Demographics
Cops Around The Country Quietly Begin Rebelling Against The Drug War
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/06/2015 21:15 -0500In May, Police Chief Leonard Campanello of the Gloucester, Massachusetts Police Department announced via Facebook that his department would adopt the new policy of treatment over arrest. Five months since the program launched, Campanello reports positive results: over 260 addicts have been placed in treatment. This summer, shoplifting, breaking and entering, and larceny dropped 23% from the same period last year. “We are seeing real people get the lives back,” he said. “And if we see a reduction in crime and cost savings that is a great bonus.”
Monetary Bazookas Or Not, "Global Crisis Is Inevitable"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2015 20:30 -0500Until recently, the consensus assumed a strengthening of the global economy in 2016. It won’t happen. If the global economic growth manages to reach 3.1% next year, as forecast by the IMF, it will be a miracle. We are close to the end of the current economic cycle. The outbreak of a new global crisis in the coming years is inevitable. The Fed and other central banks are in a dead-end having fallen in the same trap as the Bank of Japan. If they increase rates too much, they will precipitate another financial crisis. It is impossible to stop the accommodative monetary policy.
What's Next: Deflation, Inflation, Or Hyperinflation?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/03/2015 11:55 -0500Almost all serious analysts see a Terminal problem developing - "We will go from deflation to hyperinflation without seeing inflation." But hyperinflation is a political phenomenon. It is caused by those same authorities the masses think they can trust. When they are threatened, they will protect themselves by printing money on a scale we haven’t seen since the War Between the States (consumer prices in Richmond, Virginia, had risen 6,700% by the end of the war).
Thousands Of Shorts Royally Crushed After Activision Acquires King Digital
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/03/2015 07:16 -0500Call it an example of an abbreviated public lifecycle. After IPOing at $22.50 just last March and then promptly tumbling, Candy Crush maker King Digital was stuck in no man's land: demand for its products was promptly waning and the organic growth its underwriters had promised was nowhere to be found. The fundamentally savvy hedge funds sniffed this out and promptly jumped on board what seemed like a royal flush slam dunk to zero. And then, overnight, out of nowhere Activision decided to crush the Candy Crush shorts, who had built up a short stake amounting to 25% of the float, when it announced it would acquire the company for $5.9 billion or $18/share, a 16% premium to the previous day closing price... and also a 20% discount to the IPO price.
7 Astounding Charts Show How Badly The Fed Failed The Housing Market
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/29/2015 11:46 -0500For generations, single family housing development was a driver of US economic growth. Today, there is no single family housing industry to speak of. These 7 charts derived from this week’s release of new house sales data from the Census Bureau illustrates just how bad things are.
China Abandons 37-Year-Old "One-Child Policy" - Here Are The Implications
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/29/2015 06:20 -0500While China had previously hinted that it's one-child policy is being phased out, most notably in 2013 when sources close to the National Population and Family Planning Commission said China may relax its one-child policy at end-2013 or early-2014 (read end) by allowing families to have two children, moments ago, during the Fifth Chinese Plenum, this 37 year old policy was formally scrapped and China will henceforth allow two kids for all couples in what is a clear bid to boost growth.
Don't Think The Status Quo Will Save You
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/27/2015 07:57 -0500Don't think the Status Quo will save you, or make good on its vast multitude of promises. Naive faith in promises and fantasies isn't helpful in the real world.
Will This Manic Stock Market Rally End In Tears?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/26/2015 07:21 -0500
Can the stock market completely ignore these five key changes and keep powering higher on the fumes of Mario Draghi's promises?
Desperate Times Call for Absurdity
Submitted by Capitalist Exploits on 10/25/2015 09:21 -0500How governments all around the world resort to absurd marketing to finance largesse
Another Government Ponzi Scheme Starts To Crack - Do You Depend On It?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/24/2015 14:58 -0500It’s no secret that the Social Security system is effectively one giant Ponzi scheme. Actually, I think it’s worse. That’s because the government uses force and the threat of force to coerce people into it. People don’t have the option to opt out. They either pay the tax for Social Security or someone with a gun will show up sooner or later. I imagine Bernie Madoff’s firm would have lasted a lot longer had he been able to operate this way.
Japan's PM Demands "Bold Proposals" For Raising The Country's Birth-Rate
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/23/2015 20:15 -0500With a birth-rate at record-lows and death-rate at record-highs, Japanese PM Shinzo Abe unveiled a new set of 'arrows' a few weeks ago to 'fix' the demographic disaster the nation faces. At the time, Abe was long of "bold proposals" but short of actual policies to encourage the nation to make more babies (despite dwindling interest in sex). As Bloomberg reports, here are a number of options that Abe's new minister for demographics Kato could introduce to slow the downward spiral of population...
Truth Is Being Suppressed By The Tools Of Money
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/21/2015 17:50 -0500- Bank of Japan
- Bond
- Central Banks
- China
- Convexity
- Core CPI
- CPI
- default
- Demographics
- Equity Markets
- European Central Bank
- Federal Reserve
- Global Economy
- Great Depression
- Janet Yellen
- Japan
- Monetary Base
- Monetary Policy
- Moral Hazard
- New York City
- Quantitative Easing
- Real estate
- Reality
- Unemployment
- Volatility
- Warren Buffett
- Washington D.C.
Global Capitalism is trapped in its own Prisoner’s Dilemma; fourty four years after the end of the Bretton Woods System global central banks have manipulated the cost of risk in a competition of devaluation leading to a dangerous build up in debt and leverage, lower risk premiums, income disparity, and greater probability of tail events on both sides of the return distribution. Truth is being suppressed by the tools of money. Market behavior has now fully adapted to the expectation of pre-emptive central bank action to crisis creating a dangerous self-reflexivity and moral hazard. Volatility markets are warped in this new reality routinely exhibiting schizophrenic behavior. The tremendous growth of the short volatility complex across all assets, combined with self-reflexive investment strategies, are creating a dangerous ‘shadow convexity’ that will fuel the next hyper-crash.
Deflation = Debt + Demographics + Disruption... But Mostly Debt
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2015 17:53 -0500"The only way to get velocity to pick up in a benign way is to write off the debt by a meaningful amount. That would have helped in the 2008 global financial crisis if more losses had been imposed on creditors. But that obviously did not happen in 2008 as the policymakers demonstrated that they did not believe in capitalism. Otherwise, the only other way velocity picks up is by an unhealthy hyperinflationary surge reflecting a loss of confidence in central banks, an outcome that becomes more plausible the more extreme the resort to quantitative easing."
China Vs. United States: A Visual Tale Of Two Economies
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/17/2015 20:15 -0500The United States has had the world’s largest economy for about 140 years, and it roughly accounts for 22% of global GDP. However, in recent times China has overtaken the US by at least one measure of total economic strength, which is GDP based on purchasing power parity (PPP). Either way you slice it, the economies are the two strongest globally in absolute terms. That’s where the similarities end.
The Mistake Of Only Comparing US Murder Rates To "Developed" Countries
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2015 16:45 -0500Much of the political thinking about violence in the United States comes from unfavorable comparisons between the United States and a series of cherry-picked countries with lower murder rates and with fewer guns per capita. This is, in turn, supposed to fill Americans with a sense of shame and illustrate that the United States should be regarded as some sort of pariah nation because of its murder rate. However, politically, historically, and demographically, the US has little in common with these nations.



