Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
- Former Australia Prime Minister Chastises EU on Securing Borders, Economic Migration; Mish for President Review
- Dirty Secrets, Hush Money, Conviction of Former US House Speaker Dennis Hastert; Was Justice Served? Could Gold or Bitcoin Have Helped?
- Courage to Act; Reflections on Fed Hubris; What if Whatever it Takes is Not Enough? Fed Troika?
- 3rd Quarter Advance GDP Estimate +1.5%; December Hike Odds Up to 46.5%
- Final 3rd Quarter GDPNow Forecast vs. Consensus Estimates Ahead of 3rd Quarter GDP Release
Posted: 29 Oct 2015 10:58 PM PDT In a speech I almost completely agree with, former Australia prime minister Tony Abbott chastised the EU in an address at the Second Annual Margaret Thatcher Lecture in London on October 27, 2015. Tony Abbott told the EU to shut its borders because "a country that cannot control its borders starts to lose control of itself". The Sydney Morning Herald has the Transcript of Tony Abbott's Controversial Speech at the Margaret Thatcher Lecture. Here are a few select passages, emphasis mine. All countries that say "anyone who gets here can stay here" are now in peril, given the scale of the population movements that are starting to be seen. There are tens – perhaps hundreds – of millions of people, living in poverty and danger who might readily seek to enter a Western country if the opportunity is there.Rock Solid Speech There are parts of Abbott's speech I disagree with, but everything above is rock solid. Mish Proposal The selected text of Abbott's speech is remarkably similar to my own proposal made on Wednesday in Austria Announces Fence With Slovenia; Irony of German Whine; Cascading Fences; Mish Proposed Strategy. Origin of the Crisis The origin of this mess is two-fold.
The free handouts from Germany, Sweden and others bought the crisis to where we are now. It would help if Syria was stable, even under a leader we do not like. But Obama will have no part of that. Mish Proposed Strategy
US and EU bureaucrats have done none of the above. Abbot made his speech on October 27. I made my proposal on October 28, but I was not aware of the lecture or Abbott's speech when I wrote my proposal. Changes After hearing Abbott's speech would I change anything? Yes. I would change point 3 to "Eliminate the free handouts entirely." Unrelated to Abbott's speech is a point I intended to make, but didn't. I now offer point 6: Halt all US support for alleged "moderate" Al Qaeda rebels. Instead, arm the Kurds now fighting ISIS. The Kurds are the only ones doing a reasonable job against ISIS. US backed "moderates" have handed their weapons over to ISIS and in some cases joined ISIS outright. Point 6, in conjunction with point 2 will help stabilize both Iraq and Syria, and that is something that is desperately needed. Mish for President Review With that six point foreign policy proposal, I once again throw my hat into the Republican debate. For the rest of my proposals, please see Mish for President: Officially Throwing My Hat Into the Ring; 11 Questions, 11 Answers. Mike "Mish" Shedlock |
Posted: 29 Oct 2015 02:11 PM PDT Reuters reports Ex-House Speaker Hastert Pleads Guilty in Hush-Money Case. Former U.S. House Speaker Dennis Hastert pleaded guilty on Wednesday to a federal financial crime in a hush-money case stemming from allegations of sexual misconduct, marking the dramatic downfall of a once powerful politician.Sleazebag Hypocrite Dennis Hastert is without a doubt a sleazebag of disgustingly high magnitude. He is also a flaming hypocrite. Hastert was among the Republican leaders who hounded Bill Clinton for his sexual misconduct in the White House. Hastert voted to impeach Clinton. It is very tough to defend sleazebag hypocrites, but one still must ask the key question: Was justice served? MarkeyWatch author Brett Arends offers this opinion: Why Dennis Hastert's Conviction is an Outrage. If you aren't outraged by what just happened to "disgraced" former House Speaker Dennis Hastert, you're not paying attention. No, it doesn't matter if you think he's a raging hypocrite. No, it doesn't matter even if you think he's a personal or political sleazebag.Speculation After all these years, someone would have to have mighty strong evidence to blackmail a person for $3.5 million. In my opinion, a blackmail of such magnitude would require written evidence (ex. signed love notes to a student), and possibly an out-of-wedlock child. That's just my speculation, albeit quite logical. But even if so, one can ask: Why are we going after people spending their own money, but not those engaged in illegal blackmail? Could Gold or Bitcoin Have Helped? Arends wrote "gold is essentially exempt from these financial regulations." Well, not really. Arends is wrong. There are gift laws and gift taxes. The IRS explains in Frequently Asked Questions on Gift Taxes. What is considered a gift? Any transfer to an individual, either directly or indirectly, where full consideration (measured in money or money's worth) is not received in return. Pay particular attention to the the notion of getting "one's money's worth in return". The gift exclusion was $11,000 between 2002-2005, $12,000 between 2006-2008, $13,000 between 2009-2012, and $14,000 since 2013. Who pays the gift tax? The donor is generally responsible for paying the gift tax. Under special arrangements the donee may agree to pay the tax instead. Thus, even if those hush payments were considered a "gift", Hastert violated gift laws unless he could convince the court that by hushing someone up, he got his "money's worth". If Hastert did indeed get his "money's worth" then it is the recipient, not Hastert who violated tax laws. There are a lot of questions here: Is blackmail a gift, or payment for services? Was justice served? If so, for the right reason? If blackmail is payment for services, why aren't they going after the recipient? Finally, gold could have helped, not in a legal sense, but rather in the sense it likely would not have been caught. Mike "Mish" Shedlock |
Courage to Act; Reflections on Fed Hubris; What if Whatever it Takes is Not Enough? Fed Troika? Posted: 29 Oct 2015 11:49 AM PDT This past week, Ben Bernanke was in London promoting his book "Courage to Act". Today, Albert Edwards at Societe Generale pinged me with his thoughts. Edwards writes ... Ben Bernanke is in London to publicise his book 'The Courage to Act'. Although the various open events would have been fascinating, I thought it best not to attend. I would not have been able to control myself. In a repeat of the protest at the April ECB press conference I would have probably stormed the stage, thrown confetti money at him and been unceremoniously dragged out by security. But speaking to people who were there and reading the pre-vetted Q&A on the web, reminded me just how overconfident central bankers are to their very core – even after their actions are clearly ruinous. Bernanke again paraded his lack of insight of the Fed's leading role in causing the 2008 crisis. Indeed he was self-congratulatory about the Fed's success in averting another Great Depression, not accepting that they almost actually caused it! Central bankers are doomed to repeat the same mistake until they acknowledge their role in the last crisis and stop blaming everybody else. Unfortunately it now appears from recent comments that ECB President Mario Draghi is also demonstrating the same hubris. Indeed it is becoming clear that ECB QE is already failing.Private Lending Edwards cites private sector lending as evidence of ECB failure. The goal of the ECB was to spur private lending and increase inflation. The ECB succeeded at neither, but it did create huge, destabilizing asset bubbles, as did the Fed. Reader Comments Reader Randy pinged me this morning with a question: "Have you read Bernanke's book yet? Seriously Mish, I've never witnessed someone willingly display such hubris in my life. And it's scary as hell." No, I haven't read the book and do not intend to. I do not want one dime going to Bernanke. Fed Troika In a blog response to Fed Drops Risk Warnings, Opens Door for December Hike: Who's the Fed Fooling? You, the Bond Market or Itself? Reader John, offered these comments. I watched Ben Bernanke today at the London Pimco Investment Summit. His comments were surprisingly frank: It takes ~80k jobs created a month to maintain unemployment, and if the two jobs reports between now and the December meeting are of the order of 150,000 or more the Fed should/will hike.Stanley Fischer Vice-Chairman Background With those comments (thanks John!), inquiring minds may be interested in the background of Stanley Fischer. On June 14, 2014 Forbes explained Why The Fed's New Vice Chairman Will Be A Disaster For the U.S. Economy. The U.S. Senate finally confirmed former Bank of Israel governor Stanley Fischer as vice chairman of the Federal Reserve on Thursday. As the second-most influential Fed board member, Fischer will play a key role in advising and assisting Fed chairwoman Janet Yellen.Hubris Coupled with Stupidity Ben Bernanke is nothing but a self-promotional charlatan. Contrary to the title of his book, it did not take courage to act, it took courage to do nothing! It also takes courage to admit mistakes. Bernanke failed twice. Instead of letting excesses settle in a painful, but short-term fashion, wiping out excesses and clearing out the bank CEOs who contribute to the problem, Bernanke bailed out the banks and here we are back in an even bigger asset bubble than we had prior to the great recession. Fed sponsored boom-bust cycles clearly have increasing amplitudes and troughs. Does that represent "courage" or "stupidity"? I strongly suggest the latter. Mike "Mish" Shedlock |
3rd Quarter Advance GDP Estimate +1.5%; December Hike Odds Up to 46.5% Posted: 29 Oct 2015 10:08 AM PDT The third quarter advance (initial) GDP estimate came in at 1.5% a bit under the Econoday Consensus of 1.7%, a bit over the Atlanta Fed GDPNow Forecast of 1.1%, and well below the Blue Chip consensus of 2.1%. Steady domestic spending helped to prop up GDP growth in the third-quarter which came in at an annualized 1.5 percent, just shy of expectations. Final sales rose a very respectable 3.0 percent in the quarter in a gain that points to underlying momentum for the fourth quarter. Both residential and nonresidential investment slowed in the third quarter with both net exports and especially inventories also pulling down GDP. The price index came in a little lower than expected at plus 1.2 percent.Final GDPNow Forecast for 3rd Quarter December Hike Odds Up to 46.5% This is a muddling along estimate, signifying nothing has changed. In light of the Fed's complete reversal yesterday, muddling through was enough to send the CME Fedwatch December rate hike odds to 46.5%. click on chart for sharper image For discussion of the Fed's complete reversal yesterday to a much more hawkish viewpoint, please see Fed Drops Risk Warnings, Opens Door for December Hike: Who's the Fed Fooling? You, the Bond Market or Itself? Mike "Mish" Shedlock |
Final 3rd Quarter GDPNow Forecast vs. Consensus Estimates Ahead of 3rd Quarter GDP Release Posted: 29 Oct 2015 12:23 AM PDT The initial 3rd Quarter GDP release is due at 8:30AM on Thursday. Inquiring minds may be interested in the GDPNow forecast vs. the Blue Chip estimates vs. the Bloomberg Consensus estimate. GDPNow vs. Blue Chip Consensus Bloomberg Econoday Consensus
If you are up in time, place your bets. Bear in mind, GDP is so heavily revised, we will not know the true winner for another two to three months at the earliest. The "preliminary" winner will be announced at 8:30 AM. Bets taken until 8:26:30. Mike "Mish" Shedlock |
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