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Showing posts with label Neel Kashkari. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Neel Kashkari. Show all posts

Thursday, April 06, 2017

Spring Break

Financial Review

Spring Break


DOW + 14 = 20,662
SPX + 4 = 2357
NAS + 14 = 5878
RUT + 12 = 1364
10 Y – .02 = 2.34%
OIL + .55 = 51.70
GOLD – 3.80 = 1252.60

Yesterday saw a big reversal – from triple digit gains on the Dow to a loss at the close. Today’s trading followed that pattern, but not the magnitude.

President Trump flew to Florida to hold his first meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping, facing pressure from a crisis with North Korea, and working to make good on promises for trade concessions. The US and China account for one-third of the global economy.

The two countries not only drive the world economy but also rely critically on one another, a fact that should moderate the decisions of these two strong-willed leaders. Overall, the U.S. rang up a $347 billion trade deficit with China last year, with California responsible for roughly a third of that amount.

About 30 states imported at least $1 billion more in Chinese goods than they exported, per data from the International Trade Administration, an arm of the U.S. Department of Commerce. Tough actions could end up harming many American consumers and businesses. Bloomberg Intelligence Chief Economist Michael McDonough writes: Shoppers at Wal-Mart and Target would see an immediate surge in imported goods costs. U.S. corporations selling into or producing in China would see lower profits. The promised benefits — a return of U.S. manufacturing jobs — appear uncertain.

High labor costs, automation and sticky supply chains all make it difficult for firms to relocate back to the U.S. This suggests the Trump administration might be content with symbolic wins, rather than major sanctions.

The Pentagon and the White House are in detailed discussions on military options to respond to a poison gas attack in Syria that killed scores of civilians, and which Washington has blamed on the Syrian government. Trump said today that “something should happen” with Assad after the attack, but stopped short of saying he should leave office.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said however, there was no role for Assad in Syria in the future. Any US action against Syria’s government would open a new front in Syria’s fighting, with consequences that are difficult to foresee. Entering such a confrontation might complicate the fight against ISIS and potentially draw in Russia. Possibilities for military action reportedly include striking the Syrian air force or specific military targets.

Senate Republicans voted to strip Democrats of the power to filibuster President Trump’s nominee to the Supreme Court, invoking the so-called nuclear option. Senators voted 52-48 along party lines to change the Senate’s precedent, lowering the threshold for advancing Neil Gorsuch from 60 votes to a simple majority.

They then immediately voted 55-45 to advance the nominee to a final confirmation vote, which is expected to happen Friday afternoon. Senators on both sides lamented the escalation of partisan tactics over Gorsuch’s nomination and warned it would erode the fabric of the institution, which has traditionally protected the rights of the minority party.

House Intelligence Committee Chairman Devin Nunes temporarily recused himself today from all matters related to the committee’s ongoing probe into Russia’s interference in the presidential election, as House investigators look into ethics allegations against him.

Nunes said in a statement that he decided to recuse himself after complaints were filed with the Office of Congressional Ethics about his leadership. Nunes called the charges “entirely false and politically motivated,” but said his recusal would be in effect while the House Ethics Committee considers the matter.

The House Ethics Committee released a statement saying it had “determined to investigate” allegations that “Nunes may have made unauthorized disclosures of classified information, in violation of House Rules, law, regulations, or other standards of conduct.”

White House economic adviser Gary Cohn said he supports bringing back the Glass-Steagall Act, a Depression-era law that would revamp Wall Street banks by splitting their consumer-lending businesses from their investment arms. The National Economic Council director, also a former Goldman Sachs president, expressed support to lawmakers for a banking system where firms would focus primarily on trading and underwriting securities or issuing loans.

Big banks have strongly opposed such a move that would fundamentally overhaul their business. Reinstating the law, which was repealed in 1999, has not attracted significant attention in Congress, but advocates in the White House and both parties now argue it would provide critical safeguards to prevent another financial crisis.

Minneapolis Federal Reserve President Neel Kashkari criticized JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon over what he contends are unrealistic views on core U.S. banking regulations. Dimon’s assertions in a letter to shareholders this week that government-imposed capital requirement for big banks are holding back lending and that relaxing them could spur economic growth “are demonstrably false,” Kashkari said in a blog entry posted to the Minneapolis Fed’s website.

In his letter, Dimon lamented that JPMorgan is constrained in lending because of capital demands. In response, Kashkari noted that the bank has bought back $26 billion of its own stock in the last five years, using money that he says could have been loaned to customers.

One thing Kashkari and Dimon did agree on: “reducing regulatory complexity.” But Kashkari is continuing to argue that higher capital can replace other regulations while Dimon said that there is already “excess capital in the system.”

A federal judge in Detroit said he plans to name former FBI director Robert Mueller to oversee nearly $1 billion in Takata Corp restitution funds as part of a Justice Department settlement. In January, Takata agreed to plead guilty to criminal wrongdoing and to pay $1 billion to resolve a federal investigation into its air bag inflators linked to at least 16 deaths worldwide.

As part of the settlement, Takata agreed to establish two independently administered restitution funds: one for $850 million to compensate automakers for recalls, and a $125 million fund for individuals physically injured by Takata’s airbags who have not already reached a settlement.

Even with the US economy boasting impressive job growth and domestic equity markets near record highs, a fragmented recovery has left many states struggling to close budget deficits nearly a decade after the 2008 financial crisis.

The broad recovery has benefited large, economically diverse states like California and Texas, ratings agencies say, while states heavily dependent on oil revenues, like North Dakota and Alaska, and those like Illinois that are grappling with large unfunded pension obligations, have seen budget deficits bloom.

That has left those struggling states with painful decisions over spending cuts and tax increases, and ill prepared to deal with another economic downturn or cuts to federal money tied to the Medicaid program.

S&P Global has downgraded 11 states compared to just two upgrades since January 2016. It has 11 states on negative outlook, which means the ratings agency believes more than 20 percent of states are in danger of a credit downgrade.

Per a recent report by the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, half of the states face budget shortfalls despite overall economic growth and lack the revenue needed to maintain services at existing levels in 2018. No state has defaulted on its public debt since the 1930s. Despite many near misses more recently, the possibility of any state going under financially is remote at best.

Wall Street’s bet against empty malls is getting too crowded, per Citigroup analysts, who instead recommend wagering against individual retailers as the “next big short.” The strategy differs from the one pursued by a growing number of hedge funds, which have wagered against mall properties through CMBX derivatives indexes that tracks commercial mortgage-backed securities.

The prevailing theory is that failing brick-and-mortar retailers will mean higher vacancies and bankruptcies for mall operators, with losses inflicted on CMBS holders. But the trade has become so crowded in recent weeks that betting the index will drop even further is a longshot.

Retailers have been struggling for years as consumers defect to online merchants such as Amazon and shift spending to experiences such as dining and travel instead of merchandise. Mall operators are under pressure from anchor stores such as J.C. Penney and Macy’s, which have announced plans to shutter stores, and Sears Holdings has raised doubts about its survival.

Yesterday we told you Payless ShoeSource was filing for bankruptcy protection and closing nearly 400 stores. The list of store closures was released today, and 7 stores in Arizona will be shut down.

Taser International  will change its name and ticker – the new name is Axon. A-X-O-N and it is launching a program to equip every US police officer with a body camera, including supporting hardware, software, data storage and training, all free for one year.

Axon’s aim is to provide police departments in the United States with the technology so that officers — frontline officers in particular — can effectively try it, learn how to use it and offer insight on how best to implement it. While Taser will remain one of the company’s trademark products, the company attributed its name and ticker change to changing times and a shift in the focus of their business. The new ticker symbol is AAXN

The number of Americans who applied for unemployment benefits near the end of February fell by 19,000 to 223,000, setting a fresh post-recession low and illustrating the strength of the labor market. We’ll find out more tomorrow with the release of the March Jobs Report.

Economists’ estimates are calling for still-solid gains of 175,000 in the public and private sectors, but that would be down from an average pace of about 237,000 the first two months of the year. The recent strength in the labor market could make it tougher for employers to find skilled workers.

Thursday, November 17, 2016

Relatively Soon

Financial Review

Relatively Soon


DOW + 35 = 18,903
SPX + 10 = 2187
NAS + 39 = 5333
10 Y + .05 = 2.28%
OIL – .58 = 45.52
GOLD – 2.40 = 1,215

The S&P 500 is close to a record high of 2190. Not today, but close.

The Labor Department reports the Consumer Price Index increased 0.4 percent last month, the biggest increase in six months. In the 12 months through October, the CPI advanced 1.6 percent.

Gasoline prices jumped 7 percent last month and rents increased 0.4 percent; food prices were unchanged. Underlying inflation, however, remained moderate. The core CPI, which strips out food and energy costs, climbed 0.1 percent last month after a similar gain in September. That slowed the year-on-year increase in the core CPI to 2.1 percent.

The number of people who applied for unemployment benefits last week dropped by 19,000 to 235,000, a 43-year low. Initial claims have been under the key 300,000 threshold for 89 straight weeks. Companies have ramped up hiring over the past five years, and many complain they cannot find enough skilled workers to quickly fill open positions.

Arizona’s seasonally adjusted unemployment rate decreased three-tenths of a percentage point from 5.5% in September to 5.2% in October. The national unemployment rate stands at 4.9%. Arizona gained 28,000 Nonfarm jobs in October. Arizona Nonfarm employment grew by 1.8% (49,600 jobs) over the year in October.

Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen spoke to the Joint Economic Committee this morning, saying a rate hike is coming “relatively soon.” Yellen said progress in the labor market has continued and that economic activity has picked up from the modest pace seen in the first half of this year.

The Fed chair warned of the risks attached to waiting too long before raising rates, saying: “Were the FOMC to delay increases in the federal funds rate for too long, it could end up having to tighten policy relatively abruptly to keep the economy from significantly overshooting both committee’s longer-run policy goals. Moreover, holding the federal funds rate at its current level for too long could also encourage excessive risk-taking and ultimately undermine financial stability.”

So, the Fed will hike rates in December, absent some catastrophe. Also, in testimony, Yellen pledged to serve out her term despite criticism from Donald Trump during his presidential campaign and she defended the Dodd-Frank Act.

Meanwhile, Neel Kashkari, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis in January, says the big banks are still too big to fail even after the passage of the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act. And he has a proposal, called the Minneapolis Plan, to reduce the risks that these banks pose.

In a speech to the Economic Club of New York, Kashkari said his plan would require banks with $250 billion or more in assets to issue common equity of 23.5 percent, up from 13 percent required under current rules. Long-term debt would not be allowed to be counted as part of that cushion because history showed it was not a foolproof buffer to losses.

The plan would likely prompt banks to break apart because of the high cost of holding so much capital. In other words, the risk of another financial calamity outweighed the costs of increased regulation.

What makes this interesting is that President-elect Trump has called for repealing Dodd-Frank, although we don’t know what he would replace it with. At the same time, the Republican Party platform calls for breaking up the large banks by restoring the New Deal-era Glass-Steagall Act. Kashkari said the Minneapolis Plan would greatly reduce the risks of another financial meltdown.

Kashkari also said he traced some of the nation’s current political anger and polarization to how the government responded to the financial crisis — which allowed large banks to survive while thousands of Americans struggled to keep their homes and find new jobs, saying: “The bailouts violated a core belief that has been handed down from generation to generation in our society that if you take a risk you bear the rewards and consequences of that risk.”

The Bank of Mexico just hiked rates by 50 basis points, to 5.25% up from 4.75%.The Mexican peso fell to a record low against the dollar on election night as rolling results increasingly pointed to a Trump victory. It continued tumbling over the course of last week, but has since retraced some of its losses. The point of a rate rise is not to stem the peso’s fall but to anchor inflation expectations and deter capital flight; still, a rate hike could slow economic growth.  Mexico faces the threat of a rating agency downgrade, and analysts have been trimming their growth forecasts for next year.

President-elect Donald Trump is expected to meet with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe today. But Japanese officials don’t know where or when it will take place, nor do they know who will be attending. The Bank of Japan has been on the defensive, buying Japanese Government Bonds in a bid to offset rising treasury yields. Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said he would not allow market pressure from the U.S. to interfere with Japanese monetary policy and does not need to move in tandem with the Federal Reserve, and so the Bank of Japan will buy unlimited bonds – keep in mind they carry a negative interest rate.

Walmart reported earnings and revenue that slightly missed estimates. Wal-Mart said it earned 98 cents a share during the fiscal third quarter, slightly lower than 99 cents a share in the prior-year period. It raked in sales of $118 billion, a 0.7 percent increase over the prior-year period but below estimates.

Cisco Systems, another Dow stock, reported late Wednesday earnings and revenue above forecasts.  But Cisco warned on outlook for the current quarter, as the company’s traditional business of switches and routers continues to struggle with sluggish demand.

Best Buy, the electronics retailer, posted third quarter earnings of 62 cents per share, topping estimates of 42 cents. Revenue also beat. Comparable store sales were up 1.8% from the same quarter last year. Guidance for the fourth quarter came in strong.

After five months of wrangling and two different recommendations from proxy advisory firms, shareholders approved the $2.6 billion merger between Tesla and SolarCity.

Documents filed with the FCC show SpaceX plans to deploy 4,425 satellites to create a super-fast global internet network. That’s more than three times the 1,419 operational satellites that are currently in orbit, according to the Union of Concerned Scientists. The initiative was first floated by Elon Musk in early 2015, when he estimated the project would take at least five years and cost around $10 billion.

Citigroup’s Australian arm is going cashless, telling customers that it will no longer handle notes and coins as of Nov. 24, because fewer than 4% of customers have used them in the last year. While Citi is a small force in Australian retail banking, the move is a sign of how banks are being forced to reinvent branches in the face of a boom in digital transactions and contactless payments.

Following a nearly three-year investigation, JPMorgan has agreed to pay more than $264 million to settle bribery allegations that it hired children of well-connected Chinese decision-makers to win business. JPMorgan may take another hit; Fox Business is reporting that CEO Jamie Dimon might be named Treasury Secretary in the new Trump administration.

Wells Fargo said retail customers opened 44 percent fewer new accounts in October compared with the same period a year earlier following the bank’s settlement with regulators over its cross-selling scandal. New credit-card applications dropped by half to 200,000 in October, the first full month since the lender disclosed the settlement.

Andy Davenport, the CEO of Philidor, the secret pharmacy whose discovery led to a crisis at Valeant Pharmaceuticals, has been arrested and charged with “engaging in a multimillion-dollar fraud and kickback scheme.” Gary Tanner, a former Valeant executive who went on to work for Philidor, was also arrested. US prosecutors are separately investigating former Valeant CEO Michael Pearson and CFO Howard Schiller but they have not been charged at this time.

Philidor is at the heart of the scandal that erased 90% of Valeant Pharmaceuticals’ market value. Valeant hadn’t told investors about the pharmacy, which Valeant had an option to acquire and which accounted for at least 5% of the company’s sales. After the pharmacy’s existence came to light, and accusations that it was using fraudulent tactics to push Valeant’s drugs quickly followed, the company was quick to break off the relationship.

Toyota is getting serious about electric cars. The world’s biggest car company is setting up a separate in-house division to focus purely on developing an electric-car strategy to meet ever-tightening global emissions regulations. Until now, Toyota has been investing mainly in the development of hydrogen-fuel-cell cars.

Ford’s new EcoSport is set to become the smallest SUV in the Detroit automaker’s line-up, but it could also fuel the big debate over automotive trade. That’s because the model will roll off a Ford assembly line in India. Ford has also made plans to move all its small car production to Mexico.