Today’s News 1st September 2022

  • Conrad Black: Can This Be Happening In America?
    Conrad Black: Can This Be Happening In America?

    Op-ed by Conrad Black via The Epoch Times,

    We have familiar experience of the phenomenon of what are clearly intolerable circumstances being tolerated if they worsened only gradually. Everyone has looked back on a grueling experience and thought that it could not have been endured had the individual known how unpleasant it would become. No matter how familiar anyone may be with the horrors of the Nazi regime, it remains to us inconceivable that the culture of Beethoven and Goethe could have committed such crimes.

    The United States has now reached the point where the sequence of outrageous and unconstitutional measures that have occurred in the last six years would have been inconceivable six years ago.

    The seal of the Federal Bureau of Investigation is seen outside of its headquarters in Washington on Aug. 15, 2022. (Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images)

    It’s unimaginable that anyone who has ever been nominated for president by a serious American political party could be an intelligence asset for a foreign power. We now know that there has never been one scintilla of evidence remotely hinting that Donald Trump was guilty of any such offense, or that he had any inappropriate relations or even a particular regard for the government of Russia. Yet for over two years it was endlessly bandied about that Trump had been “groomed” by Russian agents like the Manchurian Candidate to debase the presidency of the United States into boot-licking subordination to the national interest of Russia. The former directors of the National and Central Intelligence Agencies, James Clapper and John Brennan, solemnly told national audiences that Trump was a Russian intelligence agent and was guilty of treason in favor of the Russians.

    Both these senior officials on occasion allegedly lied to Congress but were never prosecuted. Former FBI Director James Comey, who improperly removed government property from his office, improperly leaked confidential information to the media, improperly presumed to decide that Hillary Clinton should not be prosecuted for destroying 33,000 emails that were under subpoena from Congress, signed a false affidavit in support of a FISA warrant to conduct illegal telephone intercepts on the Trump campaign, and supported the pretense that the infamous Steele dossier, which he knew to be a pastiche of lies and defamations, was authentic intelligence, indicating the guilt of Trump of unlawful collusion with the Russian government. The ranking Democrat on the House intelligence committee, Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), and other Democrats repeated ad nauseam that they had conclusive evidence of Trump’s guilt. They lied. The inspector general of the Justice Department recorded 17 separate instances of improper official behavior. There has been no prosecution of any of this.

    In all of pre-Trump U.S. history, there had been two impeachment trials of presidents: Andrew Johnson in 1868 and Bill Clinton in 1998. Neither of them should have occurred and both failed, but in the last four years Trump was impeached twice, once for a telephone conversation with the president of Ukraine in which he asked if the Biden family and particularly the current president’s son Hunter Biden had committed illegalities in Ukraine. He did not direct the verdict; he did not ask for any incrimination of the Bidens. This was a completely inadequate pretext for impeaching a president and yet he was impeached, and on one count 49 senators including a former Republican presidential candidate, Mitt Romney, did vote Trump guilty, though he was, of course, acquitted. And at the end of his term, he was impeached again for having allegedly fomented an insurrection even though the FBI director had already testified that there was no evidence that Trump or his campaign organization or his administration were connected in any way to the trespass and the vandalism that occurred at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, and Trump requested and offered extra security, but this was declined by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Washington mayor Muriel Bowser.

    The various comprehensive accumulations of evidence about the behavior of Hunter Biden incite the strong inference that he has committed a number of illegalities and that the president repeatedly lied to the public about his own connections to his son’s activities. There is no evidence that U.S. official conduct was altered in respect of Ukraine, China, or other countries, in consideration for bribes paid to the Biden family. But there seems to be no doubt the current president and his family were engaged in improper activity that not only allegedly involves substantial lawbreaking by family members but also seems to have been suppressed rather than investigated by the FBI. The allegation that the FBI seems to have suggested to Facebook that the allegations against Hunter Biden were likely Russian disinformation and requested that they not publicize them would have been unthinkable six years ago. But it seems to have been assimilated by the American political community as a perfectly normal and acceptable occurrence.

    It seems clear that in the 2020 presidential election, where Trump could have prevailed in the Electoral College if 50,000 votes had flipped in Pennsylvania and any two of Arizona, Georgia, and Wisconsin, that millions of ballots potentially passed through hands that could not be identified. All of this occurred in swing states where rules were changed ostensibly to facilitate voting during the pandemic. But in the case of a number of states, contrary to the Constitution, these changes were determined not by the state legislatures but by executive branches or state judiciaries. In every one of the 19 lawsuits launched to attack these questionable changes to voting and vote counting rules, the judiciary, including in the case of the Texas attorney general’s action against the swing states and supported by 18 other state attorneys general, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear any of these cases on their merits; they were disallowed for technical reasons, some of those quite spurious.

    Now we have had, on the complaint of federal archivists, the intrusion and occupation for nine hours of the former president’s home on a warrant alleging just cause to believe that crimes have been committed involving the improper removal and retention of classified information. Trump had been collaborating with the archivists, possessed the power to act as he pleased with classified material when he was president, and this isn’t a classified material case anyway. He didn’t pack any of this himself as he left the White House, has not mislaid or misused any of this material, and 19 months have gone by since he left office. It’s a document-handling case. There’s no conceivable justification for such a sensational invasion in the absence of any plausible claim of significant wrongdoing—except that it’s a political tainting job against the former president, and the Presidential Records Act isn’t a criminal statute. This is just the Democrats transmuting a grumpy librarian’s complaint into the insinuation that the former president committed unimaginable crimes.

    A disastrous and shaming flight from Afghanistan is described by President Joe Biden as “a triumphant success.” Dr. Anthony Fauci retires with dignity after doing terrible damage to the country with his nonsense about shutting schools, “droplets,” the ups and downs of masking, the “abolition of hand-shakes”—almost all of it now thoroughly discredited.

    Six years ago, no one could have imagined that these outrages would have occurred, much less that they would be accepted by a bedraggled, degraded, demoralized America, its federal government in the hands of lawless and authoritarian myth-makers, applauded by the complicit national political media. Can this be America?

    Views expressed in this article are the opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times or ZeroHedge.

    Tyler Durden
    Thu, 09/01/2022 – 00:00

  • These Are The Wealthiest Billionaires In Each US State In 2022
    These Are The Wealthiest Billionaires In Each US State In 2022

    The U.S. is home to over a quarter of the world’s billionaires, representing about 720 of the roughly 2,700 that exist globally.

    While the country has more billionaires than any other, the U.S. share of global billionaires has actually been shrinking in recent decades. In 2010, about 40% of the world’s billionaire population lived in America⁠—and today, that number is closer to 27%.

    But who is the richest billionaire in every American state in 2022? Visual Capitalist’s Aran Ali uses data from Forbes to find out.

    The Richest of the Rich

    The billionaires on this list have made their fortune in a wide range of industries, including tech, automobiles, asset management, and video games.

    Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk have had their relative fortunes fluctuate in tandem with Amazon and Tesla stock prices in recent years. The volatility in share prices has meant they’ve each carried the title of the world’s wealthiest person at varying points.

    Jeff Bezos previously had the top spot but now has a net worth of $162 billion. While he’s stepped down from the CEO role and has sold large amounts of Amazon stock, his ranking will likely still tie in closely to the company’s performance for the foreseeable future.

    Elon Musk is the richest billionaire in Texas, however, he only recently became a resident of the state. His move is part of a broader migration trend occurring in the U.S. today, where California is experiencing a population decline for the first time ever. Last year, 68% of counties in California saw population declines, and data from the U.S. Census Bureau suggests many of these Americans opted for states like Florida and Texas.

    Between 2019 to 2021, the South is the only region that saw positive net flows of over a million people, while the Northeast, Midwest, and West all saw declines.

    Warren Buffett, the “Oracle of Omaha,” is the richest billionaire in Nebraska by a wide margin, with a net worth of $105 billion. Despite the stock market experiencing one of its worst starts to the year historically, Buffett’s net worth has been surprisingly steady.

    This might be due to value assets rotating back into fashion in favor of growth and tech themes this year. Also, historically Buffett has been bullish in environments where fear and negative sentiment reflect through lower asset prices.

    Female Billionaires

    There are eight different women that hold the title of richest billionaire in their state.

    Tamara Gustavson is Public Storage’s largest shareholder, with an 11% stake in the company, valued at $60 billion on the New York Stock Exchange. In addition, she acts as the director of the company and is the daughter of founder B. Wayne Hughes, who recently passed away last year. Incredibly, Public Storage operates more than 170 million square feet of real estate.

    Abigail Johnson and Jacqueline Mars were featured on our infographic showing the richest women in the world last year. Johnson has served as CEO of top asset manager Fidelity, which her grandfather Edward Johnson founded. And Jacqueline Mars is part of the Mars family, which owns the world’s largest candy maker.

    Big Disparities

    The U.S. wealth landscape is one of extremes. On one end, there are ample opportunities to earn substantial wealth, but on the other, wealth inequality and income disparity are higher than many other peer countries.

    This productivity and hustle-oriented culture suggests that while there isn’t a billionaire in every state in 2022, it seems like it’s only a matter of time before the likes of Alabama, New Mexico, and North Dakota add a billionaire to their ranks.

    Tyler Durden
    Wed, 08/31/2022 – 23:40

  • Record Trade Deficit Hitting Korea Won Foreshadows More Weakness
    Record Trade Deficit Hitting Korea Won Foreshadows More Weakness

    By Ken McCallum, Bloomberg markets live reporter and commentator

    The Korean won’s drop after the nation’s trade deficit widened even more than expected to a record suggests that bearishness toward the currency will stay intact for now.

    Signs of Korea’s economic woes may help push the dollar-won convincingly above the psychological level of 1,350, which it’s been briefly breaching this week. Morgan Stanley analysts have said that a break above that level may pave the way for a move toward 1,370, while Korea Investment & Securities Co. sees a rise to 1,380 in the second half of the year, compared with around 1,348 today.

    There’s a vicious cycle feel to the won’s weakness: Korea’s reliance on energy imports means that a stronger dollar may increase costs and fan more inflation, further undermining the won. Korea has the largest fuel and food deficit as a share of gross domestic product in Asia, according to Natixis (also, Korea’s share of net exports as a contributor to economic growth is the highest in the world at a mind-blowing 70% of GDP, which in turn is the 10th largest in the world).

    And it’s not only the trade deficit that weighs on the won. Other negatives include a downturn in the semiconductor market, economic slowdown in a China–the biggest destination of Korean exports, and the Bank of Korea’s likely inability to match the Federal Reserve’s jumbo rate hikes due to concerns about the pain it will cause for households weighed down by massive debt.

    Tyler Durden
    Wed, 08/31/2022 – 23:20

  • NASA's Webb Telescope Captures Hypnotizing Swirls Of "Phantom Galaxy"
    NASA’s Webb Telescope Captures Hypnotizing Swirls Of “Phantom Galaxy”

    NASA’s $10 billion James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) has provided an even deeper look into the cosmos, revealing the clearest view of the Phantom Galaxy, more formally known as M74, located around 32 million light-years away from Earth. 

    “Webb’s sharp vision has revealed delicate filaments of gas and dust in the grandiose spiral arms of M74, which wind outwards from the center of the image. A lack of gas in the nuclear region also provides an unobscured view of the nuclear star cluster at the galaxy’s center,” NASA and the ESA wrote in a statement

    Combining data from the Hubble Space Telescope and ground-based observatories, both space agencies pieced together a crystal-clear view of the Phantom Galaxy. 

    The Phantom Galaxy has been a significant focus for astronomers studying the origin and structure of galactic spirals. The new spacecraft with infrared technology allows astronomers “to pinpoint star-forming regions in the galaxies, accurately measure the masses and ages of star clusters, and gain insights into the nature of the small grains of dust drifting in interstellar space,” NASA and ESA said. 

    “Now we have a broader (and even more beautiful!) understanding of the galaxy M74! 

    “These Hubble and NASAWebb views show the power of observing in different wavelengths. Hubble’s optical vision highlights older stars near the center and younger, bluer stars in the spiral arms,” NASA tweeted this week. 

    In July, NASA released the first images of JWST’s findings since the spacecraft was launched into deep space last December. Though still operational, JWST has already been struck by tiny meteoroids, causing significant uncorrectable damage to the craft’s infrared technology. 

    Tyler Durden
    Wed, 08/31/2022 – 23:00

  • Biden's IRS Auditor Army Will Disrupt Economic Recovery
    Biden’s IRS Auditor Army Will Disrupt Economic Recovery

    Authored by Julio Gonzalez via RealClear Politics,

    The Biden administration’s decision to recruit nearly 90,000 new IRS auditors could have a chilling effect on small businesses and economic growth, permanently impeding our nation’s ability to recover from its current economic malaise.

    As part of the misleadingly titled “Inflation Reduction Act,” President Biden and his allies secured roughly $80 billion in new IRS funding to hire 87,000 auditors. This is bad news for the American economy.

    One of the many ways that small businesses can succeed and help grow the economy is by taking advantage of tax credits and deductions which leave more money in the hands of owners to reinvest in their businesses and offer more competitive pay for their employees.

    But with the looming threat of a veritable army of auditors being mobilized by the Biden administration, it is highly likely that many small businesses will decline to seek the benefits of those credits and deductions, lest they face the costly headache of aggressive audits from the IRS. In fact, my firm, Engineered Tax Services, specializes in working with businesses to understand and utilize those credits and deductions, and some of my firm’s small business clients have told me this is the case.

    Business and financial experts are equally certain that Biden’s Auditor Army will target small businesses.

    “There is no doubt that boosting IRS audit capabilities through a vast increase in the hiring of 87,000 new staff focused on this effort will hit small businesses the hardest,” said Karen Kerrigan, president and CEO of the Small Business and Entrepreneurship Council, in an interview with The Center Square.The tax data shows that it is small businesses of moderate means, not ‘the wealthy,’ that are targeted most frequently.

    Basic math proves this will undoubtedly be the case with Biden’s new Auditor Army. Biden wants to unleash 87,000 additional IRS agents on the American people, but there are fewer than 800 billionaires and roughly 34,000 millionaires in the country. Even if each of them gets assigned a full-time, year-round personal auditor, that leaves 52,200 agents free to harass small business owners and everyday Americans.

    Undergoing an audit is an incredibly serious and costly endeavor, regardless of the reason for the audit or the outcome, and this cost is a burden both on the business and the community in which it operates, a clear impediment to economic growth and prosperity. Even when auditors find no wrongdoing, the experience can be financially devastating for small business owners.

    “Obviously, this will be a huge burden on many small business owners, who will be forced to endure lengthy audits and do not have the resources to hire expert lawyers or accountants,” Kerrigan explained.

    Some will be forced to bring in this expensive support, which means fewer resources to invest in their business, their workers and their communities…. Dealing with crushing inflation and the economic downturn is unbearable enough for small business owners, without having this type of threat hanging over their heads,” he continued.

    The insult to the injury Biden’s Auditor Army will inflict on the American economy is that it comes at a time when many small businesses are already facing severe economic hardship, if not outright ruin.

    A July survey by t​​he small business network Alignable found that “45% of small businesses (SMBs) are halting their hiring, largely because they say they can’t afford to add staff.

    A different survey conducted by the same network, also in July, revealed that “47% of small business owners … say their businesses are at risk of closing by fall 2022, unless economic conditions improve significantly.”

    That number is “up 12 percentage points from last summer, when only 35% were concerned about economic issues forcing them to shut down,” according to Alignable, and “SMBs in key industries face even bigger problems: 59% of retailers are at risk, along with 52% in construction, 51% in the automotive sector, and 50% of restaurant owners.”

    Our small businesses are in crisis, and the last thing they need is an army of militarized bureaucrats going door to door carrying out audits, further crippling those businesses and the economic growth they generate.

    Julio Gonzalez is the CEO and Founder of Engineered Tax Services, Inc.

    Tyler Durden
    Wed, 08/31/2022 – 22:40

  • "The Straw That breaks The Market's Back": The Fed Must Do $3.9 Trillion In QT To Control Inflation… Which It Can't Possibly Do
    “The Straw That breaks The Market’s Back”: The Fed Must Do $3.9 Trillion In QT To Control Inflation… Which It Can’t Possibly Do

    Starting with first principles, there is one thing that almost all traders can agree on and it is that, sooner or later, the Fed tightening cycle will spark another financial crisis and market crash, something which we reminded readers in early 2022:

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    But while there is little disagreement on what the Fed’s endgame is, the big question is how we get there and what exactly will lead to the overtightening that crashes the economy, sparks a policy panic and bring another Fed overreaction in the opposite direction.

    For much of the past 6 months, Wall Street was confident that it would be the Fed’s rate hikes which started in March from 0.0%, and have since crept up to 2.25-2.50%, and are expected to rise another 1.00%-1.25% before the Fed eases back on the breaks.

    Incidentally, one of the reasons so many Wall Street professionals expected the Fed to pivot dovishly sooner rather than later, is that few expected the Fed would so aggressively seek to trigger then next recession, and to keep hiking until something did break. In fact, back in April SocGen quant Solomon Tadesse – who made waves on Wall Street trading desks four years ago, when he went against the consensus view, and in 2018 pinpointed the peak in Fed Funds at a lowly 2½% which turned out to be spot on – calculated that the Fed Funds rate won’t be able to climb above 1.0% before the Fed overtightens into restrictive territory, i.e., will have to ease (the explanation for his thinking is here).

    Of course, 4 months later and 1.5% above the proposed 1.0% “redline”, Solomon’s math was clearly wrong. But was he wrong or did the SocGen quant merely underestimate the far greater weight that the Fed’s balance sheet, or QE (and thus QT) has on overall easing (and tightening) of financial conditions?

    That is the topic Tadesse and his SocGen quant peers discuss in their latest Practical Quant Investor note, titled “Might QT be the straw that breaks the market’s back“, in which they note that in recent weeks, financial markets and monetary policy  pronouncements seem too focused on the policy rate to deal with inflation containment. However, extending on what we said above, the SocGen quants note that “what has been unique in post-GFC monetary policy was the reliance on QE to induce the needed easing.” As they also note, in recent years it was not policy rate hikes – which were on an orderly course – that laid low financial conditions, leading to a surprise pivot in monetary policy in December of 2018, but rather the quietly accelerating QT. By the same token, Tadesse warns “it could be a ramp-up in QT, this time on a larger scale to erode a much larger balance sheet, that could surprise markets.” This is a prudent warning because three months after QT started at a pace of $47.5BN per month from June through August, starting Sept, the Fed will double the pace of Quantitative Tightening to $95Billion, draining twice as much liquidity from the market.

    Before we delve deeper into the SocGen quant’s analysis, let’s first back up, and briefly discuss what happened in the post-June market meltup which as Tadasse puts it, until last week’s hiccup, “was a byproduct global markets had recently been on a bullish ascent, buoyed by hopes of an easing in inflation and thus a Fed pivot. Yet, central bank policy pronouncements and policymakers have been quick to warn that this expectation is premature.” Therefore, investors – SocGen summarizes – “face a historic dilemma: a choice between the two age-old investing creeds of ‘Don’t Fight the Fed’ versus ‘Don’t fight the Tape’.”

    Global markets appear to be getting ahead of themselves. The rationale for market expectations of a quick reversal in monetary policy to easing relies on two premises: one, data interpretation, and the other historical trend projection. On data, the lower inflation print for the month of July can be interpreted as an indication of receding peak inflation. Aside from the paucity of a single data point, a close examination reveals that the weakening in the inflation print might be a symptom of some loosening of supply chain bottlenecks. While this would make the Fed’s job easier, it wouldn’t justify a near-term reversal of policy in the face of accelerated demand-driven inflation, part of it a catch-up in wages and service-related price adjustments. It can also be argued that the current stubbornly low unemployment rate could be viewed as fuel for inflation pressure, and thus calling for tightening, rather than providing respite from it. Even if inflation is assumed to have peaked, it would still take more tightening to break its hold. A long-accepted principle for containing inflation to raise rates by a larger margin than the prevailing inflation rate, and historically, it took a 20+ percent rate hike to break a peak of 15 percent inflation during the Volcker’s Fed of the early 80s.

    Tadesse next hypothesizes that one of the reasons why markets have been so eager to assume a dovish pivot by the Fed is due to the central bank’s “Fed Put” Pavlovian instinct. However, due to the ongoing unexpected surge in inflation, he notes that
    “policymaking has gone through a dramatic regime shift recently  from one of ‘promoting growth’ on concerns of deflationary pressures to one of ‘containment of inflation’ at any cost, reminiscent of the ‘inflation-containment’ policies of the Volcker era.”

    Helping to visualize this argument, the SocGen chart below shows the evolution of monetary policy over the last 60 years. As Tadesse notes, policy was driven by a need for ‘price stability’ during the inflationary periods of the 70s and early 80s when policy had a propensity to tighten rather than to ease. After the successful stamping out of inflation in the early 80s, monetary policy succumbed to fears of deflationary forces engendering chronic stagnation, which led to a propensity to ease monetary conditions rather than to tighten. But that regime seems to have changed for good now, with “unexpected” inflation raging and the Fed clearly pronouncing its monetary policy priority as containing inflation at any cost.

    Thus, as we discussed extensively in recent weeks and culminating in “Even Goldman Can’t Believe It: “Did Powell Mean To Be So Dovish?” if the markets’ stubborn assumption to the contrary were to prove correct it could only result in an unsustainable easing of financial conditions, creating a risk of even more Fed overtightening that could rattle markets sooner or later. In fact, instead of expecting a Fed Put, the SocGen analyst writes that “one could argue that a market correction that could clear the policy channel from speculative-driven easing in financial conditions to a desirable tightening, might serve the long-term public interest.” Indeed, Minneapolis Fed president Neel Kashkari made it quite clear he was personally delighted with the market dump last Friday following Powell’s terse remarks. If only it wasn’t Kashkari (and his Fed pals) that made the bubble that is now deflating slowly but surely possible.

    Moving on: after taking a brief tangent to look at the current drivers of inflation (supply-driven is slowing, while demand-driven inflation is accelerating, and cautioning that the stubbornly low unemployment rate could be viewed as fuelling inflationary pressure  than providing a respite from it), Tadesse echoes something we have said all along, namely that “monetary policy provides little help for supply-driven inflationary pressures of the type arising from supply-chain disruptions.”

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    Indeed, it was these “disruptions” that explain Policymakers’ early dismissal of the rising inflation as transitory and something that would resolve itself in time. It is only recently that official acknowledgement has been given to persistent demand-driven price pressures. Policymakers have been clear since then that the policy stand is one of inflation-containment and has expressed this stance in deeds by allowing a meltdown of several weeks in global markets that would ordinarily have triggered a Fed Put in the past. In short, the SocGen strategist writes, “policymakers are outwardly resolved to curb inflation, even if it comes with a risk of recession” and a market crash… however, once we do get a recession and a few hundred thousand lost jobs crushing the approval rating of democrats, watch how quickly Powell will change his tune after being bombarded with daily phone calls from the Liz Karens Warrens of Congress.

    So what’s the Fed to do?

    Well, in an earlier research note (which we addressed here), Tadesse argued that if monetary policy had followed a pro-growth impulse, as has been the case over the last four decades, the current tightening phase could have peaked with only 0.75-1pp of rate hikes, combined with a QT program to the tune of about $1.8tn. However, after the monetary policy regime shift to ‘inflation containment’, SocGen’s analysis points to a much larger amount of rate tightening, accompanied by a meaningful slash in the Fed balance sheet. The tightening phase would take an aggressive stance, with overall monetary policy tightening going beyond 900bp and the policy rate peaking at 450bp. More importantly, Tadesse’s analysis also shows that it would take implicit rate tightening of about 450bp from a QT that would slash $3.9 trillion from Fed balance sheet! The consequences for risk assets would be calamitous.

    Here’s how the SocGen quant gets to these numbers: as a result of the unexpected surge in inflation, Tadesse writes that monetary policy making has gone through a regime shift, with Fed’s policy single-mindedly focused on inflation containment at any cost, resembling the monetary policy framework of the Volcker era in the 1970s and early 1980s, when the average MTE ratio was about 1.5x (left-hand chart below).

    The problem – as Tadesse calculates – is that such aggressive monetary tightening with a focus solely on inflation containment, even at the cost of inducing recession, would require overall monetary tightening of about 11.6%. And since rates have already been tightened by 2.5% (with only a de minimis tightening via QT for now), another 9.25% of monetary tightening might be expected via policy rate hikes and an aggressive QT program. The policy rate could go up by as much as 4.5%, with the remainder coming from QT (right-hand chart above).

    In practical terms, at a rate of 12bp per $100bn of QT (SocGen had previously calculated the price impact of QT), this amounts to a QT programme of about $3.9tn, roughly equivalent to the net growth in the Fed’s balance sheet during the pandemic (which would be logically symmetric).

    An important caveat in the analysis is the presumption that current inflation levels resemble those of the late 1970s through the 1980s. As recent inflation prints are the highest in 40 years, this might be a reasonable assumption, particularly in reference to the rates seen in the early 1980s. In addition, in interpreting the results, there is an implicit assumption that the current inflation prints are persistent and all demand driven. However, earlier analysis has shown that the current inflation dynamics are driven both by some transitory supply-related disruptions and demand-driven price pressures. Should the supply bottlenecks ease over time, the degree of monetary tightening needed to contain inflation through demand destruction could turn out to be lower.

    To visualize the tightening “blend” achievable through both rate hikes and QT, in the above-left chart Tadesse shows monetary policy frontiers (MPF) which are all the policy rate hike and QT combinations that could generate the ‘inflation-containing overall tightening’ of upwards of 9% and the ‘growth-conscious overall tightening’ discussed earlier, with the most likely outcomes of policy combinations identified with stars. Thus, an aggressive inflation-containing policy could mean additional policy rate hikes of up to 4.5% at peak and a further implicit rate tightening of 4.5% from QT (hence $3.9 trillion in total balance sheet reduction).

    In conclusion, in a time when both markets and policymakers appear too focused on the policy rate to really deal with inflation containment, and given the substantial role of Quantitative Easing policies in inducing the needed post-Covid monetary easing, the reversal policies of QT would have an equally important, albeit non-symmetric impact on tightening.

    SocGen’s analysis suggests that almost half of the required tightening could come from QT (about 450bp, accounting for $3.9 trillion in balance sheet shrinkage). Of course, from policy perspective, a lack of acknowledgement and clear communication of QT’s potential impacts may post the risk of overtightening. Furthermore, with markets expecting far less on the QT side, Tadesse now believes that “it could be the ramp-up in QT that could trigger the next fall in markets.” Appropriately enough, it comes just as the Fed’s rate of QT doubles from $47.5BN to $95BN per month.

    To summarize, “it was arguably not policy rate hikes back in 2018 that laid low financial conditions, leading to a surprise pivot in monetary policy in December. It was rather gently accelerating QT in the background. In the same token, it could be a ramp-up in QT, this time on a larger scale to erode a much larger balance sheet, that may surprise markets.”

    One final point: is there a snowball’s chance in hell that the Fed will do almost $4 trillion in QT? Of course not: as we explained on July 14, when we quoted from former NY Fed and current BofA iconic Fed analyst, Marc Cabana, the Fed will be forced to end QT prematurely (in no small part because BofA’s base case forecast is now for a US recession in 2023), and as such, “Fed QT that is stopped in Sept ’23 will result in $1tn less balance sheet reduction vs our prior estimates through end ’24. Over a similar period, early QT end would result in $780b less UST financing need + $350b of additional Fed UST demand.”

    Cabana, is of course, correct: there is no way that the Fed will be able to do years of QT at a pace of ~$100BN per month to hit SocGen’s bogey without pushing the US into a full-blown depression (especially since the recession has already officially started). But it will take a few months of -300,000 payroll prints for markets to pivot again, and realize that when Powell vowed the Fed would not even think about think about pivoting in 2023, he was wrong… again… as usual.

    The implication, however, is even more profound: if Tadesse is correct, and if indeed the Fed is unable to contain inflation unless it tightens by 9% in some combination of rates and QT, that means that the Fed will begin its next easing cycle with inflation well above the Fed’s target. Which incidentally, is how this game ends: with the Fed hiking its inflation target from 2% to 3% (or more).

    Impossible, you say? Not at all: Europe is already setting the stage for what is not only not impossibly but inevitable.

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    And yes, once the “inflation target” trial balloons start floating, readers better have all their net worth in the form of risky assets, gold, crypto and so on, because in the span of nano seconds, the entire asset market will reprice exponentially higher as the Fed finally admits it has to throw in the towel.

    Tyler Durden
    Wed, 08/31/2022 – 22:20

  • Ex-Trump Aide Says DOJ Left His Name Unredacted In Affidavit To "Silence" Him
    Ex-Trump Aide Says DOJ Left His Name Unredacted In Affidavit To “Silence” Him

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

    Former Trump administration official Kash Patel said that the Justice Department did not redact his name in its Mar-a-Lago affidavit for political purposes and is trying to “silence” him.

    Former President Donald Trump speaks with Epoch TV’s Kash Patel at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Fla., on Jan. 31, 2022. (The Epoch Times)

    Last week, a U.S. magistrate judge ordered the release of the Department of Justice (DOJ) affidavit that was used to obtain an FBI search warrant of former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago. Much of the document and names were redacted, but Patel’s was left unredacted.

    Reacting to the DOJ’s decision, Patel told Just The News that the agency “intentionally decided to politicize this affidavit for many reasons.”

    “But one, which I wasn’t even expecting them to do was put my name out there, it added absolutely no value and violated every procedure at the Department of Justice in relation to protecting parties and people’s names,” he said in a recent interview.

    It’s not clear why the DOJ chose not to keep Patel’s name covered up. The only other person identified by name is longtime Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.), the head of the House Oversight Committee who was told by the National Archives about materials that were obtained earlier this year from Mar-a-Lago. The Epoch Times has contacted the agency for comment.

    That was done “for a political effect, because they wanted to try to silence me and President Trump and everybody else, and get the mainstream media to threaten me, which it has done,” said Patel, a former National Security Council and Pentagon official.

    Earlier this month, DOJ officials argued against releasing the affidavit and claimed that doing so would protect the integrity of their investigation while saying it would also prevent witnesses from coming forward.

    But U.S. Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart, the same judge who signed off on the FBI search warrant, asked prosecutors to submit a redacted version. Reinhart also released the warrant and property receipt days before, which showed that FBI agents took allegedly classified materials from Trump’s Florida residence.

    Read more here…

    Tyler Durden
    Wed, 08/31/2022 – 22:00

  • These Are The Countries Most In Debt To China
    These Are The Countries Most In Debt To China

    According to World Bank data analyzed by Statista, countries heavily in debt to China are mostly located in Africa, but can also be found in Central Asia, Southeast Asia and the Pacific. As Statista’s Katharina Buchholz details below, as the new preferred lender to low-income countries, China now holds 37 percent of these nations’ debt. Just 24 percent of the countries’ bilateral debt comes from the rest of the world in 2022.

    Infographic: The Countries Most in Debt to China | Statista

    You will find more infographics at Statista

    The “New Silk Road” project, which finances the construction of port, rail and land infrastructure across the globe, has created much debt to China for participating countries. At the end of 2020, of the 97 countries for which data was available, Pakistan ($77.3 billion of external debt to China), Angola (36.3 billion), Ethiopia (7.9 billion), Kenya (7.4 billion) and Sri Lanka (6.8 billion) held the biggest debts to China. The countries with the biggest debt burdens in relative terms were Djibouti and Angola, followed by the Maldives and Laos, which has just opened a debt-laden railway line to China. The President of the World Bank, David Malpass, called the level of debt many countries once again hold “unsustainable” in January.

    The Paris Club used to hold the majority of low-income countries’ debt before it was restructured and largely forgiven after the turn of the millennium for qualifying, developing countries. Whether such a process will be available for Chinese debt is unclear. As of 2020, China had officially lent around $170 billion to low and middle-income countries, up from just around $40 billion in 2010.

    Chinese loans have higher interest rates than those from international institutions like the International Monetary Fund or The World Bank or bilateral loans from Paris Club countries, and also have shorter repayment windows. Their setup is closer to commercial loans concerning their conditions of repayment, confidentiality as well as their objectives of funding specific infrastructure projects instead of pursuing development goals in general.

    The Covid-19 pandemic has now complicated the already difficult repayment of Chinese loans even more. According to the Financial Times, the country had to renegotiate loans worth $52 billion in 2020 and 2021 – more than three times the amount that met this fate in the two previous years. One such case was Sri Lanka – also among China’s biggest debtors – which in May was the first Asian country in two decades to default on its debt.

    Tyler Durden
    Wed, 08/31/2022 – 21:40

  • FBI Official Accused Of Blocking Probe Into Hunter Biden Says He Retired, Wasn't Fired
    FBI Official Accused Of Blocking Probe Into Hunter Biden Says He Retired, Wasn’t Fired

    Authored by Zachary Stieber via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

    An FBI official who has been accused of blocking an investigation into President Joe Biden’s son stepped down this month, lawyers representing the official confirmed to The Epoch Times on Aug. 31.

    Timothy Thibault “voluntarily retired” and “was not fired, not forced to retire, and not asked to retire,” lawyers with Morrison & Foerster LLP said in an emailed statement.

    The J. Edgar Hoover FBI Building in Washington on July 21, 2022. (Chung I Ho/The Epoch Times)

    Thibault, an assistant special agent in charge at the FBI’s Washington Field Office, was “escorted” out of the office on Aug. 26, the Washington Times reported. Thibault was “walked out of the FBI,” CBS reported. Both outlets cited anonymous officials.

    Thibault turned in his security badge and “walked with two long-time special agent friends through the field office to finish processing his paperwork,” Thibault’s lawyers said. “He walked out of the building by himself. Claims to the contrary are false.”

    Thibault was eligible for retirement after working for over 30 years for the government and he informed his bosses about a month before his retirement about his intention to retire, his lawyers say.

    The FBI did not respond to a request for comment.

    Mark Lyttle, a U.S. prosecutor for nearly 17 years and a White House lawyer during the Trump administration, offered praise for Thibault in a statement released by the former official’s counsel. “Agent Thibault spent his career rooting out corruption with integrity and honesty. I am proud to have worked with him and to call him my friend and trusted colleague,” Lyttle, now in private practice, said.

    Thibault has come under fire in recent months after Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), the top Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee, raised concerns about his social media posts, including one that described former President Donald Trump as “a psychologically broken, embittered, and deeply unhappy man.”

    Whistleblowers from within the bureau later told Grassley that the FBI gained information in 2020 about “criminal financial and related activity” carried out by Hunter Biden, the son of then-presidential candidate Joe Biden.

    The FBI opened an assessment before the 2020 election but a team from the FBI headquarters used the assessment to “improperly discredit negative Hunter Biden information as disinformation” and caused the bureau’s investigation on Hunter Biden “to cease,” Grassley told FBI Director Christopher Wray and Attorney General Merrick Garland, citing the whistleblowers.

    When additional derogatory information about Hunter Biden came to light, Thibault “allegedly ordered the matter closed without providing a valid reason as required by FBI,” Grassley said. FBI officials, including Thibault, then allegedly tried to “improperly mark the matter in FBI systems so that it could not be opened in the future.”

    ‘False Allegations’

    Thibault’s lawyers, who have been retained on a pro bono basis, say Thibault believes he did not violate the Hatch Act with his social media posts.

    The alleged violations of the law are being investigated by the Office of Special Counsel, the lawyers revealed.

    “Mr. Thibault is cooperating with that investigation, urges the Office to complete its review, and expects to be fully exonerated,” they said.

    Regarding claims that Thibault took certain actions for partisan reasons, the lawyers said Thibault “welcomes any investigation of these false allegations, regardless of his retirement.”

    “He firmly believes that any investigation will conclude that his supervision, leadership and decision making were not impacted by political bias or partisanship of any kind. He is confident that all of his decisions were consistent with the FBI’s highest standards for ethics and integrity,” they said.

    Wray, a Trump appointee, said earlier in August that the FBI is investigating Hunter Biden with the U.S. Attorney for the District of Delaware. He said the investigation is being run out of the bureau’s Baltimore Field Office, which is in Maryland.

    Thibault did not supervise the investigation into Hunter Biden, the former official’s lawyers say, and Thibault “was not involved in any decisions related to any laptop that may be at issue in that investigation, and he did not seek to close the investigation.” Thibault was also not involved in the search warrant that agents executed at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort this month, according to the lawyers.

    Grassley, upon hearing reports that Thibault was no longer with the FBI, said in a statement that Thibault’s “blatant partisanship undermined the work and reputation of the FBI” and said that “the effort to revive the FBI’s credibility can’t stop with his exit.”

    Tyler Durden
    Wed, 08/31/2022 – 21:20

  • These Are The Ten Worst US Cities For Renters
    These Are The Ten Worst US Cities For Renters

    For cash-strapped renters crushed by the worst inflationary environment in four decades as real wages tumble, personal savings wiped out, and credit cards maxed out, we have found the top ten cities to avoid renting a one-bedroom apartment.

    The Zumper National Rent Index shows rising shelter costs for a one-bedroom apartment are not sustainable for the working poor. The median national one-bedroom rent for August was $1,486, up 11.8% over the same month last year, surpassing July’s record high. 

    Readers may recall we have focused on New York City’s hot rental market for apartments that continues to set “record number of records.” In the metro area, one-bedroom rents are up a staggering 40% year-over-year. A two-bedroom apartment is up 47%. Across all boroughs, Manhattan had the highest rent, climbing to another record high of $4,214, up 27% over last year. 

    So it is no surprise that NYC tops the list with the most expensive rent. San Francisco, San Jose, Boston, and San Diego rounded out the list of the five most costly rents in the nation. 

    Source: Bloomberg

    Here are the cheapest rents where average one-bedrooms are less than $1,000 per month. 

    Source: Bloomberg

    Renters should avoid locking in rent contracts in super expensive metro areas because the Federal Reserve’s aggressive tightening could spark turmoil in the economy later this year, if not next. This would undoubtedly mean rent prices would have to readjust. 

    Tyler Durden
    Wed, 08/31/2022 – 21:00

  • Gingrich: Media Won't Acknowledge Republican Wave Coming In November
    Gingrich: Media Won’t Acknowledge Republican Wave Coming In November

    Newt Gingrich thinks that the leftist media may be deliberately distorting what he says is evidence that a red wave is coming in November.

    In a Tuesday Fox News op-ed, the former Speaker of the House said that Republicans are particularly well positioned to regain control of the Senate in a ‘mass repudiation of President Joe Biden and the Democrats’ policies.

    The media, meanwhile, is “at best misunderstanding – and at worst deliberately distorting” the evidence, Gingrich says.

    For starters, it’s a midterm in a new president’s term. History tells us these elections almost always cut against the president’s party. Add to this that 74 percent of Americans think the country is headed in the wrong direction thanks to out-of-control spending, 40-year high inflation, rising prices, surging violence, an unpoliced border, and a host of lesser crises. 

    The Democrat-led Congress has a 79 percent disapproval rating, according to Statista. And Biden is hovering at 53 percent disapproval in an average of polls of likely voters, according to FiveThirtyEight (many polls are much worse for Biden).

    But set these broad indicators aside for a moment. -Newt Gingrich

    Gingrich notes that the “left-wing media” is pointing to New York’s 19th Congressional District special election as a bellwether for November – with Democrat Pat Ryan eeking out a 2% win over Republican Marc Molinaro – however to suggest that this portends Democratic momentum is “either ignorant or dishonest,” as the NY 19th District is ‘reliably blue’ – with the 2020 Democratic candidate winning by 11.6%.

    In short, Ryan’s win was actually a terrible showing for the Democrat, who should have won by far more.

    Gingrich continues: A 2-percentage-point win here should make Democrats nervous – not jubilant. The real lesson from the NY-19 race is for Republicans. President Trump earned 178,000 votes in the district in 2020. Although it was redrawn before this race, Molinaro got only 63,000 votes. Had Molinaro run a more aggressive campaign that focused on big national issues, I suspect he could have reached more of the potentially 115,000 Trump voters who weren’t motivated to turnout for the special election. This would have given him the win.

    The media is also obsessing over Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s recent comment that the Senate elections would be tough for Republicans. In all fairness to McConnell, his super PAC has since poured tens-of-millions of dollars into these races – and he clearly intends to win them. At the same time, pundits and reporters are ignoring the deeply positive, optimistic attitudes from the Republican National Committee, the National Republican Senate Committee, and a host of other Republican Senate-focused groups. The media is also ignoring the massive Republican voter enthusiasm. We have seen enormous Republican turnout and voter registrations across the country.

    Read the rest here…

    Tyler Durden
    Wed, 08/31/2022 – 20:20

  • White House Alarmed India Joins Russian War Games Simultaneous To Participating In US Exercises
    White House Alarmed India Joins Russian War Games Simultaneous To Participating In US Exercises

    Authored by by Kyle Anzalone via The Libertarian Institute,

    The Joe Biden administration is concerned about Indian involvement in Russia’s massive war games, White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters on Tuesday. Roughly 50,000 troops from several countries will participate in the “Vostok” military games held in far eastern Russia. 

    Responding to a question about Indian involvement in the Russian-hosted exercises, Jean-Pierre said, “So, the United States has concerns about any country exercising with Russia while Russia wages a unprovoked, brutal war against Ukraine.” She continued, “But, of course, every participating country will make its own decisions. And I’ll leave it at that.”

    Via TASS

    New Delhi is participating in the Vostok 2022 war games hosted by Moscow from September 1-7. According to the Russian Defense Ministry, 50,000 troops and 5,000 weapons units, including 140 aircraft and 60 warships partake in the drills. Soldiers from China, Laos, Mongolia, Nicaragua, Syria, and Tajikistan are also joining the exercises that will stretch into the Sea of Japan

    At the same time, India is involved in the Pitch Black 2022 war games. Hosted by Australia, the military exercises include 17 nations, over 100 aircraft and 2,500 soldiers. All four members of the anti-China The Quadrilateral Security Dialogue or ‘The Quad’ are engaging in the drills, alongside Washington.

    While Jean-Pierre expressed concern, the White House stopped short of saying it would take action against New Delhi. After Russia invaded Ukraine in February, President Joe Biden pledged to isolate the Russian economy.

    However, Washington’s economic war against Moscow has failed as Wall Street analysts are now predicting a more robust Russian economy. 

    The Kremlin has weathered its isolation from the US and many of its Western allies by selling more to Beijing, New Delhi and Ankara. This year, Turkey has doubled its Russian oil imports. To bypass American sanctions, Russian diamond traders have recently adopted the Indian Rupee. 

    Tyler Durden
    Wed, 08/31/2022 – 20:00

  • Royal Caribbean To Be First In Cruise Industry To Equip Ships With "Kickass" Starlink Internet
    Royal Caribbean To Be First In Cruise Industry To Equip Ships With “Kickass” Starlink Internet

    Royal Caribbean Group announced it would be the first in the cruise industry to equip its vessels with SpaceX’s Starlink — making it possible for those who work remotely to enjoy a cruise around the Caribbean with high-speed, low-latency internet. The standard internet on cruise ships is awful and would make anyone absolutely frustrated trying to conduct a video conferencing call.

    The “high-speed, low-latency connectivity” will allow “for a better onboard experience for guests and crew fleetwide,” Royal Caribbean said in a statement

    Installation on Celebrity Cruises and Silversea Cruises ships and all new vessels for each brand should be completed in 1Q23.

    “This technology will provide game-changing internet connectivity onboard our ships, enhancing the cruise experience for guests and crew alike. It will improve and enable more high-bandwidth activities like video streaming as well as activities like video calls,” said Jason Liberty, president and chief executive officer of Royal Caribbean.

    SpaceX Vice President of Starlink Sales Jonathan Hofeller said Starlink on cruise ships “will make their passengers’ getaways even more luxurious.”

    SpaceX’s founder, Elon Musk, tweeted: “Kickass Internet connection coming Royal Caribbean ships soon!” 

    https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

    In June, Royal Caribbean asked the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to clear the way for high-speed internet from space via Starlink’s 3,000 low-orbit satellites.

    Besides cruise ships, several airline carriers (read: here) have been discussing Starlink service, though rival satellite internet operators, including Dish Network and Viasat, have filed complaints with the FCC over interference concerns with Starlink’s sprawling mesh satellite network. 

    So will so-called ‘digital nomads’ now sail around the world on Royal Caribbean cruise ships early next year when the high-speed internet option becomes available? 

     

     

     

    Tyler Durden
    Wed, 08/31/2022 – 19:40

  • Michael Saylor & MicroStrategy Sued By D.C. AG For Tax Fraud
    Michael Saylor & MicroStrategy Sued By D.C. AG For Tax Fraud

    Authored by Shawn Amick via BitcoinMagazine.com,

    The D.C. AG alleges that Saylor and MicroStrategy conspired to commit tax evasion by fraudulently representing Saylor’s primary residence from 2005 to present.

    • Michael Saylor and MicroStrategy are being sued by D.C.

    • The complaint alleges the former CEO conspired with the company to commit tax evasion.

    • The lawsuit calls for more than $25 million in back-taxes and penalties.

    The largest corporate holder of bitcoin, MicroStrategy, and its Executive Chairman Michael Saylor are being sued by the District of Columbia (D.C.) for alleged tax fraud, per an announcement from the D.C. Attorney General.

    https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

    The complaint alleges that Saylor knowingly avoided income taxes to D.C. while fraudulently claiming to be a resident of a lower tax jurisdiction while maintaining his residence in D.C.

    “If you enjoy all the benefits of living in our great city while refusing to pay your fair share in taxes, we will hold you accountable,” said DC Attorney General Karl Racine.

    Additionally, the complaint alleges that MicroStrategy conspired with Saylor by intentionally obfuscating his real address to local and federal tax authorities.

    “On information and belief, from 2005 to the present, Saylor has avoided more than $25 million in District taxes owed,” reads the complaint.

    Moreover, the complaint recalls events back to 1980’s when Saylor originally founded the company, to the relocation of the company’s headquarters to avoid tax burdens in the 90’s, to his supposed routine use of yachts anchored in the Potomac River over many years.

    “Defendant Saylor has been domiciled in the District, or a statutory resident of the District, or both, in each taxable year from 2005 through the present,” the lawsuit continues.

    The complaint claims that Saylor also made multiple “contemptuous” social media posts on Facebook, supporting the claim that he has lived in the area from 2005 to present.

    https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

    More recently, it was announced that Saylor would be stepping down from the aforementioned role of CEO to take on the position of Executive Chairman. The move was meant to enable Saylor to focus on bitcoin initiatives in the ecosystem as well as continuing to drive MicroStrategy’s bitcoin acquisition strategy. 

    Tyler Durden
    Wed, 08/31/2022 – 19:20

  • "Worse Than Couple Years Ago:" Food Bank Demand Spikes As Inflation Wrecks Households
    “Worse Than Couple Years Ago:” Food Bank Demand Spikes As Inflation Wrecks Households

    The last time we showed readers the North Texas Food Bank (NTFB) was nearly two years ago, during the early days of the virus pandemic, when thousands of hungry and unemployed lined up in their vehicles to receive care packages. Now demand for food banks is surging, but for different reasons, as household finances are crushed by inflation and can barely afford essential items at supermarkets. 

    Trisha Cunningham, CEO of NTFB, told CBS News that demand for her food bank “is worse than a couple of years ago — we are serving now at higher levels than we even did at the peak of the pandemic.”

    https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

    The overwhelming answer that CBS found of why people are lining up at the food bank is “that they can’t afford groceries.” 

    One person told CBS, “it’s just the basics: flour, sugar, egg, and milk” prices that have spiraled out of control, adding, “we don’t buy cookies and cakes because we don’t have that luxury anymore.” 

    CBS pointed out that 53 million Americans relied on food banks in 2021, compared to 40 million in 2019, which means a whopping 13 million new Americans can’t afford essential items at supermarkets. 

    None of this comes as a surprise as consumers, mainly on the lower tier, have drained savings and maxed out credit cards to survive the highest inflation in forty years. 

    A slew of retailers warned that lower-income consumers aren’t in great shape this summer despite the Biden administration touting that everything is wonderful ahead of the midterm elections in November. 

    The latest consumer sentiment is at record lows because lower-income consumers have fewer resources to buffer against inflation. 

    Food banks are back and could see even more demand as the Federal Reserve’s most aggressive monetary tightening in decades will cause the unemployment rate to climb.

    Tyler Durden
    Wed, 08/31/2022 – 19:00

  • NVDA Tumbles After Biden Blocks Chip Exports To China
    NVDA Tumbles After Biden Blocks Chip Exports To China

    It has not been a good week for Nvidia, and now it just got worse as shares are down over 5% in after-hours trading after the firm warned that new rules governing the export of A- chips to China may affect hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue.

    In a regulatory filing Wednesday, the giant chipmaker that the U.S. has installed new license requirements for its A100 and forthcoming H100 integrated circuits — Nvidia’s highest-performance products for servers — in sales to China and Russia.

    Nvidia’s filing specifically states that Nvidia’s forecast for the current quarter includes an expected $400 million in data-center sales to China that could be affected by the move; Nvidia does not currently sell products in Russia.

    “The new license requirement may impact the company’s ability to complete its development of H100 in a timely manner or support existing customers of A100 and may require the company to transition certain operations out of China,” the SEC filing reads.

    “The company is engaged with the [U.S. government] and is seeking exemptions for the company’s internal development and support activities.”

    Nvidia said that the federal government’s new license requirements are meant to “address the risk that the covered products may be used in, or diverted to, a ‘military end use’ or ‘military end user’ in China and Russia.”

    “We are working with our customers in China to satisfy their planned or future purchases with alternative products and may seek licenses where replacements aren’t sufficient,” an Nvidia spokesperson said in an emailed statement to MarketWatch.

    “The only current products that the new licensing requirement applies to are A100, H100 and systems such as DGX that include them.”

    The company reportedly only received the notification on Aug. 26 and was already facing a sales slump, triggered by lower demand for personal computers.

    Other US chipmakers (AMD and Intel) also saw shares decline in after-hours trading, though Nvidia appears to be the company most impacted by the decision.

    Tyler Durden
    Wed, 08/31/2022 – 18:42

  • Oil Tanker That Ran Aground In Suez Canal Has Refloated
    Oil Tanker That Ran Aground In Suez Canal Has Refloated

    Update: it appears that unlike March 2021, a new transportation crisis will be avoided, as the tanker that ran aground and briefly blocked Suez traffic, has successfully refloated:

    * * *

    Earlier:

    More than a year after the Ever Given containership got stuck for 6 days in the Suez Canal, snarling already broken post-Covid supply chains, moments ago we learned that navigation in the critical canal linking the Indian Ocean with the Mediterranean, and which handles about 5% of global daily crude oil and 8% of LNG flows, has again been halted after a Singapore-flagged oil tanker run aground in the Suez.

    According to preliminary reports, the ship that has run aground is the Affinity V oil tanker sailing under a Singapore flag.

    Egypt Daily News tweeted that the tugboats from the Suez Canal Authority are currently freeing the tanker:

    https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

    It is unclear how bad the blockage is, and how quickly the ship can be freed but as of this moment navigation through the Suez has been stopped. Which is a problem for Europe, as in the absence of Russian pipeline gas flows, and with US LNG exports to Europe still suspended due to the Freeport terminal fire, the continent has become almost exclusively reliant on Beijing LNG (which as we reported yesterday is just Russian LNG repackaged and resold at a much higher price to gullible Europeans).

    Tyler Durden
    Wed, 08/31/2022 – 18:38

  • Russia To Hold 'Limited' Ukraine Annexation Vote, Including For Region Of Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Plant
    Russia To Hold ‘Limited’ Ukraine Annexation Vote, Including For Region Of Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Plant

    Russia is planning to hold “limited” referendums in September for territory it’s captured in Ukraine, according to regional media citing government sources. This is expected to start in the Donbas – where fighting is still raging after Russian forces have captured significant territory, particularly with the separatist Donetsk People’s Republic (DNR) and the Luhansk People’s Republic (LNR), according to a recent Moscow Times report

    Moscow is “impatient” and would like to “pull off” referendums in the Donetsk and Luhansk regions as fast as possible amid stalemate on the battlefield, said the Vyorstka news website citing unidentified government sources.

    Street scenes from the 2014 Crimea referendum, via PBS.

    A senior Russian lawmaker, Andrei Turchak, was cited as saying last week, “These territories are Russian regions.”

    While in the opening weeks and months of the now 6-month long invasion there was widespread speculation over whether Russia would seek to annex territory outside the Donbas, it now seems clear the Kremlin is talking about referendums beyond just the far east.

    Crucially, at a moment the world has watched with growing alarm the volatile situation at Zaporizhzhia Nuclear Power Station in southeastern Ukraine, Russian state media is now previewing a referendum in Zaporizhzhia Oblast during the coming weeks.

    According to TASS on Wednesday (machine translation): 

    The referendum on the status of the liberated territories of the Zaporizhia region will be held in September, the exact date is still unknown. Berdyansk Mayor Alexander Saulenko announced this to journalists on Wednesday.

    “The referendum will, of course, be held on our territory. We are preparing for this referendum, it is planned for September, but I can’t say the exact date yet.”

    The White House has meanwhile condemned any efforts at staging “sham” referendums, which it said the US will never recognize.

    According to the latest Biden administration response to the latest Russian media reports:

    https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

    “Since they obviously are having trouble achieving geographic gains inside Ukraine, they are trying to gain that through false political means,” White House national security spokesman John Kirby said in a briefing last week.

    “The Russian officials themselves know that what they’re doing will lack legitimacy, and it will not reflect the will of the people,” he added.

    Tyler Durden
    Wed, 08/31/2022 – 18:20

  • Treasuries' Worsening Liquidity Points To Broader Market Turmoil
    Treasuries’ Worsening Liquidity Points To Broader Market Turmoil

    By Masaki Kondo, Bloomberg Markets Live commentator and reporter

    Deteriorating liquidity in Treasuries points to turbulence across various assets.

    A Bloomberg liquidity index that measures deviations of yields from their fair value climbed to the highest level since March 2020 this week.

    Such “noise” in the US bond market suggests a general lack of arbitrage capital and tightening of liquidity in the overall market, according to a research paper from the National Bureau of Economic Research.

    The apparent decline in arbitrage capital may be a result of persistently hawkish stance by the Fed and other major central banks amid historic inflation that’s at the same time fanning concern over a global recession.

    The shortage of risk takers could create a one-way move in asset prices, especially when they are falling. Looking at implied volatility, the equity market seems to be most under-pricing such liquidity risks.

    Tyler Durden
    Wed, 08/31/2022 – 18:00

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