Archive - Apr 2014 - Story
April 5th
Mapping The World's Ebola Outbreaks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/05/2014 09:14 -0500
Ebola is one of the deadliest diseases on Earth, with a fatality rate as high as 90%. It causes bleeding from the eyes, ears, mouth and rectum and a bloody full-body rash leading to a quick demise. It’s one of a handful of diseases that are so deadly that governments consider it a threat to national security. Luckily, so far the cumulative death toll from Ebola has been limited to sporadic epidemics in Africa, although that may change. Here, courtesy of Blooomberg, is a map of Ebola's African outbreaks in recent history.
April 4th
Christine Lagarde Is Clueless: 70 Words Of Pure Keynesian Claptrap
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/04/2014 21:04 -0500
The world’s official economic institutions are run by people who believe in monetary fairy tales. The 70 words of wisdom below from IMF head Christine Lagarde are par for the course. She asserts that a new jabberwocky expression called “low-flation” is the main obstacle to higher economic growth in Europe and the DM areas generally and that it can be cured by more central bank money printing.
Visualizing The Collapse Of Chicago's Middle Class
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/04/2014 20:30 -0500
As Daniel Kay Hertz explains, the goal of these maps is not merely to depress you (you’re welcome!), but to suggest just how dramatically the reality of Chicago’s “two cities” has changed over the last few generations, how non-eternal its present state is, and that a happier alternate reality isn’t just possible, but actually existed relatively recently.
Guest Post: The Screaming Fundamentals For Owning Gold
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/04/2014 20:20 -0500- 30 Year Mortgage
- 30 Year Mortgage
- Bear Market
- Bond
- Central Banks
- China
- Chris Martenson
- Creditors
- Deficit Spending
- European Central Bank
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- Guest Post
- India
- Japan
- Middle East
- Monetary Base
- Money Supply
- None
- Precious Metals
- Purchasing Power
- Real Interest Rates
- Sovereign Debt
- Standard Chartered
- Switzerland
- Turkey
- World Gold Council
The reasons to hold gold (and silver), and we mean physical bullion, are pretty straightforward. So let’s begin with the primary ones:
- To protect against monetary recklessness
- As insulation against fiscal foolishness
- As insurance against the possibility of a major calamity in the banking/financial system
- For the embedded 'option value' that will pay out handsomely if gold is re-monetized
The punch line is this: Gold (and silver) is not in bubble territory, and its largest gains remain yet to be realized; especially if current monetary, fiscal, and fundamental supply-and-demand trends remain in play.
The Shocking Truth About The Deindustrialization Of America That Everyone Should Know
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/04/2014 20:03 -0500
How long can America continue to burn up wealth? How long can this nation continue to consume far more wealth than it produces? The trade deficit is one of the biggest reasons for the steady decline of the U.S. economy, but many Americans don't even understand what it is. Our current debt-fueled lifestyle is dependent on this cycle continuing. In order to live like we do, we must consume far more wealth than we produce. If someday we are forced to only live on the wealth that we create, it will require a massive adjustment in our standard of living. We have become great at consuming wealth but not so great at creating it. But as a result of running gigantic trade deficits year after year, we have lost tens of thousands of businesses, millions upon millions of jobs, and America is being deindustrialized at a staggering pace.
Every New Job Created Is "Not" The Same
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/04/2014 19:26 -0500
Following the March Jobs Report, ConvergEx's Nick Colas got to thinking about the composition of employment growth rather than just the headline number. Is every new job created really the same when it comes to overall economic impact? Consider that the average household income in Maryland is $69,920, versus $39,592 in Mississippi. Or that Mining and Logging jobs pay, on average, $28.77/hour and Retail Trade positions average only $14.22/hour. To expand on this point, Colas came up with three 'Ideal' marginal hires, when considering which jobs bring the most "bang" for the wage/employment "buck". At this point in the cycle we should be focused on job quality as much as quantity.
George Soros Pushes For Pot Legalization
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/04/2014 18:56 -0500
It seems two states is not enough for billionaire investor George Soros (who is ranked the 9th most influential marijuane user in the US). As The Washington Times' Kelly Riddell reports, advocacy groups are leading the campaign to crush marijuana prohibition from coast-to-coast, and 83-year-old Soros is helping line the pockets of those making that push. "Through a network of nonprofit groups, Mr. Soros has spent at least $80 million on the legalization effort since 1994, when he diverted a portion of his foundation’s funds to organizations exploring alternative drug policies, according to tax filings," Riddell notes, adding that the Soros-affiliated Foundation to Promote an Open Society donates roughly $4 million annually to the Drug Policy Alliance.
Baltic Dry Drops 9th Day In A Row; Worst Q1 In Over 10 Years
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/04/2014 17:51 -0500
For a few weeks there, as the Baltic Dry Index rose, talking-heads were ignominous in their praise of the shipping index as a leading indicator of an awesome future ahead for the world economy. The last 9 days have smashed that 'hope' to smithereens (and yet the talking-heads have gone awkwardly silent, having moved on to some other bias-confirming meme). The Baltic Dry is down 25% in the last 2 weeks, back near post-crisis lows, and has just suffered the worst start to a year in over a decade. But apart from that, seems global trade is all-good and about to take off any minute now...
Deflating the Deflation Myth
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/04/2014 17:10 -0500
The fear of deflation serves as the theoretical justification of every inflationary action taken by the Federal Reserve and central banks around the world. It is why the Federal Reserve targets a price inflation rate of 2 percent, and not 0 percent. It is in large part why the Federal Reserve has more than quadrupled the money supply since August 2008. And it is, remarkably, a great myth, for there is nothing inherently dangerous or damaging about deflation. Now unmoored from any gold standard constraints and burdened with massive government debt, in any possible scenario pitting the spectre of deflation against the ravages of inflation, the biases and phobias of central bankers will choose the latter. This choice is as inevitable as it will be devastating.
Fact Or Fiction: Obama Declares "Mission Accomplished" On Affordable Care Act
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/04/2014 16:30 -0500
...One reporter asked the President if perhaps the celebration was premature, since so much of the law has yet to go into effect, and nobody can say whether the new regime will in fact be better than the old one. Responding in that cute way that makes us forget so many of our other disappointments with him, Obama responded by saying “don’t be a party pooper.”
The 2014 "Growth" Recovery Has Been Indefinitely Postponed Due To Inclement Weather
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/04/2014 16:00 -0500
The outperformance "hope" of so-called 'growth' stocks over the past 5 months has been rapidly eviscerated as they catch down to 'value'... it seems the self-sustaining escape-velocity dream is postponed for now...
How To End TBTF? Do What Vietnam Does: Sentence Bankers To Death By Firing Squad
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/04/2014 15:35 -0500
There is a gloriously simple solution to all the world's TBTF problems, one that could be enacted in a HFT millisecond by pulling the trigger, so to speak. The solution comes from none other than that historic US nemesis, Vietnam, where unscrupulous financiers don't just go to jail. Sometimes, they get death row.
Momos Mauled: Nasdaq Crashes Most Since 2011, Stocks Tumble From Record High
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/04/2014 15:03 -0500
The jobs number expectation had been falling for a few days into the print this morning and despite the desperate efforts of every status-quo-hugging TV talking-head's Goldilocks scenario, it was not a good report - it missed low expectations and it seems the market is realizing (having been told the bar is very high for an un-taper) that the Fed will not rescue it any time soon. GDP expectations are also tumbling and thus the hope-driven hyper-growth stocks have been monkey-hammered. This is the worst swing for the Nasdaq since Dec 2011 (with Russell, Dow, and Nasdaq -1% YTD). Momos and Biotechs were blamed but this was broad-based selling as JPY carry was unwound in a hurry. Gold rallied above $1300 (+8.1% YTD) as bond yield ripped lower for 5Y's biggest daily drop in 10 weeks (short-end -4bps on the week). VIX pushed back above 14 (but it was clear derisking exposure - as opposed to hedging positions - was the order of the day).
Vince Cable Sums Up The UK Housing Bubble In 5 Words
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/04/2014 14:23 -0500



