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Why Government Intervention Is Fueling The Housing Disaster

Why Government Intervention Is Fueling The Housing Disaster

Via SchiffGold.com,

The United States is grappling with a severe housing affordability crisis that has persisted for years, leaving millions of Americans struggling to keep a roof over their heads. While some argue for increased government intervention, free market principles offer the most effective solution the issue.

According to the National Alliance to End Homelessness, a record-high 653,104 people were experiencing homelessness on a single night in January 2023.

This crisis has been exacerbated by a severe shortage of affordable housing, with the National Low-Income Housing Coalition reporting a deficit of 7.3 million affordable rental homes for low-income renters.

At first glance, these statistics might seem to call for more government intervention.

However, a deeper analysis reveals that many of our current housing woes stem from misguided government policies that have distorted the market and created artificial scarcity.

Zoning laws and building regulations, often championed as protections for communities, have in reality severely restricted the supply of housing.

Restrictive zoning laws have become a silent catalyst for the homelessness crisis, creating artificial housing shortages that drive prices beyond the reach of working-class Americans.

In Arizona, for instance, homelessness surged by 51.5% between 2017 and 2022, a direct consequence of municipal regulations that strangle housing development. 

By limiting the types of housing that can be built and imposing costly requirements on developers, these regulations have effectively priced many Americans out of the housing market.

Rent control, another popular government intervention, has been shown to reduce the quantity of available housing.

A Stanford study found that rent control in San Francisco reduced rental housing supply by 15% and led to a 5.1% city-wide rent increase.

These policies, while well-intentioned, often end up hurting the very people they aim to help.

The solution lies not in more government control, but in unleashing the power of the free market.

By removing unnecessary regulations and allowing market forces to operate freely, we can create a more affordable housing market.

Deregulation would allow for increased housing supply, addressing the root cause of high prices. By removing zoning laws and simplifying building codes, we can enable the construction of a diverse range of housing options, catering to all income levels.

Critics may argue that a free market approach would lead to gentrification and displacement. However, the reality is that our current system of artificial scarcity is what truly drives these problems. By increasing overall housing supply, we can alleviate pressure on existing affordable neighborhoods.

The power of the free market to solve housing issues is not merely theoretical.

In Houston, a city known for not having formal zoning laws, housing costs have remained significantly lower than in other major U.S. cities. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the median home value in Houston is $263,315, compared to $947,245 in Los Angeles and $766,160 in New York.

Japan provides another compelling example.

Despite being a densely populated country with limited land, Japan has managed to keep housing affordable in its major cities through market-oriented policies. Tokyo, one of the world’s largest metropolitan areas, has seen housing prices remain stable over the past two decades, largely due to flexible zoning laws and a streamlined building permit process.

It’s important to note that embracing free market solutions doesn’t mean abandoning those in need. Private charities and non-profit organizations can play a crucial role in providing targeted assistance to the most vulnerable populations. These organizations often operate more efficiently and flexibly than government programs, adapting quickly to changing needs.

The path forward is clear. To truly address our housing crisis, we must embrace free market solutions. This means rolling back restrictive zoning laws, streamlining building permits, and allowing developers to respond to market demands without unnecessary interference.

The stakes are too high to continue with failed policies of the past.

It’s time for policymakers to recognize that the solution to our housing crisis lies not in more government control, but in the free market. Only then can we hope to create a housing market that truly serves the needs of all Americans, providing affordable and quality housing options for generations to come.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/03/2024 - 14:45

DNC Official Reveals Obama, Pelosi "Did Not Want" Kamala Harris

DNC Official Reveals Obama, Pelosi "Did Not Want" Kamala Harris

Authored by Julianna Frieman via Headline USA,

Lindy Li, a member of the Democratic National Committee’s finance committee, revealed Sunday that former President Barack Obama and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi opposed Vice President Kamala Harris becoming the 2024 presidential nominee.

Referencing friends from Obama’s circle and her personal friendship with Pelosi, Li told NewsNation indubitably that both top Democrats would have rather held a primary than coronate Harris to fill Biden’s sudden vacancy atop the ticket.

“I know they didn’t,” Li said when asked about Obama and Pelosi.

“I have a lot of friends in Obama world and, actually, I’m friends with Speaker Pelosi. And I spoke with her before I actually, I actually went on air to encourage President Biden to step aside.”

Li described her own appearance on Fox News Sunday on July 21—the same day Biden ended his campaign.

She said she spoke to Pelosi about her remarks calling for Biden to step down before going on air.

“It’s not a matter of conjecture for me,” she told NewsNation.

“I know they didn’t.”

At the time, Pelosi told Li her public call for Biden to drop out was “fine.”

“It was necessary. It became clear that he was no longer effectively able to litigate the case against Trump,” Li said. “And Obama and Pelosi were both hoping for a primary instead of a coronation, so to speak.”

Li said the former House Speaker did not have her eyes on one particular candidate but noted that Obama was “carefully vetting” Sen. Mark Kelly, D-Ariz., when Biden withdrew.

“I know there were other names on his list,” the DNC official said.

“I’m not saying that Kamala Harris was necessarily at the top of the list, but he was definitely considering other candidates. I don’t think she was ruled out.”

Li told NewsNation that many Democrats were hoping for a “lightning round” primary, which never came.

She suggested Biden blocked a democratic primary when he endorsed Harris after announcing his withdrawal.

“I don’t think anyone saw that coming. We did not see that coming,” Li said. “I think a lot of people anticipated he might have stepped aside, but no one anticipated the two-fer that we got that day.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/03/2024 - 14:05

Stoli Vodka Files For Bankruptcy Amid Legal Feud With Russia

Stoli Vodka Files For Bankruptcy Amid Legal Feud With Russia

The maker of iconic Stolichnaya vodka filed for bankruptcy following a crippling cyber attack in September and an ongoing legal feud with Russia over who owns the brand.

As reported by the Post, the Stoli Group USA filed for Chapter 11 in US Bankruptcy Court in Dallas last week after a “malicious cyber-attack” forced the company to operate its global business manually “while the systems are rebuilt,” chief executive Chris Caldwell said in a statement.

Stolichnaya Vodka’s name was changed to “Stoli” in 2022 to distance itself from Russia

Stoli Group said its “experiencing financial difficulties” according to the filing, which lists between $50 and $100 million in liabilities.

Caldwell also cited ongoing legal battles with Russia, which named the company and its owner – Russian-born and exiled billionaire Yuri Shefler – “extremists groups working against Russia’s interests,” earlier this year.

Shefler has been exiled since 2002 because of his opposition to President Vladimir Putin.

After the Ukraine invasion in March 2022 Shefler changed the name of the company to Stoli from Stolichnaya. That did not help, however, because at the time propaganda-addled westerners began dumping Russian vodka and spirits in protest, even when the vodka in question was owned by an opponent of Putin.

“Today, we have made the decision to rebrand entirely as the name no longer represents our organization,” Shefler said in a statement at the time. “More than anything, I wish for ‘Stoli’ to represent peace in Europe and solidarity with Ukraine.”

The brand has long been promoted as a Russian vodka even though it’s made in Latvia. Stoli Group is a subsidiary of Luxembourg-based SPI Group, which owns other spirts and wines, including Kentucky Owl bourbon. Only Stoli Group USA and Kentucky Owl are in bankruptcy, the company said.

Shefler has been at odds with Putin for decades, publicly denouncing a number of draconian anti-gay laws in 2013. Russia and Stoli Group have also clashed in courts.

The Russian government makes a state-owned version of the brand that is sold in the country with a label that clearly says it’s Russian made, according to reports. Ownership of the brand is disputed between Shefler’s Stoli Group, and Sojuzplodoimport, a firm owned by the Russian state.

The bankruptcy comes at a time when overall alcohol sales are slowing this year as Ozempic-injecting consumers pull back on consumption to save money and for health reasons. 

Consumption of spirits in the U.S. was down 3% and beer down 3.5% for the first seven months of 2024, according to IWSR, a global drinks data and analytics firm.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/03/2024 - 13:45

County In Washington State Cannot Block ICE Deportation Flights, Appeals Court Rules

County In Washington State Cannot Block ICE Deportation Flights, Appeals Court Rules

Authored by Tom Ozimek via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

A federal appeals court has ruled that an order in King County, Washington, barring U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) from using a Seattle-area airport to deport illegal immigrants from the country is unlawful, affirming a lower court’s summary judgment and clearing the way for the removals to continue.

Airplanes parked at King County International Airport-Boeing Field in Seattle on June 1, 2022. Lindsey Wasson/File Photo/Reuters

Judge Daniel A. Bress of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit wrote in the Nov. 29 opinion that a 2019 executive order issued by King County Executive Dow Constantine that prohibited the ICE deportation flights was unlawful. The ruling identified two primary legal violations: discrimination against federal operations under the supremacy clause of the U.S. Constitution and breach of a World War II-era instrument of transfer agreement governing the airport’s use.

Bress wrote that the executive order’s flight ban “discriminatorily burdens the United States” in the enforcement of federal immigration law and that this “discrimination, plain on the face of the Order, contravenes the intergovernmental immunity doctrine.” Rooted in the supremacy clause, the intergovernmental immunity doctrine protects federal government operations from discriminatory or obstructive actions by state and local governments.

The court also found that through Constantine’s directive, King County violated its contractual obligations under the instrument of transfer agreement, which granted the federal government the right to use the King County International Airport, commonly known as Boeing Field.

The dispute dates back to April 2019, when Constantine issued an executive order that explicitly opposed ICE’s deportation operations. The directive instructed airport officials to ensure that future leases and operating agreements with fixed-base operators—the companies that provide essential services such as fueling and aircraft maintenance—contained provisions prohibiting them from servicing ICE flights.

Constantine justified the order by citing the county’s disagreement with federal immigration policies, stating that the flights raised “deeply troubling human rights concerns which are inconsistent with the values of King County,” including family separations and deportation of people into unsafe conditions in other countries. The order effectively halted deportation flights at the airport.

In response to the order, the Department of Justice filed suit in February 2020, arguing that the directive unlawfully obstructed federal immigration enforcement and violated the terms of the airport’s transfer to King County based on an instrument of transfer agreement under the Surplus Property Act of 1944. The government sought to nullify the executive order and secure a permanent injunction against its enforcement.

The U.S. District Court for the Western District of Washington sided with the federal government, granting summary judgment in its favor. The court held that the order discriminated against federal operations by singling out ICE flights while allowing other users unrestricted access to Boeing Field. It also found that the order violated the instrument of transfer agreement, which required King County to allow federal use of the airport for nonexclusive purposes.

King County appealed the decision to the Ninth Circuit, arguing that the executive order was a lawful exercise of local authority as a market participant and did not violate federal law. The county claimed that it was acting to address legitimate safety, liability, and operational concerns stemming from ICE’s activities.

However, the Ninth Circuit rejected King County’s arguments, affirming the lower court’s ruling. Writing on behalf of the panel, Bress noted that the executive order unlawfully targeted federal operations and discriminated against ICE’s use of the airport based on opposition to federal immigration policy. The appeals court also determined that King County violated its contractual obligations under the instrument of transfer agreement.

The Epoch Times reached out to King County officials with a request for comment on the ruling but did not get a response by publication time.

The ruling was made weeks before the incoming Trump administration is set to take office and begin a deportation operation.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/03/2024 - 13:25

Mysterious 'Car-Sized Drones' Over New Jersey Prompt FBI Investigation

Mysterious 'Car-Sized Drones' Over New Jersey Prompt FBI Investigation

Several weeks of mysterious drone swarms over the skies of one New Jersey county near the military research and manufacturing facility Picatinny Arsenal have sparked concerns among residents and prompted an FBI investigation.  

"It's kind of unsettling," Mike Walsh, a Morris County resident who has spotted the drones on numerous occasions, told local media outlet PIX11 News.

He said some drones "are very big, probably the size of a car." 

Since Nov. 18, Walsh and many other residents have spotted these drones in the night sky. 

"They're kind of go slow," he said, adding, "They come towards you. Then they change direction a little. They're all going different ways."

We first detailed the story on Nov. 19 in a note titled "Spy Drones? "Unusual Activity" Reported Over Morris County, New Jersey, Near Military Research Facility." 

The potential national security threat piqued our interest, considering multiple reports that the mysterious drones were observed near Picatinny Arsenal.

PIX11 News said the FBI's Newark field office has joined the investigation with other law enforcement agencies to determine who is flying these drones. 

PIX11 News contacted the FAA, which said it's received reports of activity near Morris County. The FAA has two Temporary Flight Restrictions prohibiting drone flights over Picatinny Arsenal and Trump National Golf Club Bedminster

"People think they were UFOs or being spied on," Erica Campbell told media outlet NBC 4 New York.

Given the close proximity to the highly controlled airspace around NYC, we suspect that if these drones actually posed national security threats, stealth fighter jets armed with Sidewinders would have neutralized these threats almost immediately. 

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/03/2024 - 13:05

Warning Shot: China Bans Exports Of Gallium, Germanium To US As Tit-For-Tat Chip War Escalates

Warning Shot: China Bans Exports Of Gallium, Germanium To US As Tit-For-Tat Chip War Escalates

The Biden administration's new restrictions on China's semiconductor industry have triggered a tit-for-tat response from Beijing, which announced an export ban on gallium, germanium, antimony, and other critical minerals with potential military applications to the US. 

Bloomberg reports that the Chinese Commerce Ministry announced the new export controls on Tuesday morning, adding that tighter controls on graphite sales will also be seen. 

"The US has generalized the concept of national security, and politicized and weaponized economic, trade and tech issues," a ministry spokesperson said, adding, "It has abused export control measures and unreasonably restricted certain products' export to China."

On Monday, the Biden admin revealed broader restrictions on AI chips that can be delivered to China, including prohibiting the sale of advanced chips to more than 100 Chinese companies.  

Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo told reporters Sunday that the move represented "the strongest controls ever enacted by the US to degrade the PRC's ability to make the most advanced chips that they're using in their military modernization," adding US officials had worked closely with experts, industry and allied countries to ensure that "our actions protect national security while minimizing unintended commercial consequences."

China's dominance in the global mining and processing of rare earth materials is very alarming, as it produces 94% of the world's gallium and 83% of germanium—critical metals used in the production of semiconductors, LEDs, and transistors. Beijing's Ministry of Commerce has justified the export restrictions to protect national security amid the ongoing tech war.

Source: Bloomberg

Joe Mazur, a senior analyst with the consulting firm Trivium China, told Bloomberg that these "export bans on critical minerals have been in the hopper for some time and are intended as a warning." 

"It's a clear signal that China is preparing to strike back more forcefully against US economic pressure than it has in the past few years," Mazur emphasized. 

Data from the US Geological Survey shows that the US imports about half its supply of gallium and germanium metals from China. 

The new restrictions serve as a calculated warning to America's military-industrial complex and chipmakers, signaling that Beijing could escalate its response if Washington's tit-for-tat tech war intensifies. And just wait for more fireworks with Trump entering the White House next month.

Meanwhile, there could be new high-grade gallium supplies hiding in southwest Montana. 

The US must build out its domestic supply chain of mining and refining rare earth minerals to break the addiction from China—something that won't be happening for a while. 

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/03/2024 - 12:25

'Then They Fight You...' - Bitcoin & The US' Fiscal Crossroads

'Then They Fight You...' - Bitcoin & The US' Fiscal Crossroads

Authored Avik Roy via BitcoinMagazine.com,

In this chapter from The Satoshi Papers, Avik Roy explores the U.S. government’s looming fiscal crisis and presents three potential responses from the United States: restriction, paralysis, or assimilation. Could Bitcoin emerge as a solution—or spark further conflict?

Introduction

Scholars dispute whether it was Mahatma Gandhi who first said, “First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.” What cannot be disputed is that advocates of bitcoin have adopted the aphorism as their own.

Bitcoiners commonly prophesize that at some point, bitcoin will replace the US dollar as the world’s predominant store of value.[1] Less frequently discussed is the essential question of exactly how such a transition might take place and what risks may lie along the path, especially if the issuers of fiat currency choose to fight back against challenges to their monetary monopolies.

Will the US government and other Western governments willingly adapt to an emerging bitcoin standard, or will they take restrictive measures to prevent the replacement of fiat currencies? If bitcoin does indeed surpass the dollar as the world’s most widely used medium of exchange, will a transition from the dollar to bitcoin be peaceful and benign, like the evolution from Blockbuster Video to Netflix? Or will it be violent and destructive, as with Weimar Germany and the Great Depression? Or somewhere in between?

These questions are not merely of theoretical interest. If bitcoin is to emerge from the potentially turbulent times ahead, the bitcoin community will need to contemplate exactly how to make it resilient to these future scenarios and how best to bring about the most peaceful and least disruptive transition toward an economy based once again upon sound money.

In particular, we must take into account the vulnerabilities of those whose incomes and wealth are below the rich-nation median—those who, at current and future bitcoin prices, may fail to save enough to protect themselves from the economic challenges to come. “Have fun staying poor,” some Bitcoiners retort to their skeptics on social media. But in a real economic crisis, the poor will not be having fun. The failure of fiat-based fiscal policy will inflict the most harm on those who most depend on government spending for their economic security. In democratic societies, populists across the political spectrum will have powerful incentives to harvest the resentment of the non-bitcoin-owning majority against bitcoin-owning elites.

It is, of course, difficult to predict exactly how the US government will respond to a hypothetical fiscal and monetary collapse decades into the future. But it is possible to broadly group the potential scenarios in ways that are relatively negative, neutral, or positive for society as a whole. In this essay, I describe three such scenarios: A restrictive scenario, in which the US attempts to aggressively curtail economic liberties in an effort to suppress competition between the dollar and bitcoin; a palsied scenario, in which partisan, ideological, and special-interest conflicts paralyze the government and limit its ability to either improve America’s fiscal situation or prevent bitcoin’s rise; and a munificent scenario, in which the US assimilates bitcoin into its monetary system and returns to sound fiscal policy. I base these scenarios on the highly probable emergence of a fiscal and monetary crisis in the United States by 2044.

While these scenarios may also play out in other Western nations, I focus on the US here because the US dollar is today the world’s reserve currency, and the US government’s response to bitcoin is therefore of particular importance.

The Coming Fiscal and Monetary Crisis

We know enough about the fiscal trajectory of the United States to conclude that a major crisis is not merely possible but probable by 2044 if the federal government fails to change course. In 2024, for the first time in modern history, interest on the federal debt exceeded spending on national defense. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO)—the national legislature’s official, nonpartisan fiscal scorekeeper—predicts that by 2044, federal debt held by the public will be approximately $84 trillion, or 139 percent of gross domestic product. This represents an increase from $28 trillion, or 99 percent of GDP, in 2024.[2]

The CBO estimate makes several optimistic assumptions about the country’s fiscal situation in 2044. In its most recent projections, at the time of this publication, CBO assumes that the US economy will grow at a robust 3.6 percent per year in perpetuity, that the US government will still be able to borrow at a favorable 3.6 percent in 2044, and that Congress will not pass any laws to worsen the fiscal picture (as it did, for example, during the COVID-19 pandemic).[3]

The CBO understands that its projections are optimistic. In May 2024, it published an analysis of how several alternative economic scenarios would affect the debt-to-GDP ratio. One, in which interest rates increase annually by a rate of 5 basis points (0.05 percent) higher than the CBO’s baseline, would result in 2044 debt of $93 trillion, or 156 percent of GDP. Another scenario, in which federal tax revenue and spending rates as a share of GDP continue at historical levels (for example, as a result of the continuation of purportedly temporary tax breaks and spending programs), yields a 2044 debt of $118 trillion, or 203 percent of GDP.[4]

But combining multiple factors makes clear how truly dire the future has become. If we take the CBO’s higher interest rate scenario, in which interest rate growth is 5 basis points higher each year, and then layer onto that a gradual reduction in the GDP growth rate, such that nominal GDP growth in 2044 is 2.8 percent instead of 3.6 percent, the 2044 debt reaches $156 trillion, or 288 percent of GDP. By 2054, the debt would reach $441 trillion, or 635 percent of GDP (see figure 1).

Figure 1. US debt-to-GDP ratio: Alternative scenarios

Credit: Avik Roy, https://public.flourish.studio/visualisation/18398503/.

In this scenario of higher interest rate payments and lower economic growth, in 2044 the US government would pay $6.9 trillion in interest payments, representing nearly half of all federal tax revenue. But just as we cannot assume that economic growth will remain high over the next two decades, we cannot assume that the demand for US government debt will remain steady. At a certain point, the US will run out of other people’s money. Credit Suisse estimates that in 2022 there was $454 trillion of household wealth in the world, defined as the value of financial assets and real estate assets, net of debt.[5] Not all of that wealth is available to lend to the United States. Indeed, the share of US Treasury securities held by foreign and international investors has steadily declined since the 2008 financial crisis.[6] At the same time that demand for Treasuries is proportionally declining, the supply of Treasuries is steadily increasing (see figure 2).[7]

Figure 2. Ownership of US Treasuries

Credit: Avik Roy, https://public.flourish.studio/visualisation/7641395/.

In an unregulated bond market, this decline in demand paired with an increase in supply should lead to lower bond prices, signifying higher interest rates. The Federal Reserve, however, has intervened in the Treasury market to ensure that interest rates remain lower than they otherwise would. The Fed does this by printing new US dollars out of thin air and using them to buy the Treasury bonds that the broader market declines to purchase.[8] In effect, the Fed has decided that monetary inflation (that is, rapidly increasing the quantity of US dollars in circulation) is a more acceptable outcome than allowing interest rates to rise as the nation’s creditworthiness decreases.

This situation is not sustainable. Economist Paul Winfree, using a methodology developed by researchers at the International Monetary Fund,[9] estimates that “the federal government will begin running out of fiscal space, or its capacity to take on additional debt to deal with adverse events, within the next 15 years”—that is, by 2039. He further notes that “interest rates and potential [GDP] growth are the most important factors” that would affect his projections.[10]

For the purposes of our exercise, let us assume that the US will experience a fiscal and monetary failure by 2044—that is, a major economic crisis featuring a combination of rising interest rates (brought about by the lack of market interest in buying Treasuries) and high consumer price inflation (brought about by rapid monetary inflation). Over this twenty-year period, let us also imagine that bitcoin gradually increases in value, such that the liquidity of bitcoin, measured by its total market capitalization, is competitive with that of US Treasuries. Competitive liquidity is important because it means that large institutions, such as governments and multinational banks, can buy bitcoin at scale without excessively disrupting its price. Based on the behavior of conventional financial markets, I estimate that bitcoin will reach a state of competitive liquidity with Treasuries when its market capitalization equals roughly one-fifth of federal debt held by the public. Based on my $156 trillion estimate of federal debt in 2044, this amounts to approximately $31 trillion of bitcoin market cap, representing a price of $1.5 million per bitcoin—roughly twenty times the peak price of bitcoin reached in the first half of 2024.

This is far from an unrealistic scenario. Bitcoin appreciated by a comparable multiple from August 2017 to April 2021, a period of less than four years.[11] Bitcoin has appreciated by similar multiples on many other occasions previously.[12] And if anything, my projections of the growth of US federal debt are conservative. Let us, then, further imagine that by 2044, bitcoin is a well-understood, mainstream asset. A young man who turned eighteen in 2008 will celebrate his fifty-fourth birthday in 2044. By 2044, more than half of the US population will have coexisted with bitcoin for their entire adult lives. A robust ecosystem of financial products, including lending and borrowing, will by then likely have been well established atop the bitcoin base layer. Finally, let us speculate that in this scenario, inflation has reached 50 percent per annum. (This is somewhere between the over-100 percent inflation rates of Argentina and Turkey in 2023 and the nearly 15 percent inflation experienced by the US in 1980.)

In 2044, under these conditions, the US government will be in crisis. The rapid depreciation in the value of the dollar will have led to a sudden drop in demand for Treasury bonds, and there will not be an obvious way out. If Congress engages in extreme fiscal austerity—for example, by cutting spending on welfare and entitlement programs—its members will likely be thrown out of office. If the Federal Reserve raises interest rates enough to retain investor demand—say, above 30 percent—financial markets will crash, along with the credit-fueled economy, much as they did in 1929. But if the Fed allows inflation to rise even further, it will only accelerate the exit from Treasuries and the US dollar.

Under these circumstances, how might the US government respond? And how might it treat bitcoin? In what follows, I consider three scenarios. First, I contemplate a restrictive scenario, in which the US attempts to use coercive measures to prevent the use of bitcoin as a competitor to the dollar. Second, I discuss a palsied scenario, in which political divisions and economic weakness paralyze the US government, preventing it from taking meaningful steps for or against bitcoin. Finally, I consider a munificent scenario, in which the US eventually ties the value of the dollar to bitcoin, restoring the nation’s fiscal and monetary soundness. (See figure 3.)

Figure 3. Three US fiscal scenarios

1. The Restrictive Scenario

Throughout history, the most common response of government to a weakening currency has been to force its citizens to use and hold that currency instead of sounder alternatives, a phenomenon called financial repression. Governments also commonly deploy other economic restrictions, such as price controls, capital controls, and confiscatory taxation to maintain unsound fiscal and monetary policies.[13] It is possible—even probable—that the United States will respond similarly to the crisis to come.

Price Controls

In AD 301, the Roman Emperor Diocletian issued his Edictum de Pretiis Rerum Venalium—the Edict Concerning the Sale Price of Goods—which sought to address inflation caused by the long-running debasement of the Roman currency, the denarius, over a five-hundred-year period. Diocletian’s edict imposed price caps on over 1,200 goods and services.[14] These included wages, food, clothing, and shipping rates. Diocletian blamed rising prices not on the Roman Empire’s extravagant spending but on “unprincipled and licentious persons [who] think greed has a certain sort of obligation . . . in ripping up the fortunes of all.”[15]

Actions of this sort echo throughout history until the modern day. In 1971, US President Richard Nixon responded to the imminent collapse of US gold reserves by unilaterally destroying the dollar’s peg to one-thirty-fifth of an ounce of gold and by ordering a ninety-day freeze on “all prices and wages throughout the United States.”[16] Nixon, like Diocletian and so many other rulers in between, did not blame his government’s fiscal or monetary policies for his country’s predicament but rather the “international money speculators” who “have been waging an all-out war on the American dollar.”[17]

Even mainstream economists have convincingly shown that price controls on goods and services do not work.[18] This is because producers cease production if they are forced to sell their goods and services at a loss, which leads to shortages. But price controls remain a constant temptation for politicians since many consumers believe that price controls will protect them from inflation (at least in the short term). Since 2008, the Federal Reserve has imposed an increasingly aggressive set of controls on what economic historian James Grant calls “the most important price in capital markets”—that is, the price of money as reflected by interest rates.[19] As explained above, the Federal Reserve can effectively control interest rates on Treasury securities by acting as the dominant buyer and seller of those securities on the open market. (When bond prices rise because of more buying than selling, the interest rates implied by their prices decline, and vice versa.) The interest rates used by financial institutions and consumers, in turn, are heavily influenced by the interest rates on Treasury bonds, bills, and notes. Prior to the 2008 financial crisis, the Fed used this power narrowly, on a subset of short-term Treasury securities. But afterward, under Chairman Ben Bernanke, the Fed became far more aggressive in using its power to control interest rates throughout the economy.[20]

Capital Controls

Price controls are only one tool used by governments to control monetary crises. Another is capital controls, which hamper the exchange of a local currency for another currency or reserve asset.

In 1933, during the Great Depression, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt (popularly known as FDR) deployed a First World War–era statute to prohibit Americans from fleeing the dollar for gold. His Executive Order 6102 prohibited Americans from holding gold coin, gold bullion, and gold certificates and required people to surrender their gold to the US government in exchange for $20.67 per troy ounce.[21] Nine months later, Congress devalued the dollar by changing the price of a troy ounce to $35.00, effectively forcing Americans to accept an immediate 41 percent devaluation of their savings while preventing them from escaping that devaluation by using a superior store of value.[22]

Capital controls are far from a historical relic. Argentina has historically prohibited its citizens from exchanging more than $200 worth of Argentine pesos for dollars per month, ostensibly to slow the decline of the value of the peso.[23] China imposes strict capital controls on its citizens—essentially requiring government approval for any exchange of foreign currency—to prevent capital from leaving China for other jurisdictions.[24]

Increasingly, mainstream economists see these modern examples of capital controls as a success. The International Monetary Fund, born out of the 1944 Bretton Woods Agreement, had long expressed opposition to capital controls, largely at the behest of the United States, which benefits from global use of the US dollar. But in 2022, the International Monetary Fund revised its “institutional view” of capital controls, declaring them an appropriate tool for “managing . . . risks in a way that preserves macroeconomic and financial stability.”[25]

In my restrictive 2044 scenario, the US uses capital controls to prevent Americans from fleeing the dollar for bitcoin. The federal government could achieve this in several ways:

  • Announcing a purportedly temporary, but ultimately permanent, suspension of the exchange of dollars for bitcoin and forcing the conversion of all bitcoin assets held in cryptocurrency exchanges into dollars at a fixed exchange rate. (Based on my predicted market price at which bitcoin’s liquidity is competitive with Treasuries, that would be approximately $1.5 million per bitcoin, but there is no guarantee that a forced conversion would occur at market rates.)

  • Barring businesses under US jurisdiction from holding bitcoin on their balance sheets and from accepting bitcoin as payment.

  • Liquidating bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) by forcing them to convert their holdings to US dollars at a fixed exchange rate.

  • Requiring bitcoin custodians to sell their bitcoin to the US government at a fixed exchange rate.

  • Requiring those who self-custody their bitcoin to sell it to the government at a fixed exchange rate.

  • Introducing a central bank digital currency to fully surveil all US dollar transactions and ensure that none are used to purchase bitcoin.

The US government would be unlikely to execute all of these strategies successfully. In particular, the US will be unable to force all those who self-custody bitcoin to surrender their private keys. But many law-abiding citizens would likely comply with such a directive. This would be a pyrrhic victory for the government, however: The imposition of capital controls would lead to a further decline in confidence in the US dollar, and the cost to the US government of purchasing all the bitcoin custodied by American citizens and residents could exceed $10 trillion, further weakening the US fiscal situation. Nonetheless, the government in the restrictive scenario will have concluded that these are the least bad options.

Confiscatory Taxation

The US government could also use tax policy to restrict the utility of bitcoin and thereby curtail its adoption.

In a world where one bitcoin equals $1.5 million, many of the wealthiest people in the United States will be early bitcoin adopters. Technology entrepreneur Balaji Srinivasan has estimated that at a price of $1 million per bitcoin, the number of bitcoin billionaires will begin to exceed the number of fiat billionaires.[26] This does not imply, however, that the distribution of wealth among bitcoin owners would be more equal than the distribution of wealth among owners of fiat currency today.

Fewer than 2 percent of all bitcoin addresses contain more than one bitcoin, and fewer than 0.3 percent contain more than ten bitcoin. Addresses within that top 0.3 percent own more than 82 percent of all the bitcoin in existence.[27] (See figure 4.) Given that many individuals control multiple wallets, and even allowing for the fact that some of the largest bitcoin addresses belong to cryptocurrency exchanges, these figures likely underestimate the amount of bitcoin wealth concentration. They compare unfavorably to US fiat wealth distribution; in 2019, the top 1 percent held merely 34 percent of all fiat-denominated wealth in the United States.[28]

If bitcoin ownership remains similarly distributed in 2044, those left behind by this monetary revolution—including disenfranchised elites from the previous era—will not go down quietly. Many will decry bitcoin wealth inequality as driven by anti-American speculators and seek to enact policies that restrict the economic power of bitcoin owners.

Figure 4. Distribution of bitcoin ownership

Credit: Avik Roy, https://public.flourish.studio/visualisation/18651414/.

In 2021, rumors circulated that Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen had proposed to President Joe Biden the institution of an 80 percent tax on cryptocurrency capital gains, a steep increase from the current top long-term capital gains tax rate of 23.8 percent.[29] In 2022, President Biden, building on a proposal by Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren, suggested taxing unrealized capital gains—that is, on-paper increases in the value of assets that the holder has not yet sold.[30] This would be an unprecedented move since it would require people to pay taxes on earnings they have not yet realized.

It has long been argued that taxing unrealized capital gains would violate the US Constitution because unrealized gains do not meet the legal definition of income, and Article I of the Constitution requires that non-income taxes must be levied in proportion to states’ respective populations.[31] A recent case before the Supreme Court, Moore v. United States, gave the court the opportunity to make clear its position on the question; it declined to do so.[32] As a result, it remains eminently possible that a future Congress, supported by a future Supreme Court, will assent to the taxing of unrealized capital gains, and cryptocurrency gains specifically.

Moreover, a presidential administration that does not like the constitutional interpretations of an existing Supreme Court could simply pack the court to ensure more favorable rulings. The FDR administration threatened to do precisely that during the 1930s. The conservative Supreme Court of that era had routinely ruled that FDR’s economically interventionist policies violated the Constitution. In 1937, Roosevelt responded by threatening to appoint six new justices to the Supreme Court in addition to the existing nine. While he was ultimately forced to withdraw his court-packing proposal, the Supreme Court was sufficiently intimidated and began approving New Deal legislation at a rapid pace thereafter.[33]

A unique feature of US tax policy is that US citizens who live abroad are still required to pay US income and capital gains taxes, along with the taxes they pay in the country of their residence. (In all other advanced economies, expatriates only pay taxes once, based on where they live. For example, a French national living and working in Belgium pays Belgian tax rates, not French tax rates, whereas an American in Belgium pays both Belgian and US taxes.) This creates a perverse incentive for Americans living abroad to renounce their US citizenship. Every year, a few thousand Americans do so. However, they must first seek approval from a US embassy on foreign soil and pay taxes on all unrealized capital gains. In a restrictive scenario, in which the US Treasury is starved for revenue, it is easy to imagine the government suspending the ability of Americans to renounce their citizenship, ensuring that expatriates’ income remains taxable regardless of where they live.

Right-Wing Financial Restrictions

While many of the restrictive policies described above have been proposed by politicians affiliated with the Democratic Party, Republican Party officials and representatives in 2044 may be just as willing to amplify populist resentment of the bitcoin elite. The United States is already home to a vocal movement of both American and European intellectuals building a new ideology broadly known as national conservatism, in which the suppression of individual rights is acceptable in the name of the national interest.[34] For example, some national conservatives advocate monetary and tax policies that protect the US dollar against bitcoin, even at the expense of individual property rights.[35]

The USA PATRIOT Act was passed by overwhelming bipartisan congressional majorities weeks after the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. It was signed into law by Republican President George W. Bush and included numerous provisions designed to combat the financing of international terrorism and criminal activity, especially by strengthening anti-money-laundering and know-your-customer rules, as well as reporting requirements for foreign bank account holders.[36]

The PATRIOT Act may have helped reduce the risk of terrorism against the US, but it has achieved this at a significant cost to economic freedom, especially for American expatriates and others who use non-US bank accounts for personal or business reasons. Just as FDR used a law from the First World War to confiscate Americans’ gold holdings, in 2044 a restrictive government of either party will find many of the PATRIOT Act’s tools useful to clamp down on bitcoin ownership and usage.

The End of America’s Exorbitant Privilege

Bitcoin is remarkably resilient in its design; its decentralized network will likely continue to function well despite restrictive measures adopted by governments against its use. Today, for instance, a considerable amount of bitcoin trading volume and mining activity occurs in China, despite that country’s prohibition of it, because of the use of virtual private networks (VPNs) and other tools that disguise a user’s geographic location.[37]

If we assume that half of the world’s bitcoin is owned by Americans and further assume that 80 percent of American bitcoin is held by early adopters and other large holders, it is likely that most of that 80 percent is already protected against confiscation through self-custody and offshore contingency planning. Capital controls and restrictions could collapse institutional bitcoin trading volume in the US, but most of this volume would likely move to decentralized exchanges or to jurisdictions outside of the US with less restrictive policies.

A fiscal failure of the US in 2044 will be necessarily accompanied by a reduction in US military power because such power is predicated on enormous levels of deficit-financed defense spending. Hence, the US government will not be as capable in 2044 as it is today of imposing its economic will on other countries. Smaller nations, such as Singapore and El Salvador, could choose to welcome the bitcoin-based capital that the US turns away.[38] The mass departure of bitcoin-based wealth from the US would, of course, make America poorer and further reduce the ability of the US government to fund its spending obligations.

Furthermore, US restriction of bitcoin’s utility will not be enough to convince foreign investors that US Treasuries are worth holding. The main way the US government could make investing in US bonds more attractive would be for the Federal Reserve to dramatically raise interest rates because higher interest rates equate to higher yields on Treasury securities. But this would in turn raise the cost of financing the federal debt, accelerating the US fiscal crisis.

Eventually, foreign investors may require the US to denominate its bonds in bitcoin, or in a foreign currency backed by bitcoin, as a precondition for further investment. This momentous change would end what former French Finance Minister and President Valéry Giscard d’Estaing famously called America’s privilège exorbitant: Its long-standing ability to borrow in its own currency, which has enabled the US to decrease the value of its debts by decreasing the value of the dollar.[39]

If and when US bonds are denominated in bitcoin, the United States will be forced to borrow money the way other countries do: In a currency not of its own making. Under a bitcoin standard, future devaluations of the US dollar would increase, rather than decrease, the value of America’s obligations to its creditors. America’s creditors—holders of US government bonds—would then be in a position to demand various austerity measures, such as requiring that the US close its budget deficits through a combination of large tax increases and spending cuts to Medicare, Social Security, national defense, and other federal programs.

A substantial decline in America’s ability to fund its military would have profound geopolitical implications. A century ago, when the United States eclipsed the United Kingdom as the world’s leading power, the transition was relatively benign. We have no assurances that a future transition will work the same way. Historically, multipolar environments with competing great powers are frequently recipes for world wars.[40]

2. The Palsied Scenario

In medicine, a palsy is a form of paralysis accompanied by involuntary tremors. This term accurately describes my second scenario, in which the macroeconomic tremors accompanying bitcoin’s rise are paired in the US with partisan polarization, bureaucratic conflict, and diminishing American power. In the palsied scenario, the US is unable to act aggressively against bitcoin, but neither is it able to get its fiscal house in order.

Today, partisan polarization in the US is at a modern high.[41] Republicans and Democrats are increasingly sorted by cultural factors: Republicans are disproportionately rural, high school–educated, and white; Democrats are more urban, college-educated, and nonwhite. Independents, who now make up a plurality of the electorate, are forced to choose among the candidates selected for general elections by Republican and Democratic base voters in partisan primaries.[42]

While we can hope that these trends reverse over time, there are reasons to believe they will not. Among other factors, the accelerating development of software capabilities that manipulate behavior at scale, including artificial intelligence—for all of their promise—brings substantial risks in the political sphere. The potential for deepfakes and other forms of mass deception could reduce trust in political parties, elections, and government institutions while further fragmenting the US political environment into smaller subcultural communities. The cumulative effect of this fragmentation may be the inability to achieve consensus on most issues, let alone controversial ones such as reducing federal entitlement spending.

In the palsied scenario, the US government is unable in 2044 to enact most of the restrictive measures described in the previous section. For example, paralysis could prevent Congress and the Federal Reserve from developing a central bank digital currency because of adamant opposition from activists but especially from depository banking institutions, who correctly view such a currency as a mortal threat to their business models. (A retail central bank digital currency obviates the need for individuals and businesses to deposit their money at banks because they could instead hold accounts directly at the Federal Reserve.)[43]

Similarly, in the palsied scenario, Congress would be unable in 2044 to enact confiscatory taxes against bitcoin holders and the wealthy more broadly. Congress would fail to enact these policies for the same reasons it has failed to date: Concerns about such taxes’ constitutionality; opposition from powerful economic interests; and recognition that direct attacks on bitcoin-based capital will drive that capital offshore to the detriment of the United States.

The palsied scenario is no libertarian utopia, however. In such a scenario, the federal government would retain the ability to regulate centralized exchanges, ETFs, and other financial services that facilitate the conversion of US dollars to bitcoin. If a majority of US-held bitcoin becomes owned through ETFs, the federal regulatory agencies would maintain the ability to limit the conversion of bitcoin ETF securities into actual bitcoin, heavily restricting the movement of capital out of US-controlled products.

Most importantly, however, partisan paralysis means that Congress will be unable to solve America’s fiscal crisis. Congress will lack the votes for entitlement reform or other spending cuts. And by 2044, federal spending will continue to increase at such a rapid clip that no amount of tax revenue will be able to keep pace.

Under the palsied scenario, Americans who hold bitcoin will be better able to protect their savings from government intrusion than under the restrictive scenario. They will not have to flee the country to own bitcoin, for example. This suggests that a significant proportion of the bitcoin community—both individuals and entrepreneurs—will remain in the United States and likely emerge as an economically powerful constituency. But the institutional environment in which they live and work will be frozen in dysfunction. Anti-bitcoin policy makers and pro-bitcoin political donors may end up in a stalemate.

As in the restrictive scenario, in the palsied scenario the failure of the dollar-denominated Treasury bond market could force the United States to eventually get its fiscal house in order. In both cases, creditors may very well demand that the Treasury Department issue debt securities that are collateralized by hard assets. By 2044, bitcoin will have over three decades of validation as a preeminent store of value, and the American bitcoin community will be well positioned to help the US adapt to its new circumstances.

3. The Munificent Scenario

The munificent scenario is both the least intuitive and the most optimistic scenario for America in 2044. In the munificent scenario, US policy makers respond to the fiscal and monetary crisis of 2044 by actively moving to remain ahead of events, instead of being compelled to react to forces ostensibly outside of their control.

The munificent scenario involves the US doing in 2044 something similar to what El Salvador did in 2019 or Argentina did in 2023 when those countries elected Nayib Bukele and Javier Milei to their presidencies, respectively. Though Bukele and Milei are different leaders with somewhat differing philosophies, they have both explicitly expressed support for bitcoin, with Bukele establishing bitcoin as legal tender in El Salvador[44] and Milei pledging to replace the Argentine peso with the dollar[45] while legalizing bitcoin.[46] Milei has also used his presidential authority to significantly reduce Argentine public expenditures in inflation-adjusted terms, thereby achieving a primary budget surplus.[47]

Imagine that in November 2044, the US elects a dynamic, pro-bitcoin president who pledges to adopt bitcoin as legal tender alongside the dollar (à la Bukele) and works with Treasury bondholders to reduce the US debt burden (à la Milei). One could imagine a grand fiscal bargain in which Treasury bondholders accept a one-time, partial default in exchange for Medicare and Social Security reform and an agreement to back the US dollar with bitcoin going forward, at a peg of sixty-seven satoshis to the dollar (that is, $1.5 million per bitcoin). Bondholders will likely be glad to accept a partial default in exchange for significant reforms that put the US on a sustainable fiscal and monetary footing for the future.

Such reforms need not punish the elderly and other vulnerable populations. A growing body of research suggests that fiscal solvency need not be at odds with social welfare. For example, the Foundation for Research on Equal Opportunity published a health care reform plan that was introduced by Arkansas Rep. Bruce Westerman and Indiana Sen. Mike Braun in 2020 as the Fair Care Act. The plan would reduce the deficit by over $10 trillion in a thirty-year period and make the health care system fiscally solvent while achieving universal coverage.[48] The bill achieves this in two primary ways: First, it means-tests health care subsidies so that taxpayers are only funding the cost of care for the poor and the middle class, not the wealthy. Second, it reduces the cost of subsidizing health care by incentivizing competition and innovation. In these ways, the proposal increases the economic security of lower-income Americans while also increasing the fiscal sustainability of the federal government.

Similarly, the US could reform Social Security by transitioning the Social Security trust fund from Treasury bonds to bitcoin (or bitcoin-denominated Treasury bonds).[49] Such an idea is less practical in the era of high volatility that has characterized bitcoin’s early history, but by 2044 the bitcoin-dollar exchange rate is likely to be more stable. The post-ETF maturation of bitcoin trading, as large financial institutions introduce traditional hedging practices to the asset, has significantly reduced bitcoin’s dollar-denominated price volatility. Soon, bitcoin’s price volatility may resemble that of a stable asset such as gold. By collateralizing Social Security with bitcoin, the US could ensure that Social Security lives up to its name, providing actual economic security to American retirees in their golden years.

The munificent scenario has additional benefits. The US government, by directly aligning itself with bitcoin’s monetary principles, could help make the twenty-first century another American one. It is highly unlikely that America’s primary geopolitical rival, China, will legalize a currency such as bitcoin that it cannot control. America’s culture of entrepreneurship, married with sound money, could lead to an unprecedented era of economic growth and prosperity for the United States. But this would require US leaders to place the nation’s long-term interests ahead of short-term political temptations.

*  *  *

The Satoshi Papers is now available for pre-order in the Bitcoin Magazine Store.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/03/2024 - 12:05

Tesla's China Sales Fall 4.3% In November As BYD Sales Surge

Tesla's China Sales Fall 4.3% In November As BYD Sales Surge

Just hours after Delaware Chancery Court Judge Kathaleen McCormick ruled against Elon Musk's record (but "deeply flawed" according to her) $56 billion performance-based compensation package, Tesla reported sales numbers out of China that didn't offer any respite for its stock.

According to the China Passenger Car Association (CPCA), Tesla's sales of China-made electric vehicles fell 4.3% year-on-year to 78,856 in November, Yahoo/Reuters reported

Sequentially, Model 3 and Model Y vehicles saw a 15.5% increase from the month prior, but it wasn't enough to show YOY growth for the automaker.

Tesla introduced a limited-time 10,000 yuan ($1,375.89) loan discount on its Model Y in China, aiming to stay competitive as BYD's aggressive price cuts gain traction.

The report added that Chinese automaker BYD set a new monthly sales record in November, with a 67.2% year-over-year increase, delivering 504,003 passenger vehicles from its Dynasty and Ocean series. Overseas sales accounted for 6.1% of the total.

Tesla extended its zero-interest financing for Model 3 and Model Y vehicles in China through December, marking the fifth extension since July. The company's market share in China's EV sector dropped to 6% in October, its lowest in a year and nearly half of September's level, per CPCA data. 

We wrote last month that Chinese EV makers were slated to end the year with a "continued sales surge". .

China's major EV makers ended Q3 stronger than last year, with solid deliveries reducing the need for discounts, according to Bloomberg

Now, analysts predict a sales surge in Q4. EV and hybrid sales are booming, driven by expanded subsidies. In September, EVs and hybrids made up about 53% of new car sales.

Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Joanna Chen commented: “Industry demand has been better than expected since the third quarter following China’s beefed-up subsidies but many automakers still need a major push in the fourth quarter to hit their annual sales targets.”

She continued: “The first nine months usually contribute 70% of annual car sales and automakers below that threshold are under greater pressure to step up discounts in the quarter.”

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/03/2024 - 11:45

Leverage And Speculation Are At Extremes

Leverage And Speculation Are At Extremes

Authored by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

Financial markets often move in cycles where enthusiasm drives prices higher, sometimes far beyond what fundamentals justify. As discussed in last week’s #BullBearReport, leverage and speculation are at the heart of many such cycles. These two powerful forces support the amplification of gains during upswings but can accelerate losses in downturns. Today’s market environment shows growing signs of these behaviors, particularly in options trading and leveraged single-stock ETFs.

While leverage and speculation are not new to the financial markets, they manifest investor exuberance. We made this point in a recent post on “Exuberance,” as consumer confidence in higher stock prices has reached the highest level since President Trump enacted sweeping tax cuts in 2018. However, that was before his re-election in November; since then, investor confidence has soared to record levels.

Notably, confidence and the desire to increase leverage and speculation in the markets are represented in current valuations.

Of course, the rise in investor confidence should be unsurprising, given nearly 15 years of abnormally high market returns. The chart below shows the average annual inflation-adjusted return of the S&P 500 over different periods. Note that since 1900, the average real market return has been 7.25%. However, since 2009, that annual real return has increased by more than 50%, even more so since President Trump enacted the TCJA in 2017, reducing corporate tax rates.

Given the level of high consistent returns, combined with an extended period of low volatility, and continued monetary and fiscal interventions, it is unsurprising there has been an explosion in speculation and leverage. That activity is seen in options trading, especially short-dated call options, and the surge in single-stock levered ETFs.

The question for investors is what this means for future market returns, and the risk of when, not if, something goes wrong.

Speculation in Today’s Markets: A Closer Look

In March 2021, I wrote an article titled “Long On Confidence And Short On Experience” about how retail investors flooded the market.

“In a “market mania,” retail investors are generally “long confidence” and “short experience” as the bubble inflates. While we often believe each ‘time’ is different, it rarely is. It is only the outcomes that are inevitably the same. A recent UBS survey revealed some fascinating insights about retail traders and the current speculation level in the market. The number of individuals searching “google” for how to “trade stocks has spiked since the pandemic lows.”

For anyone who has lived through two “real” bear markets, the imagery of people trying to learn how to “daytrade” their way to riches is familiar. From E*Trade commercials to “day trading companies,” people left their jobs to trade stocks. Of course, about 9-months later, it ended rather badly as we wrote in detail in “Retail Traders Go Bust.”

What is interesting is that after that painful lesson, just 24-months later, retail investors are again “long on confidence.” The painful lesson of losing large amounts of money has morphed into the “fear of missing out” on further gains. It is quite remarkable, but the signs are undeniable.

One sign of leverage and speculation we are watching are options. Options provide a leveraged way to bet on stock movements, requiring relatively little capital for potentially outsized returns. In November, US stock options volume hit nearly 70 million contracts on average per day; that is the second-highest on record, and trading activity has DOUBLED over the last two years.

As long as the market rises, those bets will pay off handsomely. The problem is that leverage works excellently on the way up but quickly turns into massive losses when markets decline.

Options trading has become a focal point for modern speculation. The accessibility of trading platforms and low costs have made it easier than ever for retail investors to engage in speculative bets. Short-dated call options, also known as “zero-day” options, which expire in less than 24 hours, are attractive for speculators hoping to capitalize on short-term stock price movements. These contracts allow investors to control large positions for a fraction of the cost of owning the underlying shares outright, effectively providing leverage.

For example, the surge in options volume on tech giants like Nvidia and Tesla has coincided with sharp moves in their stock prices. This speculative activity feeds into a cycle where dealer hedging magnifies stock volatility, detaching prices from fundamental values.

Don’t understand how to trade options? No problem, as Wall Street has got your back, or rather, your wallet. The newest speculation and leverage tool of choice is leveraged single-stock ETFs. These funds, designed to amplify the daily performance of a single stock, were developed to meet investor demand for an easy-to-understand product. For example, GraniteShares’ NVDL offers 2x exposure to Nvidia and has seen soaring trading activity. While the ETF can double the returns of Nvidia on any given day, it also doubles the losses. Such instruments are inherently risky, especially in volatile market conditions. Their popularity reflects an increasing appetite for speculative investments, often at the expense of prudent, long-term decision-making.

These trends are not unprecedented. Historically, periods of excessive leverage and speculation have driven markets to dizzying heights before sharp corrections followed. Investors today must understand these dynamics, learn from history, and adopt strategies to safeguard their portfolios.

Lessons from History: What Excessive Leverage Teaches Us

Periods of extreme leverage and speculation are not new, and the outcomes have consistently been painful for unprepared investors. The late 1990s dot-com bubble serves as a prime example. Speculative bets on internet stocks drove valuations to extraordinary levels, with investors leveraging margin accounts and options to chase gains. When the bubble burst, the Nasdaq lost nearly 80% of its value, leaving leveraged traders especially vulnerable to devastating losses.

Similarly, the 2008 financial crisis highlighted the dangers of leverage on a systemic scale. Banks, hedge funds, and individuals had layered debt onto overvalued housing assets, creating a fragile structure that crumbled when housing prices fell. What began as a localized issue in the U.S. housing market cascaded into a global financial meltdown.

More recently, the GameStop frenzy of 2021 showcased how speculative trading, often fueled by leverage, could drive wild price swings.

Young investors are taking on personal debt to invest in stocks. I have not personally witnessed such a thing since late 1999. At that time, ‘day traders’ tapped credit cards and home equity loans to leverage their investment portfolios. For anyone who has lived through two ‘real’ bear markets, the imagery of people trying to  ‘daytrade’ their way to riches is familiar. The recent surge in ‘Meme’ stocks like AMC and Gamestop as the ‘retail trader sticks it to Wall Street’ is not new.

Retail traders on platforms like Reddit’s WallStreetBets used call options to amplify their bets, forcing institutional investors to cover short positions. While some traders enjoyed massive gains, the stock’s eventual collapse left many with significant losses.

While this time certainly “feels’ different, particularly with Wall Street analysts ramping up market predictions for 2025, several warning signs warrant caution. First, valuation metrics, particularly in the technology sector, have reached more extreme levels. Stocks like Nvidia and Tesla are priced for perfection, with their valuations reflecting speculative enthusiasm rather than underlying fundamentals.

Second, the widespread use of leveraged products amplifies market volatility. Options trading and leveraged ETFs can cause rapid price swings, especially when market sentiment shifts. For example, a sharp decline in Nvidia’s stock could force a cascade of selling in instruments like NVDL, exacerbating broader market declines.

Finally, the systemic risks of leverage should not be overlooked. While today’s risks may not resemble the subprime mortgage crisis, the interconnectedness of financial markets means that unwinding leveraged positions in one area can ripple through the system, creating broader instability.

What Investors Should Do Now

Prudent risk management is essential in a market increasingly driven by speculation. Investors should begin by reassessing their portfolios to ensure they align with long-term goals and risk tolerance. High-risk assets, particularly those with stretched valuations or heavy reliance on speculative flows, may warrant trimming.

Diversification remains a cornerstone of effective risk management. Allocating across a mix of asset classes, sectors, and geographies can reduce the impact of a sharp downturn in any single area. Investors should also focus on quality, prioritizing companies with solid fundamentals, strong cash flows, and sustainable growth prospects.

Hedging can be a valuable tool in speculative markets. Simply increasing bonds or cash allocations can protect against downside risk. While these strategies may dampen potential near-term upside, they can mitigate risk during an unexpected reversion.

Finally, staying informed about market dynamics is critical. Monitoring speculative indicators, such as options volume and leveraged ETF flows, can provide early warning signs of frothy conditions. As discussed recently, pay attention to “Junk Bond To Treasury Spreads,” which have consistently been a leading indicator of financial risk.

“As investors, we suggest monitoring the high-yield spread closely because it tends to be one of the earliest signals that credit markets are beginning to price in higher risks. Unlike stock markets, which can often remain buoyant due to short-term optimism or speculative trading, the credit market is more sensitive to fundamental shifts in economic conditions.”

Conclusion

The market remains extremely bullish, and leverage and speculation continue to play a crucial role in driving extraordinary gains. However, as with everything, good times do not last forever. The current speculative environment is leaving investors exposed to significant risks when this current trend eventually reverses. The surge in options trading and leveraged single-stock ETFs reflects a speculative environment that requires vigilance. While markets may continue climbing in the near term, history shows that excesses often end with sharp corrections.

Investors can navigate these challenging conditions. A focus on fundamentals, managing risk, and maintaining a disciplined approach without succumbing to speculative temptations are required.

Those steps sound easy, but are difficult in a rising and speculative bull market where gains are easy to make. However, the benefit avoiding a bulk of the losses helps win the long game.

For more actionable insights on protecting and growing your portfolio, visit RealInvestmentAdvice.com.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/03/2024 - 11:25

Lebanon Ceasefire On Brink Of Collapse As Tit-For-Tat Fire Intensifies

Lebanon Ceasefire On Brink Of Collapse As Tit-For-Tat Fire Intensifies

The Lebanon ceasefire which went into effect on November 27 is now hanging by a thread, amid an increasing intensity of of tit-for-tat exchanges of gunfire between the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) and Hezbollah.

In response to reports of Israeli fire, Hezbollah on Monday fired back as a "warning" shot into northern Israel, causing no casualties, according to regional reporting. Since then there have been several rockets fired.

Via Reuters

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu immediately blasted what he called a serious violation of the fragile ceasefire. "Hezbollah’s firing at Mount Dov constitutes a serious violation of the ceasefire, and Israel will respond forcefully,” he said.

'"We are determined to continue enforcing the ceasefire, and to respond to any violation by Hezbollah — a minor one will be treated like a major one."

The IDF then proceeded to mount a series of large airstrikes on south Lebanon, which left at least five people dead. Nearly a dozen fatalities have been recorded due to Israeli attacks since last week's ceasefire went into effect, per Al Jazeera:

Israel has killed eleven people, including a State Security officer, in separate attacks in Lebanon as it continues its assaults on the country since the ceasefire with Hezbollah came into effect last week.

Surprisingly, CNN has laid the blame for the crumbling ceasefire on Israel's continued strikes, which have been much greater in number and intensity...

The attacks have reportedly involved artillery and small arms fire along with the airstrikes. Hezbollah has since escalated with rocket fire which the group has called "defensive" in nature.

This is supposed to be the period a 60-day transition where UN peacekeeping forces and the Lebanese national army takes control of Hezbollah positions in south Lebanon.

"The Israelis have been playing a dangerous game in recent days," a US official told Axios. The Axios report further stresses that the ceasefire could collapse at any moment, also after Israel flew several drones over Beirut on Sunday.

The Biden administration is not officially laying blame on Israel, however. John Kirby has said some degree of limited exchange of fire was expended. "There has been dramatic reduction in the violence. The monitoring mechanism is in full force and is working ... largely speaking the ceasefire is holding," he told reporters at the start of the week.

On Monday a Pentagon spokesman also described that despite some incidents, the ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah is holding. 

Netanyahu is meanwhile warning that if the ceasefire isn't adhered to, and if it unravels, Lebanon can expect nothing less than a full-scale ground assault on the south to continue, and an all-out war. Israeli officials say that all of Lebanon will be fair-game for attacks.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/03/2024 - 11:05

Trump Team Refutes Reports Claiming He Will Immediately Discharge Transgender Military Troops

Trump Team Refutes Reports Claiming He Will Immediately Discharge Transgender Military Troops

Authored by Jack Phillips via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

President-elect Donald Trump’s team refuted anonymously sourced reports claiming that he would immediately discharge all transgender-identifying people from the military upon taking office.

President-elect Donald Trump in the Oval Office on Nov. 13, 2024. Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images

Trump spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt, who was tapped by the president-elect to be his press secretary, said in a statement to The Epoch Times on Nov. 30 that such claims by several media outlets are based on speculation.

These unnamed sources are speculating and have no idea what they are actually talking about,” Leavitt said. “No policy should ever be deemed official unless it comes directly from President Trump or his authorized spokespeople.”

The alleged proposed plan was first reported by The Times of London, citing “defense sources” and a “source familiar with Trump’s plans,” last week and would entail Trump’s signing an order to medically discharge transgender-identifying troops from the military. The move, it claimed, would force some 15,000 individuals from the armed forces.

The report did not list any named sources and did not indicate whether any of the individuals worked on the Trump transition team.

In response to The Times of London report, the head of the pro-LGBT Human Rights Campaign alleged that such a ban would “make our country less safe” and is “nothing more than transphobia.”

Our military must be able to recruit the best candidates, retain the highly trained service members who have already sacrificed so much for their country, and every qualified patriot should be able to serve openly, free of discrimination,” Kelley Robinson, Human Rights Campaign president, said in a statement last week amid the reports.

In 2017, during his first term in office, Trump announced that the military would no longer allow transgender-identifying people to serve in “any capacity,” coming after the Obama administration allowed such people to serve in the military and receive taxpayer-funded medical treatments related to identifying as transgender.

Our military must be focused on decisive and overwhelming victory and cannot be burdened with the tremendous medical costs and disruption that transgender in the military would entail,” Trump wrote on social media in July 2017.

The policy was revised in 2018 and only blocked people from serving in the military who had a history of gender dysphoria who were unable or unwilling to serve as their biological sex or had undergone medical transition treatment. In 2019, the Supreme Court ruled 5–4 that the 2018 version of the ban could remain intact, but the ban was later reversed by President Joe Biden.

Just days after taking office in early 2021, Biden signed an executive order that overturned the first Trump administration order.

At the time, Biden said that the U.S. military is “stronger” around the world and at home “when it is inclusive,” according to a statement. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin had also indicated that he backed Biden’s decision.

In mid-2016, President Barack Obama ended a longstanding ban on transgender-identifying people in the military, with Defense Secretary Ash Carter at the time saying in a news conference that the military has to “have access to 100 percent of America’s population.”

Aside from military-related policies, Trump has backed a ban on transgender medical treatments for minors.

On his campaign website, the president-elect said he would remove hospitals and health care providers that participate in the “chemical or physical mutilation of minor youth” from Medicaid and Medicare programs.

Meanwhile, Trump has proposed barring transgender-identifying athletes from competing in women’s sports. In a town hall event in September, Trump said that if elected, his administration would stop the policy because “it’s a man playing” in a women’s game.

Look at what’s happened in swimming. Look at the records that are being broken,” he said.

In an Associated Press survey of more than 120,000 people who cast ballots during the last election, more than half of voters stated that support for transgender rights in government and society has gone too far. Among Trump voters, 85 percent said such support had gone too far.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/03/2024 - 10:45

Job Opening Unexpectedly Surge With Biggest Increase in 14 Months; Quits Also Soar

Job Opening Unexpectedly Surge With Biggest Increase in 14 Months; Quits Also Soar

After last month's catastrophic JOLTS report, which was a disaster across the board, and which was meant to give the Fed a green light to cut rates more after Biden won the election (which he didn't, but the Fed still had to cut even if Trump is now in control), some speculated that Biden's Department of Labor will do everything in its power to sabotage further rate cuts by the Fed, most notably the upcoming December decision in two weeks time, by pushing out much stronger than expected economic data. That's precisely what happened moments ago when the DOL reported that in October, the number of job openings in the US soared by a whopping 372K, the biggest monthly increase since August 2023, to 7.744 million from 7.372 million.

The JOLTS print smashed the median estimate of 7.519 million by 225K...

... with just 4 analysts (out of 28) predicting a higher job openings number.

According to the DOL, the job openings rate, at 4.6 percent, changed little over the month. The number of job openings increased in professional and business services (+209,000), accommodation and food services (+162,000), and information (+87,000) but decreased in federal government (-26,000).

Amusingly, after we mocked two months ago the stunning surge in construction job openings just as a record chasm had opened between the manipulated number of construction jobs and openings...

... which meant the biggest monthly surge in construction job openings on record at a time when the housing market has effectively frozen thanks to sky high interest rates, a simply glorious paradox of manipulated bullshit data...

... the BLS realized that it had to make an adjustment after getting called out, and Construction Job openings dropped by another 9K to 249K and back to post-covid lows. Oh, and yes, the number of "construction jobs" is about to fall off a cliff just as soon as Orange Man Bad enters the White House.

Setting the glaring data manipulation aside, in the context of the broader jobs report, in October the number of job openings was 770K more than the number of unemployed workers, an increase from the previous month and not too far from inverting once again, similar to what happened during the covid crash.

But while the job openings surge was a surprising reversal of the deteriorating trend observed for much of 2024, where even the DOL was stumped was the number of hires, which tumbled from 5.582 million to 5.313 million, a new post-covid low.

Commenting on the plunge, SouthBay Research notes that "hiring was weak in October and the last time hiring was this low was June and NFP slowed to 118K. But remember that this data aligns with the October Payroll data - not November's.  Both October NFP and the latest October JOLTS Hiring data cover the same period (through mid-October)." Furthermore, there were an additional 4 weeks since this JOLTS survey and hurricane recovery (aka hiring) rebounded. In addition, as the Job Openings indicate, employer intent to hire was already underway when this survey was completed.

Meanwhile, the drop in hiring was offset by a surprise spike in the number of Quits, which rose by 228K from 3.098MM to 3.326MM, the biggest increase since May 2023, with quits increasing in accommodation and food services (+90,000).

Finally, no matter what the "data" shows, let's not forget that it is all just estimated, and it is safe to say that the real number of job openings remains still far lower since half of it - or some 70% to be specific - is guesswork. As the BLS itself admits, while the response rate to most of its various labor (and other) surveys has collapsed in recent years, nothing is as bad as the JOLTS report where the actual response rate remains near a record low 33%

In other words, more than two thirds, or 67% of the final number of job openings, is made up!

Looking ahead to Friday's November Nonfarm Payrolls, the report will be driven by hurricane recovery, with the JOLTS data pointing to a lot of weakness in exactly the areas October Payrolls slipped. As for organic hiring, there have been no anecdotal signs of hiring pullback heading into November. On the contrary: businesses seem to be inclined to ramp up a bit, now that Trump is president and promises a dramatic easing of regulations.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/03/2024 - 10:36

WallerISMs

WallerISMs

By Benjamin Picton, Senior Macro Strategist at Rabobank

WallerISMs

Political instability in France again takes center stage today as markets continue to price in the seemingly inevitable collapse of Michel Barnier’s government. Marine Le Pen’s RN party vowed to side with left-wing parties to pass a vote of no confidence in Barnier’s administration this week after the Prime Minister used constitutional powers to push through unpopular social security savings measures without a vote. The Euro fell 0.75% against the Dollar and French 10-year yields rose 2.1bps in defiance of a broad downward shift for European sovereign curves.

The CAC40 closed mostly unchanged while the German DAX gained more than 1.5%. US stocks were mixed with the Dow losing 0.29% while the S&P500 rose by 0.29% and the more duration-sensitive NASDAQ put on almost 1%. US stocks may have been encouraged by a ‘Goldilocks’ manufacturing ISM report, which showed the ‘prices paid’ index falling from 54.8 to 50.3 while ‘new orders’ rose to 50.4 and ‘employment’ rose from 44.4 to 48.1.

The release of the ISM manufacturing report coincides with an article published in the FT today suggesting that Joe Biden’s embrace of industrial policy via the Inflation Reduction Act and the Chips Act is beginning to pay dividends for the American manufacturing sector as foreign investment and construction activity on new manufacturing projects surges (even if actual manufacturing employment is yet to show much upside). Figures on construction spending in October release yesterday confirmed showed stronger growth than expected.

The overall encouraging tone for the US economy paired with a fresh threat from President Trump over the weekend to impose 100% tariffs on BRICS economies seeking to de-dollarize to put a bid under the USD. Trump might contend that the rising construction activity for new manufacturing projects in the United States is due at least in part to his carrot and stick approach of offering generous tax cuts to domestic producers while imposing stiff tariffs on firms that instead produce outside of the US and seek to import finished goods. It is likely that at least some manufacturers saw which way the political winds were blowing and decided to de-risk by locating new projects inside US borders rather than gambling on a more free-trading status quo.

The Bloomberg Dollar spot index reached as high as 106.73 before retracing slightly in late trade, but the stronger Dollar wasn’t enough to send crude oil or gold prices much lower. The support in those commodity prices, along with the long wick on the DXY graph might suggest that the retracement in the USD that has been in place since the Friday before last might have a little further to run before the Dollar resumes its overall upward trend.

US OIS futures are this morning implying a 75% chance of a 25bp rate cut at the Fed’s December meeting following comments from Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller that at present he “lean[s] toward” supporting a further cut to the Fed Funds rate this month, but that his vote will depend on the flow of data between now and the December 18th FOMC meeting. Despite flagging support for a cut this month, Waller also sounded a note of caution by saying that recent data had raised some concerns that progress on disinflation may be stalling above the Fed’s 2% target.

The good result in the ‘prices paid’ component of the ISM manufacturing report might have helped to reassure traders listening to Waller, because the implied path of the Fed Funds rate according to the futures market is little changed since markets reopened after the Thanksgiving holiday late last week. Pricing on the December meeting implies ~1 extra basis point worth of cuts, while pricing for end of Q2 and Q4 next year suggests a Fed Funds rate ~2bps higher than was the case on Friday.

It may be the case that traders are simply waiting for this week’s dump of US labour market data and Jerome Powell’s comments tomorrow before adjusting their views on policy rates. Today brings the October JOLTS job openings figures, tomorrow we get the results of the ADP employment survey and Friday we will see the November non-farm payrolls report where further signs that the jobs market is no longer softening might be the sort of indicator that Waller is looking for to vote for a pause in December.

RaboResearch forecasts a cut from the FOMC in December and another in January to bring the top of the Fed Funds range down to 4.25%. After that, we think the Fed will be on hold as the new administration sets about implementing the Trump program of substantial tax cuts, deportations and universal tariffs.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/03/2024 - 10:25

NVDA Doubles AAPL, Trump Blows Up The Dollar, & The End Of OPEC: Saxo's Outrageous Predictions For 2025

NVDA Doubles AAPL, Trump Blows Up The Dollar, & The End Of OPEC: Saxo's Outrageous Predictions For 2025

It's that time of year again...

Saxo's Outrageous Predictions are not exactly news and not exactly real – at least not yet.

And while they don’t know which stories will drive the global economy in the coming year, their 2025 predictions, from Nvidia trouncing its Mag 7 peers to the fall of OPEC, from a bold bet on reflation in China to a great leap forward in biotech, are just as promised...

Outrageous.

Trump 2.0 blows up the US dollar

Summary:  As the new Trump administration turns the global financial system on its head with huge tariffs, the world scrambles to find alternatives to the dollar

The globalist system that formed in the ashes of World War II was built on the combination of a US security guarantee to protect trade routes for the “Free World” and the use of the US dollar as the chief currency for transactions and as a store of value. Even after the greenback's link to gold was broken by US President Nixon in 1971, the US dollar continued its domination in the globalised economy.

Cue the 2016 US election and the advent of President Trump, the first president in living memory to bash at the foundations of the global system, demanding tariffs for imported goods to right the huge US trade deficit wrongs and decrying the cost of maintaining the vast US security umbrella. US security alliance partners were shocked, and China was put on notice. But then came the pandemic and a new election brought Biden and encouraged the notion that Trump was an aberration, not the new norm. Then there was the 2024 US election and return of Trump. If Trump 1.0 was the warm-up act for deglobalisation, Trump 2.0 will prove the main event, with all of its consequences for the US dollar.

In 2025, the new Trump administration overhauls the entire nature of the US relationship with the world, slapping massive tariffs on all imports, while slashing deficits with the help of an Elon Musk-run Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). The implications for the US dollar are dire for trade around the world, as it cuts off the needed supply of dollars to keep the wheels of the global USD system turning, ironically risking a powerful spike higher in the US dollar. Instead, safety valves are found, as global financial actors scramble for alternatives. China and the BRICS+ transact with gold-backed digital money and, to a degree, directly in a new gold-backed offshore yuan. Europe rebases its trading relationships increasingly in the euro. Gold-linked crypto stablecoins add to the mix, as this dramatic new chapter in global financial markets begins.

Potential market impact: The crypto market quadruples to more than USD 10 trillion, the US dollar falls 20% against major currencies and 30% versus gold. The US economy continues to reflate, but wages keep up with goods inflation, as production resources reshore to the US. US exporters advantaged.

Nvidia balloons to twice the value of Apple

Summary:  Armed with its revolutionary AI chips, could tech giant Nvidia grow to twice Apple's size and become the most profitable company of all time?

The saying goes that in a gold rush, the only operators sure to make a fortune are the sellers of shovels, since most miners will fail to find any gold. What we are seeing in the AI space feels much like a gold rush, as the monopoly info-tech giants and a crush of start-ups have rushed to harness the golden promises of generative AI. These stretch from Meta’s Metaverse to the incredible number-crunching loads to drive new applications like autonomous driving. The primary shovel-seller in the AI gold rush is Nvidia, designer of the juiced-up chips, and just as importantly, the software ecosystem at the heart of the lion’s share of AI data centres.

In 2025, Nvidia’s success is supercharged further with the availability in volume of its revolutionary 208-billion transistor Blackwell chip, a chip that drives up to a 25-fold increase in performance of AI calculations per unit of energy consumed relative to the prior H100 generation. With the intensifying AI arms race as no giant or even government wants to be left behind, and as AI data centre electricity costs have soared, the insatiable demand for the more powerful and yet less power-hungry Blackwell chips sees Nvidia taking the crown as the most profitable company of all time. It handily surpasses Apple’s record USD 105 billion of profits next year, and with far faster growth baked into expectations, its market cap nearly doubles again, making it twice the size of Apple. This sees it tower above all other companies in the world at a value of USD 7 trillion, or 10% of the global equity market. Apple and other tech giants’ valuations suffer in relative terms, as their profitability is weighed down by the need to build titanic data centres to keep up in the AI gold rush.  

Potential market impact: Nvidia shares trade well north of USD 250, before the market begins to question its potential to grab an ever-greater share of corporate profits, and as unwelcome regulatory scrutiny on its monopoly status tempers the outlook. 

China unleashes CNY 50 trillion stimulus to reflate its economy

Summary:  Having created history’s most epic debt bubble, China boldly bets that fiscal stimulus to the tune of trillions of CNY is the only answer.

China is mired in a classic balance sheet recession akin to the Japanese experience of the 1990’s. In an epic binge, the country inflated a corporate debt and real-estate debt bubble without parallel in global economic history. China’s corporate debt alone stands at north of 150% of GDP. Local government debt is on the order of another 80-90% of GDP. Household debt is not as high as elsewhere, but much is linked to a suffering real estate market.  

When countries enter a balance sheet recession, every actor in the economy, both public and private, is strongly incentivised to pay down debt to repair balance sheets. But this effort to improve finances only worsens the collective outlook as economic activity and prices crater. The government can choose many paths in a balance sheet recession, but all come with significant risks. If you write off the debt, the economy deflates and the wealthy class of creditors is crushed. If you do nothing, the country can stay in a decades-long malaise. If you run massive trade surpluses to have other countries finance your balance sheet repair as China is already trying to do, you risk the ire of other nations and trade wars. If you force a reflation with massive fiscal stimulus, inflation can create social unrest. 

In 2025, China makes a bold bet that reflation is the only answer and thinks it can manage the inflationary risks as it unleashes a gargantuan set of fiscal initiatives that add up to promises of more than CNY 50 trillion (about USD 7 trillion) in 2025 and the following years. Much of the spending goes directly into consumers' pockets via e-CNY digital currency, so that it will be injected straight into the economy rather than to pay off debt. China also adds heavy doses of social engineering in its stimulus, incentivising companies to reduce working hours to improve quality of life. This boosts leisure time, consumption, company formation, family formation and childbearing. 

Potential market impact:  A strong reflationary impact in China and the world, outperformance of EM relative to DM and China in particular, higher commodity prices globally, a stronger Chinese renminbi.

First bio-printed human heart ushers in new era of longevity

Summary:  It’s alive! Fusing bioengineering and medical science, scientists successfully bio-print a human heart, promising to extend the lives of millions.

In an unprecedented scientific breakthrough, 2025 sees researchers successfully bio-print a fully functional human heart, using advanced 3D bioprinting technology. Starting with high-resolution CT scans, scientists create an intricate digital model capturing every minute detail of the heart's complex structure. This model serves as the blueprint for a state-of-the-art 3D bioprinter, which meticulously layers human stem cells and biodegradable scaffold materials to construct the organ with remarkable precision. 

Once printed, the nascent heart is placed in a specialised bioreactor that mimics the physiological conditions of the human body. Here, the heart matures over several weeks, allowing the cells to organise and differentiate properly, establishing vital networks of blood vessels and electrical pathways necessary for normal heart function. In a groundbreaking surgical procedure, the matured human heart is then transplanted into a pig for testing. 

The implications of this achievement are monumental. It promises to alleviate the global shortage of donor organs by providing bio-printed hearts tailored to the DNA of individual patients, thus reducing the risk of rejection. This breakthrough paves the way for extending human longevity by replacing failing organs with custom-made, fully compatible ones. Additionally, it opens avenues for innovation in bio-printing other complex organs, revolutionising regenerative medicine and personalised healthcare. 

This massive advance in biotechnology history captures global attention. The fusion of bioengineering and medical science promises to improve and lengthen the lives of millions in years to come. 

Potential market impact: The success in bio-printed organs sees growth expectations jump for the biotechnology and 3D printing sectors. Most companies in this space are in the start-up phase, but watch for a rash of IPOs in the space. More generally, this surge in innovation and investment could reshape the healthcare industry, leading to improved patient outcomes and significant economic growth.

Electrification boom ends OPEC

Summary:  As electric vehicles become more affordable, could oil-rich OPEC become irrelevant in 2025 and find itself on the ash heap of history?

In the space of just a few years, China has made a mockery of all prior assumptions about the potential scale of both EV production and adoption. Schroders, a nearly trillion-dollar asset manager, touted growth potential for Chinese EV production back in early 2021, projecting that EV sales might reach close to 5 million vehicles by the end of 2024 and a market share of 15%. The ensuing reality blew the roof off these projections, as Chinese EV registrations rose above 8 million already in 2023. And by September of 2024, EV market share of new car sales was reaching north of 45% in China, as overall EV sales growth rose above 40% year-on-year. This is some six years quicker than expected.  

China is showing the way in the transportation electrification boom. As other countries join China in rapidly building out exponential growth in production capacity, battery prices will deflate further, making EVs cheaper than their petrol-burning counterparts, with a crossover point in costs within 12 months, even on an unsubsidised basis. With an exponential adoption rate curve dead ahead, it brings forward projections of peak oil to as early as 2025 and the anticipation of an accelerating decline in demand in the years ahead. 

In 2025, with the writing on the wall on the forward demand picture since two-thirds of oil ends up as gasoline or diesel in cars and trucks, OPEC finds its relevance shrinking further and its multi-million barrel per day production limits irrelevant. With some members already cheating production quotas to grab what income they can and export demand falling, a majority of members quickly realise the jig is up. Amidst the bickering and in-fighting, key members leave. This consigns OPEC to the ash heap of history. Former members max out production to ensure market share, driving a large drop in oil prices. 

Potential market impact:  Crude oil slumps in price, a boon for airlines, chemical, paint and tire manufacturers and freight and logistics companies. But the market balances quickly and oil prices stabilise, as higher cost suppliers, especially in North America, shut down expensive shale oil production. Japanese carmakers find themselves in a desperate race to catch up with other EV players.

US imposes AI data centre tax as power prices run wild

Summary:  With tech giants sucking up power supplies for their new AI data centres, utility bills skyrocket and an outraged public demands action.

The AI revolution is a power-hungry one. The tech giants see that current electricity supply falls far short of what is required to power the massive new AI data centres they hope to build. They are already taking dramatic steps to secure stable, long-term power sources. Microsoft has contracted with Constellation Energy to reopen one of the old nuclear reactors at Three Mile Island. Google and Amazon are striking deals with US utilities and other providers to create small modular nuclear reactors (SMRs) for their planned AI data centres. But these are all long-term projects - for 2030 and beyond in the case of the latter two. What about the energy needs right here and now, as the AI arms race reaches new white-hot intensity already in 2025? 

In 2025, US power prices spike higher in several populated US areas, as the largest tech companies scramble to lock in baseload electricity supplies for their precious AI data centres.  This inspires popular outrage, as households see their utility bills skyrocket, aggravated by the huge spikes in power prices for electricity consumed at home during peak load periods in the evening. In response, many local authorities move in to protect political constituents, slapping huge taxes and even fines on the largest data centres in a move to subsidise lower power prices for households.  The taxes incentivise investment in massive new solar farms with load balancing battery packs, but also dozens of new natural gas-driven power stations, even as the demand for ever more power continues to rise faster than supply. Rising power prices drive a new inflationary impulse. 

Potential market impact:  A massive boom in US investment in power infrastructure. Companies like Fluor rise on signing massive new construction deals. Tesla’s accelerating Megapack gets increasing attention. Long-term US natural gas prices more than double, a significant contributor to a more inflationary outlook.

A natural disaster bankrupts a large insurance company for the first time

Summary:  After a year of wild weather in 2024, a catastrophic storm hits the US in 2025, sinking a large insurer that has underestimated climate change risks.

Climate change is driving an intensification of the earth’s water cycle. As the atmosphere warms, it can hold more moisture, and rainfall intensity has been rising sharply in recent years. This past year has seen wild weather events around the world, from a deluge that created temporary lakes in some of the driest areas of the Sahara, to deadly flooding in Slovakia and Poland as rivers burst their banks and in Connecticut and New York after a “once in a thousand year” rainfall event. Climate scientists have charted that rainfall amounts that fall in heavier rains around the world are marching ever higher. This means the risk that what was formerly considered a 100-year or even 1000-year rain and flooding event could happen on the order of once a decade, or even more frequently.  

In 2025, a catastrophic storm and rainfall event in the US catches the insurance industry unprepared, inflicting damage stretching into many multiples of the USD 40 billion in claims linked to Hurricane Katrina in 2005. One of the largest US insurers significantly underestimated the insurance risks from climate change, leading to underpriced policies in the affected region. With insufficient reserves to cover claims and inadequate reinsurance to mitigate the costs of this extreme event, panic spreads across the entire industry. A crisis unfolds, prompting government-level discussions on whether to bail out the failing company and the other walking wounded in the industry to prevent widespread risk contagion. The disaster forces a reset in natural disaster pricing, profoundly marking down real estate values in many housing markets. Consumer confidence takes a hit on the insecurity of the value of many homeowners’ largest asset, their house. 

Potential market impact:  Berkshire Hathaway shares rise as Buffett’s company has enough capital to weather the panic and the company gains market share.

Sterling erases post-Brexit discount versus the euro

Summary:  As Europe’s economy struggles, fresh fiscal policy winds are blowing in the UK, driving sterling back to levels versus the euro not seen since before Brexit.

The UK outlook is as constructive as ever in the post-Brexit era. That is, it is the most positive relative to the sick man of Europe, which is, well…Europe, or at least the core Eurozone countries, France and Germany. Fresh fiscal policy winds are blowing in the UK, where the new UK Labour government announced budget priorities ahead of 2025 that avoided the most growth-damaging types of tax hikes on income, while trimming the least productive public sector spending in moving to shrinking its deficits. By cutting unproductive subsidies like winter fuel aid for pensioners, encouraging investment in the property and manufacturing sectors and raising incomes for public sector workers, the UK is primed for solid nominal growth in the years ahead, keeping the Bank of England policy rate at a high level compared to major global peers.  

On the European continent, the situation couldn't be more different. France has a dysfunctional government that is mired in a five-year exercise of getting its out-of-control budgets in order. It has already announced growth-killing taxes on personal and corporate income and austerity. Shield your eyes! Meanwhile, Germany remains the sickest of the sick in Europe, unwilling to debt finance desperately needed domestic investment in housing and infrastructure that it could easily afford. Its former economic model of cheap Russian energy inputs to drive its huge industrial base and manufactured exports lies in ruins. And its non-luxury car producers have been rendered uncompetitive by both high energy input costs and China running away with new EV battery technology and gobbling up a dominant global export share in the critical auto sector. Germany must find a new way – but that is perhaps an outrageous prediction for 2026…  

In 2025, sterling rises through 1.27 versus the euro, the level it traded ahead of the Brexit referendum, thus erasing its entire post-Brexit vote discount. 

Potential market impact:  Encouraging domestic investment and a more robust growth outlook support sterling versus the flailing euro, seeing the Euro/Sterling rate fall as low as 0.7500, below the rate the day before the Brexit vote at 0.76. The UK FTSE 100 posts a strong performance.

*  *  *

Read the full Outrageous Predictions report here...

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/03/2024 - 10:05

California Bill Would Prioritize Descendants Of Slaves In University Admissions

California Bill Would Prioritize Descendants Of Slaves In University Admissions

Authored by Kimberly Hayek via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

A California lawmaker introduced a bill on Monday that would give the descendants of slaves priority admissions into the University of California and California State University schools, the state’s two public university systems.

A student walks toward Royce Hall on the campus of University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) on March 11, 2020. Robyn Beck/AFP via Getty Images

The bill would change a precedent set nearly 30 years ago. Since 1996, California’s Proposition 209 has prohibited public schools, including the University of California and California State University, to use race as a factor in the admissions process.

California has long employed race-blind admissions efforts, which consider socio-economic status and location to identify disadvantaged students from immigrant or ethnic backgrounds.

Assemblymember Isaac Bryan, a Democrat representing parts of Los Angeles, told The Associated Press he would introduce the bill on Monday as lawmakers met on Capitol Hill with new members bing sworn in for the incipient legislative session.

“For decades universities gave preferential admission treatment to donors, and their family members, while others tied to legacies of harm were ignored and at times outright excluded,” Bryan said. “We have a moral responsibility to do all we can to right those wrongs.

Bryan noted that the measure aligns with recommendations put forth by members of California’s Reparations Task Force, a non-regulatory state agency established by the California assembly to study and develop reparations proposals. The California Reparation Task Force issued a thousand-page report in June 2023 detailing a far-reaching plan encompassing reforms at every level of government and even cash payments.

There is a growing understanding of California’s role in perpetuating the inequalities that arose from slavery, and there’s a willingness to try to rectify that harm, to heal that harm,” Bryan said. He said that the new admissions-focused measure is aimed at correcting past and present-day discrimination at universities.

“When folks think about reparations, they think about just cash payments. But repairing the harm and the inequality that came from slavery and the policies thereafter is a much bigger process,” he said.

Bryan’s proposal is, in part, being seen as a response to President-elect Donald Trump’s plans to end diversity, equity, and inclusion programs at educational institutions, which he outlined in 2023 as part of his Agenda47.

Trump has also pledged to get rid of the Department of Education. In addition, Republican Mike Rounds, a senator from South Dakota, introduced last week the Returning Education to Our States Act, a bill to abolish the Department of Education.

California Superintendent of Schools Tony Thurmond said in early November that California would pick up slack were Trump to move forward with federal education cuts.

Black students comprised approximately 4 percent of the California State University’s student population and 5 percent at the University of California in 2023, the university systems report.

Black students have the lowest graduation rate of any demographic in California higher education. The Cal State system, in particular, has historically struggled to graduate black students, who had an approximately 50 percent chance of graduating from a CSU school as late as 2022.

Reparation Bids

Bryan’s proposal to give descendants of slaves priority admission into public universities is the latest in a series of reparations attempts at California’s state level.

Gov. Gavin Newsom signed in September several reparations-minded bills and addressed a series of issues around which some black Californians have organized. The governor also signed a formal apology for California’s past role in the perpetuation of slavery and its enduring effects.

Among the bills he signed, Newsom addressed a range of issues pertaining to black communities. For instance, SB 1348, introduced by state Senator Steven Bradford, established the designation of “California Black-Serving Institutions,” with the goal of formally recognizing higher education campuses that excel at allocating resources to black students. Bradford’s district includes parts of Los Angeles County.

Newsom did veto, however, a proposal that would have allowed black families to reclaim property seized unjustly by the government via eminent domain. The governor cited the fact that the bill tasked a non-existent state agency with carrying out its provisions and requirements as the reason for the rejection. Like the promised admissions bill, that bill was put forth by Bryan.

Bryan did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/03/2024 - 09:45

Cyber Weekend Sales Rise 9% As Cyber Monday Fades Into Oblivion

Cyber Weekend Sales Rise 9% As Cyber Monday Fades Into Oblivion

Cyber Weekend e-commerce sales grew 9% in the US this year, up from 6% in 2023, according to data from Salesforce. The growth took place even as the average discount in the US shrank by 2% from last year, to 28%.

Cyber Weekend, the Saturday and Sunday sandwiched between Black Friday, which is the unofficial start of the holiday shopping season, and Cyber Monday, have become big online shopping days. US retailers garner about 20% of their annual sales during the holiday season.

"Despite the anticipation and careful planning that consumers put into Cyber Week, the discounts haven’t quite met expectations this year,” said Caila Schwartz, Director of Consumer Insights at Salesforce. “Nevertheless, shoppers still made a significant number of purchases thus far, demonstrating their resilience and eagerness to capitalize on the season’s deals."

One explanation for the relatively strong showing of Cyber Weekend is that it continues to pull forward demand from Cyber Monday, a day which was created to much fanfare by the National Retail Federation in 2005 when online shopping was first emerging, and has already become anachronistic.

As Axis notes, Cyber Monday was an attempt by e-commerce companies to piggyback on the Black Friday shopping frenzy, which at the time was overwhelmingly an in-person affair. The original idea was that after taking Thursday and Friday off work, plus the weekend, office drones would log into their work computers on Monday, where they could order goods over the newfangled Internet.

Of course, today everybody has the internet in their pocket and e-commerce is mostly conducted over phones rather than desktop computers and nobody waits until Monday to find good deals since the deep online discount start in many cases well before Thanksgiving, and continue for many days after the holiday is long gone.

As a result, since 2019 there has been more online shopping on Black Friday than on Cyber Monday.

So while Cyber Monday was originally a way for retailers to squeeze an extra day of sales out of the Thanksgiving Day long weekend, in this day and age of constant attention for eyeballs among the "always online" population,, with each year Cyber Monday's popularity continues to decline.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/03/2024 - 09:25

BBC Includes Male 'Trans Woman' On Top 100 Women List

BBC Includes Male 'Trans Woman' On Top 100 Women List

Via dailysceptic.org,

The BBC has included a male ‘trans woman’ Colombian scientist in its annual list of 100 inspiring women, just days after sparking controversy over its choice for women’s footballer of the year.

The Telegraph has the story:

Every year, the broadcaster compiles a list of women who have achieved great things in public life.

Its nominees include transgender biologist Brigitte Baptiste, described in the citation as a “trans woman” who “explores the common patterns between biodiversity and gender identity”.

The BBC says the scientist uses a “queer lens to analyse landscapes and species in a bid to expand the notion of ‘nature’ to better protect ecosystems”.

In a 2018 TED talk, Baptiste claimed scientists had discovered “transsexual” palm trees and stated that the “change of sex and gender has been reported regularly in science”.

On this basis, she argued that it was wise to do away with ideas of “naturalness” in nature, stating: “There is nothing more queer than nature.”

The broadcaster said: “BBC 100 Women acknowledges the toll this year has taken on women by celebrating those who – through their resilience – are pushing for change, as the world changes around them.” …

Zambian footballer Barbra Banda was honoured by the corporation despite being withdrawn from Women’s Africa Cup of Nations for high testosterone levels.

The BBC named Banda as its women’s footballer of the year for 2024.

Worth reading in full.

Fiona Crack, founder of BBC 100 Women and co-controller of BBC World Service languages and deputy global director, said:

“At the BBC, we are proud to shine a spotlight on these extraordinary women, from high-profile figures to those whose remarkable contributions often go unrecognised.”

'Women' - You keep using that word; we do not think it means what you think it means...

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/03/2024 - 09:05

The End Of Fake News? MSNBC Hits New Low In Ratings

The End Of Fake News? MSNBC Hits New Low In Ratings

Authored by Luis Cornelio via Headline USA,

The leftist “news” channel MSNBC is facing a ratings crisis, with some of its advertiser-coveted viewership dropping to a two-decade low, according to Nielsen data reviewed by Fox News

During the week of Nov. 6, MSNBC averaged just 38,000 viewers among adults 25-54, its lowest-rated non-holiday weekday since July 19, 2004.

As reported by Fox News, this demographic is widely prized by advertisers and is crucial for network revenue.

Low viewership impacted shows like The 11th Hour with Stephanie Ruhle and Jose Diaz Balart Reports, both of which saw their smallest audiences ever.  

Other shows—including Chris Jansing ReportsDeadline: White House and Katy Tur Reports—saw their worst days ever among the demos. 

Several shows lost over 50% of their 25-54 audience. Among those shows are The 11th Hour with Stephanie RuhleAll In with Chris HayesChris Jansing ReportsInside with Jen PsakiThe Rachel Maddow Show and Joy Reid’s ReidOut.

This slump couldn’t have come at a worse time, as MSNBC’s parent company, Comcast, announced cuts to cable channels, excluding NBC News and Bravo TV. CNN reports that MSNBC will be moved into “SpinCo,” a publicly traded cable programming company. 

Tech mogul Elon Musk has hinted at purchasing MSNBC, while journalist Jack Posobiec says he’s recruiting investors to take control of the left-wing network. 

Podcast host Joe Rogan joked about replacing Rachel Maddow if Musk buys MSNBC: “I will wear the same outfit and glasses, and I will tell the same lies.” 

Along with viewership and Comcast scandals, MSNBC is under the scrutiny of its viewers after Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski met with Donald Trump, despite having previously compared him to dictators. 

Al Sharpton faces ethical scrutiny after his nonprofit quietly took a $500,000 donation from the Harris campaign ahead of his interview with Vice President Kamala Harris.

MSNBC conceded that Sharpton blindsided them with the donation. “MSNBC was unaware of the donations made to the National Action Network,” an MSNBC spokesperson told the Washington Free Beacon.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/03/2024 - 08:35

Futures Gain, S&P On Pace For 55th Record Closing High Of 2024

Futures Gain, S&P On Pace For 55th Record Closing High Of 2024

US equity futures are flat as the yield curve sees slight steepening; for once, the US is not benefiting from the risk-on rally seen in EU/APAC. As of 8:00am ET, S&P futures are fractionally in the green reversing earlier losses as traders await a busy line-up of Fed speakers and data releases after the index notched its 54th closing high of the year on Monday; Nasdaq 100 futures are down 0.1% even though Mag7 names are mostly higher in the premarket and Semis are bid. The USD is lower as the commodity complex catches a bid; WTI, silver, and sugar the outperformers; earlier Bloomberg reported China moved to restrict exports of rare earth metals to the US used in high-tech/military applications (gallium, germanium, antimony, and other superhard materials). Today’s macro focus will be on JOLTS and Vehicle Sales.

In premarket trading, Zscaler shares fall as much as 8.0% after the security software company gave a forecast for adjusted second-quarter earnings that missed expectations. Here are some other notable premarket movers

Anglogold Ashanti shares rise 3.7% after RBC Capital Markets upgraded the mining company to outperform from sector perform.

  • Credo Technology shares jump as much as 35% after the communications equipment company reported second-quarter results that beat expectations.
  • CVS Health gains 1.5% after Deutsche Bank upgrades the pharmacy chain to buy from hold, saying both earnings and the stock’s multiple appear to be near trough levels.
  • Janux Therapeutics shares soar 68% after the biotechnology firm announced positive updated interim clinical data for its oncology lead asset, JANX007.
  • Joby Aviation shares fall as much as 2.3%% after the all-electric vertical take-off and landing aircraft startup said its CFO Matthew Field notified the company he’d be resigning effective Dec. 13 for personal reasons.
  • Kroger shares advance 1% after Jefferies upgraded the retailer to buy from hold, and noted that the company has upside potential whether the acquisition of Albertsons goes through or not.
  • Microchip Technology shares decline 1.3% after the chipmaker said it planned to shut down a plant in Arizona, known as Fab 2. Additionally, the company sees third-quarter revenue being close to the low end of its original guidance.
  • TransMedics Group shares drop 8.0% after the medical-technology company narrowed its full-year revenue forecast. It also named a new chief financial officer.

The notable macro events this week include Friday’s payrolls report, which is expected to show hiring bounced back in November, preceded by Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s scheduled participation in a moderated discussion on Wednesday. Swaps are pricing a more than 70% chance of a quarter-point rate cut at the Fed's Dec. 17-18 meeting.

“The market still expects the Fed will cut rates,” Mark Haefele, chief investment officer at UBS Global Wealth Management, said on Bloomberg Television. “We will see when the employment data comes through on Friday how brave you have to be. But I think the bias is still there and the market thinks there is still room to do that, given the overall picture.”

Elsewhere, Citi strategists said short sellers are capitulating as the S&P 500 keeps hitting record highs and is set for its best year since 2021, while positioning on European stocks remains bearish, further widening the gap between the two markets. According to Citi's Chris Montagu, investor positioning in S&P 500 futures is “completely one-sided,” and is “setting new highs for a fourth consecutive week and increasingly the hold-out shorts are capitulating."

Indeed, appetite for US equities has shown no sign of abating this year. The S&P 500 has surged 27%, powered by technology shares and a broad preference for US assets. The rally extended after the election of Donald Trump raised hopes of tax cuts and deregulation. By contrast, positioning on Euro Stoxx 50 futures remains net bearish while ETF outflows are accelerating. Investors are shunning the region’s stocks amid sluggish economic and earnings growth and political instability in France and Germany.

Much attention right now remains focused on Paris, where the government faces a vote of no confidence on Wednesday. French far-right leader Marine Le Pen is expected to join forces with a left-wing coalition to topple Michel Barnier’s administration.

And speaking of Europe, stocks there rose, with the Stoxx 600 up 0.4%, as a rally for technology stocks drove a fourth straight day of gains for the benchmark, helping investors look past political risks in France. French stocks traded in line with their European peers on Tuesday, but the crisis has weighed on the CAC 40, causing it to trail neighboring markets like Germany, where the DAX Index rose above 20,000 points for the first time in its history. Here are the biggest movers Tuesday:

  • Hochtief shares rise as much as 5.9% after BofA upgraded its recommendation on the German infrastructure company to buy. The broker is positive about firms with US exposure going into 2025
  • BMW shares gain as much as 2.5% after UBS upgraded the German carmaker to buy from neutral, citing prospects for improved cash returns. Analysts say the firm is now their top OEM pick
  • SSP Group shares soar as much as 14% after the company, which runs food outlets in travel hubs, reported in-line annual results and said strong revenue growth has continued
  • Ceres Power shares rise as much as 3.2% after RBC upgraded the firm to sector perform, saying the British fuel-cell technology company is more insulated from headwinds versus peers
  • Greencore Group shares jump as much as 14% after the food company delivered a beat and raise, sweetened by the return of its dividend and a new share buyback
  • DiscoverIE shares gain as much as 16%, the most in a year, after the electrical component maker reported 1H results, prompting Shore Capital to upgrade its rating to hold from sell
  • Victrex shares jump as much as 17%, the most on record, after the specialty chemicals company reported results, with analysts noting decent trends in fiscal 4Q and reassuring comments about next year
  • Covivio shares drop as much as 11%, the most since April 2020, after Morgan Stanley downgraded the French firm to underweight from equal-weight, saying it may “lag” the real estate sector in 2025
  • Swiss Life shares fall as much as 4.2% after the insurer’s new targets were viewed as “challenging” by some analysts. JPMorgan says the payout ratio and cash remittances disappoint
  • Forvia shares drop as much as 6.1% as UBS downgraded the French car parts firm to neutral and set a Street-low price target, citing record uncertainty around the outlook for Europe’s car industry
  • Nel shares slide as much as 3.7% after RBC cut its recommendation to sector perform from outperform, citing slowing commercial activity with only two contracts announced this year
  • Grenergy shares plunge as much as 6.3% after the Spanish renewable company reported 9-month results impacted by low energy prices and a higher debt level

Earlier in the session, Asian stocks rose, on course for a third-straight daily gain, as semiconductor-related shares rallied after the US announced fresh curbs on technology exports to China. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index rose as much as 1.2%, with chip stocks TSMC and Tokyo Electron among the biggest boosts. Key benchmarks gained more than 1% in South Korea, Japan and Taiwan after the US unveiled measures to limit China’s access to crucial tech but stopped short of earlier proposals. Chinese stocks also reversed earlier losses after news that the country’s top leaders plan to start a key annual economic work conference next Wednesday to map out growth targets and stimulus plans for 2025.

In FX, a drop in the dollar gives relief to G-10 currencies, barring the yen, with a 0.3% decline to around 149.80/USD; the euro rises 0.3%, partly due to dollar weakness, while the CAC 40 climbs 0.6%.

In rates, treasuries are mixed in early US session with the curve steeper as long-end losses lift 30-year yields by ~2bp, steepening 2s10s and 5s30s spreads to day’s wides. US front-end yields are slightly richer on the day, widening 2s10s, 5s30s spreads by 1bp-2bp; 10-year yields around 4.21%, rising 2bps from Monday's close, and outperforming bunds in the sector by 1.5bp, trails OATs outperforming by 2.5bp. In European bond markets, Germany’s is under pressure while France outperforms; French 10-year bonds are steady after a no-confidence vote was set for Wednesday, with the yield spread to comparable German debt hovering around 85 basis points. OAT-bund spread that widened the most in six months Monday is slightly narrower. German bonds underperform gilts and Treasuries across the curve, with yields rising most at the front end. Peripheral spreads tighten to Germany.

In commodities, oil climbed ahead of an OPEC+ supply meeting on Thursday, with the market supported by hopes China’s leadership will approve more stimulus at a major meeting next week. WTI trades within Monday’s range, adding 0.9% to around $68.73. Spot gold rises roughly $6 to trade near $2,645/oz. Spot silver gains 1.6% near $31.

Looking at today's US economic data calendar, we get the October JOLTS job openings at 10am. Fed speaker slate includes Daly (12:15pm), Kugler (12:35pm), Goolsbee (1:30pm, 3:45pm)

Market Snapshot

  • S&P 500 futures little changed at 6,062.75
  • STOXX Europe 600 up 0.5% to 516.11
  • MXAP up 1.3% to 187.38
  • MXAPJ up 1.2% to 586.44
  • Nikkei up 1.9% to 39,248.86
  • Topix up 1.4% to 2,753.58
  • Hang Seng Index up 1.0% to 19,746.32
  • Shanghai Composite up 0.4% to 3,378.81
  • Sensex up 0.8% to 80,917.24
  • Australia S&P/ASX 200 up 0.6% to 8,495.22
  • Kospi up 1.9% to 2,500.10
  • German 10Y yield little changed at 2.07%
  • Euro up 0.2% to $1.0520
  • Brent Futures up 1.0% to $72.58/bbl
  • Gold spot up 0.2% to $2,645.15
  • US Dollar Index down 0.18% to 106.26

Top Overnight News

  • China imposed an outright ban on the export of crucial chipmaking materials — including gallium and germanium — to the US, citing concerns over military usage and “abuse” of export controls. It comes after the US imposed fresh curbs on the sale of high-bandwidth memory chips to China. BBG
  • China’s Central Economic Work Conference, at which officials will discuss economic targets and stimulus plans for 2025, will commence on Wed 12/11. Mainland stocks rebounded, while the yuan slid to a one-year low despite fresh PBOC support. BBG
  • China's crude oil imports are on track to peak as soon as next year as transport fuel demand begins to decline for the world's top crude buyer, ending the country's decades-long run as the dominant driver of expanding oil consumption. RTRS
  • Israel’s military said it “remains obligated” to a US-backed ceasefire after carrying out airstrikes in Lebanon yesterday in response to Hezbollah’s first attack under the truce. BBG
  • French lawmakers will hold a no-confidence vote Wednesday, with far-right leader Marine Le Pen expected to join forces with a left-wing coalition to topple the government. Prime Minister Michel Barnier used a constitutional mechanism on Monday to force through an unpopular budget, leading to a leftist coalition and Le Pen’s National Rally to call for votes of no confidence. BBG
  • The Fed’s John Williams expects more rate cuts will probably be needed “over time,” though stopped short of saying whether he would back a reduction this month. BBG
  • Donald Trump said he’ll block the Nippon Steel takeover of US Steel, instead pledging to revive it with tariffs and tax incentives. Separately, the president-elect picked investment banker Warren Stephens to be US ambassador to the UK. BBG
  • Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger’s exit may revive previously rejected deal options, including a split of the factory and product design businesses. BBG
  • BlackRock has agreed to buy private credit manager HPS Investment Partners for ~$12B in stock (HPS has ~$150B in AUM). WSJ
  • Fed's Williams (voter) said he expects more rate cuts to happen over time and that monetary policy remains in a restrictive stance, while he added that what the Fed does with policy depends on incoming data and the outlook for the economy and policy remains ‘highly uncertain’. Furthermore, Williams expects US GDP at 2.5% this year but might be higher, as well as noted that they will need to bring interest rates down over time and it is unclear where the neutral rate is right now.

A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk

APAC stocks were mostly positive as the region took impetus from the fresh record highs seen in the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq. ASX 200 rose to a fresh record high with advances led higher by healthcare, tech and consumer discretionary. Nikkei 225 outperformed and reclaimed the 39,000 level with tech companies benefitting from further US export controls on China as restrictions related to advanced chips could spur a scramble for China to secure legacy-generation chip tools. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp traded indecisively after the US unveiled a new package of chip export controls against China.

Top Asian News

  • China's Semiconductor association say US chips are no longer "safe and reliable". Relevant industries will have to be cautious about procuring these US chips.
  • China's Internet Society call on domestic companies to carefully consider the procurement of US chips and seek to expand cooperation with chipmakers from other countries. US chip export controls have caused substantial harm to stable development of China's internet industry
  • China's MOFCOM bans to export of "dual-use items" relating to gallium, germanium, antimony and super-hard materials to the US. Tighter end-user and end-use vetting for graphite dual-use items which are exported to the US. Effective Dec. 3rd. Export of dual-use items to US military users or for military reasons is prohibited.
  • China is reportedly to hold the Central Economic Work Conference on December 11th-12th on 2025 economic growth targets and stimulus plans.

European bourses began the European session mostly in the positive territory, and sentiment continued to improve as the morning progressed, to display a sea of green in Europe. European sectors hold a strong positive bias, with only a handful of industries in negative territory. The top of the pile is populated by Banks, Travel & Leisure and Tech. The latter is buoyed by gains in heavy-weight ASML (+2.1%) after the Co. noted that the impact of export restrictions will fall within its existing outlook and will not have a direct material impact on business in 2024. Real Estate is the laggard. US equity futures are essentially flat and trading on either side of the unchanged mark, and unable to benefit from the positive momentum seen across the pond. RBC S&P 500 outlook: raises Communication Services to Overweight from Marketweight; cuts Healthcare to Marketweight from Overweight; cuts Materials to Marketweight from Overweight. China's Auto Industry Body says Tesla (TSLA) sold 78,856 China made vehicles in Nov. (82,000 Y/Y).

Top European News

  • ECB's Kazaks says a data-dependent and gradual approach are still appropriate, the pace and depth of easing will be determined by data and judgement.
  • France to hold no-confidence vote on Wednesday, 4th December. Press report that the vote will take place at 15:00GMT.
  • Barclaycard UK November Consumer Spending fell 0.5% Y/Y in November.

FX

  • USD is softer vs. peers as markets digest comments from the influential Waller at the Fed who stated that he is leaning in favour of a cut for the December meeting. Ahead, JOLTS ahead of speak from Fed's Daly, Kugler and Goolsbee (twice). DXY is holding above the 106 mark and within yesterday's 105.78-106.73 range.
  • EUR has been granted some reprieve vs. the USD. Albeit, it remains to be seen how long this will last given French political issues. The latest reports note that a no-confidence vote will take place at 15:00GMT on Wednesday. EUR/USD is back on a 1.05 handle and within yesterday's 1.0460-1.0587 range.
  • GBP is firmer vs. the broadly softer USD with UK-specific drivers on the light side. As such, it is likely that events stateside will continue to dictate the state-of-play for Cable which is currently sat within yesterday's 1.2617-1.2742 range.
  • Antipodeans are both near the top of the G10 leaderboard despite AUD facing some soft domestic data overnight and a softer CNY. The uptick in AUD/USD has led the pair back above the 0.65 mark. NZD/USD has been pivoting around the 0.59 mark.
  • CHF is modestly softer vs. the EUR following the latest Swiss inflation metrics which saw the Y/Y rate print at 0.7% vs. exp. 0.8% (prev. 0.6%) and fall short of the SNB's Q4 average expectation of 1.0%.
  • PBoC set USD/CNY mid-point at 7.1996 vs exp. 7.2702 (prev. 7.1865).

Fixed Income

  • USTs are softer, weighed on by recent strong data which is lifting yields from the belly out. However, short-end debt is bid in the wake of Fed speak overnight with yields at the short-end pressured. Overnight, Waller said he is leaning towards a December cut, though noted one could argue the case for skipping and will be watching the data closely. USTs at the low-end of a 110-31+ to 111-06 band with the curve steeper.
  • OAT-Bund yield spread is narrowing down to 85bps having peaked just shy of 89bps on Monday. The main update in today’s session has been the timing of the no-confidence vote on Barnier, which is provisionally set for 15:00GMT on Wednesday.
  • Bunds are softer, with specifics somewhat light thus far and while ECB speak is in focus the likes of Cipollone haven’t added anything surprising. At the low-end of a 135.14-40 parameter, which is entirely within Monday’s 134.79-135.46 band. A fairly decent Schatz auction had little impact on Bund prices.
  • Gilts were trading in-fitting with peers going into the region's own auction, in what has been a catalyst thin session thus far, aside from BRC Retail Sales data, which was weak. The auction saw a strong cover though both the price and yield tails were elevated when compared to recent taps, sparking some very modest pressure.
  • Germany sells EUR 3.607bln vs exp. EUR 4.5bln 2.0% 2026 Schatz Auction: b/c 2.3 (prev. 2.20x), average yield 1.94% (prev. 2.11%) & retention 19.84% (prev. 19.62%).
  • UK sells GBP 2.25bln 4.375% 2054 Gilt Auction: b/c 3.0x (prev. 3.08x), average yield 4.747% (prev. 4.735%), tail 0.4bps (prev. 0.3bps).

Commodities

  • A slightly choppy morning for crude benchmarks but underlying action is firmly bullish with WTI & Brent at the top-end of parameters and within proximity to yesterday’s USD 69.11/bbl and USD 72.89/bbl best. Complex benefitting from both reports that OPEC is likely to extend its latest output cuts and tensions around the Lebanon ceasefire.
  • Gold is trading at the top-end of a relatively narrow c. USD 15/oz range, peaked at USD 2650/oz overnight and while XAU remains firmer on the session it is yet to re-test the above high.
  • Base metals traded lacklustre overnight, but did catch a slight bid in tandem with the broader risk tone and the softer Dollar. 3M LME Copper probing USD 9.1k to the upside, a marked rebound from Monday’s USD 8.91k trough.
  • OPEC is likely to extend its latest oil output cuts until the end of Q1 2025 during its meeting on Thursday, according to OPEC+ sources cited by Reuters.
  • Premiums for Russia's espo blend reach 2yr record of USD 1.30-1.50/bbl to brent, according to Reuters sources.
  • JPMorgan says Brent crude oil price is projected to average USD 80/bbl in 2024; says US Nat Gas 2025 price expected to average USD 3.50/MMBtu.
  • JPMorgan expects gold to rise towards USD 3,000/oz in 2025 with an average price of USD 2,950/oz in Q4 2025; says catch up trade later in 2025 could push silver prices towards USD 38/oz whilst platinum rallies to USD 1200/oz. Sees copper price towards USD 10,400/MT by Q4'25 and average USD 11,000/MT in 2026. Sees aluminium prices towards USD 2850/MT over H2'25.

Geopolitics

  • Israeli Defense Minister says if ceasefire collapses "we will no longer differentiate between Lebanon and Hezbollah"
  • Israeli forces blew up residential buildings in the Al-Geneina neighbourhood, east of Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip.
  • US Secretary of State Blinken met with Israel's Strategic Affairs Minister Dermer and reiterated the importance of ending the Gaza war.
  • Syrian Armed Opposition Operations Department said they took control of Halfaya, Maardis and Taiba al-Imam in the northern countryside of Hama, according to Al Jazeera.

US Event Calendar

  • 10:00: Oct. JOLTs Job Openings, est. 7.52m, prior 7.44m

Fed speakers

  • 12:15: Fed’s Daly Is Interviewed Live on Fox Business
  • 12:35: Fed’s Kugler Gives Speech on Labor Market, Policy
  • 15:45: Fed’s Goolsbee Gives Closing Remarks

DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap

Morning from Zurich where the DB Outlook roadshows roll on. There were lots of questions yesterday about the latest French situation as it became apparent that a French government collapse was increasingly likely. The situation went back and forth as the day went on, but ultimately, Marine Le Pen’s National Rally announced that they would support a motion of no confidence in the government of PM Michel Barnier. So along with the left-wing parties who are also backing the no-confidence motion, they have a majority in the National Assembly capable of bringing the government down, and this has led to a pretty serious market reaction. In fact, the Franco-German 10yr spread (+7.5bps) hit its widest level since 2012 yesterday, which was just before Mario Draghi pledged to do “whatever it takes” to save the euro. And the euro itself weakened by -0.75% against the US Dollar, marking its biggest daily decline since the week of Trump’s victory in the US election.

In terms of how the situation evolved yesterday, the prospects for the French government had looked pretty weak from the get-go. Indeed, the National Rally’s President Jordan Bardella said on RTL radio that “The National Rally will activate the censure vote unless of course there is a last minute miracle”. But around lunchtime, it was confirmed by the government that there’d be no change to the medication reimbursement system. So that pointed to a potential compromise with the National Rally’s demands, and the spread began to tighten again as it looked as though the government might survive. However, shortly after, Barnier announced that he’d push through the budget using special constitutional powers without a vote. So that saw the announcement of a no-confidence motion, which Marine Le Pen said she’d back after their demands weren’t met.

In terms of what happens next, we’re in territory that hasn’t been seen in a long time, as the last successful no-confidence motion was in 1962. That vote is likely to take place this week, possibly as soon as Wednesday, and assuming it’s successful, that would force the government’s resignation. In the short term, the government can remain in office as a caretaker government. But snap elections can’t happen again until the summer, as the French Constitution requires a one-year wait until another dissolution can take place, meaning that isn’t an option. So President Macron would have to propose a new PM, which could in theory be Barnier again, but there’s no reason to think a new government would be any more stable, given how fractured the National Assembly is. In terms of passing a budget, lawmakers could approve a special law authorising the government to collect existing taxes, and after that the government could allocate public spending by decree. However, this would only permit public spending that was part of the 2024 budget, rather than additional expenditures.

The likelihood of an imminent government collapse immediately led to fresh losses among French assets. For instance, the 10yr Franco-German spread ended the day at 88.1bps, the widest since 2012. Indeed, it also meant that the French 10yr yield (2.918%) closed only just below the Greek 10yr yield (2.927%), which just goes to show how investors’ assessment of sovereign risk has shifted over the last decade. For equities, the CAC 40 did manage to eke out a +0.02% gain, but that made it the worst performer of the big European indices, well behind the STOXX 600 that posted a +0.66% advance. Banks were hit in particular, with fresh losses for Société Générale (-2.61%), BNP Paribas (-1.24%) and Crédit Agricole (-0.87%), which built on their declines of the last two weeks.

Unlike the Euro crisis, there were no obvious signs of broader contagion to other countries yesterday. In fact, the 10yr Italian yield (-1.0bps) actually fell to a two-year low of 3.266%, and Spain’s 10yr yield (-2.4bps) fell to 2.768%, its lowest level in almost two years as well. Moreover, the push into safe assets meant yields on 10yr bunds (-5.4bps) saw the biggest declines, falling to its lowest since January at 2.034%. In the UK, the spread of 10yr gilt yields over bunds hit its widest since Liz Truss was PM, closing at 221.5bps yesterday. Matters weren’t helped there after the final UK manufacturing PMI for November was revised down six-tenths from the flash reading to 48.0, which is the weakest it’s been since February. So it continues the recent run where UK data has kept underwhelming expectations.

Outside of Europe, markets actually put in a decent performance yesterday, with the S&P 500 (+0.24%) moving up to yet another record high. One supportive factor was an upside surprise in the ISM manufacturing for November, which came in at 48.4 (vs. 47.5 expected). So even though it was still in contractionary territory, it was the strongest since June, and the new orders subcomponent (50.4) was in expansionary territory for the first time since March. That’s lifted up other growth estimates as well, with the Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow tracker for Q4 pointing to an annualised pace of +3.2%, which is its highest level to date.

That equity rally was led by further strength among big tech stocks, and the NASDAQ (+0.97%) and Magnificent 7 (+1.41%) moved up to record highs of their own. So it was a fairly narrow rally over the last 24 hours, and the equal-weighted S&P 500 actually saw a decent fall of -0.27%, moving off the all-time high it achieved last Friday.

In the meantime, US Treasury yields inched higher, with the 2yr yield up +2.9bps to 4.18%, whilst the 10yr yield rose +2.1bps to 4.19% (4.21% this morning). So that just about pushed the 2s10s curve back into inversion territory. The weakness on the 2yr might be pointing to a higher terminal rate, but investors yesterday priced in a greater chance of a rate cut this month. The chance of a cut closed at 76%, up 10pp from Friday, and the highest we have observed since US CPI data was released over 2 weeks ago. The uptick came after Fed Governor Waller spoke at the American Institute for Economic Research (AIER) Monetary Conference in Washington, D.C. last night. He said that “I am leaning toward continuing the work we have started in returning monetary policy to a more neutral setting,” signaling further cuts ahead, while adding that “an additional cut at our next meeting will not dramatically change the stance of monetary policy and allow ample scope to later slow the pace of rate cuts, if needed.” On the path of inflation he noted, “I believe the evidence is strong that policy continues to be significantly restrictive and that cutting again will only mean that we aren't pressing on the brake pedal quite as hard.”

In Asia the Nikkei (+2.24%) is trading sharply higher and is leading gains in the region while the KOSPI (+1.75%) is also trading noticeably higher with the S&P/ASX 200 (+0.75%) also trading in positive territory. Elsewhere, Chinese stocks are mixed with the Hang Seng (+0.08%) slight up but with the Shanghai Composite (-0.86%) turning sharply lower as I type. US equity futures are flat. seeing slight gains while the CSI (-0.02%) is struggling to gain traction in early trade.

In FX, the Chinese yuan (-0.25%) is weakening for the third consecutive day, trading at a one-year low of 7.2913 against the dollar despite PBOC’s efforts to support sentiment as the central bank has been setting stronger-than-expected fixes since November.
To the day ahead now, and central bank speakers include the ECB’s Cipollone and Panetta, along with the Fed’s Kugler and Goolsbee. Otherwise, US data releases include the JOLTS report of job openings for October.

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/03/2024 - 08:24

Telecoms Cable Between Sweden & Finland Damaged In Two Separate Places 

Telecoms Cable Between Sweden & Finland Damaged In Two Separate Places 

A land-based fiber-optics cable running across the border between Sweden and Finland was damaged in two separate locations on Monday. This incident comes weeks after EU investigators probed a Chinese-flagged vessel suspected of sabotaging undersea cables in the Baltic Sea. 

Internet provider Global Connect told AP News that the telecommunications cable was severed in two places in southern Finland. 

"The first damage has been repaired, and internet access has been mostly restored," said Global Connect's spokesman in Sweden, Niklas Ekström, adding that thousands of customers were briefly knocked offline. 

Ekström said, "We are still working on fixing the second damage."

He noted that the first incident was related to construction work but provided no further details about what caused the second incident, stating: "We have no analysis on this so far."

"The authorities are investigating the matter together with the company. We take the situation seriously," Finland's minister of transportation and communications, Lulu Ranne, wrote on X.

Euronews said, "Swedish media reported that Finnish police suspect a criminal offence in connection to the damaged cable."

The incident comes weeks after two undersea fiber optic cables connecting Finland, Germany, Sweden, and Lithuania across the Baltic Sea were severed by what EU investigators believe was an act of sabotage by a 225-meter Chinese bulk carrier. NATO warships have since surrounded the vessel.

With wars ongoing in Eastern Europe and parts of the Middle East, spillover risks remain elevated, as terror groups, rogue nations, and or just plain bad actors may be intensifying sabotage efforts targeting infrastructure. 

Tyler Durden Tue, 12/03/2024 - 07:45

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