WSJ : China Cuts 2014 Economic Growth to 7.3% From 7.4%


China Cuts 2014 Economic Growth to 7.3% From 7.4%
Beijing expects 2015 growth of around 7%

BEIJING—China cut its growth rate for last year to 7.3% from 7.4%, in a move likely to add to worries about the world’s No. 2 economy.

China’s statistics bureau said on Monday that the country’s gross domestic product for 2014 totaled 63.614 trillion yuan, or about $10 trillion, down 32.4 billion yuan from its initial estimate in January of this year. It said the number could be revised one more time when it releases final results in January 2016.

The difference represents less than 0.1% of China’s overall economy. Still, the new figure suggests China’s struggles last year to meet Beijing’s official growth target were more difficult than previously realized. China’s growth target last year was about 7.5%.

For this year, China has set a growth target of about 7%, which is already the slowest pace in 25 years. China reached that pace in the first half of the year, but data released in August suggested China’s economic growth was softening even further, contributing to a slump in global markets in recent weeks.

Chinese officials have sought to reassure a domestic audience and global investors that the economy is still humming along. On Monday, its top economic-planning body said the country is on track to meet the government’s annual growth target following a series of supportive policies by the government. The National Development and Reform Commission said in a statement that indicators ranging from electricity consumption to train freight to housing prices show the world’s second-largest economy is on the mend.

Over the weekend, Zhou Xiaochuan, China’s central banker, said that the “correction in the stock market is almost done” and that China’s currency is steadying after last month’s devaluation.

On Sunday, the China Securities Regulatory Commission said China’s state-owned margin loan provider will continue to stabilize the market when drastic price fluctuations lead to systematic risks. China’s top stock-market regulator also said it would study the creation of what is known as a circuit-breaker system to curb sharp daily trading moves.

China frequently revises its previous GDP figures. Last year it raised its estimate of 2013 economic output based on a new survey.

>>> What to look at this Week End - 5th & 6th of September

Weekly Performance
Dow-3.25% S&P -3.40% Nasdaq-2.99% Russell-5.69% Eurostoxx-3.24% EuroStoxx 600 -2.80% FTSE100 -2.41% CAC-3.25% Dax-2.53% Ibex-5.13% MIB -2.37% SMI -1.51% Nikkei -7.02% Hang Seng -4.57% Shanghai +7.96% (closed thu & Fri)
Even as the fall season approaches, the dog days of summer continued to hound world financial markets this week. Enduring uncertainty in China and weakness in Brazil took their toll on global equities, and while the ECB made a dovish move, members of the US Federal Reserve signaled that a September rate hike was still very much in play. Friday's highly anticipated US jobs report was strong enough to support a rate liftoff decision, but not enough to guarantee it. Oil prices joined the equity markets in their volatility, and world finance leaders met in Ankara, Turkey, to address all these concerns at the G20 meeting. As US traders worried about overseas trading during next Monday's Labor Day holiday, a risk-off mentality won the week, and the S&P ended down 3.4%, the DJIA lost 3.2%, and the Nasdaq dropped 3%.


Macro :
- Moscovici Sees EU Maintaining Growth Forecasts for 2015
- Noyer Says Markets Are Well Prepared for Fed Rate Increase
- China’s Stock-Market Rout Is Almost Over, Says PBOC Governor
- Lagarde Says Fed Must Be Sure of Jobs and Prices Before Moving
- US investors look to revival in investment grade corporate bonds http://on.ft.com/1QiEcIG

Keep an eye on :
- ATLN SW : Shire Could Target Radius, Actelion, Ariad Pharma: Sunday Times
- ATL IM : Benetton Family’s Atlantia May Bid for City Airport: S. Times
- CA FP : Carrefoursa re-IPO plan on hold as retailer focuses on small targets - CEO
- CSGN VX : Credit Suisse Ordered to Pay Highland Capital $287.5 Million
- DAI GY : Daimler CEO Zetsche Sees no Crisis in China: Bild am Sonntag
- DGE LN : FT : Diageo drifts after merger talk revival, talks oa SAB Merge of Equal - http://on.ft.com/1JVpEcO
- ENEL IM : Enel to Sell Second Part of Slovenske Stake 2 Yrs From Now: CEO
- FCA IM : Marchionne Says GM Remains Ideal Partner for FCA: Radiocor
- FCA IM : Ferrari Owner CEO Sees Succession Plan at Right Time: Radiocor
- FRE GY : Fresenius SE Reiterates Its Dividend Policy: Euro am Sonntag
- FCX US : Icahn-Targeted Freeport Said to Work With JPMorgan on Strategy
- G IM : Interview of CEO in FT : http://on.ft.com/1Qi5sqY
- IHG LN : Marcato Capital Sells Stake in IHG: Sky News http://bit.ly/1UAAECh
- INTC US : Feds clear Intel’s $16B acquisition of Altera - NY Post
- SDF GY : Potash Names BofA as One of Advisers on K+S/Potash Deal: FAZ
- EMG LN : Man Group’s Li Denies That She Was Assisting With Investigation
- MAU FP : Maurel & Prom Declares Force Majeure at Gabon Pipeline
- MBTN SW : Meyer Burger CEO Says Co. Could Return to Profit Next Year: SoZ
- CFR VX : FT : Swiss watch industry finally moving into an era of self-reliance http://on.ft.com/1Ut6nuh
- CFR VX : FT : EM turmoil and strong franc cast shadow over Swiss luxury industry http://on.ft.com/1NVHp2D
- PSX US : Warren Buffett discloses 10.8% passive stake in 13G filing
- PAH3 GY : Porsche Plans to Increase Staff by 11% This Year: Automobilwoche
- SAB SM : Sabadell May Bid for Clydesdale, Williams & Glyn: S. Times
- SAB LN : T : Diageo drifts after merger talk revival, talks oa SAB Merge of Equal - http://on.ft.com/1JVpEcO
- SPM IM : Eni chairman says all options open for Saipem stake,
- SU FP : Schneider Electric seeks buys in Brazil to expand solutions in process automation and energy efficiency, South America president says
- SHP LN : Shire Could Target Radius, Actelion, Ariad Pharma: Sunday Times
- TIT IM :
- TKA GY : ThyssenKrupp’s Kerkhoff Sees EU1b Savings in 2014/15 Year: BZ
- VIV FP : Vivendi Not Interested in Mediaset: De Puyfontaine
- VOW3 GY : Ex-VW Chairman Piech Blocked Winterkorn From Succeeding Him: FAS

FT : US investors look to revival in investment grade corporate bonds

US investors look to revival in investment grade corporate bonds

US capital market investors are hoping that an expected $100bn bond issue this month will end the longest drought in the country’s investment grade paper market in 20 years.
“You could get a surge of [investment grade bond] issuance in the first six or seven trading days,” said George Bory, head of credit strategy at Wells Fargo, although he adds that what happens after that will depend on the actions of the Federal Reserve.

On top of the traditional summer lull, both investment grade corporate bond issuance and flotations have been hit by the uncertainty about China and a possible rate hike by the Federal Reserve.
The last US-listed initial public offering was on August 14 when Gore Holdings floated on the Nasdaq while the last US investment grade bonds, excluding financial institutions, came with Hershey’s $600m issue on August 18 — making the barren spell in bonds the longest since 1995 and the dearth of new floats the worst since 2013.
While sentiment around IPOs is subdued, healthcare companies are expected to take the lead.
JD Moriarty, head of Americas equity capital markets at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, said: “In healthcare you may see some issuers move forward and you could see those as soon as [this week].”
“What you will see now is people being hesitant to be the first one. The recent volatility has caused many issuers to focus on the upcoming Fed meeting as a reason to wait,” added Mr Moriarty.
Would-be IPO companies also will need to revisit discussions on valuations since shares of their comparable companies, which weigh in how these deals are priced, have likely fallen in recent weeks.
US corporate bond spreads — the premium investors charge for holding company debt instead of Treasury bonds — have widened significantly this year amid the latest market turmoil. Aggregate credit spreads are up 32 per cent to 1.56 per cent since their February low, although they have tightened slightly since peaking at 1.6 per cent in August.
That widening spread has left Scott Service, a global fixed income portfolio manager at Loomis, Sayles & Company, feeling bullish about markets reopening.
He said he had been buying longer-dated bonds and was sanguine about the prospect of new supply pushing spreads wider.
“Early in the year I don’t think you were getting paid for the risk in the marketplace, but now I think that value proposition is better,” he said.
“Even if you get a small widening given new issue concession we still think it’s pretty attractive,” he added.
Elsewhere, rather than the new bond issues being welcomed, the prospect of large level of issuance is being greeted sceptically by investors weary after a year of record supply.
The vagaries of the calendar will probably make things worse, said Jacob Habibi, senior analyst at Invesco.
“We’ve actually only got 16 days, because I don’t expect there to be new deals coming on the day of the FOMC meeting,” said Mr Habibi, which could mean “a lot of heavy days” for the market.
Not everyone is as bullish about bond supply. Hans Mikkelsen, credit strategist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch, has forecast “unusually low supply volumes” of just $60bn of investment grade corporate bonds this month.
He said a lot of issuance was front-loaded to the first half of the year. “I think naturally that means we won’t get a lot of supply in September because some of these needs have been met earlier in the year,” he added.

>>> Shire prepares bids for Actelion and Radius in case Baxalta deal fails

Shire prepares bids for Actelion and Radius in case Baxalta deal fails 

Shire (LON: SHP), the Ireland-headquartered pharmaceutical company, is preparing several deals in the event that a proposed USD 30bn takeover of Baxalta (NYSE: BXLT) fails, The Sunday Times reported.

According to senior sources in the City, Shire has engaged investment banks to prepare deals for a number of other potential takeover targets, the report said.

Switzerland-based Actelion (XETRA: ACT) and Radius Health (Nasdaq: RDUS) of Cambridge, Massachusetts, are thought to be among Shire’s targets, the item reported. It added that analysts believe Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Ariad Pharmaceuticals (Nasdaq: ARIA) might also be a potential target.

Shire needs to find deals to expand and thus prevent its own takeover by predators, the report said. It added that Shire will probably pursue its other acquisition targets even if its takeover of Baxalta goes ahead.

Individuals working on Shire’s potential deals said Chief Executive Flemming Ornskov had become frustrated at a dearth of action in the wake of the company’s offer for Baxalta. However, in recent months his eyes have been opened to other prospective deals, leading him to place less importance on the Baxalta takeover - although it is still the number-one priority, the report said.

According to people with close links to Shire, the company is waiting for its share price to climb before making any new approach to Baxalta. One unidentified investor quoted in the piece said Shire is attempting to approach a deal quietly and is waiting until it is in a better position to make an offer.

Another source predicted Baxalta will ultimately accept a deal approaching USD 50 per share, up from Shire’s initial USD 45.23-per-share offer, the item reported. Baxalta is currently “talking tough”, the source said.

The original article appeared in print; Business section, page 3


Source Sunday Times

(Sky News) Marcato Checks Out Of FTSE-100 Hotels Giant

Marcato Checks Out Of FTSE-100 Hotels Giant

A fund which urged InterContinental Hotels Group to merge with a rival has sold its stake in the UK company, Sky News learns.

The American activist fund manager which demanded that InterContinental Hotels Group (IHG) pursue a mega-merger with a rival has offloaded its £200m stake in the company.

Sky News has learnt that Marcato Capital Management, a San Francisco-based investment firm, sold most or all of its 4% shareholding in the owner of the Crowne Plaza and Holiday Inn brands several weeks ago.

It was unclear on Sunday whether Marcato, which declined to comment, had since reinvested in IHG, which is the largest UK-based hotel operator and has a market capitalisation of more than £5.6bn.

However, sources close to the situation suggested that Marcato was no longer an investor in the British company.

They said the activist had sold its stake following a denial by IHG of a report in the Financial Times in late July which said that the UK-based company had held preliminary merger talks with Starwood Hotels & Resorts.

Marcato had made a "significant gain" on its holding in IHG, which operates nearly 5,000 hotels in 100 countries, one of the sources said.

Under UK listing rules, public companies are usually required to notify the market when shareholders with stakes of more than 3% materially increase or reduce their stakes.

However, some investment firms are exempt from this rule, which one source said explained why there had been no notification to the stock market of Marcato’s disposal.

Marcato went public with its desire for IHG to pursue a combination with another hotel operator last November, arguing that the company had a "unique, limited-time opportunity to create significant long-term shareholder value".

Referring to a report by Sky News earlier in 2014 that IHG had been approached about a deal by Wyndhams, another US hotelier, Marcato said it had become "concerned that the [IHG] board was not giving due consideration to the strategic alternatives available in the current industry and M&A [mergers and acquisitions] environment".

The shareholder said it believed that "a combination with a larger hotel operator would have compelling strategic and financial merit and represents a unique opportunity to reshape the global hospitality industry".

IHG issued a rebuttal of Marcato's demands last year, saying that while it had met the firm twice and reviewed its analysis last autumn, its directors had "concluded that it remains in the best interests of all its shareholders to continue to pursue its current strategy for high quality growth and delivering strong operational and financial performance".

IHG's chief executive, Richard Solomons, has pleased shareholders with a series of substantial capital returns generated by the sale of flagship properties as it shifts its business model to hotel management rather than ownership.

In July, IHG sold the InterContinental in Hong Kong for almost $1bn, and said it would update investors on whether any of the proceeds would be returned to them alongside its annual results next February.

The group has also been accelerating its pipeline of new hotels, operating roughly 5% of the world's existing rooms but with more than twice that level of the global industry's slate of new rooms.

Despite its focus on organic growth, IHG did acquire Kimpton, the world's biggest independent boutique hotels business, for £275m late last year.

It has also been named as a possible suitor for the parent company of Fairmont Hotels, which has been put up for sale for about $3bn, although insiders said that IHG would not be interested in pursuing a deal at anything close to that price.

Starwood is due to reveal the outcome of a strategic review which may lead to a sale in the next few months.

An IHG spokeswoman declined to comment, while a spokesman for Marcato did not reply to a request for comment.

FT : G20 tries to dispel China fears with sunny economic outlook

G20 tries to dispel China fears with sunny economic outlook

Finance ministers from the G20 nations have insisted the global economy has nothing to fear from a China slowdown as they tried to dispel the pall of gloom that has been cast by sagging growth and market turmoil.
At the end of a two-day meeting in Turkey the representatives, accounting for 85 per cent of the world’s output, expressed confidence in the economic forecast in spite of mounting evidence that global growth is falling short of expectations.

European ministers showed firm support for Beijing, which convinced many G20 officials that its devaluation and new currency management arrangements constituted a step towards a more market-determined exchange rate rather than a ploy to boost exports.
Wolfgang Schäuble, German finance minister, said the G20 agreed there was no reason to fret over slower Chinese growth, while Pierre Moscovici, the EU Commissioner for economic affairs, praised “the absolute determination of the [Chinese] authorities to sustain growth”.
US support was more tempered. Jack Lew, US Treasury secretary, pressed Lou Jiwei, his Chinese counterpart, for a signal that China would allow market pressures to drive the renminbi up as well as down.
So far, economists have struck a sanguine tone about the impact of China’s malaise on American growth — one of the global economy’s few bright spots — ahead of a US Federal Reserve meeting on whether to raise record low interest rates for the first time in nearly a decade.
Global growth forecasts have been coming down, with the International Monetary Fund expected to cut its outlook in its Autumn update, but direct linkages between China and the US — the world’s two biggest economies — are narrow.
This suggests that a sharp Chinese downturn could leave the US economy less waterlogged than many of its partners.
New forecasts from Goldman Sachs on Friday suggested that the China-induced turmoil so far — including the recent financial volatility — might reduce US growth by around 0.2 of a percentage point over the next year, a fairly modest effect.
Adam Posen, the president of the Peterson Institute of International Economics, argues the market ruckus has been overblown. While China’s government has mismanaged the situation, only a modest portion of the population is exposed to the stock market falls and there is evidence that consumption has held up, he said.
“People are making too much of the China slowdown. Financial and trade links directly from China to the US are quite limited,” Mr Posen added.
The US has a relatively closed economy with exports clocking in at just 13 per cent of GDP, compared with a 70 per cent contribution from consumer spending, making it in theory one of the least vulnerable big economies to a Chinese breakdown.
Just 7 per cent of US exports go to the People’s Republic. Deutsche Bank research last week suggested a 1 per cent decline in Chinese growth would cut US growth by just 0.1 of a percentage point.
While China has been a growth market for multinationals such as Apple, members of the S&P 500 overall derive only 2 per cent of their revenue directly from China, according to Goldman. Big US banks’ direct exposure to China’s closed financial system is also very modest, at around 3 per cent of assets.
Set against this, however, are the broader ripple effects from China’s woes. Research to be published by Oxford Economics this week will argue that the key risk to the US from a big Chinese downturn is via its indirect impact on other emerging markets, which could trigger financial stress and a more generalised trade slowdown. While US exports directly to China may be modest, emerging markets account for closer to half of US merchandise exports, it points out.
The Chinese authorities’ interventions in troubled financial markets have also raised questions about just how skilled its economic policy makers are and whether the ruling Communist party government is able to manage so complex a continental-scale economy through a formidable period of transition.
Some officials argue against drawing rosy conclusions. Mario Draghi, European Central Bank president, last week suggested negative effects from the China volatility could be felt in Europe via the trade channel and damage to confidence, as he left the door open to a further blast of monetary stimulus.
Eric Rosengren, the president of the Boston Fed, also struck a cautious note, saying the slowing of foreign economies, coupled with volatile stock prices and falling commodity prices, could point to a significant “downward revision” in the US growth forecast.
At the Fed, officials are tracing the possible China-linked risks ahead of its meeting on September 16-17. The central bank would not want to lift rates at a time of severe market volatility, but if markets calm down by September 16 other factors will come into play.
Jon Faust, a professor at Johns Hopkins University who used to be a Fed adviser, said at a panel at the Brookings Institution last week that US policymakers needed to try to look through the China-inspired market gyrations to form judgments on the real US economy.
He added: “Does the volatility signal something about the underlying economy, or is it like a lot of volatility in financial markets — the kind that will ultimately leave no trace in the data?”

>>> Why Hedge Fund Hot Shots Finally Got Hammered

Why Hedge Fund Hot Shots Finally Got Hammered

http://davidstockmanscontracorner.com/why-hedge-fund-hot-shots-finally-got-hammered/
by David Stockman • September 5, 2015

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The destruction of honest financial markets by the Fed and other central banks has created a class of hedge fund hot shots that are truly hard to take. Many of them have been riding the bubble ever since Alan Greenspan got it going after the crash of 1987 and now not only claim to be investment geniuses, but also get downright huffy if the Fed or anyone else threatens to roil the casino.

Leon Cooperman, who is an ex-Goldman trader and now proprietor of a giant fund called Omega Advisors, is one of the more insufferable blowhards among these billionaire bubble riders. Earlier this week he proved that in spades.

It seems that his fund had a thundering loss of more than 10% in August during a downdraft in the stock market that the Fed for once took no action to counter. But rather than accept responsibility for the fact that his portfolio of momo stocks took a dive during a wobbly tape, Cooperman put out a screed blaming the purportedly unfair tactics of other casino gamblers:

Lee Cooperman, the founder of Omega Advisors, has joined the growing chorus of investors blaming last week’s stock market sell-off — and his own poor performance in August — on esoteric but increasingly influential trading strategies pioneered by hedge funds like Bridgewater.

Well now. Exactly how was Bridgewater counting the cards so as to cause such a ruction at the gaming tables?

In a word, Ray Dalio, the storied founder of the giant Bridgewater “All-Weather” risk parity fund, has been doing the same thing as Cooperman, and for nearly as many decades. Namely, counting the cards held-out in plain public view by the foolish monetary central planners domiciled in the Eccles Building.

To be sure, Dalio’s fund has had superlative returns and there is undoubtedly some serious algorithmic magic embedded in Bridgewater’s computers. But at the end of the day its all a function of broken capital markets that have been usurped and rigged by the Fed.

The only thing your need to know about the vaunted “risk parity” strategies that have served Bridgewater and their imitators so handsomely, and which have now aroused the ire of more primitive gamblers like Cooperman, is the graph below:
^SPX Chart

^SPX data by YCharts

The above, of course, is the Fed’s “wealth effects” printing press at work. There have been about 30 identifiable “dips” since the March 2009 low and every one of them have been bought by the casino gamblers. And for good reason.

The Bernanke Fed’s egregious, desperate and utterly unwarranted bailout of Wall Street at the time of the post-Lehman crash taught the gamblers a profound lesson. That is, they could be exceedingly confident that the Fed would keep the free money flowing at all hazards, and that it would resort to any price rigging intervention as might be necessary to keep the stock averages rising.

Indeed, never in all of history have a few ten thousand punters made so many trillions in return for so little economic value added. But what Dalio did in this context was to invent an even more efficient machine to strip-mine the Fed’s monumental largesse.

To wit, Bridgewater’s computers buy more stocks on the “rips”, when equity volatility is falling and prices are rising; and then on the “dips” they rotate funds into more bonds when equity volatility is rising and the herd is retreating to the safe haven of treasuries and other fixed income securities, thereby causing the price of the latter to rise.

In short, there is a payday in every type of short-run financial weather because Bridgewater’s computers are monetary sump pumps; they constantly purge volatility from the portfolio.

But here’s the thing. The above chart could never exist in an honest free market.

You couldn’t create algorithms to safely pump out volatility and milk the market on alternating strokes because the regularity of the waves on which it is based are not natural; they are the handiwork a central bank that has been taken hostage by the casino gamblers.

Nor is “hostage” too strong a word. In the days of Paul Volcker and William McChesney Martin anybody who even speculated about 80 months of ZIRP would have been assigned to the William Jennings Bryan school of monetary crankery.

As it happened, however, in the last few weeks the long reign of the global money printers has begun to sprout fractures. Over on the other side of the earth in China what had become a 20-year long $4 trillion cumulative “bid” for US treasuries and other DM fixed income securities has gone serious “offers”.

This will prove to be one of the great financial pivots of history. During the course of their stupendous inflation of China’s $28 trillion Credit Ponzi, the red suzerains of Beijing bought treasuries hand over fist and thereby kept their price rising and the volatility of the world bond market falling.

To be sure, this wasn’t charity for America’s debt besotted shoppers and governments. It was done in order to peg the RMB exchange rate and thereby keep its mercantilist export machine humming and the people grateful to their beneficent communist party rulers.

But at length it became too much of a good thing because every time the Peoples Bank Of China (PBOC) bought Uncle Sam’s debt it similtaneously expanded the internal banking system and supply of RMB credit. Moreover, after Beijing launched its madcap infrastructure building campaign in response to the the 2008 financial crisis the phony construction and investment boom which ensued attracted increasing waves of hot money from abroad, thereby inflating the domestic Chinese economy to a fever pitch.

In fact, the PBOC was forced to let the RMB slowly rise against the dollar to keep its banking system from becoming a financial runaway. But the steadily rising RMB drastically accelerated the inflow of foreign capital and speculative funds into the Chinese economy, thereby filling the vaults of the PBOC to the brim at more than $4 trillion early this year compared to a few hundred billion at the turn of the century.

China Foreign Exchange Reserves

But these weren’t monetary reserves in any meaningful or historic sense of the term; they were the fruits of an utterly stupid mercantilist trade policy and the conversion of a naïve old man, and survivor of Mao’s depredations, to the view that communist party power could be better administered from the end of a printing press than from the barrel of a gun.

But Mr. Deng merely unleashed a Credit Monster that sucked in capital and resources from all over the globe into a domestic whirlpool of digging, building, borrowing, investing and speculation that was inherently unstable and incendiary. It was only a matter of time before this edifice of economic madness began to wobble and sway and to eventually buckle entirely.

That time came in 2015—-roughly 30 years after Mr. Deng proclaimed it is glorious to be rich. So saying, he did not have a clue that a credit swollen simulacrum of capitalism run by communist apparatchiks was a doomsday machine.

In any event, what is happening in China now is that the speculators—-both domestic and foreign—–see that the jig is up. That is especially the case after Beijing’s incredibly botched effort to alleviate its massive corporate debt problem by inciting a $5 trillion stock market bubble that is now being blown to smithereens.

This has happened notwithstanding the party bosses sending out truckloads of cash to arrest the stock market’s collapse and then doubling down by sending fleets of paddy wagons to arrest any one who might be tempted into overzealous offers to sell what the PBOC is trying to buy. It means that confidence in the Red Ponzi has at last been shattered.

Accordingly, money is leaking out of China thru a thousand rivulets, by-ways and financial back alleys. To prevent the RMB exchange rate from plunging and thereby inciting even more capital fright and flight, the PBOC has shifted into reverse gear in a large, sustained and strategic way—-as opposed to tactical FX management—– for the first time since the putative miracle of red capitalism incepted.

Ray Dalio wasn’t counting on this because despite Bridgewater’s proficiency in concocting trading algorithms, its vaunted macroeconomics staff consists of standard issue Keynesians—-with a dash of Minskyites thrown in for good measure. Alas, they were not prepared for the possibility that Austrians have said is inevitable all along.

To wit, that Beijing’s experiment with Red Capitalism would eventually end in a crackup boom, causing the seemingly endless Red Bid for US treasuries to become a disruptive and unwelcome Red Offer to sell hundreds of billions of said paper and like and similar dollar/euro/yen liabilities.

To make a long story short, during the gyrations of August bond prices didn’t rise like they were supposed to when the stock market plunged by 12% to its Bullard Rip low at 1867 on the S&P 500. Accordingly, Bridgewater’s risk party portfolio became swamped with too much volatility on both the bond and equity side of Dalio’s big boat. So the algorithmic sump pumps went into over-time dumping stocks in order to drain the ship.

Consequently, Bridgewater wiped out its entire profits for the year in a few days during August, pushing the momo chasers like Cooperman into the drink in the process. Needless to say, the capsizing Big Boats in the casino are now firing at each other, but also lining-up for a full court press at the Eccles Building.

Ray Dalio has already said its time for QE4. He apparently realizes that the Fed’s big fat bid is needed to replace the missing Red Bid in the treasury market, and thereby get his risk parity algorithms working again.

At the same time, Goldman today sent out its chief economist to pronounce that today’s Jobs Friday report tipped the case to no rate increase at the Fed’s upcoming September meeting. Why we need an 81st month of ZIRP when 80 months so far have not succeeded, he didn’t say.

No matter. You can be sure of this. If the market holds above next week’s retest of the 1967 Bullard Rip low, the Fed will likely announce a “one and done” move in September, causing the casino to stage a short-lived, half-heated rally.

By the same token, if the market drops through the Bullard Rip low, the Fed will plead market instability and defer its 25 bps pinprick yet again, thereby causing the same short-lived half-hearted rally.

What won’t happen, however, is another leg higher in the phony bull market engineered by the Fed and its fellow- traveling central banks. That’s because the global “dollar short” is finally coming home to roost.

For nearly two decades the central banks of EM mercantilists have been buying treasury paper, as have the commodity producers and the petro-states. So doing they have helped the Fed drive the benchmark rate to absurdly non-economic levels.

That’s what happens when the printing press is used to generate $12 trillion of so-called FX reserves and $22 trillion of total footings for the consolidated monetary roach motels of the world, otherwise known as central banks and sovereign wealth funds.

In turn, this massive stash became the collateral for the private issuance of friskier dollar denominated corporate and sovereign credits throughout the EM world, thereby slacking the thirst for yield among desperate money managers.

But now China’s house of cards is cratering, causing economies to plunge throughout the worldwide China supply chain. Witness Brazil where industrial production is down 8% from a year ago, and slipping rapidly from there; or South Korea where exports have plunged by double digits.

Metaphorically speaking, dollars are hightailing back to the Eccles building. China and the petro-states are selling and off-shore dollar lenders are effectively making a margin call.

At length, both the epic bond bubble and the monumental stock bubble so recklessly fueled by the Fed and the other central banks after September 2008 will burst in response to the deflationary tidal wave now cresting.

Needless to say, that eventuality will be the death knell for the risk parity trade. It will cause the volatility seeking algos to eat their own portfolios alive.

Can the masters of the universe hanging around in the Hedge Fund Hotels say “portfolio insurance”?

Leon Cooperman and his momo chasing compatriots will soon be praying for an event as mild as October 1987.

Teleraph : Nouriel Roubini dismisses China scare as false alarm, stuns with opti

Nouriel Roubini dismisses China scare as false alarm, stuns with optimism

Economist describes alarmist reaction to the Shanghai stock market rout as 'excessive, unreasonable and irrational'

Nouriel Roubini has cast aside his mantle as the lugubrious "Dr Doom" of the global economy, scathingly dismissing market panic over China as "manic depressive" behaviour by ill-informed investors.
"China is not in free-fall," he told the Ambrosetti forum of world leaders on Lake Como.
Mr Roubini, a professor at New York University, described the alarmist reaction to the Shanghai stock market rout as "excessive, unreasonable and irrational".
The Shanghai bourse is largely closed to the rest of the world and is thinly owned by Chinese citizens, while the country's banking system is state-owned and therefore has the entire resources of the Communist regime to avert a financial meltdown.

While the equity collapse has been dramatic, the number of shares in private hands amounts to just 30pc of GDP, compared to 81pc on Wall Street in 1929 and 183pc in 2000.
Mr Roubini said global markets have swung with impetuous ferocity from complacency about Chinese uber-growth to "extreme pessimism", suddenly switching from talk of 7pc growth rates to 3pc or even zero, when in reality little has changed.

"None of this is happening. The slowdown in China is neither a hard landing or a soft landing, it's a bumpy landing. It could be better managed but growth is not likely to be worse than 6.5pc this year and 6pc next year," he said.
It is an unusual reversal of roles for the man known across the financial world as the prophet of the Lehman crash, almost invariably described by commentators as a perma-bear.
Mr Roubini, who also runs Roubini Global Economics, said the contractionay fiscal policies that have held back recovery across the developed world since 2008 are finally abating.
"Germany seems to have accepted the need for expansionary policies. The whole of fiscal policy in Europe is shifting," he said.
The pace of debt-deleveraging is slowing. Recovery in the US and the eurozone itself is gradually picking up.

Mr Roubini said Western markets have misunderstood the purpose behind China's move to shake up its exchange regime, mistakenly seeing it as the start of a steep devaluation that could send powerful deflationary shocks through the global economy.
This has not happened so far. The yuan has been strengthening over recent days as the central bank (PBOC) intervenes in the market to stabilize the rate, and premier Li Keqiang has vowed to keep the exchange broadly stable - in trade-weighted terms.
The yuan has lost just 2.2pc since the PBOC shock the world by ditching its dollar peg and switching to a managed float on August 11, setting off a minor earthquake and a full-blown correction on Wall Street and European stock markets.

Mr Roubini warned that the world economy remains fragile and said the European Central Bank was well-advised to open the door this week to yet more quantitative easing, if only as an insurance policy in case emerging markets spiral into crisis.
"The US Federal Reserve should wait and see if it is a temporary storm, and not a gathering storm. It may have to wait until May to raise rates, and the Bank of England may have to wait until the spring of next year," he said.
The expansion remains soggy on both sides of the Atlantic. The latest US jobs data show that non-farm payrolls rose by 173,000 in August, less than the 217,000 expected. The US manufacturing surveys are slipping, but are not yet flashing the sort of amber warning signals seen before the onset of the US recession in November 2007.
Lars Feld, a professor at Freiburg University and one of the official five "Wise Men" advising the German Chancellor, said the Fed has already waited too long to raise rates and risks repeating the errors of the last decade, when it incubated an asset bubble.
"The Fed is behind the curve. They should have increased rates in the first half of the year. Under the Taylor Rule (a measure of slack in the economy) it should have acted at the end of the last year. I fear we're in the same situation as under Alan Greenspan when monetary policy was too expansionary," he told The Telegraph at the Ambrosetti forum.
Yet Mr Feld said fast-moving events in China are very hard to assess, and are potentially dangerous - a worry shared by most experts at the conclave of opinion leaders.
"The more they liberalize the economy, the more they are going to lose their grip, and we're going to be in for an unpredictable time. This is what I am scared of," he said.