Archive - Mar 2015

March 22nd

Tyler Durden's picture

Is It Racist? Starbucks Gives Up Trying To Solve America's 'Other' Great Divide





Just as The Fed folded this week on ending the nation's booming income inequality problem (by reinforcing the Yellen put for longer), so Starbucks has folded in its effort to fix the other growing divide in America - racism. Careful not to admit that it was due to pressure from the avalanche of less-than-positive social media reactions, AP reports Starbucks baristas will no longer write "Race Together" on customers' cups. "Nothing is changing," Starbucks claims it was all part "of the cadence" of the plan - hhmm. "Most people come to Starbucks for coffee," concludes one young African-American, adding "race is an uncomfortable thing to bring up, especially in a Starbucks."

 

Tyler Durden's picture

"Unequivocally Good" For Obama's Middle Class





Presented with no comment...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Looks Like Germany May Have To Pay Up





It appears clear that the war reparations 'issue' will not go away anymore. Either Berlin pays what legal experts determine should be paid, or it risks becoming a pariah in its own neighborhood. That the Germans in the 1950s and 1960s, at home and in schools, chose not to tell their children anything about their crimes cannot serve as an excuse to silence the children of its victims. It seems the only way to save the European Union, that Germany has made its economy so dependent on, is for Germany to pay up.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Spot The Odd One Out





We hate to spoil the surprise, but the answer, as clearly shown by the first blue bar on the chart below, is "Energy"...

 

rcwhalen's picture

Central Banks, Credit Expansion, and the Importance of Being Impatient





QE makes sense only from a Keynesian/socialist perspective and ignores the long-term cost of low interest rate policies to individual investors and financial institutions.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Drowning In Liquidity But None In The Bond Market: The Spark Of The Next Financial Crisis?





What happens in the event a Fed rate hike triggers widening corporate credit spreads in a corporate bond market devoid of liquidity? Could it indeed be the case that the Fed’s highly anticipated “lift-off” will serve as the catalyst for credit market carnage? Some traders think so.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The Perfect Storm For Oil Hits In Two Months: US Crude Production To Soar Just As Storage Runs Out





At the current rate of record oil production, storage will be exhausted in under two months, some time in mid-May. At that point, with no more storage to buffer the record oil production, the open market dumping begins and prices of WTI will crater as every barrel will have to be sold at any clearing price, since the producers will have no other choice than to, literally, dump the oil. In other words, a perfect storm is shaping up for oil some time in late May, early June. And then we learned something even more startling.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The Biggest Threat To The Low And Middle Skilled Worker: Robots





A study shows industrial robots' impact on economic growth is comparable to the impact of railroads, highways, and IT and given gains in labor productivity and aggregate growth, low- and middle-skilled workers could end up displaced.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

BIS Slams The Fed: The Solution To Bubbles Is Not More Bubbles, It Is Avoiding Bubbles In The First Place





"... there is a case that policy should first and foremost constrain the build-up of financial booms – especially in the form of strong joint credit and property price increases – as these are the main cause of the subsequent bust. And once the financial bust occurs, after the financial system is stabilised, the priority should be to address the nexus of debt and poor asset quality head-on, rather than relying on overly aggressive and prolonged macroeconomic accommodation through traditional policies. This would pave the way for a sustainable recovery."

- Bank of Interenational Settlements

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The New Order Emerges





China and Russia have taken the lead in establishing the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, seen as a rival organization to the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank, which are dominated by the United States with Europe and Japan. These banks do business at the behest of the old Bretton Woods order. The AIIB will dance to China and Russia's tune instead.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The Fed’s Trapped In The Corner With An Empty Bucket





In response to questions posed by Santelli, former Dallas Fed president Richard Fisher made two points which were both salient if not downright prophetic. The first: “Well, what worries me is how totally lazy investors have gotten, totally dependent on the Federal Reserve and I find this to be a precarious situation.” The second: “Are we vulnerable in my opinion to a significant equity market correction? I believe we are. Not only has the Fed painted themselves into an even tighter corner – they’ve left no clear path as to now kick the empty can.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Is A New Political System Emerging In This Country?





Put together our 1% elections, the privatization of our government, the de-legitimization of Congress and the presidency, as well as the empowerment of the national security state and the U.S. military, and add in the demobilization of the American public (in the name of protecting us from terrorism), and you have something like a new ballgame.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

US Officially Loses Battle Over China-Led Investment Bank





Washington picked a completely unnecessary fight with China over the ostensibly non-contentious topic of infrastructure development because the US can’t stand the fact that traditionally US-dominated multinational institutions are on the verge of being supplanted by sinocentric ambition — and lost.

 

williambanzai7's picture

THe PeOPLe'S CRaMeR II...





Buy the Shanghai Dip!

 
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