Obamacare
Service ISM Tumbles To Lowest Since June, Biggest Miss Since 2013, Prices Crash To 2009 Level
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/06/2015 10:18 -0500Following a disastrous Manufacturing ISM report last week, today it was the turn for its Service cousin to report. And while it wasn't quite the abysmal faceplant that some had expected the seasonally adjusted number to be, printing at 56.2, down from 59.3 and far below the 58.0 expected (but just above the lowest estimate of 56.0), it still was the biggest miss to expectations since September 2013, and the lowest print since June. And while the details were just as atrocious, with every single ISM component declining in December - something that has not happened since the Great Financial Crisis - a report which literallyh said "Obamacare and wages are still the biggest enemies to profitability", all eyes are focused not so much on the tumble in Business Activity and New Orders, but on Prices, which at 49.5, posted their first contraction since September 2009.
Presenting The Nominees For Dumbest Government Of 2014
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/06/2015 08:26 -0500Obamacare Architects At Harvard Furious After Learning They Are Not Exempt From Obamacare
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/05/2015 21:28 -0500The brain incubator at Harvard, the place which according to legend, and certainly the US News and World Report's annual paid college infomercial, is the repository for some of the smartest people in the world, is furious.
Because Harvard's brilliant ivory tower economists and public policy wonks know precisely how to fix the world... as long as said fix never applies to them!
"Something Is Not Right" Jeff Gundlach Is "Concerned About Health Of The Economy & Financial System"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/05/2015 20:30 -0500Having warned of the "terrifying consequences" of oil prices staying this low, DoubleLine's Jeffrey Gundlach, in an extensive interview with Finanz und Wirtschaft, warns he is "beginning to see signs of investor concern around the edges about the health of the economy and about the financial system. Historically, when junk bonds give up the ghost and treasuries remain firm, it is a signal that something is not right." Touching on everything from a string dollar to Indian stocks, and from Oil to bonds, and The Fed, Gundlach concludes, "the only places where there is inflation is in places that are painful. Raising interest rates against that backdrop seems like a poor idea. So I just hope the Fed thinks carefully about what it is doing." Boxed-in much?
Sayonara Global Economy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/05/2015 19:30 -0500- 10 Year Treasury
- Abenomics
- Alan Greenspan
- Bank of Japan
- Belgium
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Bond
- Brazil
- Budget Deficit
- China
- Consumer Credit
- CRAP
- default
- Federal Reserve
- Finland
- France
- Free Money
- Germany
- Global Economy
- GMAC
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Greece
- Home Equity
- Housing Market
- Ireland
- Jamie Dimon
- Janet Yellen
- Japan
- keynesianism
- Krugman
- Ludwig von Mises
- Market Crash
- Middle East
- Monetary Base
- Mortgage Backed Securities
- National Debt
- Netherlands
- New Home Sales
- Nikkei
- Obama Administration
- Obamacare
- Real estate
- Real Interest Rates
- Recession
- recovery
- Savings Rate
- Student Loans
- Switzerland
- Unemployment
- Yen
- Yield Curve
The surreal nature of this world as we enter 2015 feels like being trapped in a Fellini movie. The .1% party like it’s 1999, central bankers not only don’t take away the punch bowl – they spike it with 200% grain alcohol, the purveyors of propaganda in the mainstream media encourage the party to reach Caligula orgy levels, the captured political class and their government apparatchiks propagate manipulated and massaged economic data to convince the masses their standard of living isn’t really deteriorating, and the entire façade is supposedly validated by all-time highs in the stock market. It’s nothing but mass delusion perpetuated by the issuance of prodigious amounts of debt by central bankers around the globe. But now, the year of consequences may have finally arrived.
"Some Folks Were Overpaid..." Over 3 Million Obamacare Subsidy Recipients Will Owe IRS
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/04/2015 15:30 -0500While the Affordable Care Act fines those who don't have health insurance, it also provides subsidies for people making up to four times the federal poverty line ($46,680)... but, as The Washington Examiner reports, the subsidies are based on past tax returns, so many people may be receiving too much. In fact, as H&R Block calculates, as many as 3.4 million people who received Obamacare subsidies may owe money to the federal government.
David Rosenberg Has A Question For His Clients
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/04/2015 13:44 -0500David Rosenberg, formerly of Merrill Lynch and currently of Gluskin Sheff, who famously flip-flopped from being a self-described permabear to uber-bull last summer for the one reason that has yet to manifest itself in any way, shape or form, namely declaring that wage inflation as imminent (it wasn't, but perhaps Mr. Rosenberg was merely forecasting the trajectory of his own wages) and generally an end to deflation, has a rhetorical question for his paying clients, as asked in his letter to investors from January 2. To wit: "THIS IS WHAT PASSES FOR ANALYSIS?" We too follow up with an identical question not only for Mr. Rosenberg's clients, but for our own readers.
These 19 States Just Hiked The Minimum Wage: Here Come The "Unintended Consequences"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/02/2015 16:18 -0500The reason why the BLS has not yet revealed the reality of the shifting US labor force, and why there is virtually no real wage growth across the US, is that the BLS simply backs into statistically goal-seeked results, using seasonal and statistical (birth/death) adjustments to smooth a trendline to beat a monthly bogey used by algos to bid stocks higher. Meanwhile, the reality at the micro level, is that increasingly more Americans are seeing their work status transformed from full-time to part-time status, earning less in the process, having no healthcare and retirement benefits and virtually no job security. As a result, starting this year, some 19 states just increased their minimum wage threshold, with 3 more states due to follow later in 2015. This takes place at the state level because for numerous reasons, there simply wan't enough of a consensus to pass this at the Federal level.
Harry Reid Breaks Face Bones, Ribs After Exercise Equipment Glitch
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/02/2015 11:06 -0500While we await today's update of the Glorious Leader's Hawaiian vacation, here is an update from Nevada on the outgoing senate majority leader's health condition: " Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid was injured today in an accident while exercising at his home in Henderson, Nevada. According to a statement from the Nevada Senator's office, Reid was hurt after a piece of equipment he was using broke, which caused him to fall. He broke a "number of ribs and bones in his face."
A Mania Of Manias
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/01/2015 22:00 -0500If the tech mania was based on magic, and the housing mania was based on a supposed fact that was historically untrue, today’s mania is a mania of manias, interlinked and resting on premises that are patently illogical, contradicted by both the historical record and current experience. Those premises are: central planning works, government debt promotes prosperity, and economic growth stems from central banks buying that debt with money they create from thin air. On these premises rest manias in governments, their debts, and central banking.
2014 Greatest Hits: Presenting The Most Popular Posts Of The Past Year
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/31/2014 22:55 -0500The sixth anniversary of Zero Hedge is just around the corner, and so, for the sixth year in a row we continue our tradition of summarizing what you, our readers, found to be the most relevant, exciting, and actionable news of the year, determined by the number of page views. Those eager for a brief stroll down memory lane of prior years can do so at their leisure, by going back in time to our top articles of 2009,2010, 2011, 2012 and 2013. For everyone else, without further ado, these are the articles that readers found to be the most popular posts of the past 365 days.
Paul "Orwell" Krugman Touts Job Growth in the Obama Recovery
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/31/2014 19:30 -0500If you have a strongly held economic theory, you can always concoct a story ex post to “explain” the data. Rather, what I’m saying is that on the very terms Krugman himself chose to show the virtues of government spending, I can make a much more compelling argument that cutting government spending won’t hurt private sector hiring, and if anything will stimulate it.
How Increased Inefficiency Explains Falling Oil Prices
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/29/2014 18:30 -0500Since about 2001, several sectors of the economy have become increasingly inefficient, in the sense that it takes more resources to produce a given output, such as 1000 barrels of oil. This growing inefficiency explains both slowing world economic growth and the sharp recent drop in prices of many commodities, including oil. The mechanism at work is what I would call the crowding out effect. As more resources are required for the increasingly inefficient sectors of the economy, fewer resources are available to the rest of the economy. As a result, wages stagnate or decline. Central banks find it necessary lower interest rates, to keep the economy going. What we seem to be seeing recently is a drop in price to what consumers can afford for some of these increasingly unaffordable sectors. Unless this situation can be turned around quickly, the whole system risks collapse.
Best of Slope 2014 (Part One)
Submitted by Tim Knight from Slope of Hope on 12/29/2014 00:16 -0500As 2014 wheezes and coughs to its termination, I wanted to share some of what I consider to be the best posts of the year.
"Everything Is Awesome"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/26/2014 18:10 -0500As Politico's Michael Grunwald writes below (we believe non-satirically), the midterm election’s discontent was illegitimate. The point is that Americans should cheer up! And whose fault is all the collective doom? Well, Bill De Blasio already explained that, as Grunwald confirms, the press has a problem reporting good news. So sit back, grab a drink (though swallow it first) and enjoy reading why "everything is awesome" in America (apart from a record 101.5 million Americans not working, record numbers on foodstamps, record numbers on disability, a record wealth divide, a record - and deadly - racial divide, record poverty, and record child homelessness).




