Saturday, December 22, 2018

On this day in 1944,

Gen. McAullife Responds "NUTS!" 

to Nazi Request He Surrender Bastogne 

at Start of the Battle of the Bulge



Don't tell Bob Mueller:

Trump administration weaning Europe off Russian energy

To coin a term - Fake News:

CNN 2014 Journalist of the Year's Outrageous Lies About Pro-Trump Fergus, MN and Trump's Supporters

I'm shocked.

2014 CNN Journalist of the Year Fired for Faking Sources and News Stories

Including a 2017 story which accused Trump supporters of being racist and backward

Andrew McCarthy:

Americans will no longer support Washington’s incoherent Middle East adventurism.

There is nothing for America in Syria. We haven’t defeated ISIS by taking its territory, and it wouldn’t matter if we did because sharia-supremacist culture guarantees that a new ISIS will replace the current one. The names change, but the enemy remains the same. And if you want to fight that enemy in an elective war, the Constitution demands that the people give their consent through their representatives in Congress.

Wednesday, December 19, 2018

Jim Cramer: Fed Chair Jay Powell Is a Nightmare for President Trump and Stock Buyers

WSJ: Republican Women Stronger Supporters of Trump Than Republican Men


On this day in 1998, 20 years ago:

President Clinton Impeached For Lying to a Grand Jury and Obstructing Justice

"I did not have sexual relations with that woman, Ms. Lewinsky"

JOHN MCCAIN ASSOCIATE GAVE DOSSIER TO BUZZFEED

Cognitive Dissonance for Democrats:

Russians Fuel South Florida ‘Baby Boom’ for Birthright Citizenship

Gallup: Americans Say No. 1 Problem is 'Government,' No. 2 is 'Immigration'

The Federalist: The FBI’s conduct with Flynn is a troubling display of the government using its power against a citizen to achieve the effect it desired.


Victor Davis Hanson: We Are Witnessing a Soft Coup of the Trump Administration (Video)

Tuesday, December 18, 2018

The man who presaged Trumpism,

Pat Buchanan: Trump's China Policy Will Prevent U.S. Suicide By Appeasement

WSJ Agrees With Trump That Fed Should Pause Rate Hikes



Only 10 years ago.

The title of this book really ought to be “Too Big to Jail”.

The story of bankers who pyramided increasing risk into a failed business model which was developing so fast it evaded government review and regulation, and then almost sank the world economy, while bankrupting millions of good people and unalterably changing the lives of millions more. 
Martha Stewart went to jail for a process crime related to alleged insider trading, but not one of these S.O.B.s went to jail or was even indicted. 
A long but good read.

Monday, December 17, 2018

An Icelandic Volcano Caused 536 A.D. to be The Worst Year Ever To Be Alive

Grant's Almost Daily:
The Fed is Going to Drive the Stock Market Down


The spigots are off. On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve will conduct its final policy meeting of 2018, with a 25 basis point hike to the overnight funds rate the likely outcome; interest rate futures currently price 74% odds of policy tightening, down slightly from 78% two weeks ago. One interested observer is happy to provide chairman Jerome Powell with some free advice. This morning, Donald Trump shared his thoughts on Twitter: 

It is incredible that with a very strong dollar and virtually no inflation, the outside world blowing up around us, Paris is burning and China way down, the Fed is even considering yet another interest rate hike. Take the Victory!

It’s not just leveraged real estate-speculators turned commander-in-chief who are advocating a cessation of policy tightening, which is taking place not only through rate hikes (eight and counting since December 2015) but also the ongoing “QT” asset sales.  In today’s edition of The Wall Street Journal, former Fed governor Kevin Warsh and Duquesne Family Office LLC chairman Stanley Druckenmiller argue that the Fed needs to pump the brakes, particularly on QT:

The Fed’s balance sheet is where the money is. Yet it has provided little additional clarity on its balance-sheet plans since Chair Janet Yellen’s tenure. At a time of global quantitative tightening and uncertain economic prospects, the Fed’s silence on its asset holdings is contributing to the tumult. We were assured by policy makers that QE provided large benefits to the real economy. If so, won’t its reversal in the form of QT come with a cost? It can’t all be rainbows and unicorns.

Protestations by the executive branch, former colleagues and Wall Street luminaries aside, the Fed forges ahead.  Although securities held outright held steady last week at $3.896 trillion, $20 billion below the trailing four-week average, total balance sheet assets are down by 8.2% since the Fed began to run off its balance sheet in October 2017.  

The pace has been quickening. Thus, while Federal Reserve bank credit has declined by 7.9% over the past 12 months using the trailing four-week average, the contraction has accelerated to a 11.1% annualized rate over the past three months. Broad M2 money supply has grown by 3.9% over the past 12 months, but just 3.1% annualized since September.

Consequences of the liquidity drain are increasingly apparent, as the Druckenmiller/Warsh pair cites sharp recent drops in the banks (BKX Index is down 21% since late September and 14% in the last two weeks) and commodities (the CRB Index is down 11.6% since early October). In credit, the most speculative issues have been hammered, with the option-adjusted spread on the Bloomberg Barclays CCC and Below Index jumping to 934 basis points today from 619 basis points in early October. Today, the Financial Times reports that “not a single company has borrowed money through the $1.2 trillion U.S. high-yield corporate bond market this month.”  It would be the first time since November 2008 without any new high-yield supply.

The un-bullish turn has likewise put a dent in the leveraged loan category, with the FT reporting that two deals were scratched last week after major banks including Barclays and Wells Fargo were unable to locate buyers. Those failures were no outliers.  Bloomberg reports today that issuance of collateralized loan obligations (collections of loans that have been packaged and securitized) fell 25% year-over-year in the first half of December, accelerating from a 10% decline last month (for more on CLO’s, see the Sept. 7 edition of Grant’s).  
  
The broad reversal of financial conditions can indeed be laid at the feet of the Fed, according to David Rosenberg of Gluskin Sheff + Associates, Inc. At the spring 2018 Grant’s conference, Rosenberg told the audience that as the post-2008 bull run can be largely chalked up to the ultra-dovish policies of past Fed chairs Ben Bernanke and Janet Yellen, and investors should gird themselves for the opposite dynamic as monetary stimulus is withdrawn. 

We’ve never had a cycle where the stock market has done what it did in the context of such weak economic growth. If I took the ratios of what the stock market does benchmarked against what the economy does in nominal and real terms, this bull market and the S&P 500 would have stopped out at 1800, not 2800. The excess is central bank liquidity. The central banks added 1000 points. Not fundamentals. Central bank liquidity.

Now people say to me: No cycle ever dies of old age. I get that. But, they die at the hands of the central bank. The Fed. Each cycle has died at the hands of the Fed. Every bear market ended by the Fed. Every recession ended by the Fed. By the same token every bull market / expansion, the Fed has its thumb prints over every expansion. There is nothing more important, not fiscal policy, not trade policy. Nothing is more important for what we do than Fed liquidity. 

Slowly but surely, the pool is draining. 

On December 17, 1903, 115 years ago,

Wright Brothers Fly First Airplane 

at Kitty Hawk, N.C.



Christopher Steele Sworn Testimony: I Was Hired to Help Hillary Clinton Challenge the 2016 Election Results


I'm shocked.

93% of College Professors Don't Respect Trump or His Foreign Policy
Witches Offended that Trump Calls Mueller's Investigation a Witch Hunt

American Spectator: How the FBI pulled off a Mafia-style hit on Gen. Flynn

On this day in 1944,


On this day in 1862,

Gen. Grant Expels Jewish Cotton Speculators 

From His Military District (TN, MS & KY)