marți, 19 ianuarie 2016

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


The Most Ridiculous Moments To Ever Happen On The NYC Subway

Posted: 19 Jan 2016 02:40 PM PST

If you plan on traveling on the the New York City subway anytime soon, just be ready, it gets weird.


















Behind The Scenes Photos Of Leonardo DiCaprio's Makeup From The Revenant

Posted: 19 Jan 2016 01:44 PM PST

It took a lot of work to make Leonardo DiCaprio look like he had been mauled by a bear in "The Revenant." This is how it was done.














Seth's Blog : Deconstructing urgent vs. important



Deconstructing urgent vs. important

A six-year-old who throws a tantrum and refuses to go to school is escalating into the urgent.

Going to school every day is important.

Mollifying an angry customer is urgent, building systems and promises that keep customers from getting angry is important.

Killing the bugs in the kitchen is urgent, putting in weatherstripping to keep them out for the long haul is important (as is avoiding carcinogens).

Fifteen years ago, Elian Gonzales was at the center of a perfect media storm. It was an urgent issue, one that involved heads of state. But it wasn't nearly as important as eventually normalizing relations and the well-being of millions of people.

In fact, breaking news of any kind is rarely important. 

Important means: long-term, foundational, coherent, in the interest of many, strategic, efficient, positive...

If you take care of important things, the urgent things don't show up as often. The opposite is never true.

Let's start with this: The purpose of CNN's BREAKING NEWS posture (caps intentional) isn't to create a better-informed citizenry. It's to make money.

The reason that tech sites, stock sites, scandal rags and others attract attention is because it's fun. It's emotionally engaging to be involved in a story when we don't know how it's going to turn out. When the story is unfolding, when it's breaking, we become emotionally connected to it.

And so the BBC devotes plenty of air time talking to someone at the location of a plane crash, even though he doesn't have a clue about what just happened. Because he might. Because we are there.

Unless you're a day trader, though, this drama of seeing the news unfold right now (italics intentional) is not going to help you make better decisions--in fact, it's going to make your decisions worse. It's also unlikely to make you happier. Or smarter. We're more likely to be afraid of terrorism than long-term atmosphere change, even though it's clear that the latter kills and injures far more people than the former.

The news we consume changes us. Not just the news manufactured by CNN, but the news manufactured by our boss, our investors, our customers.

Our choice, then, is to decide whether we want to engage in the hobby of living through other people's breaking news instead of focusing on what's actually important.

       

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luni, 18 ianuarie 2016

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis


Not Satisfied: First Time Ever, Majority in U.S. Now Dissatisfied With Security From Terrorism

Posted: 18 Jan 2016 04:43 PM PST

Here's a Gallup Poll headline that plays straight into Donald Trump's hands: Majority in U.S. Now Dissatisfied With Security From Terrorism.



Trends in Satisfaction

  • 2012: 72% Satisfied
  • 2013: 67% Satisfied
  • 2014: 69% Satisfied
  • 2015: 59% Satisfied
  • 2016: 43% Satisfied

I have played this before but it's an all-time classic hit.



I can't get no satisfaction. Can you?

Mike "Mish" Shedlock

Full of Bull: Wall Street Analysts' S&P 500 Predicted Gains vs. Actual Gains 2001-2015

Posted: 18 Jan 2016 12:02 PM PST

Analyzing the Forecasters

How overoptimistic are Wall Street forecasts year in and year out?

Salil Mehta, business statistics professor at Georgetown University addresses that question on his "Statistical Ideas" blog: Strategists Full of Bull.

Mehta collected 186 public forecasts from 1998-2015 of the annual ritual of making market projections for the year ahead.

Firms included JPMorgan, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, Merrill Lynch, Bear Stearns, Lehman, Morgan Stanley, Prudential, UBS, AG Edwards, Bank of America, etc. Not every company made a forecast every year. Some of the firms are now extinct.

Data primarily comes from Barron's as far back in time as continuously available. For a couple years, when Barron's data wasn't easily available, Mehta used market prediction made in USA Today's or similar surveys.

Forecasters Full of Bull

Results were no better than a coin toss as to whether the S&P came in above or below the average forecast.

Nonetheless, every year had one thing in common: Not once did a consensus predict a down year.

On average, forecasts were wildly bullish, even with the gains in recent years.

In his analysis, Mehta focused primarily on distribution and standard deviations. Some may find his dispersion charts confusing. To his credit, Mehta made his Analyst Forecast Data available for others to analyze and I took him up on it.

Data prior to 2001 was for the Dow. I used years 2001-2015 in my analysis so the numbers are consistent line to line.

In the table below, S&P 500 projections are the average of all the analysts making calls for that year.

S&P 500 Predicted Gains vs. Actual Gains

DatePredicted S&PPredicted Gain%Actual S&PActual Gain%Gain Difference
2001169728.56%1148-13.03%-41.59%
2002127811.28%880-23.34%-34.63%
2003101915.81%111226.36%10.56%
200411331.92%12128.99%7.07%
200512573.69%12482.97%-0.72%
200613729.93%141813.62%3.70%
200715197.11%14683.53%-3.59%
2008164011.75%903-38.49%-50.23%
2009104515.77%111523.48%7.71%
2010123911.09%125812.83%1.73%
201113739.16%12580.00%-9.16%
201213557.73%142613.35%5.63%
201315629.57%184829.59%20.03%
201419777.00%205911.42%4.42%
201522097.26%2044-0.73%-7.99%
201622208.61%



15-Year Results

  • Actual gains were negative 4 times, zero 1 time, positive 10 times.
  • Analysts overestimated the actual result 7 times and underestimated results 8 times. That's a coin toss. What follows shows distinct bullish bias.
  • Analysts projected gains 100% of the time.
  • Spectacular misses (30% or more) were all in down years.
  • The average year-to-year projected gain over 15 years was 9.85%.
  • The average actual gain over 15 years was 4.75% (slightly less than half projection).

2016 Projections

CompanyS&P 500 ProjectionProjected % Gain
Federated Investors250022.31%
JPMorgan22007.63%
Barclays22007.63%
Citi22007.63%
Columbia22007.63%
Morgan Stanley21756.41%
Black Rock21756.41%
Prudential225010.08%
Goldman Sachs21002.74%
Bank of America ML22007.63%

2016 Analysis

For 2016, five out of ten companies predicted the S&P would end the year at 2200. Is that the magic number?

Goldman Sachs dared to be significantly different on the low side with a +2.74% forecast. Federated Investors projects a whopping +22.31% gain.

As typical, no company forecasts a decline.

Results year-to-date through January 17: -8.02%.

Don't worry, it's early.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock

Hollande Declares "Economic Emergency" to Save Jobs - His; Mish Proposal to Create French Jobs

Posted: 18 Jan 2016 10:46 AM PST

Emergency Effort to Save Hollande's Job

With a national election 15 months away and unemployment not falling, a crisis in France emerged: French president Francois Hollande's own job is at risk.

Having  promised to step down as president if unemployment in France fails to drop this year, Hollande took the necessary action.

He declared a state of emergency to save jobs, namely his.

Hollande Declares State of Emergency

Please consider Hollande Outlines Jobs Plan to Tackle Economic 'Emergency'
François Hollande has returned to traditional leftwing tenets for a last-ditch plan to cut persistently high unemployment and salvage his chances of re-election next year, saying France is in an economic "state of emergency".

The measures, which the president detailed in a speech on Monday, involve the creation of 500,000 vocational training schemes, additional subsidies for small companies and a programme to boost apprenticeships.

"We have to act so that growth becomes more robust and job creation more abundant," Mr Hollande said in an address to unions and business leaders.

Since 2012, when Mr Hollande came to power, more than 600,000 people have joined the ranks of the unemployed at a time when joblessness has decreased in most of the other large European economies. Despite recovering margins, companies are still hesitant to hire workers.

Under Monday's announcement, which takes effect immediately, companies with fewer than 250 workers will receive a €2,000 payout for hiring youths and unemployed people on low salaries for contracts lasting more than six months. Temporary tax breaks, announced in 2014, will become permanent, Mr Hollande said.

A package of liberalising reforms passed in parliament last year, spearheaded by Emmanuel Macron, the reformist economy minister, has not spurred employment significantly. Doubts are mounting over Mr Macron's ability to push through additional reforms this year.
Training Schemes

Nicolas Lecaussin, head of Institute for Research in Economic and Fiscal Issues, a liberal think-tank, described the new measures as "old recipes". Mr Lecaussin added: "Training schemes are controlled by unions and efforts to boost apprenticeships have failed repeatedly over the years. As always when presidential elections loom, we're entering a phase of public spending increases."

How to Create Jobs

The primary reason French companies will not hire workers is that it's so damn hard to get rid of them later if they do.

Add to that mountains of regulations including inane laws that tell businesses when they can or cannot open the doors.

If Hollande wants to create jobs, this is what he needs to do.

  1. Make it easier for businesses to fire workers.
  2. Let any business that wants to do so, open the doors on Sunday.
  3. Reduce unemployment benefits.
  4. Get rid of countless regulations telling businesses what they can and cannot do.
  5. Get rid of tariffs and subsidies. 
  6. Cut taxes, both corporate and personal. Become a pro-business country. 

Points number one and two would be a good start. But even if Hollande stopped with those two points, the socialists would fire him.

Hollande's proposals prove he is not really interested in doing what it takes to create jobs. Rather, he only wants to do what is necessary to save his.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock

Rumors on Mark-to-Market Accounting and Loan Loss Provisions: What's the Real Story?

Posted: 18 Jan 2016 12:54 AM PST

Energy-Related Losses Mount

Bank loan loss impairments related to the energy sector are set to rise rapidly.

Banks have made drilling loans to companies that are only profitable at oil prices above $50. And the price of oil just closed under $30 for the first time in about 12 years. 

Diving Into Rumors

Zero Hedge has an interesting post on Saturday entitled Dallas Fed Quietly Suspends Energy Mark-To-Market On Default Contagion Fears.

In his post, ZeroHedge claims "The Dallas Fed met with the banks a week ago and effectively suspended mark-to-market on energy debts and as a result no impairments are being written down. Furthermore, as we reported earlier this week, the Fed indicated 'under the table' that banks were to work with the energy companies on delivering without a markdown on worry that a backstop, or bail-in, was needed after reviewing loan losses which would exceed the current tier 1 capital tranches."

Mark-to-Market Accounting History

You cannot suspend what has already been suspended.

On April 3, 2009, the Wall Street Journal reported FASB Eases Mark-to-Market Rules.

Suspension of mark-to-market account was one of the factors that ignited the stock market in Spring of 2009.

Wikipedia has these notes on Mark-to-Market Accounting.

  • On September 30, 2008, the SEC and the FASB issued a joint clarification regarding the implementation of fair value accounting in cases where a market is disorderly or inactive. Section 132 of the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008, which passed on October 3, 2008, restated the SEC's authority to suspend the application of FAS 157.
  •  
  • On October 10, 2008, the FASB issued further guidance to provide an example of how to estimate fair value in cases where the market for that asset is not active at a reporting date.
  •  
  • On December 30, 2008, the SEC issued its report under Sec. 133 and decided not to suspend mark-to-market accounting. [Mish Comment: Markets that rallied into the end of the year, collapsed again in January and February]
  •  
  • On March 16, 2009, FASB proposed allowing companies to use more leeway in valuing their assets under "mark-to-market" accounting. On April 2, 2009, after a 15-day public comment period and a contentious testimony before the U.S. House Financial Services subcommittee, FASB eased the mark-to-market rules through the release of three FASB Staff Positions (FSPs). Financial institutions are still required by the rules to mark transactions to market prices but more so in a steady market and less so when the market is inactive. To proponents of the rules, this eliminates the unnecessary "positive feedback loop" that can result in a weakened economy. [Mish Comment: Markets took off just ahead of the change and never looked back]
  •  
  • On April 9, 2009, FASB issued an official update to FAS 157 that eases the mark-to-market rules when the market is unsteady or inactive. Early adopters were allowed to apply the ruling as of March 15, 2009, and the rest as of June 15, 2009. It was anticipated that these changes could significantly increase banks' statements of earnings and allow them to defer reporting losses.

No Subsequent Mark-to-Market Changes

There have been no subsequent changes. And here we are, back in bubble land, with hidden losses mounting again.

By, how much? Who the hell knows because mark-to-market accounting has already been effectively suspended.

We do have some facts, however.

More Banks Take Energy Hits

The Wall Street Journal reports More Banks Take Hits on Energy Loans.
Months of low oil prices are starting to take a toll on banks. Large U.S. banks reporting earnings Friday said they saw more energy loans go bad in the fourth quarter. Many lenders also added millions of dollars to reserves in anticipation that more oil-and-gas loans will sour.

"It's starting to spread," said William Demchak, chief executive of PNC Financial Services Group Inc. on a conference call after the bank's earnings were announced. Credit issues from low energy prices are affecting "anybody who was in the game as the oil boom started," he said.

Citigroup Inc. added to its rainy-day reserves for soured loans for the first time since 2009, adding $250 million specifically for energy and $494 million overall. "Obviously there is some pressure in the energy-related markets at this point in time," John Gerspach, Citigroup's chief financial officer, said on a conference call Friday.

As many as one-third of American oil-and-gas producers could tip toward bankruptcy and restructuring by mid-2017, according to Wolfe Research. Survival, for some, would be possible if oil rebounded to at least $50 a barrel, many analysts say.

Concerns about oil and gas exposure have battered the stocks of banks with big energy portfolios. Zions Bancorp shares are down 18% since the beginning of the year, while BOK's are down 20% and Cullen/Frost Bankers Inc. shares are down 22% during that period. The KBW Nasdaq Bank Index is down 13% amid a broad market decline.

Still, banks continue to maintain that any energy losses remain manageable.

Wells Fargo & Co. had $90 million in higher losses in its oil-and-gas portfolio during the fourth quarter, and the bank said it boosted its commercial-loan reserves as a result. Wells Fargo played down the potential impact of the energy problems, noting that oil and gas loans remained around only 2% of its total loans, and that more than 90% of the problem oil-and-gas loans in its portfolio were current on their interest payments as of the end of 2015.
J.P. Morgan Builds Loss Reserves for the First Time in Six Years

On January 14, The Wall Street Journal asked: Turning Point? J.P. Morgan Builds Loss Reserves for the First Time in Six Years
J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. built up its reserves for bad loans, a shift that spotlights Wall Street's mounting concerns about the fate of oil and gas companies.

J.P. Morgan added $136 million to its loan-loss reserves in the fourth quarter of 2015, according to the bank, or $187 million if provisions for lending-related commitments are included.

The New York bank, the largest in the country by assets, said the bulk of its added reserves, $124 million, were related to its portfolio of loans to oil and gas companies.

But the bank doesn't expect to drastically reduce its energy lending, Chief Executive James Dimon said on a call with analysts. "If banks just completely pull out of markets every time something gets volatile or scary, you'll be sinking companies left and right."

Citigroup Inc. said in December it was likely to add $300 million to $400 million to its reserves, primarily because of low oil prices. Citigroup and Wells Fargo & Co. announce their fourth-quarter earnings Friday, with Bank of America Corp. to follow on Tuesday. Spokesmen for Citigroup and BofA declined to comment. A Wells Fargo spokesman couldn't immediately be reached.

J.P. Morgan's move on Thursday was the first time any of the big four U.S. banks has added to its loan-loss reserves since the fourth quarter of 2009.

The buildup was also notable as it indicates the potential end of an era in which "releases" of loan-loss reserves flowed into and offered a welcome boost to banks' earnings, at a time when the banks often had difficulty generating profits from their operating businesses. Over the past six years, those releases have contributed nearly $25 billion to J.P. Morgan's pretax income, and about $86 billion to the four banks' total pretax income.

"You can't release loan-loss reserves forever," said Jason Goldberg, an analyst at Barclays PLC. "We're actually surprised reserve levels got this low."
Bankruptcies Coming Regardless

ZeroHedge's initial rumor the "Dallas Fed members had met with banks in Houston and explicitly told them not to force energy bankruptcies and to demand asset sales instead." could very well be true.

There's not much shocking in that statement actually.

ZeroHedge concluded "The Dallas Fed, whose new president Robert Steven Kaplan previously worked at Goldman Sachs for 22 years rising to the rank of vice chairman of investment banking, has not responded to our request for a comment as of this writing."

Regardless of what Kaplan instructed the banks to do, bankruptcies cannot be avoided by selling assets.

Sell what assets? At what price?

The assets in question are rigs, land, and drilling rights. What demand is there for used rigs? And what near-term value do energy properties have at current energy prices?

Oil reserves and the value of those reserves have both collapsed.

Bankruptcies are coming and with them so will loan losses. Either loan loss provisions rise now, or bankruptcies impose unannounced losses in the not so distant future.

Wells Fargo Is Bad, But Citi Is Worse

In an update on Sunday, ZeroHedge posted Wells Fargo Is Bad, But Citi Is Worse.
Earlier we reported that Wells Fargo may have an energy problem because as CFO John Shrewsbury revealed, of the $17 billion in energy exposure, "most of it" was junk rated.

But, while one can speculate what the terminal cumulative losses, cumulative defaults and loss severities on this loan book will be, at least Wells was honest enough to reveal its energy-related loan loss estimate: it was $1.2 billion, or 7% of total - as Mike Mayo pointed out, one of the highest on the street. Whether it is high, or low, is anyone's guess, but at least Wells disclosed it.

Citi did not.

Note the following perplexing exchange between analyst Mike Mayo and Citi CFO John Gerspach:

Mike Mayo: Can we move to energy, though? I don't want you being the only bank not disclosing reserves to energy - oil and gas loans. I mean, I think most others have disclosed that who have reported so far. And I mean, your stock's down 7%. The whole market is down a whole lot, but I don't - even if it's a low number, it can't hurt too much more from here. And so can you - how much in oil and gas loans do you have, and what are the reserves taken against that? I know you were asked this already, but I'm going back for a second try.

John Gerspach: When you take a look at the overall portfolio, Mike, we've reduced the amount of exposure. Our funded exposure to energy-related companies this quarter is down 4%. It's about $20.5 billion. The overall exposure also came down about 4%. The overall exposure now is about $58 billion, that includes unfunded. When you take a look at the composition of the funded portfolio, about 68% of that portfolio would be investment grade. That's up from the 65% that we would have had at the end of the third quarter. And the unfunded book is about 87% investment grade. So while we are taking what we believe to be the appropriate reserves for that, I'm just not prepared to give you a specific number right now as far as the amount of reserves that we have on that particular book of business. That's just not something that we've traditionally done in the past.

One wonders just how much of Gerspach's decision was dictated by the Fed's under the table suggestion to avoid mark to market in energy entirely, and thus to stop marking its loan book.

Finally, we eagerly await for someone from the Dallas Fed to contact us and to comment on our article from yesterday that the "Dallas Fed Quietly Suspends Energy Mark-To-Market On Default Contagion Fears." Because with megabanks such as Citi refusing to disclose energy losses, the longer the Fed remains mute on just what it knows that nobody else does, the more concerned the market will be that the subprime crisis is quietly playing out under its nose all over again.
Citi Math and a Bit of Realism

Citi refused to provide its loan loss provisions on energy. But it did provide exposure information. Funded exposure is $20.5 billion. 68% of that is investment grade. That makes $6.56 billion junk.

I am not here to defend Citi. I am here to inject a bit of realism.

Losses related to energy, whatever they may be, will be much smaller than losses related to the housing bubble crash.

Let's explore that idea with a series of charts.

Loan Loss Reserves to Total Loans



Loan loss provisions kept rising in spite of mark-to-market suspension. The market imposed losses, but admission was at a "pace that was measured". 

Loan loss reserves as a percentage of total loans hit a record high 3.70% in first quarter of 2010. Loan losses for the Dallas region peaked in third quarter of 2011 at 2.11%.

Let's now investigate loan loss allowances in dollar amounts, starting with the Dallas region.

Allowance for Loans and Lease Losses, Dallas



The allowance for loans an lease losses in the Dallas region peaked at $4.412 billion in the third quarter of 2010. It is currently at $3.08 billion.

Allowance for Loans and Lease Losses, All Commercial Banks



The allowance for loans and lease losses for all commercial banks peaked in April 2010 at $235.8 billion vs. $4.4 billion for the Dallas region alone.

Even if fears over energy-related oil losses are a bit overblown, problems are beginning to mount and it's highly likely to spill over into many other sectors of the economy.

The consumer is not doing all that well. Home prices are once again well beyond affordable. Manufacturing is in an outright recession. The rest of the economy is poised to follow manufacturing, or already has.

Turning Point

Declining loan loss provisions are net accruals to earning. Rising loan loss provisions are subtractions from earnings.

Between April 2010 and December 2014 loan loss provisions shrank by $126.8 billion, directly padding bank bottom lines.

In 2015, the decline in loan loss provisions was a mere $2.4 billion.

The real story is not the alleged suspension of mark-to-market rules. Rather, the real story is rising loan and lease loss provisions, across numerous segments, not just energy.

I expect loan loss provisions for housing, construction loans, subprime autos, credit cards, malls, and of course energy, will all rise.

This is a significant turning point. Loan and lease losses have only one way to go: Up. How high remains to be seen, but the effect on earnings won't be pretty.

To top it off, Iran About to Unleash Tidal Wave of Oil Into Depressed Markets.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock