QOTD: TJ On Government

Government in a bear market.  In politics, honesty is an art.

“the whole art of government consists in the art of being honest.”  –Thomas Jefferson, July 1774

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FT Forecasts 2018: More political disruption to come in the US

2017 was a year of political shock and disruption, with Donald Trump upending the rules of politics with his Twitter account. The FT’s US managing editor Gillian Tett says that trend is set to continue. The big question is how the Democrats respond.

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Royal Statistical Society : Best statistics of 2017 are 69 and 0.1

I guess we can characterize the new U.S. immigration ban as “swallowing a camel to strain a gnat” given the following data.

The numbers that best sum up 2017 are 69 and 0.1, said Britain’s Royal Statistical Society as it launched its inaugural “Statistics of the Year” award. Intended as the numerical equivalent of the Oxford English Dictionary’s “Word of the Year”, the venerable society, founded in 1834, chose an international and UK award, from a list of nominations made by its members, staff and the general public. The international statistic was 69, the number of US citizens killed on average in lawnmower accidents each year, compared with the two killed by immigrant Islamic terrorists.

…The article’s other numbers also showed that five Americans were killed by far-right terrorists, 21 by “armed toddlers” and 11,737 who were “shot by another American”.  

The 0.1 per cent figure highlights the fact that our perceptions about urban density and the country being ‘concreted over’ are not always 100 per cent accurate. “The fact that less than 6 per cent of the UK is built on also shows that there is space for new housing, if we want to build it. But, of course, it’s not always in the places where demand is greatest, and that’s a crucial point,” said Prof Rae.  FT

 

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Interest Rates Starting To Bite

We have long held that interest rates have been so low (especially real rates) that it will take some time to reach a level for them to really matter and impact markets. The 2-year yield crossing over the S&P500 divie yield this past week for the first time in the last ten years is unlikely to slow the momentum driving risk markets. Nevertheless, they are getting closer to the zip code — after two years since the tightening cycle began — where they will begin to impact fundamental valuations (what is the fundamental value of Bitcoin?) and the relative pricing of risk assets. Keep it on your radar.

Long-term rates are so utterly distorted by the central banks we are not sure if the markets even pay attention anymore. Pancaking of the yield curve? Not the signal it used to be.  Meh!

The above, of course, is somewhat offset by the massive stock of central bank money in the global financial system which has driven up asset values to a level that has finally kicked the real economy into third gear.  This has created the perception of a Goldilocks global enviornment and positive feedback loop between markets and the economy.  Now add fiscal stimulus.

The unprecedented reservoir of the mix of this type of money is still so full it will take some time to drawdown central bank balance sheets to parch the risk markets. A higher share of central bank money relative to credit based bank money reduces global systemic risk and thus asset price risk premia.  Thus, additional market distortions.

The party continues.  Momentum is a powerful thang!   Until it isn’t.

Rates_Divies

Source:   @LizAnnSonders

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European far-right parties seek to unify — EuroNews

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Sector ETF Performance – December 15

ETF_Day

ETF_WETF_METF_QETF_YTD

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Global Risk Monitor – December 15

RiskMon_1

RiskMon_2

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Yellen Says Curve Likely To Be Flatter – Bloomberg

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Tax Reform At Risk After Trump’s ‘Bama Facial?

We think the probability is much higher than markets have priced.

Susan Collins and Rand Paul  are now waffling on their tax reform vote.   Lots of flaws in the bill need to be fixed as haste makes waste.

Hard to predict how many other Republicans begin to distance themselves from the president and his “let them eat cake”  tax reform policy as the crimson tide blowback rises around the White House.

The big question is a crimson tide coming to the markets?

Not sure, but given the extreme valuations and sentiment,  coupled with the global interest rate hikes that are coming next year,  would not bet against it.

Sweet home Alabama
Where the skies are so blue
Sweet home Alabama
Lord, I’m coming home to you

 

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Week In Review – Data Only

WIR_Data

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