Archive - Feb 2014
February 16th
"Off The Charts" How China Fooled The World
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/16/2014 19:46 -0500
China is now the second largest economy in the world and for the last 30 years China's economy has been growing at an astonishing rate, wowing the world, as spending and investment has been undertaken on a scale never seen before in human history - 30 new airports, 26,000 miles of motorways and a new skyscraper every five days have been built in China in the last five years. But as we (and Michael Pettis, George Soros, and Jim Chanos - among many others) have warned, it is all eerily reminiscent of what happened in the West... the vast majority of it has been built on credit. This has now left the Chinese economy with huge debts and questions over whether much of the money can ever be paid back (spoiler alert: it can't and it won't).
Japan GDP Biggest Miss In 18 Months; Slowest Growth Since Before Second Coming Of Abe
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/16/2014 19:13 -0500
Get long 'Depends' may be the most befitting headline for tonight's massive macro miss in Japan. For the 3rd quarter in a row, Japanese GDP missed expectations with a meager +1.0% annualized growth (versus a +2.8% expectation), and a tiny 0.3% Q/Q change vs expectations of a 0.7% increase, this is the biggest miss and slowest growth since Abe retook the economic throne after his chronic-diarrhea-prone first attempt to save the nation. No matter how hard they try to spin this, there's no silver lining as consumer and business spending missed expectations notably and the only Tokyo snow fell just last week so long after the quarter was over... and this is before a tax hike that is aimed at showing how fiscally responsible the nation and not simply an insolvent ponzi scheme alive through the good graces of the greater fools of leveraged carry trades.
"From Self-Reinforcing Speculation To Fragile Instability"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/16/2014 18:39 -0500
While the only fun-durr-mentals that matter appear to be global central bank liquidity injections (and thus the level of leverage entrusted to the JPY carry trade), the crowd is swayed by truthisms and "common knowledge" memes that recovery is here, that things are improving, that earnings are 'solid', that markets are still cheap, and that historical analogs are different this time. However, with monetary policy at a turning point, we also appear (fundamentally and technically) to be at "the inflection point from self-reinforcing speculation to fragile instability."
U.S. Plunges To 46th In World Press Freedom Index... Below Romania
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/16/2014 17:36 -0500
As one might expect, the economic decline of a nation into rule by a handful of corrupt oligarchs will have many other negative repercussions. One of these is a loss of civil rights and freedoms that many of us have taken for granted. Reporters Without Borders puts out their Press Freedom Index every year, and the 2014 ranking came out today. It was not a good showing for the USSA. Specifically, the U.S. registered one of the steepest falls of all nations, down 13 slots to the #46 position. As the screen shot shows, just above Haiti and just below Romania.
Bank Of America Warns "The US Dollar Is In Trouble"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/16/2014 16:34 -0500
Global financial and commodity markets are warning that the US Dollar is in for a bout of trouble, warns BofAML's Macneil Curry. Across asset classes, Curry points out that Gold was the first to make its low against the US Dollar, doing so back on Dec-15. The second market to turn against the US Dollar was US Treasuries, with Ten year note futures turning bullish back on Dec-26. Currently, the FX market - most specifically GBP - is breaking out and pressuring the US Dollar. Finally, the Japanese stock market continues to suffer, putting downward pressure on USDJPY and thus US Dollar weakness.
How Special-Interest Groups Benefit From Minimum Wage Laws
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/16/2014 15:29 -0500
Those campaigning for a substantial jump in the minimum wage all assert that the purpose is to help working families. Unfortunately, careful students of the evidence come to a different conclusion. As Mark Wilson summarized it, “evidence from a large number of academic studies suggests that minimum wage increases don’t reduce poverty levels.” Some workers lose jobs (high minimum-wage states have among the highest unemployment rates); others have hours cut. The least-skilled get competed out of the jobs that remain (e.g., the minimum wage hits teenage employment hardest). It crowds out on-the-job training, impeding workers’ ability to learn their way out of poverty. And those effects are worse in a recession. It also raises costs and prices that workers pay as consumers. How can we explain support for a policy that harms many of those supporters say they wish to help? We explain it by focusing not on low-income workers, but their substitutes.
For Your Radar Screen: Next Week's Features
Submitted by Marc To Market on 02/16/2014 14:36 -0500- Australian Dollar
- BOE
- Bond
- Capital Markets
- Central Banks
- China
- Consumer Prices
- CPI
- CRB
- CRB Index
- Equity Markets
- fixed
- France
- Housing Market
- Hungary
- Institutional Investors
- Italy
- Japan
- Market Sentiment
- Markit
- Philly Fed
- Portugal
- recovery
- Short Interest
- Technical Indicators
- Testimony
- Trade Balance
- Trade Deficit
- Turkey
- Unemployment
- Verizon
- Yen
- Yuan
Overview of the events and data that will be of interest to investors.
What's Going On In Venezuela (In A Nutshell)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/16/2014 14:33 -0500
Protests in Venezuela continue (despite President Maduro's proclamation that the nation is in "absolute calm"), with both the government and the opposition holding rallies, leaving several streets and subway stations in Caracas closed. 10 students who were arrested amid violent protests last week have been released, though 6 students remain in custody. Demonstrators do not yet have the numbers or support base to unseat President Nicolas Maduro's administration, but as Stratfor notes, these protests could mark a turning point as the economic situation deteriorates there is a chance that protests like this could begin to generate additional social momentum in rejection of the status quo.
Xi's Tinkering Risks China Hard Landing
Submitted by Asia Confidential on 02/16/2014 14:00 -0500New figures show China's credit bubble continues to grow. President Xi Jinping hasn't done nearly enough to arrest the bubble and needs to act fast.
Foreigners Bought Half Of All London Homes Selling For Over £1 Million
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/16/2014 13:33 -0500
Actually, according to the first detailed estimate of international purchase activity in London by Knight Frank, the percentage of all central London homes that sold for more than 1 million pounds to foreigners in the 12 months through June 2013, was 49% to be exact. And as we showed yesterday when we put China's loan creation in the context of US and Japanese QE, keeping in mind the use of proceeds of all this newly created inside money has to ultimately go somewhere - that somewhere in this case being London and other global luxury real estate, said percentage is only going to get higher. Especially when one adds Russian, the middle east and other various regions whose oligarchs are desperate to park their money in "safe" havens.
STaND CLeaR GiaNT MoRoN...
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 02/16/2014 13:32 -0500Two Nimitz Class blow hards...
If America Continues To Go Down This Path, This Is What Life Will Be Like...
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/16/2014 12:47 -0500
Becoming more like Europe is not a good thing. But that is the path that we are currently on. For the most part, Europeans live in a socialist “Big Brother” system in which the government completely dominates your life from the cradle to the grave. Of course there are differences from country to country, but generally speaking the lives of most Europeans are very tightly regulated. You see, the truth is that high levels of individual liberty and freedom are considered to be “dangerous” by the European elite. They believe that if we are all allowed to just do whatever we want that it would result in utter chaos. They are convinced that life is better when those that are smarter (them) control the lives of everyone else.
The Manipulators Will Lose Their Gold War: GATA's Bill Murphy (Exclusive Interview)
Submitted by lemetropole on 02/16/2014 11:44 -0500- Bank of England
- BIS
- BOE
- Central Banks
- China
- Chris Powell
- Cognitive Dissonance
- Copper
- default
- Deutsche Bank
- Eric Sprott
- Exchange Stabilization Fund
- Futures market
- Germany
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Jim Rogers
- Market Manipulation
- Mexico
- Newspaper
- Quantitative Easing
- Robert Rubin
- Sprott Asset Management
The Inteligencia Financiera Global blog (Global Financial Intelligence Blog) is honored to present another exclusive interview now with GATA’s Bill Murphy.
"Money Launderer Until Proven Innocent" - Italy Imposes 20% Tax Withholding On All Inbound Money Transfers
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/16/2014 11:40 -0500
While the propaganda surrounding Europe's "recovery" has reached deafening levels, what is going on behind the scenes is quite the opposite, and in the latest example that Europe is increasingly formalizing a regime of implicit capital controls, we learn that Italy has just ordered banks to withhold a 20% tax on all inbound wire transfers: a decree which on to of everything will apply retroactively to February 1. As Il Sole reports, "the deductions will be automatic (unless prior request for exclusion), and then it will be up to the taxpayer to prove that the money is not in the nature of compensation "income." In other words, as of this moment, but really starting two weeks ago, all Italians are money launderers unless proven innocent.
We Can Be Certain Of This
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/16/2014 09:19 -0500Amidst this sea of uncertainty we can be certain of this: humans will continue down an unsustainable path that inevitably leads to a tragic end until they succeed in destroying themselves or they reach a point of no return and abruptly change course. That process of clinging to the present arrangement "because I can't live any other way" until that arrangement collapses is the primary narrative of our era. It is truly remarkable how humans will cling to a visibly self-destructive, no-exit arrangement because they see no alternative, and then after the present arrangement crumbles and the wreckage is cleared, we somehow manage to find some other arrangement. Sadly, we only rouse ourselves to change when there is no other choice, that is, after we've destroyed the previous arrangement.






