joi, 13 februarie 2014

Social Engagement Metrics That Matter - Measuring, Tracking, and Reporting FTW

Social Engagement Metrics That Matter - Measuring, Tracking, and Reporting FTW


Social Engagement Metrics That Matter - Measuring, Tracking, and Reporting FTW

Posted: 12 Feb 2014 03:33 PM PST

Posted by jennita

Let’s be real here, measuring your social efforts is a pain in the butt. I mean, there are tons of metrics to track, and data to look at, but actually knowing if you’re making an impact to the organization, that’s a bit trickier. Right? It’s simple to track followers and see which platforms send you traffic, but how do you know that you’re meeting your goals? How do you make sure everyone understands social’s impact on the organization?


Follower counts are boooooooring.

These are the types of questions I often hear when people are grasping with “proving their worth” or getting management and other team members on board with making social a focus. It’s so easy to get caught up in doing the things, that you sometimes forget to measure and understand why the things need to be done.

Today I want to walk you through the process we use here at Moz for measuring our social efforts. This is a process we’re constantly working to improve, and we have just recently added new metrics and changed our goals a bit. It’s something that you don’t do once, then set aside.

Social Media Goals

Before I dig into the specific metrics, it’s important to take a look at your business goals. At Moz, we use the OKR (Objectives and Key Results) system throughout the organization. This helps to ensure that we’re all measuring things in a similar way and that we’re all working toward meeting and impacting the company’s overall objectives.

Since social media is pretty top of the funnel, you’ll often have goals around increasing engagement and traffic to your site, or growing community and improving customer service, and not as much on increasing sales or subscriber numbers. Moz has always been a very customer/community centered organization, so while the Community team will always be focused on customer service and expanding the community, on a quarterly basis we additionally focus on helping meet the goals of the Marketing team as a whole.

Let’s take a look at one of these examples:

Marketing Objective: Increase Site Traffic, Engagement, and Customer Flow through Site Funnel

Key Result: Improve Non-paid traffic to the site from all sources by 25% by end of Q2

Social roadmap: Increase engagement with community by 5% on Social channels in order to increase traffic from social by 15%

Engagement Metrics That Matter

Ok, so you know how you want to use social media to reach goals for your organization. Engagement is a great goal, because it can impact the business by increasing traffic, growing brand awareness, talking with community members, showing your voice. But “engagement” isn’t a simple number like followers. It’s a fuzzy word we like to use to mean “interactions with your brand.” Plus, every social channel is completely different, and engagement isn’t the same for each, so how can you measure it? On top of that, how are you going to gather all the information? Which tools will you use, or do you have to go to each network to grab the info?

But what if I told you that actually all the social networks (including your blog!) really do have the same engagement metrics? Several years ago, Avinash Kaushik wrote a post where he touts the best social media metrics are Conversation, Amplification, Applause, and Economic value.

We’ve adopted this method of engagement tracking, and actually use this not only for our social sites, but also for engagement on the blog and in other areas of the site. Let me explain what each of these means for different platforms, and how they’re really all the same. :)

Conversation rate â€" This one is fairly straightforward in that it’s based on the number of conversations per post. On Twitter, this is replies to a tweet, or on Pinterest, Facebook, and Instagram it’s a comment on the pin, post, or photo.

Amplification rate â€" Any time a post is retweeted or re-shared, it’s being amplified. All the networks allow you to do this, so think of this one as the number of re-pins, retweets, or reshares of a particular post.

Applause rate â€" Every social network out there has an “easy” touch point to show appreciation, or applause, if you will. Twitter has favorites, Facebook has likes, Google+ has plusses, heck even most blogs (such as our own) have thumbs up or up-votes. So the Applause rate is based on the number of “likes” each post gets.

Economic value â€" This is the sum of short- and long-term revenue and cost savings. Now, I have to be honest, we don’t have the economic value part all worked out yet for the community side of things yet. But it will be a focus over the next few months to have things set up correctly.

Relative Engagement Rates â€" This is something that actually gets me all giddy. :D So, you have all these engagement metrics, but what do those numbers even mean? How can you compare the conversation rate on Facebook with the conversation rate on Instagram? This is where the relative rates come in, think of it as the average number of conversations happening per post, per follower (fan, encircle, etc.).

Think about it this way, using the relative engagement rates, you can start to compare followers to followers on different networks. Now, Facebook and Twitter (or Pinterest, or G+, or Instagram, etc.) are obviously not the same, but if you can determine the engagement rate per follower, per channel, you can then work to improve those rates accordingly.

This way, when you increase your follower count, you can also focus on sustaining (which is actually an improvement all on its own) or improving the engagement rate per follower. So you can show your boss or client, that not only have you increased followers, you’ve also increased engagement per follower. And at this point, the traffic to the site from social has probably increased as well.

Ok, these numbers aren’t rocket science, and honestly they’re not that hard to get, I mean it’s mostly math. But the very smart folks over at TrueSocialMetrics have made it super easy on all of us by essentially creating the tool that Avinash pleaded for in his initial post. (Also, bravo on seeing a need and making it happen!)

How to Track Them

As I mentioned previously, you could go about grabbing these numbers on your own and calculating them by hand… but why in the world would you do that when TrueSocialMetrics has already done all the work for you?

Your first step is to run over to TrueSocialMetrics and sign up for a free account. With the free plan you get 12 social networks and a month of data history. I personally prefer the “small” plan which is only $30/month and gives you a year of data history. (FYI, we have no affiliation with them, we’re just a happy customer!)

Once you sign up, you’ll add connections to all your social networks, including your blog, and they start calculating the data right away. The initial dashboard looks something like this:

Holy numbers Batman! Remember, right now we’re just at the point of tracking the data, we’ll make this look a bit prettier in the next step.

Here at Moz, we capture our metrics on a weekly basis, and then send a monthly email to the entire staff, showing how we did the previous month. We’ve toyed with a number of ways to show this data, and make it clear on what’s moving the needle.

Every Monday morning, Megan logs into TrueSocialMetrics and grabs the following numbers for each channel for the previous week, and adds them to our spreadsheet:

  • Posts
  • Replies
  • Shares/RTs
  • Favorites/Likes/Plusses
  • Conversation Rate
  • Amplification Rate
  • Applause Rate
  • Channel Growth
  • Visits from each channel

What I like about this is that you’re essentially using this for data storage, and anyone can do it. It’s not a method that only one person knows how to do, it’s a simple process of adding numbers to a spreadsheet. Then you’ll make something a bit easier to digest that you send around to the rest of the team, or your client.

How to Report It

Having the data and doing something with the data are two different things. Not only do you need to use the information to help meet your goals, but there are always other folks who are dying to know the ROI of what you do each day. So how can you take these metrics, and report them to the team in a way that is easily digestible. A way that shows performance over time, and helps everyone understand what’s going on from a social perspective.

Community Action Plan

The first thing we did, was to create a Community Action Plan, which is a quick and easy way to see where we’re at with reaching our goals at any given time. It shows our weekly KPIs, the baseline for each metric, the percent increase for this current period, our goal by the end of the period, and where we’re at with that goal.

On a weekly basis we grab the data, throw it in the spreadsheet, and then our action plan magically shows us how we’re doing against our goals. I <3 magic.

You can download a sample version of spreadsheet that we use for this here:

Sample Social Media Action Plan

Monthly email

In addition to having this easy-to-read dashboard, we also send out a monthly email to the entire staff which shows our engagement rates over the past 6 months, traffic from the social channels, as well as a few other community metrics we look at that aren’t social specific. We lovingly call this email the "Community Chronicle." :)

Here's a taste of what it looks like this:

Notice the downward spiral of Facebook engagement and traffic, while Twitter continues to soar? This is a trend we've been noticing for the past few months, ever since Facebook made some algo changes to their feeds that shows less and less updates from brands. *insert sad face here*

But this is exactly the kind of trend we want to know about, so we can react to it. We've been testing various ways of increasing engagement on Facebook, and we've seen a slight up-tick. We'll all surely be watching this over the next few months to see if we can get those numbers back up organically, or if we'll be forced to pay the man! The Facebook man that is.

What's next?

Well, now it's your turn to take action. Capturing the data is the easy part, the tough part is to do something with it. You'll need to decipher the trends, determine when to make changes, what works, and what doesn't work. Since it can be different for every organization, I'd love to see how you set up your action plans and if you add other metrics to it. If you do create one, send it over, I'll add a link in this post.

Social media can be a tough one to explain to the boss/client, but it doesn't have to be. Put it into simple terms and track it over time. Let me know how it goes!


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A Bouquet of Chips

 
 
 
 
 
 
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A Bouquet of Chips

While touring the Michigan Biotechnology Institute last Friday, President Obama viewed examples of a highly innovative potato breeding project, aimed at increasing nutritional value and disease resistance. That meant: potato chips!

See this and more in tomorrow's West Wing Week.

West Wing Peek: A Bouquet of Chips

 

 

  Top Stories

The Economic Case for Raising the Minimum Wage

Yesterday, President Obama signed an Executive Order to raise the minimum wage for federal contract workers to $10.10 an hour. This step is a smart business decision for the government, and will also give a boost to hardworking Americans struggling to make ends meet.

READ MORE

Behind the Scenes at the French State Dinner: See the Menu

Tuesday night, the President and First Lady hosted a state dinner in honor of President François Hollande of France. The French State Dinner menu and theme was inspired by the shared history and friendship between the United States and France.

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myRA: Helping Millions of Americans Save for Retirement

President Obama announced in his State of the Union address that he is directing the Department of the Treasury to create "myRA" -- a safe, simple, and affordable "starter" retirement savings account that will ultimately help millions of Americans begin to prepare for retirement.

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Seth's Blog : The problems you've got left...

 

The problems you've got left...

are probably the difficult ones.

We'd all like to find discount answers to our problems. Organizations, governments and individuals prefer to find the solution that's guaranteed to work, takes little time and even less effort.

Of course, the problems that lend themselves to bargain solutions have already been solved.

What we're left with are the problems that will take ridiculous amounts of effort, untold resources and the bravery to attempt something that might not work.

Knowing this before you start will help you allocate the right resources... or choose not to start at all--this problem, the one that won't be solved in a hurry, might not be worth the effort it's going to take. If it is, then pay up.

       

 

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miercuri, 12 februarie 2014

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis


Deflation Theory Reality Check: Why Inflation is Severely Understated; Feel Good Effect

Posted: 12 Feb 2014 12:43 PM PST

If you repeat something completely inane enough times, do people, even economic writers, believe it?

To understand the context of my question, please consider the Bloomberg article Price Slowdown for Cars, Baby Clothes Raises Fed Concerns by Michelle Jamrisko and Ilan Kolet.
Five years into the U.S. economic expansion, inflation shows little sign of picking up as prices rise more slowly for goods and services from automobiles to medical care, complicating the Federal Reserve's drive to guide the economy away from the precipice of deflation.

The personal consumption expenditures price index, minus food and energy costs, rose 1.2 percent in 2013, matching 2009 as the smallest gain since 1955. Of 27 categories of goods and services in the gauge, 18 showed smaller price increases over the past two years, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The slowdown has been broad-based, with durable goods such as autos, nondurables like clothing and services including health care all playing a role. Fed policy makers are on guard to keep such disinflation from morphing into outright deflation, a persistent drop in prices that prompts households to delay purchases in anticipation of even lower costs and leads companies to postpone investment and hiring.
Emphasis in red is mine.

Deflation Definition

In the following discussion, except where prefixed, the term "deflation" means a drop in consumer prices (even though that is a miserable definition).

I use that definition for point-of-discussion purposes only, simply to show the ridiculous nature of widely held beliefs.  

Deflation Theory

"A persistent drop in prices prompts households to delay purchases in anticipation of even lower costs" say the authors of the above article.

I have heard that theory expressed hundreds, if not thousands of times. I suggest a reality check.

Reality Check Questions

  1. If price of food drops will people stop eating?
  2. If the price of gasoline drops will people stop driving?
  3. If price of airline tickets drop will people stop flying?
  4. If the handle on your frying pan falls off or your blow-dryer breaks, will you delay making another purchase because you can get it cheaper next month?
  5. If computers, printers, TVs, and other electronic devices will be cheaper next year, then cheaper again the following year, will people delay purchasing electronic devices as long as prices decline?
  6. If your coat is worn out, are you inclined to wait another year if there are discounts now, but you expect even bigger discounts a year from now?
  7. Will people delay medical expenses if prices drop?
  8. If your child has a birthday next week, will you hold off buying him a present because the price of toys will be cheaper next month?
  9. If your lease is up and you have to move, can you wait six months in anticipation of better prices? Two months? One Month?
  10. If deflation theory is accurate, why are there huge lines at stores when prices drop the most?

Bonus Question


Other than meaningless examples like waiting a few days for known sales, can anyone come up with any consumer item that people will delay purchasing simply because prices are falling? 

Opposite View

Except in cases of extreme inflation or hyperinflation, I take the opposite view.

I propose people will delay purchases if prices are too high and/or they think they cannot afford something.

Take the worn-out coat as an example. If prices are too high, some will consider making that coat last another year.  Perhaps they get the coat, but not the hat they also wanted.

Unless wages keep up, people can only spend what they make or what they can get credit for.

Where's the Evidence?
 
I cannot come up with a single consumer item that people will routinely delay purchasing simply because prices are falling. Can you?

Is there any hard evidence that shows people significantly delay purchases (other than asset purchases) when prices fall? (Please don't respond with insignificant delays ahead of pre-announced sales or year-end car clearances).

Even if people did delay consumer purchases (which they don't), why would it matter? Can People delay forever?

Asset Prices

Asset prices, especially financial assets and real property, are another story.

People, especially those in debt, will indeed delay purchasing real estate if they expect better prices next year. History also shows people are reluctant to buy stocks and bonds if they fear lower prices.

Both of those are significant, but neither is represented in the CPI.

Corollary: People like bull markets in equities and bonds no matter how ridiculous the price.

PEs to Consider

Amazon: AMZN : The PE of Amazon is 592, Valuation is $160 Billion
Linked In: LNKD : PE of Linked In is 837, Valuation is $23 Billion
Facebook : FB: Facebook PE is 106, Valuation is $165  Billion
Priceline : PCLN : PE of Priceline is 36, Valuation is $64 Billion
Hertz : HTZ: PE of Hertz is 37, Valuation is $12 Billion
Starbucks : SBUX : PE of Starbucks is 483, Valuation is $57 Billion 
Boston Beer (Samuel Adams) : SAM : PE of Boston Beer is 43, Valuation is $3 Billion

I could go on and on but I won't.

At current earnings, investors in Amazon will have to wait 592 years for a positive return on earnings. More realistically, they would have to wait forever because Amazon does not pay a dividend.

In the above list, the only company that pays a dividend is Starbucks, and it is a paltry 1%.

The only thing those companies have going for them is investors are willing to bid up asset prices to preposterous heights.

Why Inflation is Severely Understated

Krugman and others lord it all over those who predicted massive price inflation. I did too, and still do!

Along with Krugman, I laugh at those expecting a huge outbreak of "price inflation". Unlike Krugman, I understand what is going on.

The fact is, we currently have massive inflation. However, instead of inflation being visible in the form of higher consumer prices, inflation is visible in the form of asset price bubbles.

To see inflation, all you have to do is open your eyes and look at lofty valuations of stocks and bonds.

Deflation Coming Up

Don't hold your breath waiting for a surge in "inflation". We already had it. Instead, expect various equity and corporate bond bubbles to implode.

With the busting of various bubbles, asset prices will drop, and so will credit marked-to-market on any loans banks made on those asset bubble.  So rather than expecting a huge surge in inflation, I expect deflation in terms of credit and prices.

Misguided Fed Policy

In an absurd attempt to prevent price deflation on consumer goods, the Fed has spawns asset bubble after asset bubble, each with a greater amplitude.

Given exceptionally poor jobs and wage growth, the very thing consumers need to survive is falling prices!

Yet, the Fed tries to prevent just that, all based on the idiotic premise "A persistent drop in prices prompts households to delay purchases in anticipation of even lower costs".

Feel Good Effect

Bubbles make people feel wealthy, and that exuberance spawns all sorts of poor economic decisions about what people can afford.

When asset bubbles collapse (as they always do), that's when people finally realize they spent too much and pull in their shopping horns. 

Those expecting a huge pickup in price inflation, a spike in US GDP, or a big boom in housing, all based on misguided perceptions of "pent-up housing demand" or equally misguided theories about "excess reserves", fail to understand how Fed boom-bust and bank-bailout policies preclude such outcomes.

Further Deflation Discussion

For further deflation discussion please see ...


Irony

The Fed's attempt to spur inflation in a deflationary world causes the very thing the Fed fears most (an economic slowdown caused by a collapse in asset prices). In turn, a collapse in the valuation of assets causes bank losses and reduces desirability and even ability of banks to lend.

The Fed is fighting the wrong battle. It's a collapse in asset prices (not consumer prices) that will restrict bank lending and cause consumers to hold off on consumer purchases.

The only correct approach is to not spawn bubbles in the first place. (Please see Bubblicious Questions: What Causes Economic Bubbles? When Do Bubbles Burst? Can the Fed Prevent Bubbles?)

Return of Deflation
 
The current "feel-good" effect will not last forever, look out below when it wears off. Deflation, in terms of consumer prices, asset prices, and credit will return.

Misguided Fed policy ensures that outcome.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com

Rethinking "Paper Tiger"

Posted: 11 Feb 2014 11:45 PM PST

Last Friday, in "Paper Tiger" I expressed the viewpoint that the German constitutional court caved in to the ECB, then bowed down before the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg.

It's time to reconsider. Here are three good reasons:

  1. AfD, the German euroskeptic party was thrilled with the ruling
  2. The nannycrats are furious
  3. The monetarists scream paralysis

Anything that annoys the nannycrats and monetarists while pleasing the euroskeptics cannot possibly be all bad. Let's take a look at what others said about the ruling.

What German Court Ruling Means for the Euro

Here are a few snips from the Spiegel Online article What German Court Ruling Means for the Euro
Germany's Constitutional Court ruling last Friday marks a significant escalation in efforts to rein in the European Central Bank. The ruling's message? Either the European Court of Justice has to stop bond purchases or German justices will.

Last Friday, when six justices on Germany's Constitutional Court cast doubt on European efforts to save the euro, the man who initiated the case was sitting obliviously at his desk. It was only when his secretary burst excitedly into his office that Peter Gauweiler understood that his case had created legal history.

Gauweiler, a member of German parliament who also has a legal firm located in Munich, managed to convince a majority of justices on the court's second senate that the ECB's program to save the European common currency is contrary to European law. The court referred the case onward to the European Court of Justice in Luxembourg, a first for the Karlsruhe-based German court. "Karlsruhe has shown ECB President Mario Draghi what a bazooka really is," Gauweiler crowed.

Gauweiler is likely the only German parliamentarian for whom the ruling is cause for such elation. The case regarding the legality of ECB efforts to assist ailing euro-zone member states has been ongoing for more than a year -- and Friday's move to refer the issue onward to Luxembourg has triggered concern and impatience among politicians in Berlin and the rest of Europe.

Sending the case to Luxembourg only appears to be an act of European conviction at first glance. In truth, it is nothing less than a final reckoning with the crisis-management strategy pursued by the ECB. There can be no doubt about it: The Constitutional Court is threatening to cause trouble.

In a worst-case scenario, the Constitutional Court could forbid Berlin from contributing to efforts to save the euro or even force Germany to leave the currency zone entirely.

Clemens Furst, head of the Center for European Economic Research, calls last Friday's ruling a "thunderbolt." The German court, he said, has made it clear that it finds OMT to be extremely problematic. "It is a clear signal," he says.

Hans-Werner Sinn, the euro-skeptic head of the Munich-based Ifo Institute, believes that the German court's position "will not remain without consequences for ECB monetary policies." Furthermore, the ruling "will strengthen the position of euro critics and the general skepticism Germans have of the ECB."

Politicians in Berlin, by contrast, are furious. "Why not just go ahead and continually review everything the government does?" snapped one conservative. He says the referral to the European court could slow euro-zone policy for the foreseeable future.

Of course, members of AfD are extremely pleased with last Friday's ruling. "I am enormously satisfied with the decision," says party head Bernd Lucke. "Finally, a court has found that the ECB's bond-buying program is a clear violation of European law." He adds that the ruling provides "an important boost for the campaign."

It is also a clear indication that Germany's highest court is extremely skeptical of the ECB. Draghi's 2012 announcement that the ECB would embark on unlimited sovereign bond purchases from ailing euro-zone member states, the court found, is incompatible with European law. The ruling notes that OMT "exceeds the mandate" of the ECB and "encroaches on the responsibility of the member states for economic policy." Furthermore, it finds that the purchasing of sovereign bonds on secondary markets represents a "circumvention" of the prohibition against direct state financing.

The finding of the German Constitutional Court, say European central bankers, is even more critical than the skepticism voiced internally. The justices, it is felt, would likely forbid instruments such as Quantitative Easing as well.

They could be right. The Karlsruhe justices feel stronger than ever. For the first time, they dared to do what they had been threatening to do for years: They branded a European decision as ultra vires and thus found it to be inconsistent with the German constitution. Sending this finding to a European court has far-reaching implications for the court's reputation and authority: "The ruling will now be translated into the 23 other official EU languages and sent to all EU member states," one Constitutional Court insider noted with gratification.
ECB Paralysed by German Court Decision as Deflation Threatens

Ambrose Evans-Pritchart at the Telegraph claims ECB Paralysed by German Court Decision as Deflation Threatens
Last week's 'thunderbolt' ruling on eurozone rescue policies by Germany's top court marks a serious escalation of Europe's governance crisis and may ultimately force Germany to withdraw from the euro, the country's most influential magazine has warned.

A sweeping report by Der Spiegel said the court ruling amounts to a full-blown showdown between Germany and the European Central Bank over the methods to shore up southern Europe's debt markets.

"It is nothing less than a final reckoning with the crisis-management strategy pursued by the ECB. The German justices insist that the German constitution sets limits on the ECB's crisis strategy. In a worst-case scenario, the Court could forbid Berlin from contributing to efforts to save the euro or even force Germany to leave the currency zone entirely," it said.

The warning came as market analysts began to see the darker implications of the ruling, which was initially seen as a green light for the ECB's bond operations.

Marcel Fratzscher, head of the DIW Institute, said the ruling greatly constrains the ECB. "A central bank must have unlimited scope for conducting monetary policy. If this prerogative is limited, it undermines credibility. The constitutional court has created fresh uncertainty with this decision," he said.

The German court in Karlsruhe said there were grounds for concluding that the ECB's back-stop plan for Italy and Spain - known as the OMT - breaches the ECB's mandate and violates the treaty prohibition on "monetary financing" of budgets. It did not address QE as such, but that distinction is becoming irrelevant in Germany.

The German court said the ECB's actions are probably "Ultra Vires". If so, German institutions such as the Bundesbank are prohibited from taking part.

The ECB can in theory carry out rescue policies without the Bundesbank. Whether this would have any market credibility in a crisis is doubtful.
Germany's Constitutional Court has Strengthened the Eurosceptics

Financial Times writer Wolfgang Münchau says Germany's Constitutional Court has Strengthened the Eurosceptics.
When the first headlines came out on Friday morning, it looked as if the German constitutional court had caved in. It decided to pass the case against Mario Draghi's "whatever-it-takes" bond-buying programme to the European Court of Justice. In doing so it seemed to have washed its hands of a fiendishly difficult case. It looked as though the president of the European Central Bank had been fully vindicated over his outright monetary transactions, the official name of his programme to save the euro.

But this interpretation is wrong. On Friday the German plaintiffs who brought the case were celebrating. It is not hard to see why. If you read past the first 15 pages of procedural jargon, you find the court concludes that OMT violates the German constitution. It accuses the ECB of making a power grab by extending its own mandate. It says the scheme endangers the underpinnings of the eurozone rescue programmes. Worse, it says OMT undermined deep principles of democracy. Were it to be used, it would deprive the German parliament of its fiscal sovereignty by forcing it to accept any losses the scheme generated. The ruling considers OMT to be debt monetisation, whereby a central bank prints money to finance sovereign debt. It is hard to think of any act short of a military coup that could violate so many important constitutional principles all at once.

I disagree with the ruling, as did two of the justices, who wanted the case dismissed. One of them angrily accused the court of overstepping its mandate. This was a fight from start to finish. The eurosceptics won.

What irks me is the you-deserve-what-you-get attitude.

If you look back to all the previous German constitutional court cases on the euro, the answer was always a variant of "Yes, but". This ruling was the legal equivalent of "No, no, no" – with one important addition. The court is asking the ECJ to clarify important points of European law, including whether OMT is covered by the ECB's mandate; whether OMT needs to be capped; whether it violates the sovereignty of national parliaments; and whether it constitutes monetary financing of government debt.

Most commentators think the ECJ will side with the ECB. I am not sure. The ECJ, too, is hard to predict. It might not take the case; or it might take it and let it ferment. If the ECJ were to side with the ECB, we would end up with a "constitutional crisis", whereby German constitutional law directly contradicts EU law. The German court left no doubt that the Bundesbank and other German institutions were bound by the constitution. They also made clear they were not letting go of this case. The ruling gives the distinct impression that the judges are referring the case not up to a higher court but down to a lower court.

What happens now? The OMT is a phantom programme. It was never triggered. Then again, it may have already served its purpose: fooling investors into believing there is a backstop when there is not. The scheme was never formalised into European law. There is no OMT directive, nor will there be.

All this leads me to conclude that the immediate impact of the ruling is not so much that this case is suspended but that the OMT is suspended. I cannot see how it could be triggered in practice given such explicit condemnation by Germany's highest court. I also expect it to strengthen the political position of eurosceptics in Germany and beyond. Watch out for Alternative für Deutschland, the new anti-euro party. As it prepares to campaign for May's European parliament elections, it can claim the constitutional court is on its side.

At the very best, the ruling will make life even less certain.
You Deserve What You Get


Those looking for a bonus 4th reason to be pleased with this ruling, need only note that Münchau seems furious, complaining "What irks me is the you-deserve-what-you-get attitude."

I nearly always find Wolfgang Münchau's analysis interesting. However, I seldom agree with his conclusions about what is best.

In this case, the nannycrats seriously deserve to be punished for their arrogance, comeuppance, and general disregard for laws of all sorts simply because it suits their purpose.

Half a Tiger

My initial reaction was the court punted. I now wonder if they did so on purpose. Regardless, half a tiger is better than a kitten or an ostrich. The court could have ruled OMT was valid or simply passed on the case.

The euroskeptics are emboldened and I sense an outright massacre of nannycrats in the May parliamentary elections.

Things are looking up, unless you are a nannycrat.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


How to Cook an Egg Inside a Condom

Posted: 12 Feb 2014 09:33 AM PST

If you want to make a boiled omelette but don't have a bag, you can use a usual condom. It works perfect.
















Busty Weather Girl Jackie Guerrido

Posted: 12 Feb 2014 09:24 AM PST

Sexy photos of Jackie Guerrido, a Puerto Rican television weather forecaster. By the way, she is 41 years old.