clash of Civilizations (Miracle on ISIS). In a Middle East version of a wilding, the reconstituted Iraqi army ripped through serious desert real estate, replacing their Black and Decker drills with guns, ammo, troops, Apache helicopters, stinger missiles, 88 pounds of uranium, and $400 million in beer money. (Goldman was planning an IPO for some serious petrodollar-denominated fees; they even had the Nasdaq symbol picked out.) As night follows day, genitals got mutilated, and heads began to roll. Stratfor's George Friedman warned us in America's Secret War not to underestimate any of the players in these global chess matches. Gladwell further reminds us in David and Goliath (see Books) that the obvious underdogs often win these fights.

“Once you got to Iraq and took it over, took down Saddam Hussein’s government, then what are you going to put in its place? That’s a very volatile part of the world, and if you take down the central government of Iraq, you could very easily end up seeing pieces of Iraq fly off: part of it, the Syrians would like to have to the west, part of it—eastern Iraq—the Iranians would like to claim; they fought over it for eight years. In the north you’ve got the Kurds, and if the Kurds spin loose and join with the Kurds in Turkey, then you threaten the territorial integrity of Turkey.”

~Dick Cheney, 1994

It's always fun until someone loses an eye! That happened when ISIS began slobbering over the Saudi oil fields and, presumably, the whole Saudi regime.ref 324 The United States had to start building a case to attack. The humanitarian mission is always a strong opening play: do it for the children (the ones who are left). Soon an enemy laptop was discovered with plans by ISIS to use bio-weapons. Sure. I believe that. Must have been found by the informant named Q-Ball. (Oops. Wrong war.) We began discovering old—very old—chemical weapons dumps posing risks akin to those at Love Canal and started pushing that angle again. Fox News kept claiming that ISIS was amassing troops on the Mexican border, apparently in alliance with drug lords, illegal aliens, democratic voters, and Ebola carriers, for the final battle in Lord of the Rings. Shockingly, the Republicans wanted to build a big fence. The Turks got caught on tape planning a false-flag attack, but they were still smarting from the Erdogan tapes revealing the previous botched variant.ref 325,326

The US administration faced a quandary. Bombing ISIS strongholds would inadvertently give Syria an advantage. The solution? Bomb them both just to be fair.ref 327 Who thinks up this stuff? The administration finally settled on the general strategy of arming everybody, hoping that everybody would get killed. God or some other deity can sort them out. Estimates of 10:1 civilian-to-militant kill ratiosref 328 have been reported for US drone attacks. The United States put together a massive coalition that included the Bloods and Crips, Klingons, and Girl Scout Troop 539 and began Operation Iraq Liberation (OIL).

Meanwhile, ISIS seems to be positioning to reestablish Syria—the old Syria with seriously expanded borders. Was this all a black swan event? Listen to this interview of Wesley Clark from 2007 in which he says half a dozen countries would be taken out over the next five years.ref 329 One Nobel Prize and seven bombed Muslim countries later, one begins to wonder.ref 330

“Note to Self: Next time, no Middle East.”

~@TheTweetofGod

Russia

“After the Russian army invaded the nation of Georgia, Senator Obama's reaction was one of indecision and moral equivalence, the kind of response that would only encourage Russia's Putin to invade Ukraine next.”

~Sarah Palin, 2008

“I can see Alaska from my front porch.”

~Vladimir Putin

OK. I made that last one up, but it's official: Cold War 2.0 has started. Putin is a popular guy in Russia. He’s sporting an 83% approval rating (almost as high as Obama's.) The Russians are tired of being famous for dash-cam videos on YouTube. The year started innocuously enough with the $50 billion Sochi Olympic fails live-tweeted by unhappy reporters:

“My hotel has no water. If restored, the front desk says, 'do not use on your face because it contains something very dangerous.’”

There was a lot of cackling when the Olympic logo failed. Putin's agitation watching the Olympics, wrongly attributed to a punk performance by his commie-dog athletes, was because he was anxious for the real games to begin.

The brawl started almost immediately after the closing ceremonies. We had already toppled Ukraine's democratically elected leadership to install a more Western-pliable variant.ref 331 The mistake we made has been described in an incisive article by John Mearsheimer in Foreign Affairs:ref 332 we wanted the Ukraine and Crimea to satisfy our whims. Russia had to have the Ukraine to satisfy its needs.

“Obama, however, has only tenuous control over the policymakers in his administration—who, sadly, lack much sense of history, know little of war, and substitute anti-Russian invective for a policy.”

~Letter to Angela Merkel from US intelligence wonks

Who could have guessed what would happen next? While we blathered on about the whereabouts of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, Russian-speaking troops dressed as Maytag repairmen filled the power vacuum in Crimea. The missing flight had more oddities than a state fair midway.ref 333,334,335 Nobody wants to admit that a missing flight makes for a much more prolonged distraction than a downed flight. That would make you a conspiracy theorist.

Obama and Putin immediately started trading tits for tats. Obama teed off with Harvardian rhetoric. Putin responded using air jerks with full eyeball rolls. Intimidating a guy who rides horses, sharks, and grizzlies shirtless was not easy. We began pressuring Mother Russia with sanctions.

“Negotiating with Obama is like playing chess with a pigeon. The pigeon knocks over all the pieces, shits on the board, and then struts around like it won the game.”

~Vladimir Putin

“I sometimes get the feeling that somewhere across that huge puddle, in America, people sit in a lab and conduct experiments, as if with rats, without actually understanding the consequences of what they are doing.”

~Vladimir Putin

The European allies cooperated reluctantly. Germany was remarkably cozy with Russia for a while, although the Putin–Merkel romance went frigid when we threatened to strap on some sanctions against Deutsche Bank.ref 336 We grabbed up another Cypriot bank supposedly containing Russian oligarch money,ref 337 forgetting that we stole every euro from them last year. The Polish foreign minister expressed angst over the fact that “we gave the Americans a blow job” and then called us “losers. Complete losers.”ref 338 Apparently, he took one on the chin at some point. (Sorry. Gratuitous sex joke.) It got a little embarrassing and diplomatically tricky when a top US State Department diplomat told the US ambassador to Ukraine that we should “Fuck the EU,” which led to a “sorry—my bad” apology.ref 339 The Ukraine banned exports of military hardware to Russia as Russia was importing Ukraine.

“What we've done over the past 10 years is to create a new method of projecting U.S. power . . . a growing arsenal of financial weaponry aimed at hitting foreign adversaries.”

~David Cohen, undersecretary for terrorism and financial intelligence, US Treasury

Soon the Europeans agreed to ban the buying of Russian bonds.ref 340 Quite the sacrifice. Standard and Poor’s downgraded Russian debt by a notch.ref 341 The Moscow stock exchange seized up.ref 342 Visa and MasterCard suspended service.ref 343 One Russian oligarch noted that the new Chinese credit card was attractive because “at least the Americans can't reach it.” JPM, spotting opportunity, blocked money transfers of Russian money back to Russia without authorization by the administration.ref 344 Really? They kept somebody's money? This is my shocked face: :<O. (In All the Presidents Bankers, Nomi Prins describes how the banks prolonged Carter's Iran hostage crisis by doing the same thing.) The international court at The Hague fined Russia for a decade-old whompin' of oil giant Yukos,ref 345 prompting a somewhat eerie response:

“There is a war coming in Europe. Do you really think this matters?”

~Putin confidant on The Hague verdict

Unsurprisingly, Russian energy giants were handled with kid gloves by the Europeans in this Game of Thrones. Winter was coming. China and Russia began setting up a pile of bilateral trade deals including a 30-year, $400 billion energy agreement.ref 346 I use dollars only for the reader's convenience 'cause it certainly ain't gonna be denominated in dollars. All the while we scratch our heads over the interests of Joe Biden's son in Crimean gas companies.ref 347

“Any fourth-grade history student knows socialism has failed in every country, at every time in history.”

~Vladimir Putin

The US grabbed control of the global energy market to put the serious hurt on Putin. The Saudis started talking about how they were comfortable with oil below $80 per barrel.ref 348 Some claimed it was to push the marginal frackers in the US out of the game,ref 349 but it's not obvious why they would bother since prices were rising at the time. More likely, the Saudis did it as part of a US-engineered collapse of the oil price.ref 350 We got to inflict discomfort on Putin, and in return, the Saudis got military support against ISIS fighters heading for their oil fields.ref 351 Our primal urge to fight Putin, however, nuked the US energy industry, the junk bond market, and possibly a few sovereign states (see Energy). The consequences of this will be clearer next December.

Cold War 2.0 was looking a little dicey militarily too. Another Malaysia Airlines flight bought the collective farm. (That pun's just plane wrong!) The Swedes undertook a massive search for a rogue Russian sub (Red October).ref 352 Russian fighters have been buzzing the coast of California.ref 353 One is rumored to have passed over a US destroyer a dozen times and, if you believe it, jammed the ship's radar and detection systems.ref 354 Russians, we are told, hacked the White House and a bunch of megabanks.ref 355,356 Russia's bilateral trade arrangements all appear targeted toward dethroning the dollar. The so-called petrodollar is at risk. I wouldn't underestimate the probability and consequences of an eventual dollar demise. For now, however, it is the ruble and the rubes who have leveraged long positions in it running laps around the drain.

The idea of pressuring Russia with the vicissitudes in the marketplace strikes me as silly. I've watched the dash-cams; those guys are tough. Russians survived cannibalism in the Siege of Leningrad (1941–44). Our idea of suffering is camping out overnight at Target for iPhones, which are for some reason perceived to be in life-altering short supply. The investor lobe in my brain tells me to get ready for a geopolitically induced buying opportunity in the energy sector. My dark-horse economic winner of the 21st century—admittedly a long time—is Russia. Oddly enough, all this may be Kabuki theater (a dud). Catch this exchange between Obama and Medvedev, who were unaware of the directional microphone.ref 357

Obama: This is my last election. After my election I have more flexibility.

Medvedev: I understand. I will transmit this information to Vladimir.

Ebola

“This is not an African disease. This is a virus that is a threat to all humanity.”

~Gayle Smith, senior director at the National Security Council

“Ebola was unreal and a gimmick aimed at carrying out cannibalistic rituals.”

~Former Nigerian nurse

Years ago I read The Hot Zone and Demon in the Freezer, but it was The Great Influenza, the story of the 1918 flu pandemic costing 100 million lives, that piqued my interest in Ebola. It turns out Ebola and the flu have a common feature: the body's immune response in the form of a “cytokine storm” poses great risk.ref 361 With numbers still in the hundreds but evidence that Ebola had entered African cities, I did a back-of-the-envelope calculation of a three-week doubling time. Bingo! Ten thousand cases later, it proved spot on. Ebola was undeniably existential risk of an unknown probability. Vice President Biden thought we should send troops to fight Ebola until he found out it wasn't a country. It wreaked havoc on West Africa, where annual per-capita healthcare expenses measure in double digits. Gunmen looting Ebola clinics, families defying government orders and simply dragging bodies to the street, and the generalized breakdown of the healthcare systems in affected countries painted a horrific picture of human suffering.ref 362

Ebola was considered a distant problem to many sitting cloistered in the protective warmth of Obamacare. It finally caught the collective attention, however, when it found its way to Dallas and then spread just a little bit.ref 363 I can't say I panicked, but I understood the concern. Speculation that it might be transmitted sexually—of course it is—gave way to the realization that Ebola lasts 90 days in semen.ref 364 This prompted authorities to urge users to stop turning their condoms inside out and reusing them. How about just throttling some poultry for a couple of months? The fear that bushmeat was infectious sent shudders through the high command of Taco Bell. Obama, although slow to react overtly to avoid panic, appointed a large campaign donor, lawyer Ron Klain, to be his Ebola czar,ref 365 prompting Bill Bennett to note, “I was a czar. This ain't no czar.” For a country professing allegiance to democracy, we sure appoint a lot of Czars. In any case, Czar Ron went into exhile the day he was appointed.

The more sanguine began comparing the total number of Ebola cases to Derek Jeter's strikeouts and Oscar Pistorius's ex-girl friends. Countless declarations that “more people have died from [fill in the blank] than from Ebola” made me yearn for a swift demise. The glib intellectuals were crystal clear: only peasants worry about such silly things as a 60% fatality rate on an exponentially growing pool of patients. An excellent lecture by Berkeley physics professor Albert Bartlett on our collective ignorance about exponential functionsref 366 might prove enlightening for the editorial staff of the New Yorker:

“Study: Fear of Ebola Highest Among People Who Did Not Pay Attention During Math and Science Classes”

~New Yorker headline

It has been a dud so far (except in West Africa). There were some odd moments like this 1971 Holiday Inn ad featuring Ebola.ref 367 A chap named Clipboard Idiot—armed with only a clipboard to protect himself from an infected patient—underscored the risks of inadequate response.ref 368 As the disease may be heading into quiescence, however, I remind the reader that glib dismissals of existential risk will, on very rare occasions, prove fatal.

“Bring out your dead.”

~Monty Python

Government

“It is terrible to contemplate how few politicians are hanged.”

~Gilbert Keith Chesterton (1874–1936), British writer

“Our own government did more harm to the liberties of the American people than bin Laden did.”

~Ron Paul

Anarcho-libertarians decry the need for any government, ignoring the fact that all civilizations since the dawn of civilization have voted yes. Government appears to be a necessary evil, but evil it certainly is sometimes. This is a place where “bipartisan” means some larger-than-usual deception is being carried out. This is an organization that is still compensating Irene Triplett, a very elderly lady, for her father's military service . . . in the Civil War.ref 369 Let's take a quick peek at why confidence in Congress has dropped to an astounding 7% (astounding that it's not 0%).

The capital of crony capitalism, of course, is Washington DC. The geniuses in Congress pushed the Access to Affordable Mortgages Act —a new wave of liar loans—because 4% interest rates are simply too high.ref 370 The Postal Service is losing billions and maxed out its available credit lines (but otherwise runs pretty well in my opinion), prompting Congress to vote a stay of execution on all post offices.ref 371 Congress pondered a new form of state-sponsored bank—the United States Employee Ownership Bank Act—funded by the taxpayers to loan money to American workers so that they can . . . wait for it . . . “form collectives and buy the companies they work for.” Hmmm...collectives. GovTrack says the chance of enactment is 0%.ref 372 Phew!

The EPA recruits earthy employees who defecate in its hallways.ref 373 A presidential wannabe (Rick Perry) was indicted by a grand jury on two felony counts of blackmail.ref 374 A lobbyist got sent to prison for bribing Harry Reid, who was not indicted, fired, or quite possibly even asked to give the money back.ref 375 Tom Delay's conviction for money laundering, the only conviction of substance of an elected official in recent years, was reversed.ref 376 Phew again! In the category of criminal stupidity, Nancy Pelosi asserted that “every dollar of unemployment insurance benefits increases America’s GDP by as much as $1.90 and could lead to 200,000 new jobs.” It would be safe to say that she ain't gonna be splittin' any atoms.

Away from the hallowed halls of Congress and the Senate, the Veterans Administration had some 'splainin' to do. It seemed to have falsified data to hide healthcare delays for veterans.ref 377 We've been sending our kids to foreign wars and completely failing to patch them up when they return home shot to pieces. An estimated 64,000 vets signed into the VA system during the last decade and never got a first appointment.ref 378 One who had a leg amputated owing to incompetence suggested wryly, “I feel the VA owes me a leg.” Indeed it does. Obama took the heat on the scandal, but this was a bipartisan effort spanning many years.

“All we have of freedom, all we use or know—this our fathers bought for us long and long ago.”

~Rudyard Kipling, “The Old Issue,” 1899

The DOJ spent millions to cover up a clerical error that caused an innocent, wheelchair-bound citizen to be handcuffed as a terrorist.ref 379 Hundreds of millions worth of cargo planes to reinforce the Afghan Air Force were turned to $32K worth of scrap instead.ref 380 Eric Holder could have used a few of 'em: he took 27 personal trips on DOJ planes.ref 381 Elon Musk lost a multi-billion dollar contract when he didn't give a public official a job at SpaceX.ref 382 A sergeant was convicted of accepting $250K in bribes from local Afghan contractors,ref 383 which makes you wonder where those crazy Afghans get their money. Maybe a brisk rug market? David Brat knocked off Eric Canter (figuratively). The big losers are all those folks who've been bribing Canter who now get zip. They will have to continue paying to ensure promises of bribes after leaving office will be taken at face value. The Lannisters always pay their debts. Leaving no issue untainted, the feds cancelled the Washington Redskins trademark.ref 384 It's not the office’s job to do this, but it does prompt some thoughts on a new mascot: the Washington Lobbyists, Criminals, Lightweights, Elites, Kickbacks (which has a nice football ring to it), or, taking a cue from the Miami Heat, the Washington Douche.

The once-reputable SEC continues to underwhelm. Former SEC lawyer James Kidney's farewell letter suggested that his superiors were more focused on getting high-paying jobs after their government service than on bringing difficult cases.ref 385 Ya think? The agency’s penalties, Kidney said, have become “at most a tollbooth on the bankster turnpike” and that the SEC had become “a cancer.” A Zero Hedge poster called it “Kidney Failure.”

The SEC awarded a whistleblower of a big Wall Street bank $14K hush money for his info; they fined the bank without naming it.ref 386 Luis Aguilar noted, “I am concerned that the commission is entering into a practice of accepting settlements without appropriately charging fraud and imposing suspensions.” This statement was prompted by a punishment meted out for a banking fraud case that entailed giving back half a million in bonuses.ref 387 As part of the Dodd–Frank financial overhaul, the Financial Stability Oversight Council was created and was soon in a turf war with the SEC over who is in charge of ignoring financial crimes.ref 388 Jesse Eisinger noted that Mary Jo “MoJo” White was “supposed to turn around the SEC. She hasn’t.”ref 389 MoJo's honor was defended by Yves Smith, who pointed out that “Mary Jo White is no doubt doing her job. It’s simply, as with Obama, not the job the public was led to think she’d do.”ref 390 Maybe the next president—possibly a wizard at trading cattle futures—will bring honor back to the SEC.

Not to be outdone by the SEC, the commissioner of the Chicago Futures Trading Commission, vigilant defender of Wall Street, Scott O’Malia, left the commission to head the International Swaps and Derivatives Association, an enormous lobbying group for the banks.ref 391 This so-called soft corruption—corruption that is real and really hard to convict—continues unabated.

The hilarious stuff occurred at the state level, and the great state of New Jersey, home of buried bodies and Hoboken, took a leadership role. The big one was Bridgegate, wherein a need for political retribution prompted one of Governor Chris Christie's aides to note, “Time for some traffic problems in Fort Lee.”ref 392 Bridges were artificially jammed up for a few days. Commuters did not get the joke, especially the guy who died in the traffic jam. As expected for any presidential hopeful, Christie just couldn't catch a break. The big guy got caught cutting pension contributions by 60% to close a budget gapref 393 while allocating $200 million to a hedge fund that, by chance, had given him a $250K campaign donation.ref 394 All told, the state’s taxpayers lost an estimated $3.8 billion to the governor's largesseref 395 (presumably including some portfolio losses). The Wall Street boys and girls garnered $938 million in fees alone.ref 396 Alas, the statute of limitations on such vente larceny is 10 minutes.

A number of other state civil servants won participation awards. Former New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin of Katrina fame was sentenced to a decade in prison (or until a last-minute pardon from Obama) for bribery.ref 397 Rahm Emanuel got $100K from Comcast and then, shockingly, supported its merger with Time-Warner.ref 398 Governor Andrew Cuomo announced he would disband the Moreland Commission formed to investigate corruption in Albany.ref 399 Nixon rolled in his grave. By this standard, he was not a criminal.

General Motors (aka Government Motors) was the victim—yes victim—of government bailouts. For 50 years they made payroll but no profits, operating at a massive loss when you account for unfunded pension liabilities. What is such a company worth to investors? Salvage rights? Had they been allowed to restructure properly, the pieces would have been auctioned off free of liabilities at prices that would allow industrialists to begin making quality cars at a profit.

But wait a minute there: GM is now profitable, right? The bailouts came at enormous cost (estimated $17–20 billion).ref 400 Claims that the government made its money back are fibs when you track all costs, including bailouts of Ally Bank (former GMAC).ref 401 This year reminded us about what happens in the absence of real restructuring. GM recalled more vehicles by May 2014 than it had sold in five years.ref 402 Preventable fatalities (negligent homicides) were traced to bad management. GM is a rotting corpse that should have been feasted on like AIG.

“Remember when if nobody bought the cars, we let the company fail?”

~‏@PoliticalLaughs

The Clintons

“We can’t afford to have that money go to the private sector. The money has to go to the federal government because the federal government will spend that money better than the private sector will spend it.”

~Hillary Clinton

That is some industrial-strength stupidity. To bipartisan horror, 2016 could be a dynastic showdown between the Clintons and Bushes. Although Jeb is lying low, the Clintons reminded us why dynasties are dubious. Leaving aside the Benghazi Defense League, the Clinton's image problems began with an interview in which Hillary declared they were “dead broke” upon departing the White House and later suggested they are “not truly well-off.” A net worth exceeding $50 million and an estimated $100 million in speaking fees for Bill buys a lot of cigars and pizzas. Hillary accepted a $225,000 speaking engagement at UNLV to discuss the horrors of rising tuition, prompting students to send her a letter asking for the money back.ref 403 I'm sure the money went to what Hillary believes is a good cause.

“Don’t let anybody tell you it’s corporations and businesses that create jobs.”

~Hillary Clinton

Showing that the Acorn doesn't fall far from the tree, Chelsea Clinton gets $75,000 per speechref 404 and worked part time at NBC for a $600,000 annual salary.ref 405 Calling an audible that would impress Eli Manning, she said, “I was curious if I could care about money on some fundamental level, and I couldn’t.” That's OK. She married a hedge fund manager who does care about money and bought her a $10 million condo.ref 406 When Bill was asked about the fairness of the discussions of Clinton wealth, he ironically noted that “someone is always trying to change the subject.” Laws prohibiting flows from foreign sources as part of the Buy American campaign seem to be loose guidelines. Warren Buffett said, “Hillary is going to win. I will bet money on it.” I bet you have, Warren.

“Under no circumstance is there ever a justification for the pre-emptive deployment of Hillary Clinton anywhere by any country.”

~The Onion

Barack Obama

“You just don't in the 21st century behave . . .by invading another country on [a] completely trumped-up pretext.”

~John Kerry, secretary of state

“Don’t do stupid shit.”

~Barack Obama at a particularly introspective moment

By way of disclosure, I am a right-hemisphere libertarian, but I was OK with Obama for a few years. Yes, he was a liberal democrat with all the apparent trappings (golf pun: #drink), but I snapped a few years back after realizing that even the stronger ideas of liberalism—I believe there are some—are lost on this guy. It is not his liberalism that drives me nuts but his views of the Constitution, civil liberties, and democracy. His presidency was to be defined by how he would resolve a massive financial crisis and corporate white-collar crime wave. He defined it alright, which will be the proximate cause of the next ones. But this section is about the other stuff.

I begin with the obvious. Obama would not be the first president to hit the links a few too many times for quality optics. Those keeping score (#drink) claim that Shankopotomous has had several hundred tee times during his presidency (of the US, not the USGA).ref 407 The total greens fees (including all the protective accoutrements) for a two-month period are estimated at $3 million.ref 408 Playing a couple of rounds on courses in Arizona that consume a million gallons of water a year is OK, but doing so on a speaking tour related to the ills of the drought and water shortage?ref 408 A round immediately after the Foley beheading prompted his aides to note that “the golf game did not reflect the depth of his grief over Mr. Foley.”ref 409 Of course (#drink), these were working foursomes that included the likes of a Bain Capital lobbyist,ref 410 prompting Jay Carney to note that “Mr. Obama is still dedicated to fighting corruption and influence peddling within the administration.” Still? Odd choice of words.

“I do think at a certain point you’ve made enough money.”

~Barack Obama

“I do think at a certain point you've played enough golf.”

~A tweeter

Let's listen to some of his detractors. We'll skip “The Cheeto” (Boehner) and the blond-haired Republican hatchet women at Fox News and ponder more interesting perspectives, including some from former supporters:

“A more shameless, reprehensible display of buck-passing it would be hard to find from a sitting president.”

~Piers Morgan

“I found that you had become exactly like the George Bush that I used to vitriolically hate.”

~Obama girl having second thoughts (and a killer bod')

“President Obama’s neo-Cold War is not about ideology or respect for borders. It is about money and global power.”

~Nomi Prins, author of All the Presidents Bankers

“The Obama White House responds to news cycles and how to get past them, not with actual solutions to real problems.”

~Ron Fournier, former Washington bureau chief at the Associated Press

“Obama protected Wall Street . . . not people who lost their jobs. . . . He picked his economic team, and when the going got tough, his economic team picked Wall Street.”

~Elizabeth Warren

Obamacare, known by few as the Affordable Care Act, continues to elicit chuckles. The website cost $1.7 billion dollars.ref 411 Come again? Really? Give me a couple of teenagers from the Bronx High School of Science, some Adderal, and a couple ounces of pot—these kids don't work for free—and I could’ve had it up and running in a month. Rumors that there was some browbeating to get 'er done conflict with reports that the contract went to one of Michelle's college BFFs.ref 412

I'll have civil liberties for $500, Alex. The administration’s plan to track all license plates to “catch illegal aliens” was canceled owing to the Gestapo optics.ref 413 The irony is that Obama deemed it a lot easier to give illegals amnesty via executive order (head slap).ref 414 Embedding government workers in media organizations to make sure reporters were doing their jobs also seems a little dubious.ref 415 A tepid response from the media confirmed that they were not.

Then we get Grubergate. As the story goes, a guy named Rich Weinstein, who literally lives on a couch in his parents' basement—he’s a benefactor of the recovery—discovered a video of Jonathan Gruber,ref 416 an MIT economist prominent in the Obamacare debate:

“This bill was written in a tortured way to make sure CBO did not score the mandate as taxes. . . . Lack of transparency is a huge political advantage. And basically, call it the stupidity of the American voter or whatever, but basically that was really, really critical for the thing to pass.”

~Jonathan “The Grubster” Gruber, MIT

Our intrepid sofa surfer tweeted the video to his two-dozen followers, and the power of social media took it from there: Grubergate had begun. Here is an entertaining two-minute synopsis.ref 417 With ample funding from the Obama administration,ref 418 The Grubster concluded in copious scholarly works that Obamacare would be a wondrous thing. Soon The Grubster was demoted by Obama from “trusted advisor” to an advisor “who never worked on our staff,” which became “who?” for short. Of course, embarrassment and hashtags are the highest form of punishment meted out to wayward politicians these days. The Grubster, however, may be held to a different standard. The failure to disclose conflicts of interest of such magnitudes is a serious ethics violation where I come from;ref 418 it could get fugly. Not to worry: I hear there are distinguished-scholar openings at CUNY for polarizing and misguided macroeconomists.

“It’s terrifying that a guy in his mom’s basement is finding his stuff, and nobody else is.”

~Rich Weinstein, couch potato and Grubergate whistle-blower

Obama introduced—via a vote-bypassing executive order—a new IRA called My IRA or MyRA for short (by one letter).ref 419 Some feared it would morph into a TriRa (Trimester IRA) owing to mandated investing in government savings bonds currently returning zippo on an inflation-adjusted basis. One supporter warned that investors “shouldn't expect big returns” (at least not with a positive sign.) I can't find evidence (not even a Wikipedia page) that this lead trial balloon launched. The algos loved it, however. The previously delisted microcap Myriad Entertainment & Resorts (symbol: MYRA) was ramped 900% by news-trolling algos.ref 420

Other assorted items caught the attention of Obama's detractors. The White House tried to juke the job stats for “factoryless goods” but had to kill the idea.ref 421 The Potus's retrieval of Bowe Bergdahl meant as a whole new diversionary strategy—a positive diversion—failed to elicit euphoria when evidence surfaced that Bowe had actually defected to the other team.ref 422 By the way, everybody knows the preferred currency in hostage negotiations is arms, not prisoners. Obama wore a beige suit, triggering the dumbest goddamned chatter—Taupegate. You'd think he’d ridden around in the Choomwagon dressed like Sly Stone. The Secret Service had its troubles,ref 423 and somehow the Fox Blonds pushed that one back on the administration.

“The United States is and will remain the one indispensable nation in the world.”

~Barack Obama

“This is what a successful presidency looks like.”

~Paul Krugman, distinguished scholar, CUNY

IRS Scandal Part Deux

“[Holder] has put politics above the enforcement of the law on numerous occasions and unfortunately that is likely to occur again.”

~American Center for Law and Justice on IRS-gate

Internal Revenue Service Information Technologies: “The IRS does not routinely save chat communications.”

Lois Lerner: “Perfect.”

This scandal, big in 2013, was buried in a shallow grave but wouldn't die. Recall that Lois Lerner, director of the Exempt Organizations Unit of the IRS, made more than 150 trips to the White House (probably more than Biden) to discuss what appeared to be Stasi tactics against tea party Republicans.ref 424 Elijah Cummins apparently helped compile the preferred-audit list.ref 425 The investigation continued in 2014, causing an epidemic of computer crashes and hard drive failures.ref 426“Hard drive crashes continue as we speak,” admitted John Koskinen a House Oversight and Government Reform subcommittee. Of course, the claim was that none was backed up and that they would be too onerous to search anyway.ref 427 Oops: Sonasoft had them all backed up, but their contract may have included a “lose the backup” clause.ref 428 The federal law mandating the reporting of lost data got downgraded to a guideline. Holder promised a special prosecutor.ref 429 Right. That will happen contemporaneously with the release of Tarek Aziz's autobiography. During congressional investigations Representative Darrell Issa grilled IRS Commissioner John Koskinen:ref 430

“For too long, the IRS has promised to produce requested—and later subpoenaed—documents, only to respond later with excuses and inaction. Despite your empty promises and broken commitments to cooperation, the IRS still insists on flouting Constitutional congressional oversight.”

~Darrell Issa

For those with short memories, Koskinen was charged with overseeing the government's Y2K remediation,ref 431 so broken computers are his forte. A released email from Lerner conveyed an acute interest in whether emails could be searched and noted with irony that “we need to be cautious about what we say in emails.” The district judge demanded that somebody from the IRS show up and, under oath, start 'splainin' the lost emails.ref 432 That spokesperson admitted that Lerner's Blackberry was “wiped clean of any sensitive or proprietary information and removed as scrap for disposal in June 2012,” well after the investigation began.ref 433 Nothing ever comes of these scandals.

Bundy Ranch and Ferguson

“If someone comes out of a liquor store with a weapon and fifty dollars in cash, I don’t care if a drone kills him or a policeman kills him.”

~Senator Rand Paul

The highlights of socially important events for me were the battles of the masses versus the State exemplified by conflicts on the Bundy Ranch in Nevada and in Ferguson, Missouri. In both cases, ambiguities exist as to what happened and who is in the wrong. That really isn't the point. These two events dovetail with wealth inequality and police militarization, which are setting off some spectacular fireworks as my fingers hit the keys and will continue to do so in the future. I begin with the Bundy Ranch.

As the story goes, some years ago a rancher named Cliven Bundy decided that paying the feds to graze his cattle on federal lands was not of interest to him (the paying part, that is). There may have also been some large-money interests pining for them thar hills.ref 434 The battle festered and finally spewed forth when the feds decided to confiscate and execute Cliven's herd. Oh boy. The feds gathered the troops, and the Bundys rounded up a gang that eventually included militias from across the countryref 435 hankerin' for a fight. For days the two sides squared off in full eyeball-to-eyeball contact. The standoff was reminiscent of the Army versus WWI vets showdown that led to hundreds of deaths.ref 436 The feds blinked and went home. (Hats off to them.) Powerful imagery shows the ranchers saddled up against the militarized police (Figure 15).

Figure 15. Range war at Bundy Ranch

Pan the camera to Ferguson, Missouri—a ‘hood of St. Louis. Michael Brown, a black male of considerable girth reputedly robbed a store and was gunned down. Some evidence says he was gunned down from behind; leaked autopsy reports indicate he had lurched for the gun as the police claim. That is not the point either. A garden-variety example of an inner-city kid getting whacked by the cops that wouldn't normally make it above the fold in the Ferguson Gazette went full Rodney King. The riots stayed out of the green zones (affluent neighborhoods) but lingered for a very long time, as nicely summarized here.ref 437 Why the fuss? There are as many as 40 shootings in Chicago every night. (For the hopelessly clueless or politically too correct, the glibness in that last sentence is a literary device.)

Ferguson may suffer from a new-era form of policing that has been growing for decades and is described in lurid detail by Matt Taibbi in The Divide (see Books). Police tactics are mutating from Norman Rockwellian to Orwellian during the last few decades. As Taibbi tells it, potential criminals are identified using methods that the affluent cannot fathom—you are in the wrong place at the wrong time and look suspicious. Large paddy wagons drop dozens of putative criminals at the precinct. The serious criminals are sorted from the mistakes. The latter—schoolteachers picked up on hooker charges, for example—plead down their cases to misdemeanors to avoid the hassle, pay their fines, and return to their daily struggles both poorer and angrier. Those unable to make bail, even those charged with nonviolent offenses, spend days, weeks, and even months in the hoosegow awaiting trial. A kid charged with stealing a backpack was held for three years at Rikers Island before his trial, only to have his case dismissed.

Why doesn't the cost of incarceration break the cycle? Oh, that's the money shot: federal subsidies make these all-expense-paid stays profitable for the state. And if that weren’t enough, a Clinton-era law mandates that a conviction on any drug offense—zero tolerance—results in eviction from federally sponsored housing. (I generally find “zero tolerance” to be too, well, intolerant.) Even those with militant opposition to subsidized federal housing can probably imagine the sense of violation inherent in a fabricated drug offense leaving you broke and homeless. When some random kid named Michael Brown gets shot, you might be inspired to hit the streets with 'tude too and more than just a can of spray paint.

These bouts of civil unrest and disobedience may be the stories of the decade. I try to drive this idea to the hoop in the conclusion, but let's press on.

“Police Department Reduces Costs by Using Same Evidence For Every Investigation”

~The Onion headline

Police Militarization

“We get up early to beat the crowds.”

~Catch phrase on T-shirts of police charged with crowd control

So where is all this leading? With the advent of smartphones, most debates over paranormal phenomena and almond-eyed aliens have been put to rest, but evidence of police brutality is epidemic. I could link to dozens of YouTube videos but choose only three—a homeless woman getting the crapped kicked out of her,ref 438 a horrifying montage,ref 439 and a homeless, mentally ill guy getting gunned down.ref 440 The last one looks like murder in the first to me. Police tased an 8-year-old girl.ref 441 A military-style SWAT—Special Weapons and Tactics—raid cracked down on a farmer trafficking in unpasteurized milk.ref 442 SWAT raided a guy known for trolling the mayor on Twitter.ref 443 The executive producer of Tosh.0 intervened in a crime as a Good Samaritan and got shot while the crooks got cuffed.ref 444 Police emptied 600 rounds into a vehicle, killing both bank robbers and a hostage,ref 445 apparently accepting limited collateral damage. I could go on and on and on . . . but that would be overkill.

The Fourth Amendment delineates castle doctrine—people’s houses are their castles. Posse comitatus, passed in 1878 and updated in 1981,ref 446 provides safeguards against military intervention in civilian affairs. No problemo. Authorities end run laws prohibiting the use of the military as police by converting local police forces into military units with flexible guidelines brought to you by Homeland Security. We are witnessing what Radley Balko's must-read—must-read—book refers to as The Rise of the Warrior Cop (see Books). SWAT teams, originally invented by Los Angeles police chief Daryl Gates—yes, that Daryl Gates—to intervene in the most severe situations, are now routine participants in drug busts and arrests for a host of nonviolent crimes. In conjunction with no-knock warrants, military raids on private residences have increased 10-fold since the late ‘90s. Federal grants are placing billions of dollars worth of heavy artillery—machine guns, armored vehicles, flack jackets, grenade launchers—in the most unlikely places. The Department of Agriculture ordered submachine guns with 30-round magazines to fight the War on Fruit.ref 447 Brevard County received eight Apache helicopters.ref 448 The University of Maryland obtained an armored vehicle fitted with a grenade launcher.ref 449“It's never been deployed against our students, nor could I ever envision it being deployed against our students,” the police chief says. Campus police prefer pepper spray. Representative Hank Johnson wryly noted that “apparently, college kids are getting too rowdy.” A town in Iowa with 7,000 people and a San Diego school district both got armored vehicles.ref 450

“If I had a rocket launcher some son-of-a-bitch would pay.”

~Bruce Cockburn

The scary part is that these SWAT guys can be really nuts. In a large police force, you can select carefully (if you wish). Small-town SWAT teams are picked like teams in sandlot Wiffle ball—you get some real losers. Here is a video of one of the A-teamers:ref 451 do you want this guy bashing in doors in your hometown? Even worse, the feds offered grants for police to hire veterans. Sounds logical given that vets need jobs, but some of these guys are pretty comfortable splattering skulls like cantaloupes. Sprinkle in a little PTSD, and you've got a problem.

So why are Mayberry and Hooterville arming themselves to the teeth with military gear? The simple explanation is that the arms dealers are pocketing billions. A more insidious possibility is that municipal police forces are preparing for tough times ahead. I spoke with a prominent defense lawyer in Ithaca—Ithaca, New York!—who says “we've already lost the fight: they own us.”

Civil Forfeiture

“Normal people do not carry that kind of cash.”

~Police officer justifying a civil forfeiture

Of course, the police have plenty of nonviolent tactics. Enter the notion of civil forfeiture. It takes on a multitude of forms, all sharing the common theme of authorities confiscating money and goods when they suspect nefarious activity.ref 452 You read that right: suspect. Laws changed markedly after 9/11 under the Patriot Act. Police can now legally confiscate money before trial and . . . wait for it . . . keep it as a slush fund.ref 453 Years ago, California got into a pickle when authorities got caught confiscating the contents of dormant safe deposit boxes that weren't dormant and whose contents were sold off without an inventory.ref 454 We now have traffic violations leading to the confiscation of cash because its quantities are deemed suspiciously large. A federal judge called authorities' attempt to conceal $13 million from a gambler as “abhorrent.”ref 453

If you think these are urban legends, think again. Forbes published a story about 639 civil forfeitures.ref 455 In only 20% of the cases was there any evidence of possibly illegal activity. The majority, however, went unchallenged because of the court costs and sense of futility. In instances in which there was no evidence of crime committed, the authorities rarely offered to give the money back. A must-see John Oliver rant does a fine job of defining the problem.ref 456 I suspect that those failing to achieve satisfaction in the courts might have some pretty dark thoughts. This video of a prosecutor gleefully describing how to maximize the take from civil forfeiture generates them in me.ref 457 I better stop here.

Civil Liberties

“That is exactly why Edward Snowden felt compelled to whistle-blow. He understood what was at stake: Everything.”

~Mike Krieger (@libertyblitz)

“Why don’t we use the American Constitution? It was written by really smart guys, it has worked for over 200 years, and they’re not using it anymore.”

~Newspaper in Kiev

Every year it feels like the battle for our civil liberties is slipping away from us one liberty at a time. Frontline brought us the must-see documentary The United States of Secrets.ref 458 Gizmodo provided a nice listicle titled, 65 Things We Know about NSA Surveillance We Didn't Know a Year Ago.ref 459 The fact that such stinging indictments are still available is an encouraging sign. Another Snowden interview, by contrast, was widely broadcast . . . except in the US.ref 460

“When our engineers work tirelessly to improve security, we imagine we’re protecting you against criminals, not our own government.”

~Mark Zuckerberg, CEO and founder of Facebook

The ultimate struggle of good versus evil appears to be the battle for the tech world, in which the power of social media and remarkable global dissemination of information have squared off against authorities showing increasingly fascist tendencies, often under the guise of protecting democracy and freedom. We were warned by Scott McNealy of Sun Microsystems years agoref 461 that the tech world has been commandeered by those interested in peering into every aspect of our private lives. Jim Farley, the vice president of Ford said, “We know everyone who breaks the law, [and] we know when you're doing it.ref 462 Catchy, but I would go back to “Ford—Quality is job one.” The NSA intercepts online laptop purchases to install spyware.ref 463 Tech companies are forced to cooperate. Failure to do so leads to secret trials by secret courts accompanied by secret fines.ref 464 Attempts to add encryption files to smartphones are being opposed by the FBIref 465 because they would “hurt law enforcement efforts to crack homicide and child-exploitation cases.” Yes, Joe Friday: Do it for the children.

“Concentrated power is not rendered harmless by the good intentions of those who create it.”

~Milton Friedman

Payments to tech companies are suggested to be salve for the wounds of cooperation. RSA, a subsidiary of EMC, was paid $10 million to provide backdoor entry for the NSA.ref 466 RSA touted its “high-security data storage.” Apparently it's not the highest security. Yahoo's fight against the government’s pressure to cooperate led to a modest fine but also forced cooperation.ref 467 Whistle-blower William Binney says the fight to keep 80% of fiber-optic cable traffic routing through the United States is motivated by the authorities’ desire to have full access to the content.ref 468 US authorities bitch about Chinese-made routers as insecure, but Glenn Greenwald tells us that US-made routers are very NSA friendly.ref 469 Germany booted Verizon in fear of its relationship with the NSA.ref 470 (This is probably pandering by politicians.) Civil rights battler Michael Krieger takes on the Cyber Information Sharing Act's attempt to commandeer all our digital privacy.ref 471 (Michael has been tirelessly bringing these stories into the light of day.) A scandal involving a cooperative effort among the NSA, Facebook, and one of my colleagues at Cornell (Professor Jeffrey Hancock) involved a study in which Facebook altered individuals’ newsfeeds to see how social media influenced their responses to key issues.ref 472,473 I’m told that Hancock is a sincere guy, but the motives of the NSA are in doubt. Attempts by the FCC to regulate the Internet are exceedingly dangerous.ref 474

Congress does not support the NSA; it is held captive by it and terrified of its power. Russell Tice, yet another NSA whistle-blower, notes the massive blackmail of politicians.ref 475 Of course, some members of Congress are sociopaths, willing to endorse any bad idea (for a price, of course). There is plenty of evidence, however, that the battle of good versus evil has been lost in the halls of power as well. Jon Stewart hammered Diane Feinstein for her hypocrisy on NSA after the agency stole documents from her computer.ref 476 Given that she was one of the most ardent supporters of the NSA, ya gotta wonder what the agency had on her to win her support. Feinstein declared that “our oversight role will prevail” in the context of the CIA spying on the Senate Intelligence Committeeref 477 (as well as all of Congress).ref 478 Do we look that stupid? It has already failed. On a bright note, the CIA apologized and promised to never do it again. Obama announced no plans to curtail the agency's aggressive global surveillance, prompting General Hayden, head of the NSA, to declare this a “vote of confidence” for the NSA and its staff.ref 479 Maybe Hayden is confident that their spying program on Obama beginning in 2004ref 480 had collected enough dirt? This is J. Edgar Hoover on 'roids.

“This is kind of death of the republic kind of stuff.”

~Rachel Maddow on CIA spying on politicians

And don't think we will be saved by the FBI; it has switched from crime-fighting to national security: facial recognition software, and license plate tracking. They also go after rogue journalists to make the world a safer place.ref 481 I feel so safe.

“It is not the responsibility of the government or the legal system to protect a citizen from himself.”

~Justice Casey Percell

The security agencies have their own revolving door. I’m sure Stratfor buys a few, but it has become an arm of the government, so it's really just a reassignment. As noted above, an MI5 agent went to HSBC, but I would make the same argument on that one too. Some would say Edward Snowden took the revolving door to work for the Russians, but that would be a reach. Michael Krieger told us that ex-NSA head Keith Alexander sold his insights to Wall Street’s largest lobbying group, the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association, for $600K per month via his new venture IronNet Cybersecurity Inc.ref 482 NSA’s chief technical officer, Patrick Dowd, is allowed to work up to 20 hours a week at IronNet Cybersecurity Inc.ref 482 Why leave the NSA when you’re more valuable moonlighting while on the NSA payroll? Theresa Shea is the director of the NSA’s Signals Intelligence, which refers to all electronic eavesdropping and interception.ref 483 Her husband works in the private sector of the profitable Signals Intelligence industry at Telic Networks and DRS Signal Solutions Inc.ref 484 The NSA turned down a Freedom of Information Act request to probe Shea's finances,ref 485 referencing a “1959 law that allows it to keep almost everything secret.” Shea resigned to pursue outside interests.

How about the mid-level stuff? A federal whistle-blower got his email account hacked and four years worth of damning evidence deleted.ref 486 I hear Sonasoft backs that stuff up. A CIA operative used correct channels to divulge key info and got fired.ref 487 The War against Whistle-Blowers is a major plank of this administration. The NSA sends out malware to infect computers, take screen shots, and record audios.ref 488 A program called DROPOUTJEEP allows the NSA to pull essentially anything from your smartphone.ref 489 NSA says that it is simply too big—too much of a burden—to comply with court orders involving saving and providing evidence.ref 490

And in the category of “thinking you're safe ‘cause you have nothing to hide” I bring you just a couple of anecdotes. A woman was charged with a crime for leaving her 11-year-old waiting in a car.ref 491 Another woman got five days in jail for not following a town ordinance on lawn mowing.ref 492 In the Justina Pelletier case, the state took custody of a 15-year-old over disagreement with a hospital's treatment.ref 493 A Pennsylvania woman had her house auctioned by authorities because of a $6 overdue tax bill.ref 494 One woman received massive fines and a jail sentence over school truancy.ref 495 We can't tolerate kids missing such a bushmeat-laden curriculum that includes Common Core mathematicsref 496 mandated by state education interventionists. Cecily McMillan of Occupy Wall Street was convicted of assaulting a cop—elbowed him in a scuffle—and faces seven years in prison.ref 497 Probably won't get that, but . . .

This is not just a War on Women. One poor gent got it right up the butt—a triple-enema-to-find-drugs without a reach-around.ref 498 I sure hope they fed him a snack while they were up there. No drugs were found, and he got a court-ordered $1.6 million settlement and an endorsement deal as pitchman for the colonoscopy lobby. A hacker from Anonymous is looking at 440 years in prison.ref 499 Barrett Brown is facing more than 100 years in prison for trying to organize a Wiki-affiliated database to archive hacked materials.ref 500 He’s spent more than a year in prison, and some consider him a political prisoner. Here's the perfect defense: hack into a bank’s computers, put yourself on their payroll, and declare immunity from all prosecutions.

We now have drones with 4,000 rounds of pepper spray pellets.ref 501 Fortunately, it would never be used on US citizens. After a three-year fight, a court released a “drone memo” outlining arguments for killing US citizens.ref 502 I guess I'll take the pepper spray. The feds did a smash and grab on computer data in an investigation, grabbed too much, held onto it despite a court order to get rid of it, and then passed it to the IRS.ref 503 Nice. Orlando used eminent domain to take land from a church to build a soccer stadium,ref 504 attesting to the rising popularity of soccer. Rumors of such land grabs date back to the ‘60's when Walt Disney was positioning to change Orlando from a small town into a gigantic cesspool. General Mills claims that the simple act of purchasing a product may subject you to non-class-action status and restriction to arbitration.ref 505 Caveat emptor.

“Now—as the nature of the threat we face evolves to include the possibility of individual radicalization via the Internet—it is critical that we return our focus to potential extremists here at home.”

~Eric Holder

Let me close this discussion of civil liberties by taking on a very charged topic. Universities are under increased pressure to deal with sexual misconduct ranging from inappropriate behavior to full-blown rape. Keeping students safe by keeping predators off campus is admirable, but university staffs currently seem ill-equipped, especially for cases that should be handled in criminal courts. (Those who say university police should play a central role have never seen university police in action.) Women must feel safe on campus, but this safety should not come with no attention to the rights—quite possibly the Constitutionally granted rights—of men. An active debate about when no means no has now mutated into a debate about when yes means no. Oberlin administrators have declared, for example, that intoxicated women—not obliterated, merely intoxicated—are no longer considered capable of saying yes.ref 506 By proxy, Oberlin men are being converted by policy to sexual predators. California's legislature enacted the “affirmative consent” law,ref 507 in which silence is not implicit consent. The students must use “affirmative, conscious, and voluntary agreement” that is “ongoing throughout a sexual activity.” [Insert patently obvious joke here if you dare.]

I don't have the wisdom of Solomon to know where the happy medium is, but this ain't it. Federal probes of college sexual harassment practices are soaring.ref 508 Lawsuits by the accused are piling up. The system is under stress. An open letter from 28 Harvard Law School faculty is a worthy read.ref 509,510

“We find the new sexual harassment policy inconsistent with many of the most basic principles we teach.”

~28 Harvard Law School professors

We should be careful not to push the system to the point where parents sending their boys off to college have to remind them to videotape their sex to defend against an accusation. As I am on the final edits, the Rolling Stone scandal involving false accusations of gang rape at the University of Virginia is just hitting the press.ref 511 Oh dear. On second thought, skip college and take Father Guido Sarducci's Five Minute University.ref 512

Conclusion

“I’m tired of being outraged”

~Ben Hunt, Salient Partners

I envision German Jews sitting around the dinner table in the 1930's discussing risk. Among those who had the opportunity to mitigate the risk—certainly many did not—some chose to do so, and others bet that the threat would pass. It didn't, and they paid dearly. Next time you hear a glib intellectual dismissing risk-averse peasants—intellectual children—because the risk is low or because the worst case scenario failed to materialize, I would understand if you planted one right in their chops and muttered “you smug bastard.”

There is no “risk” of a 10% stock market correction because there are no consequences except to the blokes who live (and die) by leverage. Risk is not about what happens but what could happen and what the consequences could be. Russian Roulette is statistically a 6:1 winner . . . until you lose.

In 2002 I wrote a close friend at Goldman (Rick Sherlund) of the risk of a banking collapse.ref 277 I described the risk of subprime mortgages and possible collapse of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, GE Capital, and the entire banking system. Yes. It did collapse, only to be resurrected by central bankers willing to do things to sheep (us) that would make Romans blush. Some, central bankers included, say nobody saw it coming, which is obviously wrong because I was merely parotting what I had read. Thousands saw it coming, and billions didn't. Some would say I was dead wrong in my warning to Rick because my call was too early. Bullshit. It was a great call given the consequences of the collapse.

This year has been all about risk—existential risk. Some of it seemed to dissipate and some lingers. Ebola was mathematically very serious—Russian Roulette—but western civilization has dodged that bullet for now. Market valuations remain risky—regression to the mean could easily provide a 50% haircut and more if we observe regression through the mean. This has not come to pass, but the risk is very real. Those who seek risk in markets will eventually find it.

I avoided ranting too much about unfunded liabilities and pension stresses this year not because the risks have dissipated—they have not—but because nothing has happened yet. I seriously doubt, however, that the pension problem will be a dud. Whether we witness a massive corrective action—a come-to-Zeus moment—or rot spread over decades does not dissuade me from believing we will experience an historic purging of debt and unfullfillable commitments.

Cold War 2.0 came out of nowhere and has the potential of, at a minimum, rotting our national balance sheet and, in the worst case scenario, turning into a conflagration of a higher order. Oh surely that would never happen again, right? The House of Commons met 14 days before World War I broke out. There is no mention in the minutes discussing the risk of armed conflict. The history books are littered with destructive human folly—men (and now women) attempting to be important—and such folly will continue unabated. Folks like Niall Ferguson who study empires in decline think the US Empire is waning. This essay by Soviet dissident Dmitry Orlov is a particularly harsh view.ref 488 A common theme in these discourses is that declining empires tend to respond violently at home and abroad.

We can see it already. Loss of civil liberties, militarization of the police force, and civil forfeiture are profound concerns to me. I get a little over-protective of what's mine. Can you recall an instance in which such a path was taken and then society backed out uneventfully? I can't. Richard Clarke, Bush's National Coordinator for Security, closed his tell-all book Against All Enemies by suggesting that the enemy is within.

Ferguson, Missouri is emblematic of both hope and risk. I see the Ferguson unrest as an outgrowth of Occupy Wall Street. The folks on the street are getting madder at the current imbalances. Their lot in life is getting worse for reasons that are too complex for me to fully grasp. What they have figured out, however, is that they have power.“Hands up” and “Can't breath” have become rallying cries for pissed off folks and not just inner city dwellers. With the advent of social media and cell phones, a group of people who have never met can assemble spontaneously to shut down the system. Society is developing unprecedented collective neural pathways to express discontent. Don't underestimate the intensity and frequency of such events going forward, because there are a lot of people with a lot of things to be pissed at.

Of course, despite the authorities' best efforts to keep everything orderly, we know how this global Game of Tetris ends:

“Players lose a typical game of Tetris when they can no longer keep up with the increasing speed, and the Tetriminos stack up to the top of the playing field. This is commonly referred to as topping out.”

~Wikipedia on Tetris

Books

“I cannot remember the books I’ve read any more than the meals I have eaten; even so, they have made me.”

~Ralph Waldo Emerson

I rehypothecated that quote from last year's review, but it brilliantly captures my frustration of not remembering in detail what I've read but sensing enrichment nonetheless. I summarize all the books I've read during the year. Owing to limited bandwidth, I try to choose carefully. Audiobooks help: I am an audiophile. Books sent by authors are appreciated but engender a sense of obligation and potential conflict. I have flagged those books. The topics wander but are always reputedly nonfiction: why waste my time on fiction?

Flashboys by Michael Lewis

Michael set out to write a horror story about Sergey Aleynikov (highlighted in previous reviewsref 2), but the book morphed into a tell-all exposé on high frequency traders. I am a huge Michael Lewis fan; I read everything he writes for his prose, humor, and capacity to find the story within the story. The narrative may have some minor flaws, but Flashboys is classic Lewis prose and very entertaining.

The Great Degeneration: How Institutions Decay and Economies Die by Niall Ferguson

This is a short, easy read in which Ferguson articulates his views on why and how the West is in decline. He documents the political and economic decay foreshadowing the demise of Western civilization and submits that it could cascade rather quickly. He won't swing opponents (not even former economist Krugman), but it provides for some great confirmation bias.

Human Action by Ludwig von Mises

This is a very scholarly work by the legendary godfather of Austrian economics. Those who profess to be Austrian economists view this as one of the bibles. In my humble opinion, this book is not for the faint of heart. I found it to be a bitch to get through. Although ignorance is at play, the prose is also so bloated (early 20th-century Austrian) as to make it difficult for all but the most dedicated reader. The man needed a copy editor. With that said, the ideas are seminal.

The Death of Money: The Coming Collapse of the International Monetary System by James Rickards

Rickards is a publishing dynamo. His books are global, his resume impeccable. In this follow-up to Currency Wars, Jim describes the battle of central bankers against the forces of the free market, the essence of the inflation–deflation battle. This is an entertaining view of global currencies that I found reminiscent of George Friedman's America's Secret War. Those who have read Hayek's Fatal Conceit will confidently join Jim in predicting that the central bankers are going to lose: they are fatally conceited.

Volcker: The Triumph of Persistence by William L. Silber

The top-seeded Amazon review hammers this book, citing superior treatises (Secrets of the Temple, for example) that I have also read. The critic completely missed the point. This book is not about monetary policy; it's a biography of Volcker and his relationship to the banks and bankers. I really enjoyed the book and now have a much better understanding of the man called Volcker.

Rise of the Warrior Cop: The Militarization of America's Police Forces by Radley Balko

This was, quite possibly, the most disturbing book I've ever read. I moved it to the top of a huge list when Ferguson broke out. Balko documents the slow, methodical militarization of the police force and the accompanying risk to our civil liberties and liberty itself. It could have been hyperbolic, but it was not. I had to complete it in small doses owing to relentless agitation, but it gets my highest recommendation. It also dovetails nicely with Matt Taibbi's The Divide (see below).

The Divide: American Injustice in the Age of the Wealth Gap by Matt Taibbi and Molly Crabapple

This book is two stories combined like two decks of cards shuffled together. The first is the story of the failure to prosecute Wall Street crimes. Taibbi does a good job of revealing in disgusting detail how and why the judicial system failed. (Plot spoiler: Holder sucks.) It was nauseating. The second is a story of the wholesale roundup and prosecution of impoverished city dwellers with minimum regard for the rules of law and maximum regard for profit motive. You read that right: profit motive. I am no putty-headed liberal, but this story is lurid and grotesque. This book is not fun, but it puts some of the emergent civil unrest into context.

What It Means to Be a Libertarian by Robert Murray

An easy-to-read treatise by one of the more vocal supporters of libertarianism. It is a pragmatic approach to deconstructing many ham-fisted government interventions in our private and economic lives. Murray explains how interventions fail to optimize outcomes as the paternalistic types convince themselves their motives are pure.

The Deep Dark: Disaster and Redemption in America's Richest Silver Mine by Greg Olsen.

Olsen describes the harrowing tale of the fire in the Sunshine silver mine in 1972—the largest mining disaster in US history—that killed hundreds. It's not about silver but rather human tragedy. I enjoyed it, but it is unlikely to climb to the top of many readers' lists of must-read books.

The Fifties by David Halberstam

David is one of the great narrators of easy-read modern history. He describes all aspects of postwar America in a decade viewed by many as the fundamental linchpin of the tumultuous decades to come. The social, cultural, and geopolitical events will be particularly interesting to boomers reaching back to their childhoods. It was a nice follow-up to Cronkite.

New York Burning: Liberty, Slavery, and Conspiracy in Eighteenth-Century Manhattan by Jill Lepore

The book introduces the slave rebellion of 1741. The frustrating part of the story is that the rebellion may have been real, or the hunt for a conspiracy may have been New York's comeback to the Salem witch trials. Historians will never know. What’s clear is that a lot of slaves were crucified in one of the darker periods of US history. The positive side of the book is that you get a great look at slavery in Manhattan, which was a very different beast than its variant on Southern plantations. It's a niche read.

Pam, Sam, and the Paper Money Sham by Bill Borden

The author sent me this charming children's tale of how inflation is a destructive force. Given the topic, I think he did a good job, and the book certainly has little or no competition. In some sense he is channeling Dr. Seuss's morality theme. On the contrary, I was left with the sense that the topic is pretty edgy. A small cadre of Amazon evaluators loved it. Paul Krugman is unlikely to read it to his grandchildren.

The Drunkard's Walk: How Randomness Rules Our Lives by Leonard Mlodinow

I love this book genre. This example is on par with Daniel Kahneman's Thinking Fast and Slow and better than Nassim Taleb's Fooled by Randomness (which I still like, I hasten to add). Mlodinow wanders through the role of random patterns in our lives that are sometimes stunningly difficult to understand in depth. He develops statistical thinking methodically with very clever vignettes and good prose. This is a classic must read.

Influence: Science and Practice by Robert B. Cialdini

This book came massively praised by Charlie Munger in a stupendous 1995 interview at Harvard Law School.ref 489 It’s another from the neuropsychology genre. The updated fifth edition describes the half-dozen categories of manipulation that we are subjected to throughout our daily lives. The ideas are presented as vignettes, and they are entertaining and very thoughtful.

Unbalanced: The Codependency of America and Chinaby Stephen Roach

With the perspective of a Wall Street economist, Stephen has become a leading expert on the relationship between China and the United States. I sense that this book has not been widely read, quite possibly because of the complexity of the topic or the public's failure to understand how China–US relations will define us for decades to come. The author’s past writings reveal him to be bullish on China. His careful analysis of the codependency shows that this position is not held without serious concern. China's newfound enthusiasm for capitalism is likely to be seriously challenged in the next few years. The US's unsustainable consumption of Chinese goods will be a very tough nut to crack. Disclosure: Stephen provided a copy of his book.

The Golden Revolution: How to Prepare for the Coming Global Gold Standard by John Butler

As one of the more prominent gold enthusiasts, the author methodically walks us through the history of gold-backed currencies, the rise of fiat currencies, and the case for why we will be returning to a gold-backed global currency regime at some point, a premise I have begun to endorse. The book sprinkles in a solid dose of Austrian business cycle theory. I'm not sure it will sway any die-hard Keynesians to see the light—a high bar—but those whose interests in gold have been piqued will find this a highly readable and useful treatise.

David and Goliath by Malcolm Gladwell

Bashing Gladwell has become a bit chic. I could really care less if he lacks rigor. The man can tell a story. David and Goliath uses Gladwellian anecdotes to illustrate that asymmetries in power struggles are often not what they appear to be. The superior force (Goliath) never had a prayer against the underdog (David). The origins and historical examples of these asymmetries are very entertaining, but apparently only if you are a Luddite.

All the Presidents' Bankers: The Hidden Alliances That Drive American Power by Nomi Prins

Nomi goes through the history of the 20th and 21st centuries looking at the relationships of half a dozen bankers with US presidents. The story is about how a system depending on powerful men (Morgan, Baker, Lamont, etc.) and functioning as the fourth branch of government mutated into a multi-headed hydra in which the prominent bankers—we all know their names—are running organizations more akin to the Borg. The relentless push for deregulation, backstopping of dubious practices, and amassing of political influence is presented with shockingly limited hyperbole. Nomi's tale of horror is not as nauseating as I expected it to be, but the rot of the banking system is inescapable.

Global Pension Crisis: Unfunded Liabilities and How We Can Fill the Gap by Richard A. Marin

Rich is the former CEO of Bear Stearns Asset Management and currently a colleague at Cornell. He provided a copy of the book, which examines the coming pension crisis with a global view similar to that of Laurence Kotlikoff's domestic one (The Coming Generational Storm). Both of these books tell harrowing tales of underfunding that will define our lives for decades. Both grope for solutions that, quite frankly, I don't buy. Their original assertions are correct: we're screwed.

The History of Science: 1700–1900 by Frederick Gregory

The Teaching Company offers stupendous trimester-length, college-level courses on CD (usually about 20 CDs). This one is a follow up to The History of Science: Antiquity to 1700. As expected, the quality is high. I recommend hitting the website and browsing the topics. Never pay the list price. They are often on sale for $50–$70 (80% discount). I have listened to more than 20 of these courses on CD to date.

The Brain That Changes Itself: Stories of Personal Triumph from the Frontiers of Brain Science by Norman Doidge

The topic of neural plasticity—the capacity of the brain to rewire itself—is fantastically interesting, which is reason enough to read the book. The stories of the manifestation of this plasticity are often incredible. That said, the book has two weaknesses: (1) as it proceeds, the scientific rigor of the narrative seems to be lost, and (2) one gets a bit of an infomercial feel as though the author is a tad overly attached to the players. Overall, I learned a ton.

2014 Year in Review Collum


Frontrunning: January 6

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  • Average 10-year yield of U.S., Japan and Germany dropped below 1% for the first time ever: Free Money in Bond Markets Shows Global Economy Still Struggling (BBG)
  • China Fast-Tracks $1 Trillion in Projects to Spur Growth (BBG)
  • Brent falls below $52 as oil hits new five and a half year lows (Reuters)
  • Saudi Arabia Raises Price of Main Oil Grade for Asian Buyers (BBG)
  • Oilfield Writedowns Loom as Crude Slump Guts Drilling Values (BBG)
  • Biggest Oil-Rig Drop Since 2009 Spells Tough Year Ahead (BBG)
  • CIA says its inspector general is resigning at end of month (Reuters)
  • Pipeline IPOs Climb on Demand for Returns Immune to Oil (BBG)
  • Natural Gas No Savior for Investors Seeking Oil Refuge (BBG)
  • Euro zone economy ended 2014 in poor shape (Reuters)
  • Russia Showing Off Military Hardware in AirAsia Search (BBG)
  • Ukraine Bonds at 60 Cents Seen Signaling Risk of Default (BBG)
  • NetJets Unrest Puts Warren Buffett in a Rare Pinch (WSJ)
  • Thousands flee intensifying India-Pakistan clashes (Reuters)
  • Crop of Young Outsiders Remakes the Face of Congress (WSJ)
  • Singapore Private Bankers Wake Up to Junk Bond Risks as Cracks Emerge (BBG)
  • Germans Protest Anti-Islamist Rally as Landmarks Go Dark (BBG)
  • Launch of SpaceX rocket from Florida called off (Reuters)

 

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

* Stock markets around the globe tumbled as oil briefly fell below $50 a barrel and fresh worries arose about Europe's economy, fueling fears of deflation. (http://on.wsj.com/1wgNIAN)

* Despite a bad bet on Caesars Entertainment Corp, Apollo Global Management may avoid losing all of its chips. Through a series of financial maneuvers, Apollo has positioned itself to salvage some of the $1.7 billion it invested in Caesars. The restructuring hinges on the bankruptcy of Caesars's largest unit, which could come as soon as mid-January, and transfers of the unit's best assets that have infuriated creditors. (http://on.wsj.com/1BCpmVG)

* Morgan Stanley fired one of its financial advisers after it accused him of stealing account data on about 350,000 clients and posting some of that information online. (http://on.wsj.com/1Bscxzl)

* Dissent is brewing in the pilot ranks of NetJets Inc , the company owned by Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway. Labor unrest is unusual for a Berkshire company and this particular fight is turning nasty. (http://on.wsj.com/1xMDbQZ)

* Facebook Inc said it had acquired Wit.ai, a voice-recognition startup that claims to "turn speech into actionable data," a move that could give the social network more information for targeted advertisements. (http://on.wsj.com/1vWJVaW)

* Financial news network CNBC will no longer rely on TV ratings specialist Nielsen to measure its daytime audience, beginning later this year. Instead, it has retained marketing and research firm Cogent Reports for the task. (http://on.wsj.com/1BCqLLW)

* Sony Corp Chief Executive Officer Kazuo Hirai made his first public comments Monday on the recent hacking attack on its movie division, thanking employees and partners for support that made the movie, the Interview, available to public audiences. (http://on.wsj.com/1wR5UA3)

 

FT

British bank Lloyds Banking Group PLC is seeking a waiver on one of the key measures of the UK's new ringfencing regime for its ringfenced entity to have a different board of directors to that of its parent group, as the country's big banks take prepare for submission of their plans to protect ordinary customers from the banks' risky activities.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel will hold talks with David Cameron in Downing Street on Wednesday as part of a UK visit that is expected to set out her limits for helping the British prime minister renegotiate Britain's relationship with Europe.

Finance minister George Osborne cast the UK general election as a choice between "competence and chaos," as the Conservatives began a four-month offence against the Labour claiming that the opposition party has almost 21 billion pounds ($32.05 billion) of unfunded spending plans.

Scottish football club Rangers confirmed it had received an offer from American financier Robert Sarver to take control of the ailing company that owns it.

 

NYT

* TPG's head of global operations, Kevin Burns, is generating additional payments through his role as acting president and chief operating officer of Chobani, the yogurt maker that took a $750 million loan from TPG last April, according to people briefed on the matter. (http://nyti.ms/1yurcua)

* Morgan Stanley fired a financial adviser who allegedly stole account information of its wealth management clients and posted some of it online. The bank traced the breach to a financial adviser working out of its New York offices, a 30-year-old named Galen Marsh, according to a person involved in the investigation. (http://nyti.ms/14repfE)

* Gilead Sciences Inc struck back on Monday against its rival AbbVie Inc in a budding marketing war over costly hepatitis C drugs, winning exclusive access to many patients whose prescriptions are managed by CVS Health Corp . (http://nyti.ms/1tEFKR7)

* The U.S. Justice Department announced on Monday that it had joined two whistle-blower lawsuits filed against the doctor, Asad Qamar, a cardiologist who collected more than $18 million in payments from Medicare in 2012, and his medical group, the Institute for Cardiovascular Excellence. Qamar has been accused by the federal government of performing unnecessary procedures on patients. (http://nyti.ms/1BDL9N2)

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

* Ottawa is set to announce new funding on Tuesday for a "direct diplomacy" project aimed at communicating directly with Iranian citizens as it looks to apply a similar strategy in other countries, including Russia and parts of Iraq and Syria. (http://bit.ly/1Ff5fCV)

* Canada's public broadcaster CBC has suspended two senior executives - Chris Boyce, executive director of CBC Radio, and Todd Spencer, executive director of human resources and industrial relations - in connection with the Jian Ghomeshi scandal. (http://bit.ly/13VJ3fT)

* A senior figure in Islamic State's self-declared police force in Syria, which has carried out beheadings, was himself found decapitated in the eastern province of Deir al-Zor, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said on Tuesday. (http://bit.ly/1xNnqwd)

NATIONAL POST

* The arrival of Mexican drug traffickers, along with increased activity by outlaw motorcycle gangs, is changing the face of organized crime in Alberta. Royal Canadian Mountain Police's commanding officer in Alberta says the syndicates are now basing people here to import and distribute cocaine and other drugs. (http://bit.ly/1Bu5Lcr)

* After five years without a gold medal at the ice hockey world junior championship, including a spectacular third-period collapse against Russia in the final four years ago, Canada finally won the IIHF World Junior Championship, beating Russia 5-4. (http://bit.ly/1vY8l3O)

* Calgary-based triathlete Tamara Loiselle risked her life to rescue a drowning couple while vacationing in Mexico. Loiselle almost drowned about six years ago after she fell off a boat and didn't have the strength to pull herself up. She vowed to get back into shape. The strength she earned over time would save two people. (http://bit.ly/1FfuCoh)

 

China

CHINA SECURITIES JOURNAL

- The Shanghai municipal government on Monday approved the establishment of a petroleum and natural gas trading centre.

- The Legislative Affairs Office of the State Council, China's cabinet, on Monday said the State Administration of Taxation and the Ministry of Finance were seeking opinions on a draft amendment for tax administration law and were clarifying the legal status of the taxpayer identification system.

CHINA DAILY

- The Chinese Communist Party's internal discipline watchdog said 102,168 officials were sacked last year for violating the "eight-point rules" on frugality, including disobeying workplace rules, using public funds for overseas travel or personal entertainment and excessive spending on receptions and vehicles.

PEOPLE'S DAILY

- This year will be a crucial year for the comprehensive deepening of reform, and a rule of law mindset is indispensable, an editorial said.

 

Britain

The Times

The euro has slumped to a nine-year low against the dollar, buffeted by market expectations that the European Central Bank is poised to launch full-blown quantitative easing and renewed fears over political uncertainty in Greece. (thetim.es/1Ii6Dkv)

Shares in Marks and Spencer Group Plc fell steeply Monday after City analysts warned that an expected rise in food sales over Christmas was unlikely to offset a forecast decline in clothing during the last quarter. (thetim.es/1DcogUO)

 
The Guardian

More than 1,500 high street jobs are at risk after the clothing chain Bank Fashion collapsed into administration. (bit.ly/1xM1NJt)

Quarterly poll of chief finance officers finds firms fear uncertain times ahead, with possible exit from EU also cited as a worry. (bit.ly/1HxYOsu)

The Telegraph

Dave Lewis, chief executive officer of Tesco Plc, is considering closing the retailer's defined-benefit pension scheme to new members as part of his plan to shore up the company's battered balance sheet. (bit.ly/1DbUwY5)

Chris Sullivan, the deputy chief executive of Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc, has left the taxpayer-owned lender early. (bit.ly/1xLrOfi)

CitySprint, one of the UK's biggest courier firms, has hired advisers to explore strategic options for the company just weeks after the demise of delivery rival City Link. (bit.ly/1KfWw3w)

Sky News

The euro has dropped to a nine-year low against the US dollar as investor fears over growth prospects continue to grow. (bit.ly/13UwCAU)

Newly released sales data from one of Britain's biggest high street chains has revealed a shopping revolution because of Black Friday discounting. (bit.ly/1DrxyJW)

The Independent

"Click and collect" overtook home deliveries at John Lewis Plc over Christmas - as the retailer relied on Internet purchases to boost sales during the festive period. (ind.pn/1F8UZfA)

Thomas Gilbert, a $200 million (131.04 million pounds) hedge fund founder, has been discovered shot dead in his New York flat. (ind.pn/1vRCmCl)

 

Corporate

* Verizon Communications Inc approached AOL Inc about a potential acquisition or joint venture to expand its mobile-video offerings, Bloomberg reported, citing people with knowledge of the matter.

* European private equity firm Cinven's acquisition of the public-sector division of British software firm Northgate Information Solutions will be backed with 285 million pounds($434 million) of debt financing, banking sources said on Monday.

 
* United Arab Emirates-based healthcare provider NMC Health , founded by billionaire Indian entrepreneur B.R. Shetty, is in talks with bankers for a potential long-term loan, four sources with knowledge of the matter said on Monday.

* Acushnet Company, which owns golf brands such as Titleist and Footjoy, chose U.S.-based Solebury Capital to advise on a potential IPO seen worth around $1.8 billion around 2016, a source with direct knowledge said on Tuesday.

* Accessories retailer Coach Inc is nearing a deal to buy privately held women's luxury shoe company Stuart Weitzman Holdings LLC for about $600 million, according to a person familiar with the matter.

* Paul Tudor Jones, the founder and chief investment officer of the roughly $13 billion hedge fund firm Tudor Investment Corp, has closed his firm's oldest fund, a source familiar with the matter said on Monday.

* Lewis Ranieri is nearing a deal to sell commercial real-estate services firm Situs Holdings, in the mortgage-bond pioneer's latest effort to cash in on a rising property market, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter. (on.wsj.com/1wg6JUb)

* Britain's Financial Conduct Authority plans to fine the investment banking unit of the failed Portuguese lender Banco Espirito Santo SA for violating listing rules, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing two people familiar with the matter.

* NPS Pharmaceuticals, which develops treatment for rare diseases, is looking for a buyer, the Wall Street Journal reported. NPS Pharma's advisers at Goldman Sachs Group Inc have started contacting other companies to gauge their interest, WSJ said, citing people familiar with the matter.

 

 

Fly On The Wall Pre-market Buzz

ECONOMIC REPORTS

Domestic economic reports scheduled for today include:
Markit services PMI for December at 9:45--consensus 53.6
ISM non-manufacturing survey for December at 10:00--consensus 58.0
Factory orders for November at 10:00--consensus down 0.5%

ANALYST RESEARCH

Upgrades

Anthem (ANTM) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Deutsche Bank
Becton Dickinson (BDX) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at BofA/Merrill
C.H. Robinson (CHRW) upgraded to Neutral from Sell at Goldman
Constellation Brands (STZ) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Goldman
Delhaize (DEG) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at BofA/Merrill
El Pollo Loco (LOCO) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Jefferies
FedEx (FDX) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at UBS
Flagstar Bancorp (FBC) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at FBR Capital
Humana (HUM) upgraded to Hold from Sell at Deutsche Bank
Huntington Ingalls (HII) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at BofA/Merrill
Infoblox (BLOX) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Deutsche Bank
Oracle (ORCL) upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at Piper Jaffray
Public Storage (PSA) upgraded to Neutral from Sell at Goldman
Rockwell Collins (COL) upgraded to Neutral from Underperform at BofA/Merrill
Siliconware Precision (SPIL) upgraded to Outperform from Neutral at Credit Suisse
Workday (WDAY) upgraded to Overweight from Equal Weight at Barclays

Downgrades

Aerohive (HIVE) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Goldman
Associated Estates (AEC) downgraded to Hold from Buy at MLV & Co.
BroadSoft (BSFT) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Goldman
CGG SA (CGG) downgraded to Sell from Neutral at UBS
CSX (CSX) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at UBS
Domino's Pizza (DPZ) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Jefferies
General Electric (GE) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Deutsche Bank
H.B. Fuller (FUL) downgraded to Hold from Buy at KeyBanc
Infinera (INFN) downgraded to Buy from Conviction Buy at Goldman
LogMeln (LOGM) downgraded to Underweight from Equal Weight at Barclays
MGM China (MCHVF) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Deutsche Bank
Mallinckrodt (MNK) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at BMO Capital
Melco Crown (MPEL) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at BofA/Merrill (yesterday)
NetSuite (N) downgraded to Equal Weight from Overweight at Barclays
Noodles & Company (ndls) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at UBS
Norfolk Southern (NSC) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at UBS
QIAGEN (QGEN) downgraded to Underperform from Neutral at BofA/Merrill
Roka Bioscience (ROKA) downgraded to Underperform from Neutral at BofA/Merrill
Sensata (ST) downgraded to Sector Perform from Outperform at RBC Capital
Varonis (VRNS) downgraded to Equal Weight from Overweight at Barclays

Initiations

Alexion (ALXN) initiated with an Overweight at Barclays
Amgen (AMGN) initiated with an Equal Weight at Barclays
Aon plc (AON) initiated with a Buy at Jefferies
Avolon (AVOL) initiated with a Buy at Citigroup
Avolon (AVOL) initiated with an Outperform at Cowen
Avolon (AVOL) initiated with an Outperform at Wells Fargo
Biogen (BIIB) initiated with an Overweight at Barclays
Celgene (CELG) initiated with an Equal Weight at Barclays
Ellie Mae (ELLI) initiated with a Buy at Roth Capital
Encana (ECA) reinstated with an Equal Weight at Barclays
Gilead (GILD) initiated with an Overweight at Barclays
Hortonworks (HDP) initiated with a Buy at Goldman
Hortonworks (HDP) initiated with an Outperform at Pacific Crest
Hortonworks (HDP) initiated with an Outperform at RBC Capital
James River Group (JRVR) initiated with a Buy at UBS
James River Group (JRVR) initiated with an Outperform at FBR Capital
KEYW (KEYW) initiated with an In-Line at Imperial Capital
Marsh & McLennan (MMC) initiated with a Hold at Jefferies
Medivation (MDVN) initiated with an Overweight at Barclays
NPS Pharmaceuticals (NPSP) initiated with an Overweight at Barclays
New Relic (NEWR) initiated with a Neutral at UBS
Palo Alto (PANW) initiated with an Outperform at RBC Capital
Pharmacyclics (PCYC) initiated with a Buy at BTIG
Regeneron (REGN) initiated with an Equal Weight at Barclays
Sunesis (SNSS) initiated with a Buy at BTIG
Towers Watson (TW) initiated with a Buy at Jefferies
United Therapeutics (UTHR) initiated with a Neutral at BTIG
United Therapeutics (UTHR) initiated with an Equal Weight at Barclays
Vertex (VRTX) initiated with a Buy at BTIG
Vertex (VRTX) initiated with an Equal Weight at Barclays
Western Union (WU) initiated with a Hold at Stifel
Workiva (WK) initiated with a Buy at Stifel
Workiva (WK) initiated with an Outperform at RW Baird
Workiva (WK) initiated with an Overweight at Morgan Stanley
Xoom (XOOM) initiated with a Buy at Stifel
Zillow (Z) initiated with a Market Perform at Cowen

COMPANY NEWS

Xoom (XOOM) determined that it has been the victim of a criminal fraud. The company also said that Matt Hibbard resigned as CFO, effective immediately
Facebook (FB) said it acquired speech recognition startup Wit.ai
Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) announced the start of a Phase 1, first-in-human clinical trial of a preventive Ebola vaccine in development at its Janssen Pharmaceutical

Companies

Salix (SLXP) CEO Carolyn Logan to retire, effective January 30. Tom D’Alonzo will be appointed acting CEO, and William Bertrand, Jr., the company’s SVP and General Counsel, will be appointed acting COO, pending the company’s hiring of a permanent CEO

EARNINGS

Companies that missed consensus earnings expectations include:
Peak Resorts (SKIS), Ennis (EBF)

SciClone (SCLN) backs FY14 EPS view of 64c-68c, one estimate 56c. The company sees FY14 revenue $152M-$158M, one estimate $151.2M
Xoom (XOOM) raises Q4 revenue view to $43.1M-$43.6M from $41M-$43M, consensus $41.8M
Helix Energy (HLX) backs FY14 EPS view $1.85-$1.95, consensus $1.95
InspireMD (NSPR) reports Q4 revenue approximately $900,000, consensus $700,000

NEWSPAPERS/WEBSITES

NPS Pharmaceuticals (NPSP) hires Goldman (GS) to help find buyer, WSJ reports (SHPG, ABBV)
Verizon (VZ) contacts AOL (AOL) regarding possible takeover or venture, Bloomberg reports
Coach (COH) close to deal to purchase Stuart Weitzman for about $600M, WSJ reports
Morgan Stanley (MS) client data theft probed by FBI, Reuters reports
Toyota (TM) to offer almost 6K FCV patents for free, Nikkei reports
RBS (RBS) deputy CEO leaves lender early, Telegraph reports
Gap (GPS) stock is 'on sale,' Barron's contends

SYNDICATE

Alder Biopharmaceuticals (ALDR) files to sell 4M shares of common stock
Avalanche Biotechnologies (AAVL) files to sell 2M shares of common stock
Cempra (CEMP) files to sell $100M in common stock
Cerus (CERS) intends to offer common stock
Five Prime (FPRX) files to sell $75M in common stock
Karyopharm (KPTI) announces proposed offering of 3M shares of common stock
Synageva (GEVA) files to sell 2.5M shares of common stock

News That Matters

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HEADLINES

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EU Winter Economic Forecast: Outlook Improved But Risks Remain

ECB's Jazbec: QE Could End Sooner Than Sept. 2016

ECB's Weidmann: Countries Must Bear Consequences Of Own Actions

BoE Rates Left Unchanged, In Wait-And-See Mode Amid Infl. Woes

EU's Moscovici: QE Is Significant Enough To Have Macroeconomic Impact

CNB Keeps Interest Rates Unchanged, Confirms Exchange Rate Commitment

Fed's Rosengren Sees No Clear Sign Inflation Trending Higher

Japan Taps Reflationist As New BoJ Board Member

Greek Bond Yields Jump After ECB Raises Stakes For Athens

UK House Prices Jump Unexpectedly In January - Halifax

Switzerland's Economic Experts Slash Growth Forecasts

Pfizer To Buy Hospira In $17 Billion Cash Deal

Sprint Corp. Posts Q3 GAAP Loss Of 60c/Share

Siemens Said To Plan 7,400 Job Cuts As CEO Reduces Costs

Fitch & Moody's Affirm BT Group Following EE Announcement

Daimler 'On Upward Curve' After 10% Profit Jump

AstraZeneca To Buy Actavis Lung Drugs As Q4 Earnings Fall Short

Vodafone Posts Better Than Expected Third Quarter Sales

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COMMENTARY

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Buffett Says Tough For Fed To Lift Rates Given Strong Dollar

Warren Buffett, the billionaire chairman of Berkshire Hathaway Inc., said it would be “very tough” for the Federal Reserve to lift interest rates this year because of the stronger U.S. dollar.

“That would exacerbate the problem,” Buffett said in an interview on the Fox Business network. “I don’t think it’ll be very feasible to do. I think it would have a lot of international repercussions.”

U.S. economic growth, outperforming most industrialized counterparts, has helped push the nation’s currency higher than it’s been in more than a decade against currencies of six trade partners. That’s making it cheaper for Americans to buy imported goods and helping to lower inflation that’s already below the Fed’s goal, making it harder to boost rates. (Bloomberg – Continue Reading)

Democracy Could Have Saved Europe From The Single Currency

“Elections change nothing,” said Wolfgang Schäuble, Germany’s tough-minded finance minister. He was talking about Greece, but he could have been talking about the entire EU racket. The Europhile elites have a guarded and contingent attitude towards democracy. It has its place, to be sure, but it must never be allowed to slow the process of political integration. As the President of the European Commission, Jean-Claude Juncker, put it in response to Syriza’s election victory, “There can be no democratic choice against the European treaties”.

He means it. In 2011, in order to keep the euro intact, the EU connived at the toppling of two elected prime ministers: Silvio Berlusconi in Rome and George Papandreou in Athens. Both men were replaced by Eurocrats who presided over, in effect, Brussels-approved civilian juntas. Although their regimes were called “national governments”, their purpose was to drive through policies that would be rejected at the ballot box. (CapX  - Continue Reading)

 

What The ECB's Move On Greek Government Debt Is Really All About

In a press release that jolted the markets, the ECB announced that it will no longer accept Greek government debt as collateral starting next week. But this news is not necessarily a potential liquidity disaster for Greek banks.

The Greek banking system is not particularly reliant on Greek sovereign debt as collateral. Figures from the Bank of Greece show that Greek financial institutions currently have about 21 billion euros of Greek sovereign exposure. Furthermore, this debt has already been subject to valuation haircuts of up to 40% when used as collateral at the ECB.

All collateral that the Greek banks use for ECB operations that is not Greek sovereign debt is still perfectly good to use. This decision of the ECB is against the Greek sovereign, not the Greek banks. (ekathimerini – Continue Reading)

Fitch: China's RRR Cut Less Of An Easing Than It Appears

The 50bp reduction in China's reserve requirement ratio (RRR), effective on 5 February, is less of a policy easing than it appears, says Fitch Ratings. The measure compensates almost exactly for liquidity destroyed by cross-border capital outflows during 2014. Accompanying targeted-easing measures are in line with the authorities' practice in this easing cycle, going back to 3Q14.

Latest data from the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) indicates that net capital outflows in 2014 totalled USD96bn (CNY575bn). We estimate the 50bp RRR cut by the People's Bank of China (PBOC) to release around CNY570bn into the economy. Therefore, the liquidity effect of the broad-based RRR cut roughly balances out against the impact of capital outflows.

Also notable is the PBOC's continuing with targeted-easing measures to lower borrowing costs in certain sectors of the economy, on top of the broad-based easing. The PBOC announced an additional 50bp RRR cut for smaller financial institutions focused on micro enterprises and agricultural lending, as well as a 400bp RRR cut for the Agricultural Development Bank of China (ADBC). We expect these measures to release approximately CNY101bn (USD16bn) in liquidity - CNY85bn for the smaller institutions and CNY16bn for ADBC. (Fitch – Continue Reading)

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DATA

Markit Eurozone Retail PMI Jan: 46.6 (prev 47.6)

UK Halifax House Prices (MoM) Jan: 2.00% (est 0.00%; rev prev 1.10%)

UK New Car Registrations (YoY) Jan: 6.70% (prev 8.70%)

Markit Germany Construction PMI Jan: 49.5 (prev 50.5)

Markit Germany Retail PMI Jan: 52.3 (prev 51.7)

Markit France Retail PMI Jan: 44.0 (prev 46.5)

Markit Italy Retail PMI Jan: 41.2 (prev 42.8)

Switzerland's Economic Experts Slash Growth Forecasts

Swedish Industrial Production (MoM) Dec: 1.70% (est 1.00%; prev -0.20%)

Swedish Industrial Orders NSA (YoY) Dec: -11.40% (prev 1.10%)

Swedish Service Production (MoM) SA Dec: -0.20% (est -0.50%; prev 1.00%)

Irish Industrial Production (MoM) Dec: -12.40% (prev 4.60%)

GOVERNMENT/ CENTRAL BANK NEWS AND COMMENTARY

EU Winter Economic Forecast: Outlook Improved But Risks Remain

ECB's Praet: ECB Simply Applied Its Rules For End To Greek Waiver

ECB's Jazbec: QE Could End Sooner Than Sept. 2016

ECB's Weidmann Says ECB Should Apply 'Strict Standards' On ELA

ECB's Weidmann: Countries Must Bear Consequences Of Own Actions

Greek Finance Ministry Says ECB Decision Aimed At Eurogroup

Greek Govt Official Says ECB Move Will Have Limited Impact

BoE In Wait-And-See Mode Amid Inflation Woes

EU's Moscovici: QE Is Significant Enough To Have Macroeconomic Impact

France Hollande: ECB Greece Decision But Onus On EU Govts

Fed's Rosengren Sees No Clear Sign Inflation Trending Higher

Japan Taps Reflationist As New BoJ Board Member

GOVERNMENT/ CORPORATE BOND NEWS & COMMENTARY

US 10yr Treasuries Forming A Base Amid Inverted Head And Shoulders - RBS

ECB's Greek Shock Reverberates In Bonds From Germany To Spain

Spain Sells EUR3.8 Bln In Bonds Including New 5-Year Linker

France AFT Issuance: A Total Amount Of EUR8.999 Bln d'OAT

EQUITY NEWS & COMMENTARY

Wall Street Eyes Earnings Amid Deepened Greek Turmoil

European Stocks Halt Three-Day Advance As ECB Limits Greek Loans

ECB's Ban On Greek Bonds Hits Europe, Greece Slumps

FTSE Falls As ECB Turns Screw On Greece

Asia Stocks Subdued As Greece Jitters Offset China Stimulus

Pfizer To Buy Hospira In $17 Billion Cash Deal

Sprint Corp. Posts Q3 GAAP Loss Of 60c/Share

BT To Buy Mobile Firm EE For GBP12.5 Bln

Fitch Affirms BT Group At 'BBB'/Positive On EE Announcement

Moody's Affirms BT's Baa2 Following Planned EE Acquisition; Positive Outlook

Siemens Said To Plan 7,400 Job Cuts As CEO Reduces Costs

Daimler 'On Upward Curve' After 10% Profit Jump

Munich Re Q4 Profit Slides; Lifts Dividend

BNP Paribas Earnings Hit By US Settlement

AstraZeneca To Buy Actavis Lung Drugs As Q4 Earnings Fall Short

Vodafone Posts Better Than Expected Third Quarter Sales

Sanofi Profit Soars On Lower Lemtrada Charge

Tesco Under Formal Investigation Over Payments And Dealings With Suppliers

Samsung May Sell Majority Stake in Tokyo Skyscraper

CURRENCY/ COMMODITY NEWS & COMMENTARY

EUR/USD: Strong Gains On Strong German Manufacturing Report

Talk Of SNB Buying EURUSD Spurs The Euro Rally

GBP/USD: Cable Holds Gains As BoE Policy Unchanged

Dollar Index Drops As Market Sentiment Recovers

Gold Extends Gains On Greece Uncertainty, US Data Eyed

Copper Slides After Inventory Surge Highlights Surplus

Brent Rises Back Above $55, Outlook Still Fragile

EMERGING MARKET NEWS & COMMENTARY

IMF Said To Seek Limit To Ukraine Bailout Share As War Escalates

Ukraine's Central Bank Says Strengthens Monetary Policy To Target Inflation

S&P: China Cut To RRR Seen Helping Banks

CNB Keeps Interest Rates Unchanged, Confirms Exchange Rate Commitment

 

Frontrunning: February 9

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  • Greek Risk Draws Global Concern on Lehman Echo Warnings (BBG)
  • Merkel to urge caution in U.S. as pressure builds to arm Ukraine forces (Reuters)
  • West Races to Defuse Ukraine Crisis (WSJ)
  • German-French Push Yields Ukraine Summit Plan With Putin (BBG)
  • Swiss Leaks lifts the veil on a secretive banking system (ICIJ)
  • Italy Lenders Seen Cleansing Books Amid Bad-Bank Plans (BBG)
  • G-20 Finance Chiefs Face Tough Test in Istanbul (WSJ)
  • Demand for OPEC Crude Will Rise This Year, Says Group (WSJ)... or rather prays
  • U.S. Banks Say Soaring Dollar Puts Them at Disadvantage (WSJ)
  • Oil steadies near $58 as U.S. rig count offsets Chinese data (Reuters)
  • Turkish Lira Falls to Record as Erdogan Attacks Monetary Policy (BBG)
  • Behind RadioShack’s Collapse Is a Tiny Distressed Lender (BBG)
  • British Muslims protest in London against Charlie Hebdo cartoons (Reuters)
  • Saxo Bank Takes Hard Line on Clients’ Swiss Franc Losses (WSJ)
  • HSBC admits Swiss bank failings over client taxes (Reuters)
  • Conquering China’s Mountain of Debt (BBG)
  • U.S. companies may not be fleeing due to high tax rate, Reuters analysis shows (Reuters)

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

* The United States and Germany are struggling to maintain a united front against an unflinching Russia ahead of a crucial week of high-stakes, top-level diplomacy on the Ukraine crisis. (http://on.wsj.com/1Fo724Y)

* The strengthening U.S. dollar is rippling through the financial system in unexpected ways, revealing what bankers say is a hidden flaw in a Federal Reserve proposal to increase capital cushions at the nation's largest banks. (http://on.wsj.com/1ALSWM7)

* Dubai, through its government and ruler-owned real-estate conglomerates, is leading a construction frenzy of ambitious developments that seem to cost increasingly more with each new announcement. Dubai has slowly but surely clawed its way out of the hole it dug for itself in 2009 when a series of government-linked companies, including several under the direct control of the ruler, were unable to pay lenders on time and called for a standstill on repayments. (http://on.wsj.com/16Dp0Eo)

* As the telecom industry marches forward, Frontier Communications Corp is growing quickly by snapping up the unloved telephone lines its bigger competitors are leaving behind. (http://on.wsj.com/1znmpFq)

* Copenhagen-based Saxo Bank has taken an aggressive approach to handling customer foreign-exchange losses that followed the Swiss central bank's decision to let the franc rise against the euro. (http://on.wsj.com/1A48ZoK)

* The anti-austerity position taken by the just-elected government toward Greece's creditors has given new hope to many Athenians, even those who did not vote for the leftist Syriza party. (http://on.wsj.com/1yYYBJ9)

* Morgan Stanley is joining the hedge-fund retreat. The New York bank is looking to sell its 19 percent stake in the $17.5 billion London-based Lansdowne Partners LLP, according to people familiar with the matter. (http://on.wsj.com/1DvraTP)

* Coca-Cola Co and PepsiCo Inc likely will highlight rough going abroad but improving conditions at home when they publish fourth-quarter results this week. (http://on.wsj.com/1DSSskY)

* Credit Suisse Group AG is launching a specialty finance company to invest in the unrated debt of small or midsize U.S. companies, following in the footsteps of rivals such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc and a handful of private-equity giants. (http://on.wsj.com/1C9IqvW)

 

FT

The U.S. Department of Justice will investigate the sale of "structured products" to investors by Barclays and UBS without disclosing the returns they made on currency trades used to generate the products' returns.

Warren Buffett is facing pressure from investment analysts to disclose more information on his $370 billion company Berkshire Hathaway, particularly about its large insurance business.

Sienna Capital, an affiliate of Groupe Bruxelles Lambert , has invested 150 million euros in Primestone - a hedge fund that aims to buy stakes in listed companies and work alongside management to increase shareholder value.

British private equity group Terra Firma will change its approach to investment and put 1 billion euros ($1.13 billion) of its own capital into deals as it seeks to restore its reputation after the debt-laden takeover of EMI in 2007.

 

NYT

* The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is starting to draw up regulations that could sharply reduce the number of unaffordable loans with high interest rates from payday lenders.(http://nyti.ms/170xu9v)

* A year after it was announced, Comcast Corp's audacious acquisition of Time Warner Cable Inc remains in limbo as Washington regulators scrutinize the deal. The air of inevitability around Comcast's proposed $45 billion acquisition of Time Warner Cable has dissipated as the F.C.C. prepares to vote on a proposal to regulate the Internet like a utility. (http://nyti.ms/1uu1dlB)

* The New York Fire Department will receive additional funding in Mayor Bill de Blasio's budget to increase staffing in hopes of shaving seconds off ambulance response times, city officials said. (http://nyti.ms/1M4DVIE)

* Investors in billions of dollars of Puerto Rico bonds secured a major legal victory when a federal judge ruled that the commonwealth's recently enacted debt-restructuring law was unconstitutional. (http://nyti.ms/1yZ1XM2)

* A pair of fast-growing digital media companies, Vox and BuzzFeed, have landed their first interviews with President Obama. The interviews are the latest indication that Vox and BuzzFeed News have emerged as serious news organizations, and are a further sign of the Obama administration's efforts to connect with millennials. (http://nyti.ms/1yZ3rpE)

 

Canada

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

** Tim Hortons Inc has apologized after the owner of a Vancouver location was seen dumping a bucket of water on a homeless man sleeping outside. The incident at the Tim Hortons was first reported on Friday by witnesses on social media, where posts urging a boycott were shared thousands of times. (http://bit.ly/1CablQC)

** After suffering a clear loss in the Canadian Supreme Court, opponents of physician-assisted suicide now want to persuade the federal government to impose the tightest possible restrictions on the medical procedure. Constitutional-law experts and political insiders said the most likely option at this point is new legislation within the 12-month time frame that was offered by the Supreme Court in its unanimous ruling on Friday. (http://bit.ly/1A9AhZg)

** The Canadian army somehow lost three highly sophisticated, precision-guided artillery shells on its ways out of Afghanistan in an embarrassing case that resulted in an almost two-year investigation. (http://bit.ly/1yZNek5)

NATIONAL POST

** Fourth-quarter figures released last week by the Canadian Venture Capital Association show the information and communications technology sector scooped the largest share of venture capital funding in 2014 with C$1.3 billion ($1.04 billion) - up from C$1.1 billion in 2013. (http://bit.ly/1ERZ1rH)

** London-based barrister Amal Clooney is going to Cairo for visiting the family of Mohamed Fahmy, a Canadian citizen who was former Cairo bureau chief for Al Jazeera English and has been jailed for over a year in Egypt on charges of falsifying news during civil unrest and having terrorist links to the Muslim Brotherhood. (http://bit.ly/1Dw81Bg)

 

Britain

The Times

The new boss of Centrica Plc is facing calls to cut its dividend for the first time in almost a decade as it grapples with the oil price collapse and falling profits for household gas and electricity. (http://thetim.es/1ER2ir7)

Inflation will turn negative this year because of the dramatic slide in energy costs, the Bank of England will predict this week. (http://thetim.es/1Ky7OPI)

The Guardian

HSBC's Swiss banking arm helped wealthy customers dodge taxes and conceal millions of dollars of assets, doling out bundles of untraceable cash and advising clients on how to circumvent domestic tax authorities, according to a huge cache of leaked secret bank account files. (http://bit.ly/1zM7Tun)

A leading free market thinktank has issued a fierce attack on George Osborne, accusing him of cynical electioneering after the chancellor announced the amount of market-beating "pensioner bonds", available to people over 65, would be increased to 15 billion pounds ($22.86 billion) by the general election in May. (http://bit.ly/1zMCmZq)

The Telegraph

The Labour Party has begun a desperate attempt to quell growing accusations that the party is anti-business after Ed Miliband's attack on the chairman of Boots Company Plc, insisting it is "aggressively pro-business". (http://bit.ly/1vzm081)

Tesco chief executive Dave Lewis's attempts to heal relationships with suppliers suffered a blow yesterday as it emerged that the troubled supermarket continues to put pressure on already squeezed small businesses. (http://bit.ly/1DuSAZT)

Sky News

Ministers are to unveil a fresh drive urging consumers to switch energy companies just weeks before the main parties pledge renewed oversight of the industry in their general election manifestos. (http://bit.ly/1vzm9IP)

Tax havens such as Bermuda, Jersey and Guernsey will have six months to open their books or face international blacklisting if the Labour Party wins the general election in May, Ed Miliband has vowed. (http://bit.ly/1CJoNOa)

The Independent

Poundland Group Plc is set to take over rival discounter 99p Stores for 55 million pounds in a deal that would see the company become one of the biggest retailers on the high street. (http://ind.pn/1zVIEZN)

The accountancy giant PricewaterhouseCoopers is promoting tax avoidance by multinational firms "on an industrial scale," MPs said in a damning report published today. (http://ind.pn/1IduJSF)

 

 

Fly On The Wall Pre-market Buzz

ECONOMIC REPORTS

Domestic economic reports scheduled for today include:
Labor market conditions index change for January at 10:00--prior 6.1

ANALYST RESEARCH

Upgrades

Advanced Semiconductor (ASX) upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at JPMorgan
Conn's (CONN) upgraded to Buy from Hold at KeyBanc
Delhaize (DEG) upgraded to Neutral from Underperform at Exane BNP Paribas
Frontier Communications (FTR) upgraded to Neutral from Sell at Citigroup
Harris (HRS) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Sterne Agee
Hyatt Hotels (H) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at SunTrust
Mosaic (MOS) upgraded to Overweight from Equal Weight at Morgan Stanley
Nippon Telegraph (NTT) upgraded to Overweight from Neutral at JPMorgan
Pfizer (PFE) upgraded to Outperform from Market Perform at BMO Capital
Statoil (STO) upgraded to Overweight from Equal Weight at Morgan Stanley

Downgrades

Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF) downgraded to Sell from Hold at Wunderlich
Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF) downgraded to Underperform from Neutral at BofA/Merrill
Alcoa (AA) downgraded to Neutral from Overweight at JPMorgan
American Capital Mortgage (MTGE) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Compass Point
BNP Paribas (BNPQY) downgraded to Underweight from Neutral at JPMorgan
BioMed Realty (BMR) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Stifel
Buffalo Wild Wings (BWLD) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Miller Tabak
CBOE Holdings (CBOE) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at UBS
Century Aluminum (CENX) downgraded to Underweight from Neutral at JPMorgan
Chesapeake Lodging (CHSP) downgraded to Market Perform at JMP Securities
Cummins (CMI) downgraded to Neutral from Overweight at Atlantic Equities
DISH (DISH) downgraded to Sector Perform from Outperform at RBC Capital
Deckers Outdoor (DECK) downgraded to Equal Weight from Overweight at Morgan Stanley
Dermira (DERM) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Citigroup
Discovery (DISCA) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at FBR Capital
Emerson (EMR) downgraded to Perform from Outperform at Oppenheimer
Foresight Energy (FELP) downgraded to Equal Weight from Overweight at Barclays
KeyCorp (KEY) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Citigroup
MarineMax (HZO) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Longbow
Marsh & McLennan (MMC) downgraded to Equal Weight from Overweight at Morgan Stanley
PHH Corp. (PHH) downgraded to Market Perform from Outperform at Keefe Bruyette
Petrobras (PBR) downgraded to Underperform from Neutral at Credit Suisse
Prudential (PRU) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Deutsche Bank
Regions Financial (RF) downgraded to Underperform at Keefe Bruyette
Roche (RHHBY) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Citigroup
Sensient (SXT) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Gabelli
Skechers (SKX) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at B. Riley

Initiations

AbbVie (ABBV) initiated with a Sell at Citigroup
Novartis (NVS) resumed with a Buy at Citigroup
Post Holdings (POST) initiated with an Outperform at BMO Capital
Valeant (VRX) initiated with an Overweight at Barclays
Vermillion (VRML) initiated with a Buy at Roth Capital

COMPANY NEWS

Alibaba (BABA) announced a $590M strategic investment in Meizu
The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, which is comprised of reporters from 45 countries, said over the weekend that leaked documents show HSBC (HSBC) profited from maintaining secret bank accounts for "criminals, traffickers, tax dodgers, politicians and celebrities"
Google (GOOG) acquired private photo sharing/backup app Odysee
SeaWorld (SEAS) appointed Daniel Brown Chief Parks Operations Officer
Starboard 'applauds' Staples (SPLS) acquisition of Office Depot (ODP)
Intuit (INTU) announced that TurboTax has resumed e-filing of state income tax returns. The company continues to work with the states as they build their own anti-fraud capabilities and will share best practices as it works toward the best interests of the taxpayer. The resumption comes after the company temporarily paused transmissions upon seeing an increase in suspicious filings and attempts by criminals to use stolen identity information to file fraudulent state tax returns and claim tax refunds

EARNINGS

Companies that beat consensus earnings expectations last night and today include:
Hasbro (HAS), Diamond Offshore (DO), Loews (L), Sohu.com (SOHU), Cameco (CCJ), Dominion (D), Dominion Midstream (DM)

Companies that missed consensus earnings expectations include:
Boardwalk Pipeline (BWP), Nordic American Tankers (NAT), Changyou.com (CYOU)

Companies that matched consensus earnings expectations include:
Golub Capital (GBDC)

CNA Financial (CNA) reports Q4 adjusted NOI 96c, consensus 80c
Changyou.com (CYOU) sees Q1 non-GAAP EPS 64c-68c, consensus 24c
Sohu.com (SOHU) sees Q1 non-GAAP EPS ($1.05)-(95c), consensus (72c)
Cameco (CCJ) sees FY15 consolidated revenue declining up to 5%, consensus $2.52B
Frontier Communications (FTR) sees Q4 revenue approximately $1.33B, consensus $1.34B, sees FY14 revenue about $4.772B, consensus $4.79B
Dominion (D) sees Q1 EPS 85c-$1.00, consensus $1.03

NEWSPAPERS/WEBSITES

HSBC (HSBC) admits control failures at Swiss unit, Reuters reports
Qualcomm (QCOM) could announce deal with China today, Reuters reports
U.S. probe of UBS (UBS), Barclays (BCS) foreign exchange products expands, FT reports
Motorola Solutions (MSI) to explore possible sale, Bloomberg reports (RTN, HON, GD)
JPMorgan (JPM) hiring practices in Asia under U.S. scrutiny, WSJ reports
Actuant (ATU) shares could rise 25%, Barron's says
AbbVie (ABBV) could climb 30%, Barron's says
Donaldson (DCI) could be good for long-term investors, Barron's says

SYNDICATE

American CareSource (ANCI) files to sell $15M of common stock
Johnson Controls (JCI) files automatic mixed securities shelf
Marcus & Millichap (MMI) files to sell 4.6M shares of common stock for holders
POZEN (POZN) files to sell 8.5M shares of common stock

 

 

Warren Buffett Releases Monster 43-Page Half-Century Letter To Berkshire Faithful

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The day the Buffet "value-investing" fanatics have been looking forward to all year, almost as much as the annual pilgrimage to Omaha, has finally arrived - hours ago Warren Buffett released his historic, 50th annual letter to shareholders, which is extra special because as the Oracle notes in the foreword, "Fifty years ago, today’s management took charge at Berkshire. For this Golden Anniversary, Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger each wrote his views of what has happened at Berkshire during the past 50 years and what each expects during the next 50."

The foreword continues: "Neither changed a word of his commentary after reading what the other had written. Warren’s thoughts begin on page 24 and Charlie’s on page 39. Shareholders, particularly new ones, may find it useful to read those letters before reading the report on 2014, which begins below." The result is the magnum opus of Berskshire letter, one which weighs in at 43 pages and a massive 25,100 words compared to "only" 24 pages and about 14,700 words last year, and 15,300 the year before. Almost as if Buffett is telegraphing that this may be his last letter and savoring the moment...

But first, some of the details of Berkshire's performance, which was not quite the magnum opus Buffett may have expected, after Berkshire Hathaway posted lower earnings for the fourth quarter amid investment derivative gains of $192 million.

As summarized by the WSJ, Berkshire reported a net profit of $4.16 billion, or $2,529 a Class A share, compared with $4.99 billion, or $2,297 a share, a year earlier. Operating earnings, which exclude some investment results, were $2,412 a Class A share, versus $2,297 a share, thus missing Wall Street expectations of per-share operating earnings of $2,701. Book value per Class A share increased by 8.3% to $146,186 at Dec. 31.

So back to the letter: here are some preliminary observations and excerpts from the letter:

  • Berkshire increased its ownership interest last year in each of its “Big Four” investments – American Express, Coca-Cola, IBM and Wells Fargo. We purchased additional shares of IBM (increasing our ownership to 7.8% versus 6.3% at yearend 2013). Meanwhile, stock repurchases at Coca-Cola, American Express and Wells Fargo raised our percentage ownership of each. Our equity in Coca-Cola grew from 9.1% to 9.2%, our interest in American Express increased from 14.2% to 14.8% and our ownership of Wells Fargo grew from 9.2% to 9.4%. And, if you think tenths of a percent aren’t important, ponder this math: For the four companies in aggregate, each increase of one-tenth of a percent in our ownership raises Berkshire’s portion of their annual earnings by $50 million.
  • [W]ho has ever benefited during the past 238 years by betting against America? If you compare our country’s present condition to that existing in 1776, you have to rub your eyes in wonder. In my lifetime alone, real per-capita U.S. output has sextupled. My parents could not have dreamed in 1930 of the world their son would  see. Though the preachers of pessimism prattle endlessly about America’s problems, I’ve never seen one who wishes to emigrate (though I can think of a few for whom I would happily buy a one-way ticket).

Of course there is the fact that global wealth inequality has never been greater and as a result the entire globe has approached - or crossed - its own "let them eat cake" moment, but let's forget all about that. After all, for Buffett the "long enough timeline" has almost dropped to zero.

Munger explains economies of scale and quasi-monopoly:

  • in the early decades of the Buffett era, common stocks within Berkshire’s insurance subsidiaries greatly outperformed the index, exactly as Buffett expected. And, later, when both the large size of Berkshire’s stockholdings and income tax considerations caused the index-beating part of returns to fade to insignificance (perhaps not forever), other and better advantage came. Ajit Jain created out of nothing an immense reinsurance business that produced both a huge “float” and a large underwriting gain. And all of GEICO came into Berkshire, followed by a quadrupling of GEICO’s market share. And the rest of Berkshire’s insurance operations hugely improved, largely by dint of reputational advantage, underwriting discipline, finding and staying within good niches, and recruiting and holding outstanding people. Then, later, as Berkshire’s nearly unique and quite dependable corporate personality and large size became well known, its insurance subsidiaries got and seized many attractive opportunities, not available to others, to buy privately issued securities. Most of these securities had fixed maturities and produced outstanding results.

Buffett's take on the future:

  • The bad news is that Berkshire’s long-term gains – measured by percentages, not by dollars – cannot be dramatic and will not come close to those achieved in the past 50 years. The numbers have become too big. I think Berkshire will outperform the average American company, but our advantage, if any, won’t be great. Eventually – probably between ten and twenty years from now – Berkshire’s earnings and capital resources will reach a level that will not allow management to intelligently reinvest all of the company’s earnings. At that time our directors will need to determine whether the best method to distribute the excess earnings is through dividends, share repurchases or both. If Berkshire shares are selling below intrinsic business value, massive repurchases will almost certainly be the best choice. You can be comfortable that your directors will make the right decision.

And Munger's:

  • The next to last task on my list was: Predict whether abnormally good results would continue at Berkshire if Buffett were soon to depart. The answer is yes. Berkshire has in place in its subsidiaries much business momentum grounded in much durable competitive advantage. Provided that most of the Berkshire system remains in place, the combined momentum and opportunity now present is so great that Berkshire would almost surely remain a better-than-normal company for a very long time even if (1) Buffett left tomorrow, (2) his successors were persons of only moderate ability, and (3) Berkshire never again purchased a large business.
  • But, under this Buffett-soon-leaves assumption, his successors would not be “of only moderate ability.” For instance, Ajit Jain and Greg Abel are proven performers who would probably be under-described as “world-class.” “World-leading” would be the description I would choose. In some important ways, each is a better  business executive than Buffett.
  • With Berkshire now so large and the age of activism upon us, I think some desirable acquisition opportunities will come and that Berkshire’s $60 billion in cash will constructively decrease.

FInally, some amusing comments by Buffet on the sudden need for liquidity and/or bialouts:

  • [W]e will never engage in operating or investment practices that can result in sudden demands for large sums. That means we will not expose Berkshire to short-term debt maturities of size nor enter into derivative contracts or other business arrangements that could require large collateral calls. Some years ago, we became a party to certain derivative contracts that we believed were significantly mispriced and that had only minor collateral requirements. These have proved to be quite profitable. Recently, however, newly-written derivative contracts have required full collateralization. And that ended our interest in derivatives, regardless of what profit potential they might offer. We have not, for some years, written these contracts, except for a few needed for operational purposes at our utility businesses.

To be sure, when it comes to "major demands for large sums" in his investments, Buffett seems to forget that it was the US taxpayers themselves who ended up funding said collateral demands as recently as 2008, but that's what crony capitalism is all about: knowing that when the hammer hits, the US government is there to bail you out. As for Buffett phasing out derivatives, this makes sense: with available leverage declining (due to full collateralization), Buffett, who personally decried derivatives as financial weapons of mass destruction, can avoid being a hypocrite as he himself has no use for such massively leveraging instruments any longer.

Some other notes from the WSJ which has been diligently parsing the letter since its release:

  • No successor named, as we expected. But on pages 36 and 37, Mr. Buffett discusses the qualities the CEO would need: “My successor will need one other particular strength: the ability to fight off the ABCs of business decay, which are arrogance, bureaucracy and complacency.” Munger notes: "under this Buffett-soon-leaves assumption, his successors would not be “of only moderate ability.” For instance, Ajit Jain and Greg Abel are proven performers who would probably be under-described as “world-class.” “World-leading” would be the description I would choose. In some important ways, each is a better business executive than Buffett."
  • Warren Buffett adds his name to the list of those commenting on the effects of a strong U.S. dollar. In the letter Mr. Buffett says: “[We] expect that the per-share earnings of these four investees [American Express, Coca-Cola, IBM and Wells Fargo], in aggregate, will grow substantially over time (though 2015 will be a tough year for the group, in part because of the strong dollar).”
  • Mr. Buffett reiterates the importance of preserving the firm’s culture and believes his son Howard is best suited to succeed him as non-executive Chairman:
  • “To further ensure continuation of our culture, I have suggested that my son, Howard, succeed me as a nonexecutive Chairman. My only reason for this wish is to make change easier if the wrong CEO should ever be employed and there occurs a need for the Chairman to move forcefully.”
  • Buffett says a dividend, share repurchase or both are possible as Berkshire’s earnings and capital resources will reach a level in the next 10 to 20 years that “will not allow management to intelligently reinvest all of the company’s earnings.” How the company will use its capital has been a hot topic of late. Mr. Buffett has previously said it’s unlikely he will pay a dividend in his lifetime, arguing that money can be spent to grow the company instead. However, a small group of investors have long been pushing for one.
  • Mr. Buffett said massive repurchases will almost certainly be a better choice than distributing a dividend if Berkshire shares are selling below intrinsic business value.
  • Buffett has more to say on page 31 on potentially spinning off certain businesses. That makes “no sense,” he said. “Our companies are worth more as part of Berkshire than as separate entities.” He explains again that Berkshire can move funds between its parts without incurring taxes, but also talks about things like the cost of a board of directors and other administrative expenses that would jump if these companies were split off. This dis-synergy defense sounds a lot like what J.P. Morgan’s executives had to say this week about why it shouldn’t break up.
  • Buffett is never one to shy from calling out his mistakes in the letter, and this year he’s got a new one: an investment in U.K. grocery store giant Tesco. Buffett lost $444 million on the company when he sold out of it last year, he writes today, lamenting that he moved slowly as the company faced a barrage of issues and accounting problems.  He says in 2013 he “soured somewhat” on the management team and had cut the position by a bit more than 25% but now wishes he had sold more. “My leisurely pace in making sales would prove expensive,” he writes. “Charlie calls this sort of behavior ‘thumb-sucking.’ (Considering what my delay cost us, he is being kind.)” Tesco really ran into trouble in 2014, losing market share, struggling with margins and the accounting issues. As Buffett put it: “You see a cockroach in your kitchen; as the days go by, you meet his relatives.”

Full letter below (pdf link)

Frontrunning: March 2

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  • Hilsenrath: Fed Ushering in New Era of Uncertainty on Rates (WSJ)
  • Is Supreme Court's chief justice ready to take down ObamaCare? (The Hill)
  • Netanyahu arrives in U.S., signs of easing of tensions over Iran speech (Reuters)
  • Nemtsov Murder Fuels Suspicion, Fails to Spur Russia Selloff (BBG)
  • ECB uncomfortable with leading role in Greek funding drama (Reuters)
  • Video shows Los Angeles police shooting homeless man dead (Reuters)
  • Iraq Military Begins Campaign to Reclaim Tikrit (WSJ)
  • How Billionaires in London Use Secret Luxury Homes to Hide Assets (BBG)
  • European Banks’ Reciprocity Draws Scrutiny (WSJ)
  • Berkshire insurance 'superstar' could fill Buffett's shoes (Reuters)
  • RadioShack Gifts That Don't Keep On Giving (BBG)
  • HSBC Whistleblower Says He Can Prove HSBC Knew of Tax Abuses (BBG)
  • 1 semiconductor + 1 semiconductor = 1 conductor? NXP to buy Freescale, create $40 billion company (Reuters)
  • Apple’s Looming Watch Spurs Frenzy of Upgrades for Android Timepieces (BBG)

 

 

Overnight Media Digest

WSJ

* Thousands of Russians marched in Moscow in memory of opposition leader Boris Nemtsov, whose slaying has sent shock waves through society as the highest-profile assassination in Russia during the Putin era. (http://on.wsj.com/1N7hdA6)

* A showdown this week between the White House and Israel's Netanyahu has far-reaching implications for ties between the two countries and the shape of power and influence in the Middle East. (http://on.wsj.com/1BvVE7H)

* Telecom firms trying to connect billions more people to the Web are not sure if Facebook Inc is their friend or foe. Tensions between the phone and Internet industries will be on display at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. (http://on.wsj.com/1vQTb6W)

* Ajit Jain, who runs Berkshire Hathaway Inc's reinsurance business, and Greg Abel, who runs the conglomerate's energy business, have emerged as favorites to succeed Warren Buffett as CEO. (http://on.wsj.com/1EEnLm5)

* NXP Semiconductors and Freescale Semiconductor have agreed to merge in a deal that values Freescale at $11.8 billion and would create a combined company with a market value of more than $30 billion. (http://on.wsj.com/1N7hrqW)

* A surprise rate cut by China's central bank underscores the increasingly aggressive measures the leadership is relying on to rev up activity in the world's second-largest economy. (http://on.wsj.com/1vQS7A0)

* Rebekah Brooks, the former News Corp executive who resigned in 2011 amid the phone-hacking scandal at the now-defunct UK tabloid the News of the World, is close to finalizing a deal to return to the company, people familiar with the matter said. (http://on.wsj.com/1E8kvAw)

 

FT

Luxury sports car brand Aston Martin is set to revamp its image of an iconic British carmaker and focus on women and youth in its forthcoming models and designs. Andy Palmer, Aston Martin's CEO, who joined the Warwickshire-based carmaker in October, will tell the Geneva motor show that they plan to add two new product lines.

NXP Semiconductors, makers of chips that are used in credit and debit cards, has bought its rival Freescale in a deal that would create a company with a total value of $40 billion.

Russian billionaire Mikhail Fridman has threatened to go to court if the British government tries to block a 5 mln euro deal that will give Fridman ownership of RWE Dea, the oil and gas arm of Germany's RWE.

French telecom operator Orange is eyeing a partnership with its Italian rival Telecom Italia to create further consolidation in the European telecom market. Orange CEO Stephane Richard said in an interview to French weekly Journal du Dimanche that a tie-up "would be an attractive European consolidation opportunity."

 

NYT

* Controlling China's sprawling food supply chain has proved a frustrating endeavor. Now, with a quick scan of a code with a smartphone, shoppers can look up a fruit's complete journey from the field to a bin in a Beijing supermarket. The smartphone feature, which also details soil and water tests from the farm, is intended to ensure that a fruit has not been contaminated anywhere along the way. (http://nyti.ms/1K6hV1s)

* Wells Fargo & Co, one of the largest subprime car lenders, is pulling back from that roaring market, a move that is being felt throughout the broader auto industry. Wells Fargo has imposed a cap for the first time on the amount of loans it will extend to subprime borrowers. (http://nyti.ms/1K6ipVh)

* On the 35th floor of a two-bedroom rental overlooking the East River, Dennis Kozlowski lives with his new wife, Kimberly, in relative modesty - at least compared with his previous life as the extravagant chief of Tyco International Plc. (http://nyti.ms/1K6iEjn)

* Rebekah Brooks, the former head of Rupert Murdoch's media holdings in Britain, acquitted last year on charges related to the phone hacking scandal, is likely to return to News Corp to focus on new avenues for digital and social media, people familiar with the company's plans said. (http://nyti.ms/1K6jf4s)

* NXP Semiconductors NV said on Sunday it would buy a smaller peer, Freescale Semiconductor Ltd, in an $11.8 billion deal that would create a big maker of chips for industries as varied as automobiles and mobile payments. (http://nyti.ms/1K6jGvC)

* AT&T Inc, the second-largest wireless carrier in the United States, says it is has found life beyond being a phone carrier. The company said that this year it is poised to become a more diversified company, with money coming in from connected cars and the "Internet of Things." AT&T also says that business solutions, or services it offers to businesses, will be its largest source of income. (http://nyti.ms/1K6k4KE)

 

Hong Kong

SOUTH CHINA MORNING POST

-- At least 16 People's Liberation Army major generals have been taken away for investigation in relation to graft cases involving their former superiors, according to sources close to the military. Two independent sources close to the PLA said most of the officers were either secretaries or relatives of former military commanders or senior officers. (bit.ly/1vPY540)

-- A 61-year-old man has become the first person in Hong Kong to die of H7N9 bird flu this season, after contracting the virus during a visit to the mainland. It came as three more adults died from H3N2 influenza on Sunday, taking the total deaths from flu this year to 307, higher than that from the Sars outbreak in 2003, which claimed 299 lives in Hong Kong. (bit.ly/1AWzMR5)

-- The boost to Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing's turnover from the Shanghai stock connect scheme in recent months has brokers expecting good profit growth figures when the local bourse announces its results on Thursday. Credit Suisse expects HKEx to report HK$5.08 billion ($655.15 million) net profit for last year, up 12 percent from 2013. (bit.ly/18Cwx8g)

THE STANDARD

-- More than 60 percent of Hongkongers feel the Legislative Council should pass the government's political reform package while 30 percent disagree, according to the pro-establishment Democratic Alliance for the Betterment and Progress of Hong Kong. It said the survey was conducted on its behalf by the Hong Kong Public Opinion Research Centre. (bit.ly/1M2xmoS)

-- Hong Kong Financial Secretary John Tsang Chun-wah set up his Facebook account last month to better communicate his eighth budget to Hongkongers. Writing in his blog, Tsang said it is the first time he is using Facebook to communicate with the public and some have even mocked him for being "out" late on social media. (bit.ly/1Dsifi8)

-- Several online lottery sales platforms in the mainland have been closed, reflecting Beijing's determination to clean up the industry. Alibaba said it has suspended sales of lotteries on Taobao Lottery platform in response to an order from the Ministry of Civil Affairs, while Tencent confirmed that all lottery business on its QQ and PC platform has been suspended. (bit.ly/1E7SDwu)

MING PAO DAILY

-- The number of public phone booths in Hong Kong fell to 1,630 from 1,920 in the year 2000, amid advances in mobile telecommunications technology and the popularity of smartphones, according to data from the city's Office of the Communications Authority.

 

Britain

The Times

Abu Dhabi's sovereign wealth fund Abu Dhabi Investment Authority tabled a 1.6 bln pound takeover bid for Maybourne Hotel Group, owner of Claridge's, the Berkeley and the Connaught in London. (http://thetim.es/1Bv3b6G)

Stephen Schwarzman, the boss of the world's largest buyout firms, Blackstone, took home $690 mln last year in one of the biggest paydays in Wall Street history. (http://thetim.es/1Bv3lev)

The Guardian

More than 300 young people have been groomed and sexually exploited by gangs of men in Oxfordshire in the past 15 years, a damning report into the failures of police and social services to stop years of sexual torture, trafficking and rape will reveal, the Guardian has learned. (http://bit.ly/1Bv3JJK)

A coalition row about limiting free speech on university campuses to ban hate preachers has broken out with the Tories saying their default position is now that any extremist speaker should be banned, given the potential damage they can do. (http://bit.ly/1Bv3Q8a)

The Telegraph

The Liberal Democrats plan to hit the UK banking industry with an additional 1 bln pound tax bill, which the party says will help eliminate the country's deficit. The supplementary charge will be in addition to the existing bank levy, which is on track to raise 8 bln pounds in this parliamentary session, said Danny Alexander, the Liberal Democrat chief secretary to the Treasury. (http://bit.ly/1BuJuMv)

German finance minister Wolfgang Schaeuble has softened his hard-line attitude towards Greece, saying its new left-wing Syriza government needs "a bit of time" but appears to be able to work towards resolving its debt crisis. (http://bit.ly/1Bv453b)

Sky News

Energy price comparison websites have been "duping" customers into switching to deals that are not the cheapest on the market and should pay them compensation, a group of MPs have said. Energy and Climate Change Committee said some sites had used misleading language to dupe consumers into options that only displayed commission-earning deals. (http://bit.ly/1Bv4eUm)

The Rail, Maritime and Transport union is organising gatherings in London, Doncaster and Edinburgh to protest against the East Coast Main Line being handed over to Virgin and Stagecoach. (http://bit.ly/1Bv4nqF)

The Independent

The BBC will back a radical overhaul of the licence fee, paving the way for the end of the current system of funding the state broadcaster, the Corporation's head, Tony Hall, is expected to say today. (http://ind.pn/1Bv5S8r)

Lloyds is to pay its first dividend since the financial crisis but faces a growing controversy over the huge rewards handed to its executives as a result, including £11.5m to boss Antonio Horta-Osorio. (http://ind.pn/1Bv65sn)

 

 

Fly On The Wall Pre-Market Buzz

ECONOMIC REPORTS

Domestic economic reports scheduled for today include:
Personal income for January at 8:30--consensus up 0.4%
Personal spending for January at 8:30--consensus down  0.1%
Markit manufacturing PMI for February at 9:45--consensus 54.3
ISM manufacturing index for February at 10:00--consensus 53.0
Construction spending for January at 10:00--consensus up 0.3%

ANALYST RESEARCH

Upgrades

Alaska Air (ALK) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Stifel
Digital Realty (DLR) upgraded to Buy from Hold at Stifel
Jack Henry (JKHY) upgraded to Outperform from Perform at Oppenheimer
OM Asset Management (OMAM) upgraded to Buy from Neutral at Citigroup
Telefonica (TEF) upgraded to Outperform from Sector Perform at RBC Capital
United Rentals (URI) upgraded to Overweight from Equal Weight at Morgan Stanley

Downgrades

Ashford Hospitality (AHT) downgraded to Neutral from Outperform at Credit Suisse
Bank of Ireland (IRE) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Deutsche Bank
BlackRock (BLK) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Citigroup
CONE Midstream (CNNX) downgraded to Equal Weight from Overweight at Barclays
Cloud Peak (CLD) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Brean Capital
Cracker Barrel (CBRL) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Miller Tabak
Crane (CR) downgraded to Underperform from Neutral at BofA/Merrill
DDR Corp. (DDR) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Goldman
IBM (IBM) downgraded to Underweight from Neutral at Atlantic Equities
InterXion (INXN) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Stifel
Isis Pharmaceuticals (ISIS) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Brean Capital
Lumber Liquidators (LL) downgraded to Equal Weight from Overweight at Morgan Stanley
MarkWest Energy (MWE) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Wunderlich
Michaels (MIK) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Goldman
Navient (NAVI) downgraded to Equal Weight from Overweight at Barclays
Navient (NAVI) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Compass Point
Northern Oil and Gas (NOG) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at SunTrust
Oasis Petroleum (OAS) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Guggenheim
PTC Therapeutics (PTCT) downgraded to Neutral from Overweight at JPMorgan
SBA Communications (SBAC) downgraded to Outperform from Top Pick at RBC Capital
Safe Bulkers (SB) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Citigroup
Spirit Airlines (SAVE) downgraded to Hold from Buy at Stifel
Sucampo (SCMP) downgraded to Underperform from Neutral at Credit Suisse
Synageva (GEVA) downgraded to Neutral from Overweight at JPMorgan
TCP International (TCPI) downgraded to Neutral from Overweight at Piper Jaffray
Walter Investment (WAC) downgraded to Underperform from Market Perform at FBR Capital
Wayfair (W) downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Citigroup

Initiations

Chemtura (CHMT) initiated with an Outperform at RW Baird
Euronav NV (EURN) initiated with an Overweight at JPMorgan
LabCorp (LH) initiated with an Overweight at Barclays
Quest Diagnostics (DGX) initiated with an Equal Weight at Barclays
TerraForm (TERP) initiated with a Buy at UBS

COMPANY NEWS

NXP Semiconductors (NXPI), Freescale (FSL) announced $40B merger agreement
Buffett said sold entire Exxon Mobil (XOM) stake in Q4, said that his likely cost for IBM (IBM) shares is around $170
Mitel (MITL) agrees to acquire Mavenir Systems for $560M
Samsung (SSNLF) announced the Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 edge phones and Samsung Pay mobile payment system
U.S. DOE to end contracts with Navient's (NAVI) Pioneer Credit, other agencies. Navient said losses Department of Education contract worth $65M in 2014
BlackBerry (BBRY) unveils software and services vision, expands cross platform strategy across all smartphone and tablets running iOS (AAPL), Android (GOOG), and Windows (MSFT) operating systems

EARNINGS

Companies that beat consensus earnings expectations last night and today include:
Intercept (ICPT), Dresser-Rand (DRC), Cleco (CNL)

Companies that missed consensus earnings expectations include:
Emerge Energy (EMES), Pattern Energy (PEGI), Gran Tierra (GTE), OPKO Health (OPK), Cleco (CNL)

LSB Industries (LXU) reports Q4 adjusted EPS 9c vs. (42c) a year ago
Pattern Energy (PEGI) reports Q4 EPS (36c) vs. (17c) a year ago
Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A) reports Q4 operating EPS $2,412 vs. $2,297 in Q413
Cleco (CNL) sees FY15 EPS $2.28-$2.38, consensus $2.51
Vermilion Energy (VET) reports Q4 EPS 55c vs. 50c a year ago

NEWSPAPERS/WEBSITES

Citi (C) CEO, CFO may be pressured to leave if bank fails stress test, FT reports
Alibaba (BABA) to invest $316M in Taiwan entrepreneurs, WSJ reports
Lumber Liquidators (LL) linked to health and safety violations, CBS' 60 Minutes says
Samsung (SSNLF) expects Galaxy S6 to become company's best-selling model, DigiTimes reports
Wells Fargo (WFC) to place limit on subprime auto loans, NY Times reports
EMC (EMC) decides against spinning off stake in VMware (VMW), Reuters reports
Google (GOOG) shares could rise 5%-10% with a dividend, Barron's says
American Express (AXP) shares could rally 15%, Barron's says
Campbell Soup (CPB) could drop 5%-10%, Barron's says

SYNDICATE

Alliance Resource Partners (ARLP) files automatic mixed securities shelf
Aqua America (WTR) files automatic mixed securities shelf
Bank of America (BAC) files mixed securities shelf
Cleveland BioLabs (CBLI) files to sell 2.07M shares of common stock for holders
Continental Building (CBPX) files to sell $22.5M in common stock for holder
Empire State files to sell 15.74M shares of Class A common stock for holders
Essent Group (ESNT) files automatic mixed securities shelf
Essent Group (ESNT) files to sell 41.01M shares of common stock for holders
Healthcare Trust (HTA) files automatic mixed securities shelf
Healthcare Trust (HTA) files to sell 2.5M shares of Class A common for holders
Hess Corp. (HES) files automatic mixed securities shelf
Ignyta (RXDX) files $150M mixed securities shelf
Kimco Realty (KIM) announces $500M 'at the market' equity offering program
Kimco Realty (KIM) files automatic mixed securities shelf
LifePoint (LPNT) files automatic mixed securities shelf
ModusLink (MLNK) files $100M mixed securities shelf
Nationstar (NSM) files automatic mixed securities shelf
Organovo (ONVO) files $190M mixed securities shelf

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