Morning in Arizona

Morning in Arizona
Rainbows over Canyonlands - Dave Stoker

The Headline Animator

Thursday, December 07, 2017

Ultra Violet

Financial Review

Ultra Violet


DOW + 70 = 24,211
SPX + 7 = 2636
NAS + 36 = 6812
RUT + 11 = 1520
10 Y + .05 = 2.38%
OIL+ .66 = 56.62
GOLD – 16.00 = 1247.80

Cryptocurrency

Top Cryptocurrencies

  Name Symbol Price USD Market Cap Volume (24h) Total Vol. % Price BTC Chg. % 1D Chg. % 7D

Bitcoin BTC 16,012.0 $290.56B $17.67B 59.15% 1 -3.56% +74.30%

Ethereum ETH 413.58 $41.34B $2.10B 7.02% 0.0250542 -0.34% -1.99%

Bitcoin Cash BCH 1,378.80 $26.18B $1.55B 5.20% 0.0906213 +11.89% +15.99%

IOTA MIOTA 3.71990 $10.57B $1.14B 3.80% 0.00022174 -9.27% +196.54%

Ripple XRP 0.23500 $10.09B $553.84M 1.85% 0.00001519 +15.71% +6.01%

Dash DASH 660.52 $5.36B $242.77M 0.81% 0.0403684 -0.34% -11.54%

Litecoin LTC 97.110 $5.31B $644.07M 2.16% 0.00571542 -0.85% +13.95%

Bitcoin Gold BTG 238.73 $4.52B $146.44M 0.49% 0.0157946 +11.30% -7.79%

Monero XMR 251.29 $4.32B $281.56M 0.94% 0.0163026 -3.27% +59.69%

Cardano ADA 0.112903 $2.98B $64.74M 0.22% 0.0000067 +1.62% -1.36%

Stocks closed higher. The S&P 500 snapped a 4-day losing streak. Tech stocks made something of a comeback after taking a battering earlier this week. From Friday through Tuesday, the Nasdaq fell 1.6%, with analysts largely blaming the drop on profit-taking after a big rally and on concerns about how the U.S. tax overhaul will impact the tech sector. Whatever rotation away from tech happened in the past few days, it was minor.

Hamas urged Palestinians to abandon peace efforts and launch a new uprising against Israel in response to Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as the Israeli capital. Palestinian factions called for a “Day of Rage” on Friday, and today a wave of protest in the West Bank and Gaza brought clashes between Palestinians and Israeli troops.

Sen. Al Franken said he will resign in the coming weeks, in a speech on the Senate floor that put him face to face with dozens of Democratic colleagues who called for him to step down over mounting allegations of sexual misconduct.

General Electric plans to cut 12,000 jobs in its power division as the new CEO institutes sweeping changes and the company grapples with a decline in business for coal and natural gas products. The company will cut nearly one in five positions in its GE Power unit. Overall, the layoffs equal about 4% of the company’s workforce of about 295,000 employees at the end of 2016.

New CEO John Flannery is aiming to make GE more efficient. He has already earned a reputation for taking a microscope to GE’s global business to identify opportunities for savings and changes. GE said the cuts would contribute to its plans to slash $3.5 billion in “structural costs” in 2017 and 2018. That includes a $1 billion cost-cutting plan in 2018 by the GE Power division, which makes gas and steam turbines, electrical transmission products, nuclear plant infrastructure and other items.

Initial claims for state unemployment benefits slipped 2,000 to a seasonally adjusted 236,000 for the week ended Dec. 2. Last week marked the 144th straight week that claims remained below the 300,000 threshold, which is associated with a strong labor market. That is the longest such stretch since 1970, when the labor market was smaller.

This only tells part of the story about the strength of the economy. Yes, the unemployment rate is at 4.1%, a level considered near full employment. But many workers who leave or lose a job are not eligible for unemployment benefits. That is why the claims number has been so low for so long.

The bitcoin boom continued today, zipping past $17,000. Since its low of $11,450 on Tuesday to its peak Thursday, Bitcoin has rallied 45% in a roughly 48-hour span. Bitcoin soared above $19,500 a coin on Coinbase’s GDAX exchange at about 11:30 a.m. ET, three hours after it blew past $16,000.

The massive tear upward seems to have put pressure on Coinbase’s infrastructure — the exchange said on Twitter that users were experiencing issues logging into their accounts because of record traffic. Other exchanges had other prices. Pick one and wish.

If you placed a wager on bitcoin, congratulations. Don’t forget to cash in. If you didn’t put money in bitcoin and you are starting to feel tempted, just remember that you probably didn’t win the lottery this week either. So, what?

The only thing hotter than bitcoin is inflation in Venezuela, now running at 1,369 percent between January and November. The Venezuelan central bank reported inflation of 180 percent and 240 percent in 2015 and 2016, which had been the highest on record. It has since then stopped providing figures.

S&P Global analysts said a partial government shutdown would cost the economy about $6.5 billion per week, or about 0.2 percent of gross domestic product growth in the fourth quarter of 2017, as the impact of furloughing federal employees ripples across the country.

Lawmakers have until the end of Friday to reach an agreement to avert the shutdown. The House is slated to vote Thursday on a short-term extension to keep the government going a couple of more weeks while lawmakers try to work out the problems.

If a shutdown were to take place so far into the quarter, fourth-quarter GDP would not have time to bounce back, which could shake investors and consumers and, as a result, possibly snuff out any economic momentum. The bad news, is that even in a partial shutdown, Congress would continue to get paid for taking a holiday recess.

A faction of conservative Republicans is raising warnings about federal spending, two weeks after backing tax-cut legislation that would raise federal deficits by $1 trillion over the next decade. They say that compromises struck with moderate Senate Republicans, as well as negotiations to keep Democrats from filibustering spending bills, will contain measures that increase government spending.

As Congress turns attention to funding the government after months devoted to passing the tax cut package, some of the lawmakers who dismissed Congress’s own analysis that the tax cuts would add deficits are raising alarms about spending.

That may threaten some of the deals Senate Republican leaders cut to secure votes for the tax plan, including heading off cuts to Medicaid and legislation to stabilize Obamacare insurance markets. Killing your parents and then complaining about being an orphan.

Wildfires in Los Angeles have burned more than 120,000 acres, and it will get worse. Schools are closed, roadways are shut and nearly 200,000 people have been told to evacuate their homes. Winds were strengthening on Thursday, with warnings that gusts of 80 miles per hour. The high winds will continue at least through tomorrow.

Brush fires broke out this morning in Malibu, Oxnard and Huntington Beach; that in addition to the fires burning, basically out of control in Sylmar, Santa Clarita, Bel-Air and Ventura.

The Federal Reserve reports net worth of households and nonprofits hit a record of $96.9 trillion after a $1.74 trillion increase, or 1.8%, gain in the third quarter. Total debt grew at the fastest rate in nearly two years, 6.2% annualized, after the federal government was allowed to borrow again following the end of a debt-limit impasse. The stock market rally continued in the third quarter, and that $1.1 trillion gain was the big driver of the gain in net worth. Rising house prices added another $400 billion.

On the borrowing front, the story continued to be the rise in corporate debt, rising 6.4% annualized, as well as the continued auto- and student-loan driven rise in consumer credit, which rose 4.9% annualized. Cash on corporate balance sheets rose to $2.36 trillion from $2.29 trillion. So, tax cuts.

Goggle and Amazon are fighting. Google on Tuesday said it would pull its YouTube apps from Amazon’s Fire TV and Alexa-powered Echo Show starting next month. Why? Google pointed a finger at Amazon, which hasn’t been selling some products from Google and Nest, which is also owned by Google’s parent company.

Amazon also doesn’t allow Google products to have access to its Prime Video streaming service. These kinds of conflicts can be confusing for consumers who probably just want to watch the things they like on the devices they’ve bought. It’s childish that companies as big as Amazon and Google can’t work out a deal that makes sense for both, thereby helping the industry to grow and, instead, let consumers and content owners suffer.

Meanwhile, another long-standing streaming media tiff is getting (somewhat) resolved. As of Wednesday, Apple TV owners are finally able to add Amazon’s Prime Video to their devices — about six months after Apple chief executive Tim Cook promised the service was on its way. The two companies reportedly had trouble negotiating while wearing the hats of both partners and competitors.

With the holiday shopping season approaching and bankruptcy proceedings underway in federal court, Toys R Us just received court approval to pay 17 executives about $14 million in incentive bonuses, as long as the company hits its target of $550 million in earnings. It must hit a minimum of $484 million in adjusted earnings before any bonuses are awarded.

Attorneys for the company argued in court papers that the bonuses would help encourage executives to focus on driving up sales as the holidays approach. Because if they don’t get bonuses, they might not do a good job?

The national student loan debt is currently $1.4 trillion, an amount owed by more than 44 million borrowers. The average student loan borrower owes $27,857 in educational debt upon graduation.

The Student Loan Report polled 1,000 student loan borrowers currently in repayment to find out if they would rather receive a gift or an equally-valued student loan payment this holiday season, and 69% said they would like the money to go toward paying down the student loan debt.  Just trying to help you work through your shopping list.

Wildfires torching California, sexual-harassment scandals toppling powerful men and a splintered political landscape — and that’s only a trickle of the headlines. It’s the sludge of earthbound news that has Pantone, the design world’s arbiter of color, looking to the night sky and the future for its 2018 color of the year.

Ultra Violet 18-3383, it is — a dramatically provocative and thoughtful shade. Pantone says the hue, a blue-based purple, expresses “originality, ingenuity and visionary thinking that points us toward the future.” Apparently this is an annual event.

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