Susan Rice VEEP Pick Ramping

Susan Rice has narrowed a 33 point gap on August 2nd in the prediction markets to within 7 points of Senator Kamala Harris to become Joe Biden’s choice as the Democratic vice presidential nominee.     See our July 19th post, Susan Rice — The Next VEEP?

Rice served as President Obama’s  Ambassador to the United Nations and  National Security Advisor.

Biden has already locked himself into choosing a woman running mate and he does owe the African-American community for pulling his ass out of the fire and saving his candidacy in the South Carolina primary, especially indebted to Congressman James Clyburn.

She wasn’t even on the radar a few months ago.

When choosing a candidate, the most important question is:  Is she/he presidential timber?  Rice, definitely fits the bill, more so, we believe, than the others on the shortlist.  We like her and so does the Trump camp, who believes she is good fodder for the Obama/Hillary Deep State conspiracies — great IPA, by the way.

Deep State

 

Biden is expected to name his pick in the next week.

Susan RIce

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Going Deeper: PMIs vs Factory Utilization

Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI)

The headline PMI is a number from 0 to 100. A PMI above 50 represents an expansion when compared with the previous month. A PMI reading under 50 represents a contraction, and a reading at 50 indicates no change. The further away from 50 the greater the level of change.  – Investopedia

We had to post this after hearing a market talking head rationalizing the big stock market moves based on,

“The data is good.  The U.S. PMI hasn’t been this high since November 2018.”

US_PMI

It’s time for a reality check and some Will Rodgers,

It isn’t what we don’t know that gives us trouble, it’s what we know that ain’t so. – Will Rodgers

By definition, the PMI is a diffusion index designed to measure the prevailing direction and robustness of the month-to-month changes in manufacturing.

July’s PMI has zero relationship to the “November 2018” PMI except for the fact both months were expanding compared to the prior month.   The relative levels mean absolutely nothing.

The July PMI comes in “strong” yet factories are still operating at much lower capacity than they were in November 2018.

Factory_Utilization

Upshot

Avoid the dumb-dumb pills of the talking heads, think and analyze for yourselves, folks.

We will get the same bullshit noise after Q3 GDP prints at around 20 percent. on October 29th,  just five days before the election.

“the largest and strongest quarterly GDP expansion on record!” 

It will be true as a stand-alone statement, in fact, double the next strongest quarterly annualized expansion of 10 percent in Q1 1958, but please keep it in context.

We preach a lot about “context” at GMM.    The strong Q3 GDP print will come after,

GDP_NPR

See the article here

So, even if  Q3 GDP comes in with the “greatest expansion ever” at 20 percent annualized,  real output (GDP) in the U.S. will still be 6.35 percent below Q4 2019 GDP.

Why Markets Crash

It is also important to realize markets like to move on first derivatives (changes in levels) and tend to ignore levels, such as valuations until they do.  One of the reasons why markets tend to crash and experience more left tail outsized events than statistics would suggest.

One last thing,

 

Beware of Semantic and Quantitative Fascism

The economy, as a whole, is not strong.

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Gold Heading To $3,000

The gold move has been astounding but not surprising.  In our book, the main driver of gold is the perception of the central bank’s commitment to maintaining the purchasing power of its fiat currency.   Unless the Fed panics and begins to shut down the digital printing press, gold is moving much higher.

Gold_3

The chart below illustrates the measured move target to 2793.90, which simply adds the move from the Sep ’11 high to the Dec ’15 low to the Sep ’11 high.

Gold, baby.

Gold

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Mars 2020 rover: How far we’ve come – CNET

Very cool.

I remember buying a computer for my loft apartment at the Archive in Greenwich Village just to watch the 1997 Mars rover, Sojourner,  land, and cruise around the Red Planet.  The brand new days of the internet and analog dial-up.

We know one of the NASA engineers who was tasked with building and now monitoring the mechanical arm that will grab rocks from Mars and bring them back on board the Perseverance, which launched last Thursday and is scheduled to land on Mars, February 18, 2021.

We also know two teenage girls with the foresight to purchase a couple acres on Mars.  Talk about real estate speculators!

The high-tech Mars 2020 rover is about to launch into space (complete with its own helicopter). But how does this one-tonne beast compare to the original, pint-sized rover we sent to Mars in 1997?

Subscribe to CNET: https://www.youtube.com/user/CNETTV

 

Mars

See the article here 

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And The Winner is…

Not even close.

“So the last will be first, and the first will be last.”  Gospel of Matthew

https://twitter.com/fred035schultz/status/1288900848651829250?s=21

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Complicated Capilalism

Compassionate capitalism is our mantra around but the pandemic has really complicated things, especially when it comes to private property rights.   As the pandemic drags on, who is right?  Renters or landlords?

Chapter 19 Of U.S. Bankruptcy Code?

We suspect there is going to have to be new and special legislation, maybe adding a Chapter 19 to the U.S. bankruptcy code,  to clear the arrears built with rental forbearance.  We have friends on both sides,  landlords who are not getting paid and renters who cannot afford to pay.

It’s complicated but someone will eventually have to take the hit — that is, the loss of rental income, both from residential and commercial properties.

Our priors are that a big chunk of the stock of rental arrears will find its way back to the banks and the Fed will take it off their balance sheets with the miracle of the digital printing press.   Gold, baby!

The real estate lobby is very powerful.

Land Of Make Believe

Stunning, but not surprising, how all these issues have been ignored and swept under the rug.  The debts that are accruing and not yet reported are in extend and pretend mode.  How the PPP loans are just a hidden form of unemployment insurance and distorting the unemployment rate — keeping the reported data lower than the actual number of unemployed.

We are truly living in the land of “suspended animation.”   And, we get it, the policymakers are just plugging holes trying to keep the boat afloat but they do need a long-term comprehensive and bold plan, which addresses both the health and economic crisis.

We suspect one is coming at 12:01 pm Eastern on January 20, 2021.

Left Is Rising

It doesn’t take a genius to figure out which direction the political winds are blowing after viewing the following photo.

 

No_Job_No_Rent

See the article here

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Trump’s Suggestion To Delay Election Is No Surprise

“Don’t be surprised if you begin to hear the drumbeats of delaying or canceling the November election.” – GMM, July 19

NY_Times_Jul30

See the article here 

 

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The Ultimate Scarcity Asset

GaveKal reminds us why assets typically have value.

  1. They can be rare—gold bars, diamonds, houses on Victoria Peak, bottles of 1982 Pétrus, Van Gogh paintings, or
  2. They can generate cash flows over time

We have been writing for years how the supply-side (relative shortages) has been increasingly driving financial asset values.

Also, run, don’t walk to our donut shop analogy,

The Local Donut Shop And Financial Asset Inflation

…The Fed, the Brinks Truck, has created a demand and supply shock for chocolate donuts or financial assets.  A positive demand shock by handing out cash and injecting more liquidity through its purchases.  A negative supply shock by removing chocolate donuts or financial assets from the donut shop and those of the customers in line.

All good until the price of maple donuts begins to rise, especially if some are imported from Canada with a now weaker currency,  as the mandate of Brinks company is to maintain a stable price and production of maple donuts.  — GMM, July 1st

Check out the following chart.  Is it any wonder why gold, now backed by an almost bulletproof story and negative real interest rates, is on a one-way rocket ship ride?

 

Scarcity_pyramid

Hat Tip:  @TheVolawatcher

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Gold’s Tower Of Terror Trade & The Coming Of Stagflation

I was just explaining to a close friend earlier today how gold can sometimes be a “Tower of Terror” trade where the bottom falls out of the price for no apparent reason.  In addition, the metal is mainly driven by sentiment around a central bank’s long-term resolve and ability to maintain the currency’s purchasing power, which makes gold just a “date” and never a “long-term marriage.”

Gold Is Going Much Higher

Though we do expect this move to be a relatively long and thrilling date, with a not zero probability of morphing into a marriage.

Yikes!

Before leaving for a walk tonight I see gold futures in Asian trading up to 2 percent after the New York close and fast approaching $2k.   I come back and the price had fallen almost $50 from its high trade of $1975, or almost 2 1/2 percent in a little less than two hours.

Welcome to the “Tower of Terror,”  Robinhooders.

Gold_Jul27 The Tower of Terror

 

The yellow metal is pretty overbought here and needs some consolidation before making its next move to $3000.

No Inflation? 

Not so fast.  There is no credit crunch and it feels, at least to us, there is inflation in the economy.  Continued accommodation will result in more inflation and central banks really can’t do a damn thing about it.

VOX

This inflationary spike is unprecedented across all comparison years and constitutes more inflation than normally occurs in a year. We show that the increase in prices mainly happened in the first week of the UK’s lockdown (which began on 23 March 2020), and that a key driver was a reduction in the fraction of promotional transactions as retailers cut back on both price promotions and quantity discounts. This fall in promotions contrasts with the Great Recession, during which consumers purchased more on sale (see Griffith et al. 2016 for evidence in the UK, and Nevo and Wong 2019 for the US).

Second, we show that declining product variety strengthens inflation. Typically, inflation between two successive periods is computed by comparing the prices of products available during both periods. However, consumers’ effective cost-of-living is also impacted by the removal or entry of new products; all else equal, if less products are available consumers will be worse off. In Figure 2 we show the evolution in the number of unique products purchased per week in 2020 and in preceding years. Prior to the start of lockdown, and similar to previous years, the number of products sold in each week is stable. However, from the beginning of lockdown, there is a fall of around 8% in the number of products we observe purchased. This points towards a reduction in product variety, which erodes consumers’ effective purchasing power 

…What lessons about the dynamics of inflation can be drawn from these findings? Lockdown coincided with unusually high inflation, which was experienced by almost all households and in almost all product categories. This finding is noteworthy given financial markets expect the COVID-19 pandemic to be a disinflationary shock (Broeders et al. 2020). The pervasive nature of the inflation, along with the fact that it is observed even in product categories with declines in output, point toward a risk of stagflation. 

It is naturally too early to say for sure whether persistent stagflation will materialise. While the higher price level has persisted for several weeks, the inflation spike coincided with a one-time event, the beginning of lockdown; in addition, we do not observe the entirety of households’ consumption baskets (e.g. rents and services are not included). Nonetheless, it is crucial for central banks, fiscal authorities, and statistical agencies to closely monitor inflation risks going forward. Our work highlights the advantages of real-time scanner data for this purpose. One can track changes in spending patterns for disaggregate products in real-time and observe changes in promotion activity and product variety, all of which are important drivers of inflation and are typically overlooked by statistical agencies. Voxeu

Yes, the study was done in the UK but the laws of economics know no borders and the thesis rings true in America too.

 

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Germany The Winner In COVID Economic Management

Morgan Stanley’s Ruchir Sharma joins Fareed to grade countries around the world on their responses to Covid-19 and their economic resiliency to the crisis.

Source: CNN

Fareed_Sharma

Click here to view video

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