Fail
When Collapse Is Cheaper And More Effective Than Reform
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2015 11:40 -0500Collapse begins when real reform becomes impossible.
Frontrunning: November 5
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2015 07:38 -0500- BOE Stays Cautious on Rate-Hike Timing as Inflation Outlook Cut (BBG)
- China Enters Bull Market (WSJ)
- Britain says Islamic State likely brought down Russian plane (Reuters)
- Dollar jumps as markets fix on December rate expectations (Reuters)
- Activist Investor Bill Ackman Plays Defense (WSJ)
- BOJ Survey Data Reveals Signs of Growing Inequality in Japan (BBG)
- UAW Warns of General Motors Strike If Workers Fail to Approve Contract (WSJ)
The Tools Collectivists Use To Gain Power
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2015 22:30 -0500Collectivism requires the homogenization of society, to the point that individualism is frowned upon and success is treated as negligible. The nightmare of collectivism is the defining battle of our age. It is in this era that we will decide whether or not individual liberty and freedom of thought are more important than the illusory security and “harmony” of the collective. Collectivism and individualism cannot coexist; confrontation is inevitable. Recognizing this, and preparing for it, is our duty as free human beings.
How The Global Debt Bubble Is Crushing Commodity Prices
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2015 18:05 -0500Why is the price of oil so low now? In fact, why are all commodity prices so low? We see the problem as being an affordability issue that has been hidden by a growing debt bubble. As this debt bubble has expanded, it has kept the sales prices of commodities up with the cost of extraction (Figure 1), even though wages have not been rising as fast as commodity prices since about the year 2000. That period is ending as the productivity of additional debt is falling.
New Poll Shows 60% Of Americans Think Hillary Clinton Is Untrustworthy & Dishonest
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2015 15:55 -0500The real interesting part of the latest Quinnipiac University National Poll, is not the fact that 60% of Americans think Hillary Clinton is dishonest, but that 40% of Americans don’t.
The Fed Desperately Tries To Maintain The Status Quo
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2015 14:36 -0500The production structure has long since adapted to ZIRP and “short-term gambling, punting on momentum-driven moves, on levered buybacks” are further lifting the opportunity costs of abandoning it. In order to try to rescue its credibility, the Fed may decide to try some timid, quarter-point increases. But what will they do if markets really crash?
Victim Body Parts Suggest "Powerful Explosion" Most Likely Cause Of Russian Airplane Crash
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/03/2015 15:15 -0500"A large number of body parts may indicate that a powerful explosion took place aboard the plane before it hit the ground."
Presenting 5+1 Ways To Smuggle Billions Out Of China
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/03/2015 13:20 -0500Bring On 'Operation Switch' - Bill Gross Calls For A Reverse 'Operation Twist' To "Benefit Savers And The Economy"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/03/2015 08:49 -0500- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Bill Gross
- Bond
- Borrowing Costs
- Central Banks
- Commercial Paper
- Equity Markets
- Fail
- Illinois
- Insurance Companies
- Janus Capital
- Japan
- John Maynard Keynes
- John Williams
- Maynard Keynes
- Nominal GDP
- Personal Income
- Puerto Rico
- Recession
- recovery
- San Francisco Fed
- Too Big To Fail
- Yield Curve
"But they won’t, you know. Yellen and Draghi believe in the Taylor model and the Phillips curve. Gresham’s law will be found in the history books, but his corollary has little chance of making it into future economic textbooks. The result will likely be a continued imbalance between savings and investment, a yield curve too flat to support historic business models, and an anemic 1-2% rate of real economic growth in even the most robust developed countries."
German Bunds Tumble Amid China Reserve "Selling" Chatter
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/02/2015 10:56 -0500Amid the ever-expanding easing program in Europe (longer? more-er? different-er?), one of the gravest concerns was (amid a growing scarcity of collateral), finding willing sellers (at any price) to meet the needs of central bank asset purchasers could be a problem. However, as The FT reports, it appears the Chinese stepped up to the plate to 'help' The ECB (rather The Bundesbank) out from its dilemma. Just as we saw with Chinese selling US Treasuries (whether to diversify away from the major reserve currencies, deal with outflows, or to manage a liquidity crisis at home), The PBoC's reserve management wing, the State Administration of Foreign Exchange, has been selling some of its German government bonds since the ECB began buying them in March, say two sources close to central banks in China and Europe. This news has prompted further weakness in Bunds today, despite expectations of Draghi unleashing more buying in December.
$20 Trillion In Government Bonds Yield Under 1%: The Stunning Facts How We Got There
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/01/2015 15:34 -0500- There have been 606 global rate cuts since LEH
- $12.4 trillion of central bank asset purchases (QE) since Bear Stearns
- The Fed is operating a zero rate policy for the longest period ever (even exceeding the WW2 Aug’37-Sep’42 zero rate period)
- $6.3 trillion global government bonds currently yielding <0%
- $20.0 trillion global government bonds currently yielding <1%
Sunday Humor: Israel Accidentally Carves Russian Warplane Into Pumpkin For Halloween Facebook Post
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/01/2015 14:00 -0500Epic fail...
The Global Test Most Will Fail: Surviving The Bust That Inevitably Follows A Boom
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/01/2015 12:05 -0500Booms powered by credit, new markets and speculation are followed by busts as night follows day. This creates a very difficult test for every nation-state facing the inevitable bust: how does the leadership deal with the end of the boom? As the world is about to learn once again, the "fix" may make the next bust even more destructive.
China's Manufacturing Misses; Nonmanufacturing Worst Since 2008 Despite Unprecedented $1 Trillion "Debt Injection"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/01/2015 08:38 -0500The most anticipated economic release over the weekend was the early glimpse into China's manufacturing and non-manufacturing sectors via the two key PMI surveys released by China's National Bureau of Statistics, to get a sense if the slowdown across China is stabilizing or, as some have suggested, rebounding. It did not: overnight the NBS reported that the manufacturing PMI remained unchanged in October at 49.8 missing consensus estimates of a modest rebound to 50.0, its third consecutive month in contraction territory.
Did The PBOC Just Exacerbate China's Credit & Currency Peg Time Bomb?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/31/2015 14:15 -0500China as the global Bubble’s focal point – the weak link yet, at the same time, the key marginal source of Bubble finance. China’s policy course appears to focus on two facets: to stabilize the yuan versus the dollar and to resuscitate Credit expansion. For better than two decades, similar policy courses were followed by myriad EM policymakers in hopes of sustaining financial and economic booms. Many cases ended in abject failure – often spectacularly. Why? Because when officials resort to such measures to sustain faltering Bubbles it generally works to only exacerbate systemic fragilities. For one, late-stage reflationary measures compound Credit system vulnerability while compounding structural impairment to the real economy. Secondly, central bank and banking system Credit-bolstering measures create liquidity that invariably feeds destabilizing “capital” and “hot money” outflows.



