Archive - Jun 2014 - Story
June 29th
Picturing Public Confidence In Government
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2014 18:23 -0500"Tipping Point?"
IcaCap: Is Earth Round Or Flat?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2014 17:34 -0500It’s become rather obvious that current stimulus plans are not working. Rather than scrap the madness and start over, our world political and economic leaders insist on a rather bizarre analysis that what they are doing is actually correct. But the reason for its ineffectiveness is that they haven’t done enough of it. In other words, yes the central banks and governments of the world have certainly dug themselves into a pretty deep hole. Yet, instead of trying to climb out or shout for help, they ask for more shovels – dig deeper! Many people have commented that all the world really needs is a little more confidence. Once people and companies become more comfortable they’ll start to spend again. This view is 100% correct – but what’s missing from this analysis is the reason confidence is declining. The reason for the decline is due to the very policy actions of our governments and central banks to help restore confidence. Their actions are actually causing people to have less confidence – talk about irony.
ISIS Declares A Caliphate; Crucifies 9 Syrian Rebels For Being "Too Moderate"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2014 17:08 -0500Erstwhile leader of ISIS, Sheikh Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi has declared himself Caliphate, Amir Al-Mu'minin - Leader of Believers, as militants bear down on Baghdad. This comes as the extremist group demands that all Al-Qaeda and Jihadi branches must now pledge allegiance to ISIS.. if not there are consequences as nine rebels have been crucified for being too 'moderate' or accused of receiving support from Western powers. We suspect this may slow 'demand' for Obama's latest cunning plan to offer 'aid' to only "moderate" terrorists.
Axel Merk: The Fed's Next Move? "If You're Not Concerned, You're Not Paying Attention"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2014 16:45 -0500"If you're not concerned, you're not paying attention" say Axel Merk, founder and Chief Investment Officer of Merk Funds (and former President of the Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis and a former FOMC member). Like many, he sees today's excessive high-price, low-volume, zero-volatility markets as an unnatural and dangerous result of misguided intervention by the Federal Reserve... "Now, the capital base and the equity of the Fed is very small. Odds are that the losses would wipe out the equity at the Fed."
When "Financial Innovation" Trumps Math
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2014 16:02 -0500Is it any wonder we are where we are when no lesser esteemed group than The American Bankers Association Education Foundation offers this sound advice for 'divvying up a dollar'...
Martin Armstrong Warns Civil Unrest Is Rising Everywhere: "This Won't End Pretty"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2014 15:40 -0500The greatest problem we have is misinformation. People simply do not comprehend why and how the economic policies of the post-war era are imploding. This whole agenda of socialism has sold a Utopian idea that the State is there for the people yet it is run by lawyers following their own self-interest. Even confiscating all the wealth of the so-called rich will not sustain the system. Consequently, we just have to crash and burn and start all over again.
The Delusion Of Perpetual Motion; Bob Shiller Warns "I'm Definitely Concerned"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2014 15:01 -0500"I am definitely concerned. When was [the cyclically adjusted P/E ratio or CAPE] higher than it is now? I can tell you: 1929, 2000 and 2007;" warned Bob Shiller this week, adding that "it's likely to turn down again, just like it did the last two times." As John Hussman reminds us this week, stock valuations now reflect not only the absence of any interest-competitive component of expected returns, but the absence of any expected compensation for the greater risk of stocks, which is not insignificant – as investors might remember from 2000-2002 and 2007-2009 plunges, despite aggressive easing by the Federal Reserve throughout both episodes. Investment decisions driven primarily by the question “What other choice do I have?” are likely to prove regrettable.
The Systemic Sources of Geopolitical Turmoil: Instability, Fragmentation, Resource Wars
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2014 14:07 -0500It's tempting to think that the resolution of various geopolitical crises would restore global stability: tempting, but wrong. Global turmoil may appear to have specific causes - Ukraine, Iraq, Syria, etc. - but the deeper reality is the instability is systemic.
30% Discount To 'Book' And Still Not Cheap Enough...
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2014 11:17 -0500At least one market appears to have a somewhat efficient price discovery mechanism...

The Great War’s Aftermath: Keynesianism, Monetary Central Planning & The Permanent Warfare State
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2014 10:27 -0500- Alan Greenspan
- Arthur Burns
- B+
- BLS
- China
- Corruption
- Detroit
- Fannie Mae
- Federal Deficit
- Ford
- France
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Great Depression
- Iran
- Japan
- Keynesian economics
- keynesianism
- Krugman
- Mad Money
- Michigan
- Middle East
- Milton Friedman
- Monetary Policy
- Monetization
- Money Supply
- National Debt
- Nationalism
- Netherlands
- New York Fed
- NRA
- OPEC
- Paul Volcker
- Real estate
- Recession
- recovery
- Salient
- Saudi Arabia
- Savings Rate
- SWIFT
- Unemployment
- White House
The Great Depression did not represent the failure of capitalism or some inherent suicidal tendency of the free market to plunge into cyclical depression - absent the constant ministrations of the state through monetary, fiscal, tax and regulatory interventions. Instead, the Great Depression was a unique historical occurrence - the delayed consequence of the monumental folly of the Great War, abetted by the financial deformations spawned by modern central banking. But ironically, the “failure of capitalism” explanation of the Great Depression is exactly what enabled the Warfare State to thrive and dominate the rest of the 20th century because it gave birth to what have become its twin handmaidens - Keynesian economics and monetary central planning. Together, these two doctrines eroded and eventually destroyed the great policy barrier - that is, the old-time religion of balanced budgets - that had kept America a relatively peaceful Republic until 1914. The good Ben (Franklin that is) said,” Sir you have a Republic if you can keep it”. We apparently haven’t.
Dear US Soldiers And Veterans: Avoid The Following Hospitals Like The Plague
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2014 09:35 -0500The VA scandal was just the beginning. According to Internal documents obtained by New York Times, US military healthcare is "a system in which scrutiny is sporadic and avoidable errors are chronic." As the NYT reports In Military Care, a Pattern of Errors but Not Scrutiny, "the military system has consistently had higher than expected rates of harm and complications in two central parts of its business — maternity care and surgery."
June 28th
Shinzo Abe And The Three Magic Arrows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/28/2014 20:34 -0500Abe’s arrows have been praised in the media by the economically ignorant, the politically motivated, and those who believe prosperity is parceled out by some all powerful shaman. However, the arrows, seen in the harsh light of reality, turn out to be counterfeiting schemes, “investing” in money losing ventures, taking money from the productive, and squabbling with the neighbors. These counterproductive political actions won’t ever result in a stronger economy and have instead left the Japanese people with a crushing debt and tax burden. Don’t get taken in by the hogwash you read in mainstream media propaganda pieces. Abe’s policies are complete and utter failures.
Sarajevo Is The Fulcrum Of Modern History: The Great War And Its Terrible Aftermath
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/28/2014 20:21 -0500- Auto Sales
- Bank of England
- BOE
- Bond
- Brazil
- Central Banks
- China
- Commercial Paper
- Copper
- Creditors
- default
- Deficit Spending
- Discount Window
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- Great Depression
- Housing Starts
- Iran
- Japan
- Keynesian economics
- keynesianism
- Kuwait
- Madison Avenue
- Monetization
- National Debt
- New York Fed
- Niall Ferguson
- Nikkei
- Nominal GDP
- Open Market Operations
- Poland
- Real estate
- Recession
- Russell 2000
- The Visible Hand
- Totalitarianism
- Transparency
- World Trade
One hundred years ago today the world was shook loose of its moorings. Every school boy knows that the assassination of the archduke of Austria at Sarajevo was the trigger that incited the bloody, destructive conflagration of the world’s nations known as the Great War. But this senseless eruption of unprecedented industrial state violence did not end with the armistice four years later. In fact, 1914 is the fulcrum of modern history. It is the year the Fed opened-up for business just as the carnage in northern France closed-down the prior magnificent half-century era of liberal internationalism and honest gold-backed money. So it was the Great War’s terrible aftermath - a century of drift toward statism, militarism and fiat money - that was actually triggered by the events at Sarajevo.
"The Battle For Baghdad" - A Backgrounder On ISIS' Grand Plan
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/28/2014 19:44 -0500It is no secret that the extremist al-Qaeda Jihadist group known as ISIS for short, which in the span of weeks has overrun the northern part of Iraq, has grand ambitions to not only preserve its power in the north and central regions, as well as the border with Syria, but to ultimately proceed south where not only Baghdad is located but also the great energy infrastructure of the country: "the grand prize" for ISIS as it would make the extremist group viable and financially self-sustaining. But how and when will this "Battle for Baghdad" take place? For the answer we go to a backgrounder prepared by the Institute for the Study of War titled, as expected, "ISIS Battle Plan for Baghdad" which lays it out in detail.
Crushing The Q2 "Recovery" Dream In 1 Simple Chart
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/28/2014 19:00 -0500For a week or two, the 'news' appeared to confirm the 'hope'; faith that Q1's dysphoria would emerge phoenix-like into Q2 euphoria as a 'hibernating' American public emerging from their weather-shelter and spent-spent-spent all their borrowed-borrowed-borrowed money. That ended last week! Despite the dramatically low volume liftathon in stocks since the FOMC meeting, major risk markets around the world are cracking. European bonds and stocks had a bad week, Treasuries rallied the most in 6 weeks, and the key to it all, USDJPY, slipped to 4 week lows. Why? As the chart below shows, US macro data is collapsing again (right on cue) and stands at 2-month lows... (and is the worst-performing macro nation in the world this year!)


