Monday, September 26, 2022

ECONOMIST EL-ERIAN The strong dollar: A global wrecking ball

 


“The longer and higher the dollar soars above the rest, the greater the risk of more prolonged global stagflation, debt problems in the developing world, more restrictions on the free flow of goods across borders, greater political turmoil in fragile economies and greater geopolitical conflicts,” he wrote in his Washing Post op-ed. 

On Monday, El-Erian also noted that the recent strength of the U.S. dollar only adds to three key paradigm shifts that have made for an “uncomfortably high probability” of a global recession.



✓✓ ✓

First, he noted that central banks around the world have moved from supportive to restrictive policies practically in unison to counter inflation. Second, he explained that global economic growth is “slowing significantly” as the world’s three most important economies, the U.S., the E.U., and China, all continue to lose momentum. 

And finally, he said that the process of globalization that helped bring about a deflationary trend worldwide over the past two-plus decades is now fading because of “persistent geopolitical tensions.”


 “It’s not just about the big paradigm shifts,” El-Erian said. “This is about governments and central banks being sources of volatility rather than volatility suppressors. They are adding to the volatility, that’s particularly clear with the government in the U.K., but also in the U.S. with the Fed…it is quite a mess in some of these markets and these are the main markets for the global economy.”


Mohamed A. El-Erian

is Chief Economic Advisor at Allianz, the corporate parent of PIMCO where he formerly served as chief executive and co-chief investment officer. He chairs President Obama’s Global Development Council, is a columnist for Bloomberg View and a contributing editor at the Financial Times.

A New York Times Bestseller
fortune.com

Top economist Mohamed El-Erian says the ‘relentless appreciation of the dollar’ is terrible news for the global economy

Will Daniel
5 - 7 minutes

The British pound, like most major currencies other than the dollar, has been under siege throughout 2022. And the situation deteriorated dramatically last week, when the U.K.’s new prime minister, Liz Truss, unveiled a spending plan to boost economic growth.

Investors fear the plan—which will require £45 billion in new debt, and includes the largest tax cuts seen in the U.K. in 50 years—will only serve to exacerbate inflation, undoing the work of the Bank of England’s interest rate hikes.

Despite a negative reaction from markets last week to the new fiscal measures, U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer Kwasi Kwarteng said over the weekend that there’s “more to come” on tax cuts, sending the pound tumbling to a record low against the U.S. dollar on Monday.

✓The once-dominant pound sterling is now down more than 21% this year compared to the dollar, and it’s not the only foreign currency that’s struggling. The Japanese Yen is also down roughly 20% on the year vs. the dollar, while the Euro and the Thai baht are both down more than 15%.

The dollar has ruled the roost in 2022 amid the Federal Reserve’s aggressive interest rate hikes, Europe’s energy crisis, and China’s COVID lockdowns.


As Fortune previously reported, investors looking to protect their capital in these trying economic times see the greenback as a safe haven, because the U.S. economy is “the cleanest dirty shirt,” according to Eric Leve, chief investment officer of the wealth management firm Bailard.

 


But economists warn that the dollar’s strength can also be a nightmare for the global economy.

“What is clear is we have this relentless increase in yields, this relentless appreciation of the dollar. They are both bad news for corporates and for the economy,” Mohamed El-Erian, the president of Queens’ College at the University of Cambridge, told CNBC on Monday.

Echoing Leve’s comments, El-Erian explained that with “fires burning” all over the developing world—and now even in places like the U.K—the dollar is the currency of last resort for investors.

“The reason why this last leg up in the dollar is happening is because we are the safe haven and one consequence of that is our currency gets stronger,” he said.

The strong dollar: A global wrecking ball

This isn’t the first time that El-Erian has warned about the potentially disastrous implications of a rising U.S. dollar.

In a Sept. 6 Washington Post op-ed, El-Erian explained that a strong dollar can be a “mixed blessing.” On one hand, the strength of the greenback helps to reduce U.S. inflation, but at the same time, when the dollar remains persistently strong, it can bankrupt developing nations as their dollar-denominated debt costs soar.

That’s exactly what happened in the Latin American debt crisis of the 1980s. Developing nations in Central and South America amassed billions in dollar-denominated loans with low-interest rates throughout the 1970s. Then, when the U.S. raised interest rates dramatically to fight inflation beginning in1982, debt costs soared sparking a crisis that plunged Latin America into a “lost decade,” according to the Federal Reserve.

And El-Erian warns that a strong dollar can have a number of devastating effects outside of emerging market economies as well.

“The longer and higher the dollar soars above the rest, the greater the risk of more prolonged global stagflation, debt problems in the developing world, more restrictions on the free flow of goods across borders, greater political turmoil in fragile economies and greater geopolitical conflicts,” he wrote in his Washing Post op-ed. 

On Monday, El-Erian also noted that the recent strength of the U.S. dollar only adds to three key paradigm shifts that have made for an “uncomfortably high probability” of a global recession.

The top economist broke down these shifts in his latest Bloomberg op-ed over the weekend. 

✓First, he noted that central banks around the world have moved from supportive to restrictive policies practically in unison to counter inflation. 

✓✓Second, he explained that global economic growth is “slowing significantly” as the world’s three most important economies, the U.S., the E.U., and China, all continue to lose momentum. 

✓✓✓And finally, he said that the process of globalization that helped bring about a deflationary trend worldwide over the past two-plus decades is now fading because of “persistent geopolitical tensions.”

In his interview with CNBC on Monday, the top economist explained that these paradigm shifts have only been made worse by government policies, and called on policymakers to stop adding to the volatility, hinting at the new U.K. tax cut and spending plan.

“It’s not just about the big paradigm shifts,” El-Erian said. “This is about governments and central banks being sources of volatility rather than volatility suppressors. They are adding to the volatility, that’s particularly clear with the government in the U.K., but also in the U.S. with the Fed…it is quite a mess in some of these markets and these are the main markets for the global economy.”

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Mohamed on Twitter (@elerianm)

 

www.bloomberg.com

Why Investors Are Facing Even More Market Instability

Mohamed A. El-Erian
1 minute

Traders and investors didn’t need even more uncertainty.

Traders and investors didn’t need even more uncertainty.

Photographer: Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Frequent flyers are accustomed to turbulence on some flights. Indeed, many expect it. Despite such anticipation, however, the turbulence can once in a while create significant anxiety among even the most seasoned travelers.

This is what happened in markets last week. The “expected” turbulence, related in large part to three continuing paradigm shifts, was turbocharged by two less-anticipated factors, whose duration will play an important role in determining the orderly functioning of markets.


4 hours ago · Investors are paying the paying the price for the Federal Reserve's policy mistakes, according to Mohamed El-Erian.


Twitter


Mohamed on Twitter (@elerianm)

WAIT WAIT DON'T TELL ME...What is Mesa AZ Known For???? Modern-Day Desert Retreat?

 What is Mesa AZ known for? 


"Mesa is the ultimate desert playground for incredible, sought-after outdoor adventure. Plan for an inspired Arizona getaway on the region's canyon-carved waterways and endless trails. As the third largest city in Arizona, this modern-day desert urban retreat offers fun for everyone from foodies to adventure seekers!" 
 
REALITY CHECK 


 

Pioneer Park is not properly located inside the grid of the original One-Square Mile where the eastern boundary is Mesa Drive. It's just east of that across from the Mesa LDS Temple Area and the public park takes its name from a dedication of a statue in 1987 honoring four Mormon families sent by Joseph Smith from Salt Lake City to colonize Arizona. That Pioneer Monument is what you see arriving on Main Street at the entrance. 
 
 
Founding Pioneers of Mesa
1877 - 1880
The Lehi Company - March 6, 1877
Daniel Webster Jones • [ ] Rogers • Dudley J. Merrill • [ ] C. Merrill • [ ] Merrill • S. [ ] Merrill • George Steele • Thomas Biggs • Austin O. Williams • Ross R. Rogers • Joseph McRae • Isaac Turley • John D. Brady

First Mesa Company - February 14, 1878
Francis [ ] Pomeroy • [ ] • Charles I. Robson • Warren E. [ ] • Elijah Pomeroy • Theodore [ ] • [ ] • [ ] • John Pomeroy • Chris [ ] • William M. Newell • Will E. Pomeroy • Hebe [ ] • Job Henry Smith • William Schwazz • Charles Mallory • Jess M. Perkins • George Noonan

Second Mesa Company - January 17, 1879
Hyrum S. [ ] • John [ ] • George C. Dana • Charles C. Dana • William LeSueur • John T. LeSueur Charles Crismon, Jr. • Joseph Cain • Charles Warner • John Davis • William Brimm

The Third Mesa Company - January 19, 1880
William N. Standage • Chauncey F. Rogers • Henry Standage • Hyrum W. Pew
Mesa Pioneer Monument image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Bill Kirchner, May 4, 2010
6. Mesa Pioneer Monument
 
There's also a stone structure erected in 1955 just behind it, somewhat modified before the park re-opened in December 2017, with a plaque memorializing the Daughters of Utah Pioneers.
< Take the time to read it
"Early in 1878 with a straight edge and a spirit level they proved the feasibility of using the ancient Montezuma Canal to bring life-giving water from the Salt River to the desert sands. On February 14th work began on the project, A survey was made and stakes driven, May 16, 1878 to plat the townsite according to the "City of Zion" Plan given by Joseph Smith. the founder of The Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-Day Saints. Elijah Pomeroy was the first bishop and A.F. Macdonald was the first mayor."  
_______________________________________________________________
BLOGGER NOTE: Ever since then there's a direct pipeline from the religion of the Pioneers where their descendants who are bishops and the leaders in LDS stakes and wards get elected to become mayors or elected/unelected power brokers in a closely-connected network of cohorts in Government, Finance, Insurance and Real Estate.
The pipeline still produces results from A.F.Macdonald the first mayor > the 40th mayor John Giles was also "a bishop'"
_________________________________________________________________________.
Other than that, no other mention in the public park for the two indigenous cultures  already living on the land for centuries before the arrival of The Pioneers in the late 19th Century.
Is that in any way a respect for the well-documented history or two earlier first peoples - Spanish-Mexican and the Hohokam/Salt River Pima Maricopa - or is it a skewed  and flawed a one-dimensional interpretation?

REMEMBER THIS
20 July 2019
Mesa City Manager Chris Brady's Big-League Schemes: Trick Mesa Taxpayer's To Finance A Ball Park For The Billionaire-Ricketts Family
Sloan Park at Riverview was named after a plumber for some reason after that Chicago chewing-gum original Wrigley Field just wasn't juicy enough here in Mesa.
Here are former mayor Scott Smith and current city manager Chris Brady in 2012 making a sales-pitch to get the Cubbies Spring Training Facility financed on-the-backs of Mesa taxpayers to the tune of over $200,000,000 for the Billionaire-Ricketts Family who bought the sports franchise in 2009.
From what we know now it was a shake-down [Use the search box on  this blog for more]
_________________________________________________________________________
Email dump: More dirt on Cubs purchase, family conflict from Joe ...
Chicago Sun-Times
The Ricketts family at Wrigley Field in October 2009:
 (from left) Joe Ricketts, Pete Ricketts, Todd Ricketts, Laura Ricketts, Marlene Ricketts and Tom ...
On Tuesday, Deadspin broke news that leaked emails revealed Cubs ownership contemplated moving the team out of Chicago due to a difficult relationship with Mayor Rahm Emanuel in 2013. As it turns out, the suggestion was made by Todd “Fredo” Ricketts and was likely never taken seriously.
Here’s a list of other Todd Ricketts’ suggestions revealed in additional leaked emails:
“It’ll be totally fine if our family gets involved in politics. No one will ever find out about it so it won’t be controversial at all.”
– “Now that we own the McDonald’s across the street from Wrigley, I’m going on an all Quarter Pounder diet. Please don’t tear that place down Tom. I’m sure any hotel we put up there won’t do nearly as much business as the McDonald’s. Plus, where will all the rats go?”
____________________________________________________________________________
In some conservative Republican circles it was "a home run." Here in Mesa most city officials and real estate developers went-to-bat to get it built and financed
> Donald Trump's $14 billion Cabinet
 #2 Todd Ricketts @$5.3 Billion
Ricketts is a co-owner of the Chicago Cubs and CEO of Ending Spending, an organization “dedicated to educating and engaging American taxpayers about wasteful and excessive government spending,” according to its site.
[Reference: https://www.cbsnews.com ]
 
GROUNDWATER INFORMATION RESOURCES
This is from an earlier post on this blog 18 July 2019
Digging-Deeper: Know Your Water + Water-Rights
Don't really intend to be silly or light-hearted about water rights and water, but it is the most precious commodity here in the Desert Southwest.
Here in Arizona in what we now call The Salt River Valley, ancient indigenous cultures created a vast system of canal networks over the centuries before the arrival of new 'Pioneers'. They expanded the open canals to supply natural water resources, converted to private-ownership or municipal control to build vast fortunes for agricultural lands and ranches. After World War II those same lands were needed to create large tracts of housing for Suburban Sprawl and shopping centers and for new industries. Irrigation districts had to be created. Water usage increased. Groundwater had to be tapped into. Water and Wastewater Treatment Plants had to get built. Planning for the future, the city of Mesa once owned 11,400 acres in Pinal County called the Mesa Water Farm. That acreage - and the water-rights - were sold off to Saints Holding Company.  
___________________________________________________________________________
 
West of the Continental Divide, there's a noted demarcation in the geography where there's less than 20 inches rainfall annually.
Readers of this blog can also note there is a very distinct different pattern of what are defined as water rights in the nation's westward expansion.
Homesteading and Water Settlement Acts were the federal government incentives to lay claim to tracts of lands and territories. More than anything else, that's what led to the colonizing of Mesa and The Salt River Valley by family groups in wagon trains sent by Joseph Smith from Salt Lake City.
Their mission was to expand the Kingdom of Deseret here to create The New Zion.
RELATED CONTENT
19 June 2021

Mesa Police Department in The Spotlight Again > City Council 3 Contract Awards Approvals Mon 0621.2021

This starts off about 10 minutes into this Slide Show Presentation > Watch-and-Listen to what they have to say about "a relationship...
www.axios.com

COVID-19 relief funds paid for crime surveillance and more in Arizona

Jessica Boehm
3 - 4 minutes



Illustration of a police officer standing on the highest pile of coins in a row.
Illustration: Maura Losch/Axios

"Mesa allocated $3.3 million of federal pandemic relief funds to create a citywide crime surveillance program called the Real Time Crime Center.

  • The center allows officers to use security cameras on roads and in public spaces to have virtual eyes around the city.

How it works: Detective Richard Encinas tells Axios Phoenix the center is used to deliver information to police in real time, allowing them to quickly identify and apprehend criminals and respond to "suspicious activity."

  • He says center operators witnessed a serious rollover vehicle accident at the intersection of Stapley Drive and Southern Avenue recently and were able to deploy police and fire officials to the scene before a witness called in the accident, saving "precious minutes."
  • Glendale operates a similar program.
Side-by-side photos of a room with large computer screens.
Mesa's Real Time Crime Center. Photos: City of Mesa

State of play: Mesa is one of hundreds of cities across the nation, including many others in Arizona, that are using some of the funds they received from the American Rescue Plan Act to supplement their law enforcement operations.

  • Cities and counties across the country received $350 billion total through ARPA and have allocated about $101 billion so far.
  • The money was meant to help alleviate the impacts of the pandemic, but few limitations were put on local governments, so municipalities are using it for a range of projects, Axios Phoenix found through a partnership with the Marshall Project.

Zoom in: Many Arizona cities allocated the funds to pay for police officer salaries or bonuses.

  • Phoenix dedicated $29 million for up to $2,000 in bonuses for full-time essential employees, including officers.
  • Chandler allocated $750,00 toward hiring incentives for sworn police officers, detention officers and dispatchers.
  • Scottsdale plans to spend all $29 million it received to pay for police and fire operations.

Zoom out: A new Marshall Project report found that localities across the country have allocated around $52.6 billion so far for "revenue replacement," a vague catch-all category.

  • Nearly half of that went to projects that mentioned police, law enforcement, courts, jails and prisons.

Between the lines: President Biden is embracing the law enforcement spending and using it as evidence that Democrats don't want to defund the police.

Of note: Cities and counties also allocated hundreds of millions of dollars on other categories that don't directly relate to the pandemic.

  • Phoenix will spend up to $10 million on the rehabilitation of its 27th Avenue Recycling Facility.
  • Maricopa County allocated $3 million to improve drinking water infrastructure at county parks.

🌱

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Learn more 

SEE RELATED CONTENT on this blog 


The Donald and Judge Dearie

 


m.dailykos.com

Donald Trump has already lost everything he wanted from a 'special master'


Log In
7 - 8 minutes

Sep 24, 2022 7:14am PDT by Mark Sumner, Daily Kos Staff

357 588

Please log in or sign up to continue.

"Not one document has been sorted, but Donald Trump has already lost everything he gained when Judge Aileen Cannon appointed a “special master.” In the last week, rulings from that special master, Judge Raymond Dearie, and from a three-judge panel of the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals, have drained the entire process of any value to Trump. That process will continue. But everything Trump hoped to achieve, is gone.

Even before stepping foot in the White House, Donald Trump had been involved in a jaw-dropping 3,500 law suits. From all that time in court spent stiffing contractors, dodging people who paid for condos that were never built, and feigning ignorance over tax fraud, Trump demonstrated his biggest superpower: Delay. Given enough money, and an unscrupulous attorney, Trump found the legal system offered endless opportunities for motions, appeals, and requests. In a lesson that came straight from his racist father and his legal mentor Roy Cohn, Trump learned early that it was possible to ride out most any storm through the magic of delay.

In the case of the documents that Trump stole from the White House and carted off to Mar-a-Lago, Trump has already worked the refs for 21 months of delay. Thanks to Judge Cannon, he expected the special master process to take him safely through the next three months, gliding past the mid-term elections, while the Department of Justice had to sit on their hands. 

Except what happened this week not only gutted the value of the special master process, they also anticipated Trump’s next moves.

At this point, Trump may be talking up the National Archives as his latest “radical left wing” villains when it comes to interviews with Sean Hannity, but the truth is that Trump has pretty much zero concern for the 11,000 documents taken from Mar-a-Lago and destined to come under control of the Presidential Records Act. Will those documents contain examples of his greed, vanity, and disdain for the nation? Of course they will. And it won’t change a thing.


It’s the 103 classified documents that really concern Trump. Because “Donald Trump took this Top Secret document describing secrets of the [insert nation here] nuclear program and refused to give it back, even under subpoena” is exactly the kind of charge that a grand jury can easily understand when raising their hands in favor of an indictment. And that’s assuming that all those empty folders don’t represent classified documents that have gone completely missing, because that’s an even simpler charge.

What’s happening with the Jan. 6 investigation, and the broader investigation of attempts to overturn the 2020 election is difficult to discern, because so much of that investigation has happened under seal or behind closed doors. What’s happening with the document search at Mar-a-Lago is very public. It’s also very simple: Trump stole documents. He lied about them to federal agents. He refused to return them. He’s lying about them still. 


What we can see of the investigation into classified documents recovered from Mar-a-Lago represents the greatest single chance that Donald Trump will be indicted on criminal charges within the next few months. How good the odds of the FBI showing up at Mar-a-Lago to retrieve something other than documents might be is hard to tell, but it is a non-zero chance. And Trump knows it. . ."

READ MORE

TOM TOMORROW (2)


Attribution:
Cartoon: The amazing Trumpkin

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Attribution:
Cartoon: The debate

This is a “classic” TMW, which is to say, a rerun. After two and a half years, covid finally snagged me last week. Apologies, I hope to be back on track on next week.



Monday Headlines | Street Insider

 Inhale...here's one from last week:

www.streetinsider.com

​Boeing and Former CEO to Pay $200 Million and $1 Million to Settle SEC Charges

1 - 2 minutes

Today, The Securities and Exchange Commission charged The Boeing Company (NYSE: BA) and its former CEO, Dennis A. Muilenburg, with making materially misleading public statements following crashes of Boeing airplanes in 2018 and 2019.

According to the SEC’s orders, after the first crash, Boeing and Muilenburg knew that the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System (MCAS) posed an ongoing airplane safety issue, but nevertheless assured the public that the 737 MAX airplane was safe. Following the second crash, the company and Muilenburg misled investors by providing assurances that there were no slips or gaps in the certification process with respect to MCAS, despite knowing about serious safety concerns.

The company and Muilenburg consented to cease-and-desist SEC orders that include penalties of $200 million and $1 million, respectively.



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✓ 

AeroSpace & Defense News: The Business of Drones


The next-generation navigation system features a suite of down-looking sensors that gather imagery data and track features on the ground, as well as an embedded compute module to process and determine the precise location of an aircraft while it is in flight. Designed with the operator in mind, the system automatically transitions to and from GPS-denied navigation mode without any input from the operator.
www.suasnews.com

Puma VNS visual navigation system

By Press
2 minutes

AeroVironment’s Puma™ VNS is a visual-based navigation system for PumaAE small unmanned aircraft systems (SUAS). PumaVNS enables GPS-denied navigation across GPS-contested environments. The system performs Visual Inertial Odometry (VIO) through a suite of integrated sensors and an onboard compute module to determine the precise location of the aircraft during flight.


Designed to adapt to a continuously changing battlefield, PumaVNS will enable increasingly advanced navigation capabilities, features and functionality through future software and hardware updates. Available as an add-on option for new Puma 3 AE system orders and as a retrofit kit for fielded Puma 2 AE and Puma 3 AE aircraft.

KEY FEATURES
» Zero pilot input required for seamless mission continuity through GPS-contested environments
» Two-piece low-SWAP retrofit kit on existing & new Puma™ AE
» Performs Visual Inertial Odometry (VIO) through onboard sensors to estimate true location without GPS
» Enables integration of future autonomy capabilities
» Minimal performance impact to Puma™ aircraft
» Compact—Fits into existing Puma™ case for mission packout

Data sheet

 

www.asdnews.com

AeroVironment Introduces Puma VNS, a Visual-Based Navigation

3 minutes

  • System determines precise location of the aircraft during flight without relying on GPS
  • Will enable increasingly advanced navigational capabilities, features and functionality through future software and hardware updates
  • Available as an add-on option for new Puma 2 AE and Puma 3 AE system orders and as a retrofit kit for fielded systems

AeroVironment, Inc. (NASDAQ: AVAV), a global leader in intelligent, multi-domain robotic systems, today introduced Puma™ VNS, a visual-based navigation system for Puma 2 AE and Puma 3 AE small unmanned aircraft systems (SUAS) that will enable GPS-denied navigation across increasingly GPS-contested environments.

The system will provide operators with continually advanced navigation capabilities, features and functionality through anticipated software and hardware updates. The system will also enable the integration of future autonomy capabilities.

“Puma VNS gives operators an unprecedented advantage in the battlefield,” said Trace Stevenson, AeroVironment vice president and product line general manager for SUAS. “Operators now can execute missions with more confidence in GPS-contested environment with the system’s new navigational capabilities.”

Aircraft Communication System Market - Global Forecast to 2027

Aircraft Communication System Market - Global Forecast to 2027

by Connectivity (SATCOM, VHF/UHF/L-Band, HF and Data Link), Fit (Line Fit, Retrofit), Platform (Fixed-wing, Rotary-wing, UAVs and eVTOL/eSTOL), Component and Region 

The next-generation navigation system features a suite of down-looking sensors that gather imagery data and track features on the ground, as well as an embedded compute module to process and determine the precise location of an aircraft while it is in flight. Designed with the operator in mind, the system automatically transitions to and from GPS-denied navigation mode without any input from the operator.

Source: AeroVironment, Inc.
Date: Sep 16, 2022
View original News release


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