Archive - Dec 9, 2013
Fed's Fisher Blasts "Flaccid" Monetary Policy, Says More CapEx Needed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2013 15:51 -0500We warned here (and here most recently), the most insidious way in which the Fed's ZIRP policy is now bleeding not only the middle class dry, but is forcing companies to reallocate cash in ways that benefit corporate shareholders at the present, at the expense of investing prudently for growth 2 or 3 years down the road. It seems the message is being heard loud and very clear among 'some' of the FOMC members; most notably Richard Fisher:
"Without fiscal policy that incentivizes rather than discourages U.S. capex (capital expenditure), this accommodative monetary policy aimed at reducing unemployment (especially structural unemployment) or improving the quality of jobs is rendered flaccid and less than optimally effective... I would feel more comfortable were we to remove ourselves as soon as possible from interfering with the normal price-setting functioning of financial markets."
Perhaps Yellen (and others) will listen this time?
Chart Of The Day: Jobs, Jobs, Jobs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2013 15:11 -0500
The number of employees across the firms of the broad-based Russell 2000 equity index has collapsed by more than half from its peak. The price of that index, in the same period, has risen 137%. Can you spot when the index 'price' disconnected from economic reality?
Of course, we are sure the chart will be dismissed as meaningless for some "demographic" or "cyclical" reason and we should not worry, just BTFATH, of course.
El-Erian Blasts America's Partisan Peril
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2013 14:46 -0500
The United States’ reputation for sound economic policymaking took a beating in 2013. Some of this was warranted; some of it was not. And now a related distorted narrative – one that in 2014 could needlessly undermine policies that are key to improving America’s economic recovery – is gaining traction... to the danger of "government failure."
US Gets Involved In Another Foreign Conflict, Will Support French Troops In Central African Republic
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2013 14:19 -0500One of the underreported stories from last week, noted here previously, was that quietly, on the day in which French unemployment soared to a new 16 year high, French president Hollande did what every true Keynesian in his position would do and dispatched troops to the Central African Republic due to a "duty to intervene" and stop the "alarming, frightening massacres" taking place there. There were no YouTube clips available to justify said massacres yet: we assume they are being produced currently. A few days later the fighting has begun with Reuters reporting that French troops fought gunmen in Bangui, the capital of Central African Republic, on Monday as they searched for weapons in an operation to disarm rival Muslim and Christian fighters responsible for hundreds of killings since last week. Shooting erupted near the airport in the morning after gunmen refused to hand over their weapons, and French forces later came under attack by former rebels in the city centre. France said it was prepared to use force if fighters rejected calls to disarm or return to barracks. Paris boosted its military presence to 1,600 troops at the weekend as waves of religious violence swept its former colony.
Quote Of The Day: UK Housing Market "Warp Speed" Edition
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2013 13:46 -0500A month ago, the Bank of England's Cunliffe dismissed UK realtors' fears of a central bank-driven bubble in housing, by stating confidently that "it is not a boom or a bubble. It is a market correction, albeit a fairly quick one." But now, the man really in charge of the liquidity pedal, the BoE head Mark Carney has proclaimed:
- BOE'S CARNEY SAYS CONCERNED ABOUT POTENTIAL DEVELOPMENTS IN UK HOUSING MARKET
- BOE'S CARNEY: WANTS TO AVOID HOUSING MARKET MOVING TO 'WARP SPEED'
In the speech at the New York Economic Club, Carney went on note that this BoE-created bubble could be popped by raising capital requirements against the housing sector if need be; but we suspect the faster way to pop the momentum-chasing hot-money frenzy will be to pass the foreign homebuyers' capital gains tax.
Bitcoinaires Take To The Streets
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2013 13:19 -0500
While Newport Beach Lamborghini dealerships may be engaging in marketing gimmicks such as exchanging the 'explosively volatile' Bitcoins for Teslas; the true Bitcoinaires opt for something more internally combustible...
THe CeNTRaL PLaNNeR, THe JuGGLeR, THe OPeRaToR AnD THe BuST...
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 12/09/2013 13:02 -0500Commemorating 100 Years of Central Banking Fraud...
In The Third Quarter, The Rich Got Richer By $1.9 Trillion
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2013 12:55 -0500
The quarterly Flow of Funds report by the Fed has been released and the latest household net worth numbers are out. While not nearly quite as dramatic as last quarter's wholesale dataset revision, which saw all of America suddenly worth $3 trillion more primarily due to a change of how "pension entitlements" (formerly "pension reserves") are calculated (more more in the full breakdown from September), with the resulting total net worth rising to a total of $74.8 trillion, according to the just released data, in the third quarter, US housholds, or rather a very tiny subset of them, saw their net worth rise once again, this time to $77.3 trillion from a revised $75.3 trillion.
Riots Break Out In Singapore; Think Your Country Is Immune?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2013 12:36 -0500
Yesterday, a 33-year old Indian man got hit by the proverbial bus in Singapore’s Little India neighborhood. That was the catalyst. What transpired for the next several hours was a full blown riot... the first of its kind since 1969. Singapore has had years of tensions building. These issues are commonplace. Ideological differences. The wealth gap and economic uncertainty. Immigration challenges. They’re the same issues, for example, that have plunged much of Europe into turmoil, including the rise of a blatantly fascist political party in Greece. And these same issues exist, in abundance, in the Land of the Free… where a number of serious ideological divides are becoming obvious social chasms. And if it can happen in Singapore - one of the safest, most stable countries on the planet, it can happen anywhere. Even in a sterile American suburb.
Greece Tumbles Into The Deflationary Abyss, While Its Primary Surplus Sounds The "Grexit" Alarm
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2013 12:10 -0500
While the second-derivative hopers and primary budget surplus believers cling to the faith that Stournaras talking about recovery is enough to bring the depressing Greek nation out of its slumber, the fact is that Greek deflation has never been worse. However, it gets worse... as a recent study by CFR finds that countries are most at risk of defaulting the year they turn a positive primary budget - meaning they are no longer reliant on their creditors. Simply put, the Greek government has far less incentive to pay, and far more negotiating leverage with, its creditors once it no longer needs to borrow from them to keep the country running - this makes it more likely, rather than less, that Greece will default sometime next year. Beggars, once again, become choosers.
"No Way To Tell How Many People Who Have Signed Up For Obamacare Actually Have"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2013 11:46 -0500
The Obamacare enrollment portal is the gift that keeps on giving endless examples of government incompetence. The latest comes from Bloomberg which informs us that "there’s no way to tell how many people who think they’ve signed up for health insurance through the U.S. exchange actually have, after about 1 in 4 enrollments sent to insurers from the federal website had garbled included incomplete information." Still that particular glitch was not enough to prevent Obama from taking full credit for a "fixed" website after somehow the White House managed to calculate that sign ups soared to 100,000 people, and have taken off since the "fix."
Ukraine Risk Soars To 4 Year High As Opposition Offices Raided, Protests Continue - Live Feed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2013 11:33 -0500As the country's leaders search the world for funding, and in spite of the seemingly acquiescent removal of barriers from the government buildings by the police, the situation in Ukraine appears to growing more out of control:
- *UKRAINE'S TOP PROSECUTOR SAYS PROTESTS VIOLATE LAW
- *PROTESTS ENTAIL 'SEVERE CRIMINAL RESPONSIBILITY:' PROSECUTOR
- ARMED MASKED MEN SEIZE KIEV PARTY HEADQUARTERS OF JAILED OPPOSITION LEADER YULIA TYMOSHENKO-EYEWITNESS
- TYMOSHENKO PARTY SPOKESWOMAN SAYS RAIDERS TOOK COMPUTER SERVER, BLAMES POLICE; POLICE DENY INVOLVEMENT
As we warned previously, the nation's funding situation remains "precarious" and headlines will crow of consiliatory discussions, this action appears to be anything but - as perhaps the Ukrainian elite fear the same kind of "success" that the people's coup in Thailand appears to be having. Ukraine's CDS has reached its highest in 4 years.
Arkansas Nuclear Facility Offline Following Fire, Possible Explosion
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2013 11:06 -0500
No tsunami or earthquake but Entergy's Arkansas nuclear facility is offline...
*ENTERGY: ARKANSAS NUCLEAR ONE OFFLINE AFTER TRANSFORMER FIRE
*ENTERGY SAYS UNIT 2 OFFLINE, UNIT 1 REMAINS ONLINE
Reassuringly, Entergy explains there was "no damage to the actual nuclear reactor," for now.
Fed Extends Closing Time Of First POMO By 15 Minutes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2013 11:02 -0500First, delayed Bill auctions due to "technical glitches"... Now the first POMO of the day delayed by 15 minutes. Is Central Planning proving to be a touch problematic, or is this merely a slight disturbance in the farce?

Part 4 - Bail-In Regimes - The Key Attributes and Who Is Driving?
Submitted by GoldCore on 12/09/2013 10:38 -0500The FSB's first chairman was Mario Draghi, current President of the European Central Bank, while its current chairman is Mark Carney, Governor of the Bank of England. The inclusion of Financial Market Infrastructures means that large parts of the global financial system is susceptible to bail-in and could potentially be bailed-in including exchange traded funds.





