Individual Economists

Solid 5Y Auction Stops Through Despite Another Sharp Drop In Foreign Demand

Zero Hedge -

Solid 5Y Auction Stops Through Despite Another Sharp Drop In Foreign Demand

After yesterday's ugly 2Y auction saw a major drop in foreign demand, markets were worried that not only would today's sale of $70bn in 5Y paper be poor received, especially after the brutal whiplash which has seen 10Y yields tumble 10bps then spike right back up, but worse, foreign demand would be even scarcer. In the end, it wasn't quite so bad.

Starting at the top, the auction priced at a high yield of 3.995%, the first sub 4.0% 5Y auction since Sept (and thus, the first sub 4.00% coupon, specifically today's coupon was 3.875%), down from 4.10% last month, but the auction also stopped through the 4.005% When Issued by 1.0bp, the 5th stop through in the past 6 auctions.

The bid to cover was solid at 2.41, above last month's 2.33, and right on top of the 2.39 six-auction average.

Like yesterday, it's the internals that were most interesting, but unlike yesterday, we did not see a painful tumble in the Indirect award as foreign bidders pulled out. Which is not to say there was a lot of them: the Indirect takedown dropped from 75.8% in March, one of the highest on record, to just 64.0%, low, but not outlandishly so, and in fact January's 62.8% was lower. So while foreigners were skittish, it wasn't as bad as yesterday.

And with Indirects sliding, Directs naturally jumped, from 11.0% to 24.8%, the highest since January, and one of the highest on record. The offset, Dealers, took down just 11.1%, down from 13.2% in March and one of the lowest on record.

Overall, this was a solid auction, and while indirects slumped, the drop was more modest than yesterday's jarring crash to a 2 year low. Still the market reaction showed some indigestion, and 10Y yield were last seen at 4.37% after dropping as low as 4.25% earlier.

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/23/2025 - 13:28

"West Coast On Tipping Point": Los Angeles Port Set For Steep Drop In Traffic

Zero Hedge -

"West Coast On Tipping Point": Los Angeles Port Set For Steep Drop In Traffic

The Trump administration is likely monitoring sliding scheduled import volumes at the Port of Los Angeles—the largest container port in the Western Hemisphere—amid President Trump's overnight remarks hinting at a potential de-escalation in the trade war with China. The president's comments to ease trade tensions with Beijing come as scheduled import volumes at the LA Port indicate possible inbound trade disruptions on the horizon. 

According to Port Optimizer, a tracking system for vessel operators, scheduled import volumes for the LA Port for the week ending May 3 show a 38.53% week-over-week plunge. Year-over-year, the data shows a 9.79% decrease. For the week ending May 10, scheduled import volumes continued to slow, with a year-over-year change down around 35%.

We've closely monitored the fallout from the 145% tariffs on Chinese goods entering the U.S. for weeks, as trade disruptions ripple from China to the U.S. Now, it appears those disruptions are about to reach American West Coast ports.

Let's review what's transpired:

"We are at a tipping point on the West Coast," Ken Adamo, chief of analytics at DAT Freight & Analytics, told CNBC, adding, "Looking at how many truck loads are available versus trucks, we've seen a precipitous drop, over 700,000 loads have evaporated nationally in the past week compared to two weeks prior."

Falling scheduled import volumes at the LA Port coincide with a rise in canceled sailings.

More color from CNBC:

The vessel drop coincides with a rise in canceled sailings from ocean carriers on Pacific routes that include ports of Long Beach, Los Angeles, Oakland, and Seattle, according to an alert from Worldwide Logistics informing clients of blank sailings.

The Gemini alliance between Maersk and Hapag Lloyd has a cancellation rate of 24.39%; followed by the Ocean Alliance, comprising CMA CGM, Cosco Shipping, Evergreen, and OOCL, at 18%; and the Premier Alliance, comprising Ocean Network Express, Hyundai Merchant Marine, and Yang Ming Marine Transport, at 15%. MSC and ZIM currently have a 10% rate of canceled sailings.

Ocean carriers are trying to balance the pullback in orders resulting from the tariffs and the escalation of tensions in the trade war. CNBC recently reported a total of 80 blank, or canceled, sailings out of China as demand plummets and carriers suspend or adjust transpacific services.

Trump's possible de-escalation of the trade war also came after the IMF reported on Tuesday that tariffs had prompted it to slash its global growth forecast.

. . . 

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/23/2025 - 13:25

If You Believe The Trump Pivot Story, "Clearly You Enjoy Fairy Tales"

Zero Hedge -

If You Believe The Trump Pivot Story, "Clearly You Enjoy Fairy Tales"

By Michael Every of Rabobank

And They All Lived Happily Ever After(?)

Once again, an awful lot just happened, even by 2025 standards, and while some might be away with the faeries as a result, I still things as very Grimm.

As Tuesday saw the Wall Street Journal warn that the US Dow was heading for its worst April since the 1929 Great Depression, which fits the present zeitgeist, in Washington D.C. we got a flurry of developments:

  • President Trump said he doesn’t intend to fire Fed Chair Powell - which he can’t anyway. And he may not even want to if he could as it’s useful to have a scapegoat for anything that goes wrong. Markets loved the prospect of going back to a world where they can savagely criticize, and lean against, central bankers but elected officials can’t; let’s see if they proceed to price for the Fed cutting rates ahead in exactly the manner Trump was talking about.

  • ŸElon Musk floated that he’s about to step back from DOGE from next month, only spending time wielding a chainsaw a few days a week.

  • ŸNouriel Roubini posted a defence of US CEA Head Miran which claims there are no White House plans for capital controls (that he knows of).

  • ŸThe State Department is going to get a big shake-up to slim it down.

  • ŸAt Health and Human Services, RFK, Jr. is to ban artificial food dyes, also stating: “Sugar is poison, and Americans need to know that it is poisoning us.”

  • ŸUS Treasury Secretary Bessent side-briefed an investment bank that the trade stand-off with China is “unsustainable” --it’s a de facto embargo now after all-- and a deal would be struck soon, even if it will take 2-3 years for things to normalise. This saw stocks rip higher before the public heard about it --“Main Street not Wall Street”, right?-- though Bessent apparently also said much depended on China, not the US, moving.

  • ŸThe White House added a trade deal with China is going well, and Trump said the final tariff won’t be as high as 145% “because China will have to make a deal.” To a 60% tariff, once unthinkable but now looking reasonable by comparison? To voluntary export restraint?

  • ŸThe US said it’s received 18 trade proposals and has meetings with 34 others this week - all of whom will be told to deal less with China.

  • ŸAs US Trade Representative ‘Keeping up with the Jones Act’ port fees now in place are so high they also decouple the US from Chinese-built vessels, with Chinese-cranes, containers, and chassis next in line. It’s full steam ahead for the trade war on that front.

Meanwhile, China asked South Korea not to export goods to US defense firms that contain its rare earths, and Vietnam and Korea clamped down on transshipment of Chinese goods to the US, showing sides are being taken. Expect more of that ahead.

With no sign of realist statecraft, Politico flags ‘Trump’s tariff war empowers Europe’s free traders’-- just not the ones prepared to match US offers of removing all regulatory barriers to trade-- as “Even the EU’s most protectionist countries are realizing that they need new friends to trade with as their oldest ally goes rogue.”

EU Commission President Von der Leyen adds the ‘World is ‘lining up’ to work with Europe amid Trump’s trade war’. So, Europe will be importing a lot more then? Because nobody wants to replace exporting to the US with importing from the EU. In which case, Europe ‘replacing the US’ globally means taking on all its key weaknesses, such as trade deficits, with few of its strengths, such as energy, tech, and defence muscle.

In geopolitics, Russia proposed to freeze the invasion of Ukraine along current lines as part of a peace deal. Europe remains concerned that could lead to further concessions from the US would weaken Ukraine going forwards, and Kyiv has already rejected ceding Crimea to Russia. Is there really a happy ending there?

US and Israeli military preparations for a strike on Iran continue, as President Trump says he and Israeli PM Netanyahu are “on the same side of every issue.” Yet US-Iran nuclear talks are advancing quickly, with the two sides already exchanging drafts according to once source – and as Israel sees its outgoing equivalent of the FBI leaves an affidavit that the PM wanted him to spy on protestors and swear loyalty to him over the legal system. Some would argue that the last time the Middle East saw a happy ending was in ‘The Tales of the Arabian Nights’.

And sounding like one itself, the now suddenly ex-head of the WEF and his wife -- whom all the Liberal World Order’s great and good liked to hobnob with -- are under investigation for financial and ethical misconduct involving ATMs, private in-room massages at hotels, and luxury travel. I’m shocked that an organization as democratic, transparent, and accountable as the WEF, and which charges nearly $50 for a hotdog, might allegedly have seen misuse of funds like that. Some will be equally sure the next WEF head will Build Back Better.

So, where do we sit now? With stocks higher, key bond yields lower, DXY trending higher if off yesterday’s peak, and gold sharply lower if trying to rebuild momentum in early Asian trading.

But if you think that just because Trump said he isn’t going to fire Powell in an era in which the independence of central banks is going to be called into question by the demands of realpolitik; or because he said something nice about China and tariffs for the nth time as the world starts to divide along geopolitical lines; or because nuclear-armed Russia and nearly-nuclear-armed Iran are about to live happily ever after with the neighbours they have sworn to destroy,… well, clearly you enjoy fairy tales.

Sadly, we still have to achieve a new global security, financial, economic, and trading architecture to replace the old US-centric one that didn’t work well enough not to collapse. That will take us 1,001 nights, at least!

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/23/2025 - 13:05

Round Two! Trump Slams Zelensky For Rejecting Crimea Proposal For Peace

Zero Hedge -

Round Two! Trump Slams Zelensky For Rejecting Crimea Proposal For Peace

Trump vs. Zelensky Round Two? Tensions initially looked to have cooled after the Zelensky-Vance-Trump February 28 verbal blow-up and showdown at the Oval Office (see clip below), but the spat is heating up once again, and is fast getting personal.

President Trump has slammed President Zelensky in a Wednesday post on Truth Social, saying of the Ukrainian leader, "if he wants Crimea, why didn’t they fight for it eleven years ago when it was handed over to Russia without a shot being fired"... and "He can have Peace or, he can fight for another three years before losing the whole Country."

The fiery denunciation appears in direct response to Zelensky the day prior rejecting Washington demands that Ukraine be ready to formally recognize Russian sovereignty over Crimea. Trump continued, "It's inflammatory statements like Zelenskyy’s that makes it so difficult to settle this War. He has nothing to boast about!"

The White House has this week been making it clear that the United States is ready to walk away from the peace process if it doesn't have willing partners. All of this pressure seems aimed squarely at Kiev, given also Vice President Vance's Wednesday remarks while in India. 

"We’ve issued a very explicit proposal to both the Russians and the Ukrainians, and it’s time for them to either say yes or for the United States to walk away from this process," Vance told the press pool while on the trip. "The only way to really stop the killing is for the armies to both put down their weapons, to freeze this thing and to get on with the business of actually building a better Russia and a better Ukraine." Freezing the war now would certainly give Russian forces a huge advantage, given the immense territory in the East they now hold.

Trump in the fresh social media post further demanded that now is the time to "GET IT DONE" - referring to achieving a lasting settlement. And he coupled this with another swipe at Zelensky, saying the man has "no cards to play" - which has been a US admin theme going back to February.

"I look forward to being able to help Ukraine, and Russia, get out of this Complete and Total MESS, that would have never started if I were President!" - Trump concluded in the post.

Trump is clearly not happy in the wake of Zelensky's Tuesday remarks wherein he asserted that Ukraine will not legally recognize Russia's occupation of Crimea under any circumstances,

"There is nothing to talk about. This violates our Constitution. This is our territory, the territory of the people of Ukraine," Zelensky told reporters.

But Trump is now calling this out as essentially BS - saying that no, this is the very thing in question that must be talked about if the war is to end. On a practical level, Russia is never going to give up Crimea regardless, given it has long been the historic home of the Russian Navy's Black Sea fleet, and has an overwhelming Russian-speaking population.

This was "Round One"...

Will Zelensky respond to this latest dressing down by Trump? His PR handlers are likely urging him not to. The last time this happened in the wake of Zelensky's visit to the White House, the US cut off weapons supplies and intelligence-sharing to Kiev for several days. But this spat and sparring could blow up further yet. Zelensky expressed hope that he could meet with Trump while in Rome for the Pope's funeral on Saturday, but this is now looking less likely.

*  *  *

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Tyler Durden Wed, 04/23/2025 - 12:50

Vance Ramps Up Pressure On Ukraine With Peace Plan That 'Sharply Favors Russia'

Zero Hedge -

Vance Ramps Up Pressure On Ukraine With Peace Plan That 'Sharply Favors Russia'

Vice President JD Vance while traveling in India on Wednesday issued some new and provocative remarks on the prospect of Ukraine peace, and Washington's demands related to ending the war.

The NY Times headlined is coverage of Vance's new remarks by somewhat disparagingly calling it a "Plan for Ukraine That Sharply Favors Russia" — given that it calls for 'freezing' the front lines, which would leave Russian forces in control of the majority of the Donbass region in Eastern Ukraine.

The Vice President reiterated to reporters that the United States would "walk away" from engaging in a peace process if both Ukraine and Russia refused to accept the American terms. The NY Times concludes, "But President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine was clearly the target."

Via Reuters

"We’ve issued a very explicit proposal to both the Russians and the Ukrainians, and it’s time for them to either say yes or for the United States to walk away from this process," Vance told the press pool. "The only way to really stop the killing is for the armies to both put down their weapons, to freeze this thing and to get on with the business of actually building a better Russia and a better Ukraine."

Here is the brief list of basics that Washington is demanding for its outline of peace:

—a "freeze" of territorial lines in the three-plus year war

—no path to NATO membership for Ukraine

—formal recognition of Russia holding Crimea

But it was only yesterday that Ukraine's President Zelensky said he has rejected the possibility of ceding over Crimea, after the Trump administration reportedly offered this 'gift' to Putin of US recognition of Russian sovereignty over the strategic peninsula which has long been home to the Russian navy's Black Sea fleet.

According to Ukrainian media:

Ukraine will not legally recognize Russia's occupation of Crimea under any circumstances, President Volodymyr Zelensky said during a briefing in Kyiv on April 22.

"There is nothing to talk about. This violates our Constitution. This is our territory, the territory of the people of Ukraine," Zelensky told reporters.

Zelensky added, "As soon as talks about Crimea and our sovereign territories begin, the talks enter the format that Russia wants - prolonging the war - because it will not be possible to agree on everything quickly."

Kiev has also recently accused Moscow of using negotiations as a smokescreen, also coming off the 30-hour Easter truce, which saw both sides accuse the other of many violations.

Commenting further of Vance's fresh remarks, the NY Times writes, "It was the first time a U.S. official had publicly laid out a cease-fire deal in such stark terms and the comments appeared designed to increase pressure on Ukraine, which has long refused to accept Russia’s claims on its lands, particularly in Crimea."

Ukraine is meanwhile telling its Western backers that it is "ready to negotiate, but not to surrender." According to fresh words of Ukraine’s vice PM Yulia Svyrydenko, "There will be no agreement that hands Russia the stronger foundations it needs to regroup and return with greater violence. A full ceasefire—on land, in the air, and at sea—is the necessary first step. If Russia opts for a limited pause, Ukraine will respond in kind."

Something like this was just tried as part of the 30-hour Easter ceasefire, with apparent limited success. But Svyrydenko also hit back at Washington, saying "But our people will not accept a frozen conflict disguised as peace." The high-ranking official has laid out the following key points of Ukraine's position:

—Open to negotiations, but not surrender 

—No deal to allow Russia to regroup for future aggression

—Full ceasefire (land, air, sea) required as first step

—No “frozen conflict” masked as peace

—No Ukraine recognition of Crimea as Russian

—If no NATO membership, must get strong, binding security guarantees

The reality remains that if Zelensky can't so much as admit that Crimea will be permanently in Russia's hands, with no hope of Kiev ever getting it back, the prospect of a peace settlement happening anytime soon seems very remote. Moscow has made clear it will never give Crimea over to Ukraine, after the 2014 referendum, and most Western officials recognize this as a reality as well.

This is why the White House is willing to let go of Ukrainian claims on Crimea as well, given it is a realistic first step and major, pragmatic concession toward potentially ending the conflict.

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/23/2025 - 12:20

After Hours (S07 E13): How *Not* to Invest

The Big Picture -



 

 

In their latest episode of the VALUE: After Hours Podcast, Tobias Carlisle, Jake Taylor, and Barry Ritholz discuss:

Barry Ritholtz: From Blogfather to Podcast Pro How Not to Invest: The Making of Barry’s New Book The Belfer Family Tragedy: Enron, Madoff, FTX The Real Cost of Bernie Madoff: It Wasn’t the Money Billion-Dollar Advisors, Underperforming Portfolios Fiduciary Failures and the Problem with Finance Panic Selling, Risk Off, and Behavioral Finance High-Frequency Trading and The Vanguard Effect Jake’s Veggies: Trophic Cascades and Tariff Lessons Tariffs, Trump, and Market Reaction

 

The Book Tour continues…

 

 

Source:
After Hours (S07 E13): How *Not* to Invest with Barry Ritholtz
Johnny Hopkins
Acquirers Multiple, April 21, 2025

 

The post After Hours (S07 E13): How *Not* to Invest appeared first on The Big Picture.

High-Level Ukraine Peace Talks Scrapped After Rubio, Witkoff Pull Out Last Minute

Zero Hedge -

High-Level Ukraine Peace Talks Scrapped After Rubio, Witkoff Pull Out Last Minute

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio was expected to lead a high-level American delegation for more Ukraine peace consultations among allies in London on Wednesday. But in the latest sign that White House patience is wearing thin, the American delegation became a no-show.

"European diplomats pulled the plug on high-level talks set for Wednesday about ending Russia’s war in Ukraine after top US diplomats abruptly canceled plans to attend," The Washington Post reports.

AFP/Getty Images

Now there will only be lower-level talks, and a planned foreign minister's meeting has been scrapped due to Rubio's absence. All this highlights the clear rift between Washington and European partners, which has seen the US side push the idea of offering Russia recognition of its sovereignty over Crimea.

Ukraine has instead wanted to "discuss a complete ceasefire first and everything else later" - according to an official quoted in The Washington Post.

British Foreign Secretary David Lammy was supposed to host his peers, but will now merely "drop in" during lower level talks, according to the report. "The foreign minister-level meeting isn’t happening," an unnamed diplomat told the Post.

"We’re hopeful as per the Rubio tweet that a meeting in London can happen soon, but without Witkoff, the secretary of state, the French and German foreign ministers, there’s no reason for the foreign secretary to chair," the diplomat said.

According to more travel details from the report:

U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio had been scheduled to fly to London on Tuesday night but canceled those plans midday. Steve Witkoff, a special envoy and close ally of President Donald Trump central to White House efforts to broker an end to the war, also dropped out. He will head to Moscow this week, according to the Russians.

Likely these optics of Witkoff going to Moscow instead of London will be seen by Kiev as further evidence it is losing its number one ally and supplier of weapons and intelligence.

And Vice President JD Vance while on a planned trip to India Wednesday reiterated the White House stance, saying "We’ve issued a very explicit proposal to both the Russians and the Ukrainians, and it’s time for them to either say yes or for the United States to walk away from this process."

He continued in the remarks to reporters while visiting the Taj Mahal, "We’re going to see if the Europeans, the Russians and the Ukrainians are ultimately able to get this thing over the finish line."

The suggestion is that both sides would have to give up territories they control, and make mutual compromises, but still it's clear that Russia is in the driver's seat on the battlefield - having just this week also regained nearly all of Kursk territory, leaving Zelensky with no leverage there.

Ukraine has said it's open to negotiations "but not to surrender". President Putin has meanwhile in a surprise move reportedly offered to halt all front line fighting - or freeze it in place - for the sake of achieving peace; however, he would likely want major concessions from the West in return, starting with international recognition of Crimea as under Russia. And any 'freeze' of current lines leaves Russia in control of most of the Donbass region.

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/23/2025 - 11:45

WTI Prices Tumble As Official Crude Inventory Data Disappoints, Production Remains Near Record Highs

Zero Hedge -

WTI Prices Tumble As Official Crude Inventory Data Disappoints, Production Remains Near Record Highs

Overnight gains on the heels of across the board inventory draws reported by API (and some optimism on easing China tensions) have been dashed this morning after comments from the new Kazakh energy minister (pushing back against production cuts for his always over-producing nation). This was then amplified with headlines that other OPEC nations were pushing for accelerated output increases.

But for now, all eyes are on the official data...

API

  • Crude: -4.57mm

  • Cushing: -354k

  • Gasoline: -2.18mm

  • Distillate: -1.64mm

DOE

  • Crude: +244k

  • Cushing: -86k

  • Gasoline: -4.476mm

  • Distillate: -2.35mm

The official data was considerably worse than API's with DOE reporting a small crude build vs API's big draw. Products did see major drawdowns...

Source: Bloomberg

Imports of Canadian crude oil fell for the third consecutive week to 3.3 million barrels a day. The decline is partly explained by the weeklong outage of the Keystone pipeline, the conduit that delivers supplies from the oil sands to US refineries. The drop-off weighed on overall crude imports into the US. 

Gasoline imports climbed to the highest since August as we gear up for summer driving season. 

Total US crude stocks rose for the fourth week helped by the addition of 468k barrels to the SPR...

Source: Bloomberg

US Crude production remains near record highs...

Source: Bloomberg

WTI prices are tumbling following the OPEC comments...

Earlier this month the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies unexpectedly announced plans to hike output at three times the pace previously expected in May. That move was designed to keep perennial overproducers like Kazakhstan in line with their targets, and Saudi Arabia’s energy minister said at the time the hike would be just an “aperitif” if those countries didn’t improve their performance.

“The comment about ‘own interest’ is new to me,” said Arne Lohmann Rasmussen, chief analyst at A/S Global Risk Management.

“It underlines that OPEC+ has some tough quarters ahead with the global economy/demand under pressure from the trade-war. Certainly not bullish for oil.”

The comments raise fresh concerns about whether OPEC+ will continue to press ahead with a faster-than-expected pace of output hikes in the coming months. That could add supplies to a market that has been relatively strong in the short-term, but that analysts widely expect to be oversupplied later this year.

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/23/2025 - 10:47

Sudden Massive ETF Inflows Push Bitcoin Above Google As World's 5th Largest Asset

Zero Hedge -

Sudden Massive ETF Inflows Push Bitcoin Above Google As World's 5th Largest Asset

Investments in Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) rebounded to levels last seen in January, signaling a recovery in investor sentiment from concerns about global trade tariff escalations.

US spot Bitcoin ETFs had over $912 million worth of cumulative net inflows on April 22, marking their highest daily investment in more than three months since Jan. 21...

This helped lift the price of bitcoin above $94,000...

“Macro factors like a weakening dollar and rising gold correlation” may reinforce Bitcoin’s appeal as a hedge against economic volatility, Ryan Lee, chief analyst at Bitget Research, told Cointelegraph.

And lifted the crypto currency above Google as the world's fifth largest asset...

Crypto and traditional stock markets are “walking a tightrope between political drama and economic reality,” with Bitcoin staging a significant rebound thanks to “strong ETF inflows, institutional acquisitions, and a weakening US dollar,” according to Nexo dispatch analyst Iliya Kalchev:

“Bitcoin’s strength amid dollar weakness, record gold prices, and renewed institutional buying reflects a market recalibrating what safety looks like.”

“The conversation has clearly shifted. Bitcoin is no longer trading in the shadows of tech — it’s becoming a lens through which macro uncertainty is priced,” he added.

Nansen CEO Alex Svanevik also praised Bitcoin’s resilience, noting that the maturing asset has become “less Nasdaq — more gold” in the past two weeks, increasingly acting as a safe haven asset against economic turmoil, though concerns over economic recession may limit its price trajectory.

On April 21, BitMEX co-founder Arthur Hayes predicted that this might be the “last chance” to buy Bitcoin below $100,000, as the incoming US Treasury buybacks may signal the next significant catalyst for Bitcoin price.

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/23/2025 - 10:40

Newsletter: New Home Sales Increase to 724,000 Annual Rate in March

Calculated Risk -

Today, in the Calculated Risk Real Estate Newsletter: New Home Sales Increase to 724,000 Annual Rate in March

Brief excerpt:
The Census Bureau reported New Home Sales in March were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR) of 724 thousand. The previous three months were revised down, combined.
...
New Home Sales 2023 2024The next graph shows new home sales for 2024 and 2025 by month (Seasonally Adjusted Annual Rate). Sales in March 2025 were up 6.0% from March 2024.

New home sales, seasonally adjusted, have increased year-over-year in 21 of the last 24 months. This is essentially the opposite of what happened with existing home sales that had been down year-over-year every month for 3+ years (existing home sales have been up year-over-year for the last 4 or the last 5 months).
There is much more in the article.

Oil Prices Tumble On Report Some OPEC+ Members Want Accelerated Output Increase

Zero Hedge -

Oil Prices Tumble On Report Some OPEC+ Members Want Accelerated Output Increase

Update 10:33 am ET: What was already an ugly day for oil on the back of the Kazakhstan comments that it would effectively not adhere to OPEC+ quotas, turned even uglier after Reuters came out with another oil hit piece, reporting that "some" OPEC+ member countries are pushing for another output increase. The report said its OPEC sources said there were calls for that to be tabled at the May 5 meeting and enacted in June. 

Why OPEC+ would agree to flooding the world with oil at a time when most major countries are already teetering on recession, and a flood of production could send oil crashing and spark budget crises across OPEC+ nations, was unclear. What was clear is that whoever commissioned the Reuters report, was short oil, as WTI dumped as low as $61.53 from a session high just shy of $65.

* * *

Oil turned lower after Kazakhstan said it will prioritize national interests over those of the OPEC+ alliance, a move that risks fueling further tensions within the cartel.

Overnight saw prices rally after bigger than expected inventory drawdowns reported by API in the US, but that was all erased this morning as Kazakhstan’s newly appointed energy minister Erlan Akkenzhenov said the country is not able to reduce production at its three largest projects as they are controlled by international oil majors, Reuters reported.

He said the country will prioritize its national interests over commitments to the OPEC+ alliance.

The move lower shows just how overly sensitive financial markets have become in recent months. Kazakhstan has been 'over-producing' for years with OPEC unable to control them... but suddenly it's an issue?

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/23/2025 - 10:32

US New Home Sales Surged In March As Mortgage Rates Tumbled, But...

Zero Hedge -

US New Home Sales Surged In March As Mortgage Rates Tumbled, But...

New home sales soared 7.4% MoM in March (dramatically better than the +1.3% MoM expected), lifting sales up 6.0% YoY...

But...

While new home sales soared amid the tumbling mortgage rates, April has seen rates surge back up to 7.00%, suggesting this sudden sales spike will be short-lived...

And if confirmation was needed, the more timely 'mortgage applications' data shows a major plunge in the last two weeks...

...and if you're hoping for lower rates to keep the American Dream alive, that will likely come at the cost of a recessionary environment... 

...not exactly a great background for homebuyers, whose sentiment already languishes at record lows...

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/23/2025 - 10:10

"After Shorts Are Squeezed, Will Markets Turn Lower Again"

Zero Hedge -

"After Shorts Are Squeezed, Will Markets Turn Lower Again"

By Peter Tchir of Academy Securities

If We Could Turn Back Time

I think this is the second time I’ve used a Cher song in the T-report (must be a guilty pleasure of mine). I also think that some of my colleagues at Academy have some firsthand knowledge of the filming of the video. In any case, as headline after headline hit last night, this is the song that kept popping into my head.

If we could turn back time?

If we went back a few weeks ago and had announced:

  • 10% tariffs on every nation (as “reciprocal”) with 90 days to negotiate deals.
  • All USMCA compliant goods exempted.
  • A variety of important tech exempted.
  • Something harsh, but manageable in the interim, with China.
  • Complete faith in the independence of the Fed.

How bearish would I have been?

Would recession still be on the table? Possibly, but the “capital R” recession would have seemed unlikely and Depression would not have been something I would have contemplated putting in writing.

Would 20% to 30% down on stocks been my call? Definitely not.

But we didn’t!

Do These Pants Make Me Look Bad?

I think in all human history, the only “correct” answer to this question is NO! The real answer might be yes, but that has rarely helped any relationship. Even, avoiding the question by saying that the pants bring out the color of your eyes, tends to be taken for a no.

This administration has spent the better part of the past month telling every country that they look awful in their outfits! That whatever they had on, was just hideous.

Now, in the car ride to the event, we’ve decided that maybe the outfit wasn’t that bad?

Bessent speaks at 10:00 am today. It seems likely that he might bring up some things the Treasury can do to help the bond market (there is chatter about announcing an operation twist to help support the long end of the yield curve).

We can continue to rally on the back of this new “softer” approach from the administration. Some of the people in the admin seemed to have disappeared from the talk show circuit. There is clearly some “repositioning” of policy.

Maybe as we wrote about this weekend, in Dealpalooza, the admin will back off and make some deals (even if they aren’t particularly effective). More importantly, maybe the admin will pivot to Domestic Production for National Security.

That pivot would be welcome and maybe the self-imposed de-escalation in tariffs is a step in that direction?

I find it difficult to see how this backtracking will help “win” big concessions in trade deals. To me, it confirms, that we over-reached, over-estimated our relative strength and have had to backtrack. That isn’t great for the U.S. negotiating position, at least not for those countries who already felt that the U.S. had miscalculated. Recent actions will only confirm that opinion for those countries.

But maybe it let’s us pivot to something more domestic in nature. Something that isn’t a zero-sum game.

That would be positive and I could embrace this rally further.

It seems plausible to expect more positive headlines today, especially from Bessent.

But, the reality is, I think the U.S. is in a far weaker position globally today, than it was a month or two ago. We, unfortunately, cannot go back in time, and the things that have been said or done, cannot be unsaid (they can be undone, but that isn’t the same).

Had we just started here a month or so ago, markets would be in better shape, and many friendships wouldn’t have been tested the way they were. But we aren’t.

So, I’ll move to cautiously optimistic that the worst is behind us on the policy front.

I’m not sure the damage of what has been done and what is still on the table (I think there are still tariffs in place), has been priced into equities after these recent bounces. The bond market may also have to shift to thinking about deficits again, as those concerns may reach “headline” status again, if everything else calms down.

I do feel bad that I no longer can claim to have any idea of what tariffs are in place, on what, with who, but I suspect some of those in charge of enforcing the policy no longer do either, as it has been “evolving” so rapidly.

Good luck, enjoy the respite, it is okay to be optimistic, but there is some risk that after the shorts are squeezed and reality sinks in, markets turn lower again.

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/23/2025 - 10:05

New Home Sales Increase to 724,000 Annual Rate in March

Calculated Risk -

The Census Bureau reports New Home Sales in March were at a seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR) of 724 thousand.

The previous three months were revised down, combined.
Sales of new single-family houses in March 2025 were at a seasonally-adjusted annual rate of 724,000, according to estimates released jointly today by the U.S. Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development. This is 7.4 percent above the February 2025 rate of 674,000, and is 6.0 percent above the March 2024 rate of 683,000.
emphasis added
New Home SalesClick on graph for larger image.

The first graph shows New Home Sales vs. recessions since 1963. The dashed line is the current sales rate.

New home sales were above pre-pandemic levels.

The second graph shows New Home Months of Supply.

New Home Sales, Months of SupplyThe months of supply decreased in March to 8.3 months from 8.9 months in February.

The all-time record high was 12.2 months of supply in January 2009. The all-time record low was 3.3 months in August 2020.

This is well above the top of the normal range (about 4 to 6 months of supply is normal).
"The seasonally-adjusted estimate of new houses for sale at the end of March 2025 was 503,000. This is 0.6 percent above the February 2025 estimate of 500,000, and is 7.9 percent above the March 2024 estimate of 466,000.

This represents a supply of 8.3 months at the current sales rate. The months' supply is 6.7 percent below the February 2025 estimate of 8.9 months, and is 1.2 percent above the March 2024 estimate of 8.2 months."
Sales were above expectations of 680 thousand SAAR, however sales for the three previous months were revised down, combined. I'll have more later today.

Bessent Calls For 'Reforms' Among 'Bretton Woods Institutions' To Rein In Global Trade Imbalances

Zero Hedge -

Bessent Calls For 'Reforms' Among 'Bretton Woods Institutions' To Rein In Global Trade Imbalances

Days after Scott Bessent dazzled JP Morgan with closed-door comments (aka not Main Street) that the tariff standoff with China is unsustainable, the US Treasury Secretary is set to deliver comments on Wednesday at the IIF Global Outlook Forum regarding the state of the global financial system as the Trump administration seeks to tamp down rhetoric over China.

According to a copy of Bessent's prepared remarks, he is set to tell the IIF that "America First does not mean America Alone," and that the International Monetary Fund must prioritize economic and financial sustainability. He is calling for IMF and World Bank reforms after "mission creep," i.e. non-economic goals such as climate change and social justice, but that the Trump administration wants to work with them.

"Going forward, the Trump Administration will leverage U.S. leadership and influence at these institutions and push them to accomplish their important mandates," Bessent said, adding "The United States will also demand that the management and staff of these institutions be accountable for demonstrating real progress."

Bessent - who blamed persistent U.S. trade deficits on foreign policy decisions that promote excess saving and low wages abroad, added that "The architects of Bretton Woods recognized that a global economy required global coordination," and called for "key reforms to ensure the Bretton Woods institutions are serving their stakeholders—not the other way around."

He also encouraged "security-aligned trade," suggesting that U.S. security partnerships should influence economic alignment - a strategic counter to China’s Belt and Road.

China Rebalancing

Bessent also said that China "is in need of rebalancing."

"Recent data shows the Chinese economy tilting even further away from consumption toward manufacturing. China’s economic system, with growth driven by manufacturing exports, will continue to create even more serious imbalances with its trading partners if the status quo is allowed to continue.  

China’s current economic model is built on exporting its way out of its economic troubles. It’s an unsustainable model that is not only harming China but the entire world.  

China needs to change. The country knows it needs to change. Everyone knows it needs to change. And we want to help it change—because we need rebalancing too."

According to an anonymously sourced (of course) report by the WSJ minutes before Bessent's speech (and which was immediately denied), the Trump administration "is considering slashing its steep tariffs on Chinese imports—in some cases by more than half—in a bid to de-escalate tensions with Beijing."

President Trump hasn’t made a final determination, the people said, adding that the discussions remain fluid and several options are on the table.

One senior White House official said the China tariffs were likely to come down to between roughly 50% and 65%. The administration is also considering a tiered approach similar to the one proposed by the House committee on China late last year: 35% levies for items the U.S. deems not a threat to national security, and at least 100% for items deemed as strategic to America’s interest, some of the people said. The bill proposed phasing in those levies over five years. -WSJ

Watch Treasury Secretary Bessent speak here:

Bessent's comments also come after President Donald Trump softened his tone on the unfolding trade war between the world's two largest economies - to which China's foreign ministry spokesman, Guo Jiakun replied "our doors are wide open."

According to Tuesday comments by Trump, "very high" tariffs on Chinese imports will "come down substantially, but it won't be zero."

"I think we're going to live together very happily and ideally work together, so I think it's going to work out very well," Trump told reporters at the White House.

Trump notably excluded China from a pause on "reciprocal" tariffs that were extended to other trading partners in order to allow them time to negotiate - blaming China's retaliatory actions for its exclusion.

The China tariffs include a 125% reciprocal tariff on top of Trump's original 20% tariff related to the fentanyl trade. Combined with pre-existing Section 301 tariffs, some Chinese goods face levies as high as 245%.

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Bessent's full comments below:

Thank you for that kind introduction. It’s an honor to be here.

In the final months of World War II, Western leaders convened the greatest economic minds of their generation. Their task? To build a new financial system.

At a quiet resort high up in the mountains of New Hampshire, they laid the foundation for Pax Americana.

The architects of Bretton Woods recognized that a global economy required global coordination. To encourage that coordination, they created the IMF and the World Bank.

These twin institutions were born after a period of intense geopolitical and economic volatility. The purpose of the IMF and the World Bank was to better align national interests with international order, thereby bringing stability to an unstable world.

In short, their purpose was to restore and preserve balance.

This remains the purpose of the Bretton Woods institutions. Yet everywhere we look across the international economic system today, we see imbalance.

The good news: it doesn’t have to be this way. My goal this morning is to outline a blueprint to restore equilibrium to the global financial system and the institutions designed to uphold it.

I have spent the bulk of my career from the outside looking in on financial policy circles. Now I am on the inside looking out. And I am eager to work with each of you to restore order to the international system. To achieve this, however, we must first reconnect the IMF and World Bank with their founding missions.

The IMF and World Bank have enduring value. But mission creep has knocked these institutions off course. We must enact key reforms to ensure the Bretton Woods institutions are serving their stakeholders—not the other way around.  

Bringing balance back to global finance will require clear-eyed leadership from the IMF and World Bank. This morning, I will explain how they can provide that leadership to build safer, stronger, and more prosperous economies all around the world. I wish to invite my international counterparts to join us in working toward these goals.

On this point, I wish to be clear: America First does not mean America alone. To the contrary, it is a call for deeper collaboration and mutual respect among trade partners.

Far from stepping back, America First seeks to expand U.S. leadership in international institutions like the IMF and World Bank. By embracing a stronger leadership role, America First seeks to restore fairness to the international economic system.

Global Imbalances and Trade

Nowhere is the imbalance I mentioned earlier more obvious than in the world of trade. That’s why the United States is taking action now to rebalance global commerce.

For decades, successive administrations relied on faulty assumptions that our trading partners would implement policies that would drive a balanced global economy. Instead, we face the stark reality of large and persistent U.S. deficits as a result of an unfair trading system.

Intentional policy choices by other countries have hollowed out America’s manufacturing sector and undermined our critical supply chains, putting our national and economic security at risk. President Trump has taken strong action to address these imbalances and the negative impacts they have on Americans.

This status quo of large and persistent imbalances is not sustainable. It is not sustainable for the United States, and ultimately, it is not sustainable for other economies.

Now I know “sustainability” is a popular term around here. But I’m not talking about climate change or carbon footprints. I’m talking about economic and financial sustainability—the kind of sustainability that raises standards of living and keeps markets afloat. International financial institutions must be singularly focused on upholding this kind of sustainability if they are to succeed in their missions.

In response to President Trump’s tariff announcements, more than 100 countries have approached us wanting to help rebalance global trade. These countries have responded openly and positively to the President’s actions to create a more balanced international system. We are engaged in meaningful discussions and look forward to talking with others.

China, in particular, is in need of a rebalancing. Recent data shows the Chinese economy tilting even further away from consumption toward manufacturing. China’s economic system, with growth driven by manufacturing exports, will continue to create even more serious imbalances with its trading partners if the status quo is allowed to continue.

China’s current economic model is built on exporting its way out of its economic troubles. It’s an unsustainable model that is not only harming China but the entire world.

China needs to change. The country knows it needs to change. Everyone knows it needs to change. And we want to help it change—because we need rebalancing too.

China can start by moving its economy away from export overcapacity, and toward supporting its own consumers and domestic demand. Such a shift would help with the global rebalancing that the world desperately needs.

Of course, trade is not the only factor in broader global economic imbalances.  The persistent over-reliance on the United States for demand is resulting in an evermore unbalanced global economy.

Some countries’ policies encourage excess saving, which holds back private sector-led growth. Others keep wages artificially depressed, which also suppresses growth. These practices contribute to global dependence on U.S. demand to spur growth. They also lead to a global economy that is weaker and more vulnerable than it should be.

In Europe, former ECB President Mario Draghi has identified several sources of stagnation—and he has outlined several recommendations to get the economy back on the right track. European countries would do well to take his recommendations to heart.

Europe has already taken some long overdue initial steps that I applaud. These steps create a new source of global demand, and also involve Europe stepping up on the security front. I believe global economic relationships should come to reflect security partnerships.

Security partners are more likely to have compatible economies structured for mutually beneficial trade. If the United States continues offering security guarantees and open markets, then our allies must step up with stronger commitments to shared defense. The initial actions from Europe on increased fiscal and defense spending are proof that the Trump Administration’s policies are working.

U.S. Leadership at the IMF and World Bank

The Trump Administration and U.S. Treasury are committed to maintaining and expanding U.S. economic leadership in the world. This is especially true at the international financial institutions.

The IMF and World Bank serve critical roles in the international system.  And the Trump Administration is eager to work with them—so long as they can stay true to their missions.

But under the status quo, they are falling short.

The Bretton Woods institutions must step back from their sprawling and unfocused agendas, which have stifled their ability to deliver on their core mandates.

Going forward, the Trump Administration will leverage U.S. leadership and influence at these institutions and push them to accomplish their important mandates. The United States will also demand that the management and staff of these institutions be accountable for demonstrating real progress. I invite all of you to join us in working to refocus these institutions on their core missions. It is in our collective interest to do so.

IMF

First, we must make the IMF the IMF again.

The IMF’s mission is to promote international monetary cooperation, facilitate the balanced growth of international trade, encourage economic growth, and discourage harmful policies like competitive exchange rate depreciation. These are crucially important functions to support the U.S. and global economies.

Instead, the IMF has suffered from mission creep. The IMF was once unwavering in its mission of promoting global monetary cooperation and financial stability. Now it devotes disproportionate time and resources to work on climate change, gender, and social issues.

These issues are not the IMF’s mission. And the IMF’s focus in these areas is crowding out its work on critical macroeconomic issues.

The IMF must be a brutal truth-teller, and not just to some members. Instead, today’s IMF has been whistling past the graveyard. Its 2024 External Sector Report was entitled “Imbalances Receding.”  This pollyannish outlook is symptomatic of an institution more dedicated to preserving the status quo than asking the hard questions.

Here in the United States, we know we need to get our fiscal house in order. The last administration ran up the largest peacetime deficit in our nation’s history. The current administration is committed to fixing this. We are open to critique. But we will not abide the IMF failing to critique the countries that need it most—principally, surplus countries.  

In line with its core mandate, the IMF needs to call out countries like China that have pursued globally distortive policies and opaque currency practices for many decades.

I also expect the IMF to call out unsustainable lending practices by certain creditor countries.  The IMF should more proactively push official bilateral lenders to come to the table early to work with borrower countries to minimize periods of debt distress.

The IMF must refocus its lending on addressing balance of payments problems. And its lending should be temporary.

When done responsibly, IMF lending is at the very core of its contribution to the global economy: when markets fail, the IMF steps in and makes resources available. In exchange, countries implement economic reforms to resolve their balance of payments issues and support economic growth. The reforms undertaken during these programs are some of the IMF’s most important contributions to a strong, sustainable, and balanced global economy.

Argentina is a fitting example. I was in Argentina earlier this month to demonstrate the United States’ support for the IMF’s efforts to help the country reset financially. Argentina deserves the IMF’s support because the country is making real progress toward meeting financial benchmarks.   

But not every country is so deserving. The IMF must hold countries accountable for implementing economic reforms. And sometimes, the IMF needs to say No. The organization has no obligation to lend to countries that fail to implement reforms.  Economic stability and growth should be the markers of the IMF’s success—not how much money the institution lends out.

World Bank

Like the IMF, the World Bank must be made fit for purpose again.

The World Bank Group helps developing countries grow their economies, reduce poverty, increase private investment, support private-sector job creation, and reduce dependence on foreign aid. It offers transparent and affordable long-term financing for countries to invest in their own development priorities.

The Bank, along with the Fund, provides extensive technical support to promote debt sustainability among low-income countries, which empowers those countries to stand up to coercive and opaque lending terms from creditors. These core functions of the World Bank complement the Trump Administration’s efforts to foster safer, stronger, and more prosperous economies in the United States and the world.

But the Bank, like the IMF, has strayed in certain respects from its initial mission.

The Bank should no longer expect blank checks for vapid, buzzword-centric marketing accompanied by half-hearted commitments to reform. As the Bank returns to its core mission, it must use its resources as efficiently and effectively as possible. And it must do so in ways that demonstrate tangible value for all member countries.

The Bank can use its resources more efficiently now by focusing on increasing energy access. Business leaders the world over identify unreliable power supply as one of the primary impediments to investment. The World Bank and African Development Bank’s joint “Mission 300” initiative to expand energy access to 300 million more people in Africa is a welcome effort.  But the World Bank must respond to countries’ energy priorities and needs and focus on dependable technologies that can sustain economic growth rather than seek to meet distortionary climate finance targets.

We applaud the recent announcement that the World Bank will seek to remove prohibitions on support for nuclear energy, which could revolutionize energy supply for many emerging markets.  We encourage the Bank to go further in giving countries access to all technologies that can provide affordable baseload generation.

The World Bank must be tech neutral and prioritize affordability in energy investment. In most cases, this means investing in gas and other fossil fuel-based energy production. In other cases, this may mean investing in renewable energy coupled with systems to help manage the intermittency of wind and solar.

The history of humanity teaches a simple lesson: Energy abundance sparks economic abundance. That’s why the Bank should encourage an all-of-the-above approach to energy development. Such an approach will make World Bank financing more effective. And it will reconnect the Bank to its core mission of economic growth and poverty alleviation.

In addition to increasing energy access, the World Bank can use its resources more effectively by starting to apply its graduation policy. This would allow the Bank to focus on lending to poorer, less-creditworthy countries. This is where World Bank support makes the biggest difference for poverty and growth.

Instead, the World Bank continues to lend every year to countries that have met the criteria to graduate from World Bank borrowing. There is no justification for this continued lending. It siphons off resources from higher priorities and crowds out the development of private markets.  It also disincentivizes countries’ efforts to move away from dependency on the World Bank and toward job-rich, private sector-led growth.  

Going forward, the Bank must set firm graduation timelines for countries that have long since met the graduation criteria. Treating China—the second-largest economy in the world—as a “developing country” is absurd.

While it has been at the expense of many Western markets, China’s rise has been rapid and impressive. But if China wants to play a role in the global economy commensurate with its actual importance, then the country needs to graduate up.

The World Bank should also implement transparent procurement policies based on best value. It must help countries move away from procurement approaches that prioritize only the lowest-cost bids.

Such procurement policies reward distortive and subsidized industrial policies that undermine development. They also stifle the private sector, incentivize corruption and collusion, and result in greater long-term costs. Procurement policies based on best value are better from both an efficiency and development perspective, and their robust implementation will benefit the Bank and its shareholders.

Related to this subject, I wish to send a strong message about procurement policies as regards Ukraine: No one who financed or supplied the Russian war machine will be eligible for funds earmarked for Ukraine’s reconstruction.

Conclusion

To conclude, I invite our allies to work with us as we rebalance the international financial system and refocus the IMF and World Bank on their founding charters. America First means we are doubling down on our engagement with the international economic system, including at the IMF and the World Bank.  

A more sustainable international economic system will be one that better serves the interests of the United States and all other participants in the system.   And we look forward to working with you in this endeavor. Thank you.

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/23/2025 - 09:59

After Dismal European PMIs, US Services Sector Slumps, Manufacturing Jumps Ahead Of Tariff Deadlines

Zero Hedge -

After Dismal European PMIs, US Services Sector Slumps, Manufacturing Jumps Ahead Of Tariff Deadlines

European flash April PMIs were ugly this morning with the Euro-area-wide headline composite measure -0.8 to 50.1, and with weakness concentrated in French and German services activity.

  • Euro Area Composite PMI (Apr, Flash): 50.1, consensus 50.2, last 50.9

    • Euro Area Manufacturing PMI (Apr, Flash): 48.7, consensus 47.4, last 48.6

    • Euro Area Services PMI (Apr, Flash): 49.7, consensus 50.5, last 51.0

  • France Composite PMI (Apr, Flash): 47.3, consensus 47.8, last 48.0

  • Germany Composite PMI (Apr, Flash): 49.7, consensus 50.5, last 51.3.

  • UK Composite PMI (Apr, Flash): 48.2,  consensus 50.4, last 51.5.

The manufacturing sector displayed surprising signs of resilience despite the imposition of US tariffs earlier this month (stock of purchases (+0.5pt to 45.6), quantity of purchases (+1.3pt to 47.4), and stock of finished goods (+1.4pt to 47.8) all improved). The details of the manufacturing print and commentary provided in the press release suggest that activity in the sector was likely supported by front-loading (possibly reflecting strategic shipments during the 90-day pause on the country-specific component of the US reciprocal tariffs) and restocking.

However, there was a clear drop-off in the forward-looking business expectations measures.

The responses for today’s flash PMI reports were collected between the 9th and 22nd of April, implying that the majority of the responses should reflect both the reciprocal tariff announcement and implementation of 10% baseline and critical industry tariffs, as well as the 90-day reciprocal tariff delay on April 9th.

In the US, expectations were for weakness in both Services and Manufacturing surveys, following a slew of dismal 'soft' data from Regional Fed surveys.

However, reflecting similar trajectories to Europe, US Manufacturing PMI beat expectations, rising to 50.7 from 50.2 (better than the 49.0 contraction expected) while Services disappointed, dropping from 54.4 to 51.4 (below the 52.6 expected)...

The tariff front-running that was seen in Europe appears to have been echoed in the US Manufacturing sector.

However, just as in Europe, forward-looking expectations for output tumbled... The latest reading was the joint-second lowest since September 2020, surpassed only by October 2022.

Commenting on the flash PMI data, Chris Williamson, Chief Business Economist at S&P Global Market Intelligence said:

The early flash PMI data for April point to a marked slowing of business activity growth at the start of the second quarter, accompanied by a slump in optimism about the outlook. At the same time, price pressures intensified, creating a headache for a central bank which is coming under increasing pressure to shore up a weakening economy just as inflation looks set to rise. 

"Output rose in April at its slowest pace since December 2023, indicating that the US economy is growing at a modest annualized rate of just 1.0%. Manufacturing is broadly stagnating as any beneficial effect of tariffs are offset by heightened economic uncertainty, supply chain concerns and falling exports, while the services economy is slowing amid weakened demand growth, notably in terms of exports such as travel and tourism. 

"Confidence about business conditions in the year ahead has meanwhile deteriorated sharply, worsening among manufacturers and service providers alike, largely thanks to growing concerns about the impact of recent government policy announcements.

"Tariffs are meanwhile being cited as the key cause of higher prices, though labor costs are also reportedly continuing to rise, causing companies to hike their selling prices at a pace not seen for over a year. In manufacturing, the rate of price increase is the steepest for nearly two-and-a-half years. These higher prices will inevitably feed through to higher consumer inflation, potentially limiting the scope for the Federal Reserve to reduce interest rates at a time when a slowing economy looks in need of a boost."

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/23/2025 - 09:53

Judge Orders Trump Admin To Issue Correction Notices To Fired Probationary Workers

Zero Hedge -

Judge Orders Trump Admin To Issue Correction Notices To Fired Probationary Workers

Authored by Jack Phillips via The Epoch Times (emphasis ours),

A federal judge ordered the Trump administration to provide laid-off federal probationary employees with a written notice stating that they were not terminated for performance reasons but that it was part of a government-wide termination effort.

Protesters at a rally held by the American Federation of Government Employees of District 14 at the Office of Personnel Management in Washington, on March 4, 2025. Alex Wroblewski/AFP via Getty Images

U.S. District Judge William Alsup also ordered Acting Director of the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) Charles Ezell not to tell agencies to terminate “any federal employee or group of federal employees.”

The judge wrote on April 18 that the firings of probationary workers followed an OPM template that states they were fired for job performance reasons.

Termination under the false pretense of performance is an injury that will persist for the working life of each civil servant,” wrote Alsup, who is based in San Francisco. “The stain created by OPM’s pretense will follow each employee through their careers and will limit their professional opportunities.

The latest directive from the judge is part of a lawsuit that was filed by labor unions and nonprofits contesting the mass firings of thousands of probationary workers in February under President Donald Trump.

Probationary workers are typically new hires or employees who were recently promoted and who must serve a trial period of one to two years before they receive full-term, or permanent, employment.

If a particular termination was in fact carried out after an individualized evaluation of that employee’s performance or fitness, the Chief Human Capital Officer (or equivalent) of that agency may instead submit ... a declaration, under oath and seal, stating so and providing the individual reasoning underpinning that termination,” Alsup also wrote, setting a May 8 deadline to do so.

On April 8, the U.S. Supreme Court blocked an earlier order from Alsup that required the administration to return to work some of the terminated probationary federal employees who were terminated. The justices were responding to the Trump administration’s emergency appeal of Alsup’s ruling

The court’s order involved a technical legal assessment of the right, or standing, of several nonprofit associations to sue over the firings. Supreme Court Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson, who dissented, said they would have kept the judge’s order in place.

The groups who filed the lawsuit argued that the Trump administration violated the Constitution’s separation of powers clause and that OPM had lacked “the constitutional, statutory, or regulatory authority to order federal agencies to terminate employees in this fashion that Congress has authorized those agencies to hire and manage.”

“Notwithstanding this lack of legal authority, OPM ordered federal agencies throughout the nation, including in this District, to wipe out their ranks of probationary employees without any regard to applicable statutes,” said their complaint, filed in February.

The Trump administration lawyers, in their emergency petition to the Supreme Court, said that the district judge had acted unconstitutionally.

The judge’s “extraordinary reinstatement order violates the separation of powers, arrogating to a single district court the Executive Branch’s powers of personnel management on the flimsiest of grounds and the hastiest of timelines,“ lawyers for the government wrote. ”That is no way to run a government.”

Separately, a federal judge in Maryland overseeing a similar lawsuit brought by 19 states ruled that the Trump administration did not follow laws regarding mass terminations of federal employees.

That order was overturned this past week by the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in a 2-1 decision.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/23/2025 - 09:40

'Depression Cycle Is Here' Charles Nenner Warns "It Will Be Much Worse In 2026"

Zero Hedge -

'Depression Cycle Is Here' Charles Nenner Warns "It Will Be Much Worse In 2026"

Via Greg Hunter’s USAWatchdog.com,

Renowned geopolitical and financial cycle expert Charles Nenner is not only predicting a big war cycle but a depression coming by the end of 2025 and into 2026. 

It’s not caused by the Trump tariffs; it’s just part of the cycle that Nenner follows.  When does this big downturn start?  Nenner explains, “In the next few months..."

"...and the end of this year will be a down year.  2026 will also be a down year.  It’s going to be very serious.  I wrote last year I expect the S&P to go down to 4,000.  So, from 6,200 to 4,000 if you are in bad stocks, you could lose 50% of your money, and to get that back, you have to make 100% on what is left of your money.  Then we can have a bounce and go lower again.  If you look at the list of brokers, 99% are positive.  They were talking about the S&P going to 6,800, and then they changed their minds when it came down.”

Nenner is predicting a down year for the stock market this year, but look out in 2026.  Nenner says,

“It will be much worse in 2026 because the cycles in 1928 and 1929 are in the same position as 2025 and 2026.”

Can it shoot through 4,000 on the S&P?  Nenner says, 

“Most definitely, I think so, yeah . . . we expect a bounce from there before it goes down again.”

Beyond that, Nenner has long called for a DOW at 5,000.  It’s nearly 39,000 today.  Nenner says,

“I calculated it at 5,000, yes, and I have not calculated it for the S&P.”

That is pretty bearish, and before people pooh-pooh what Nenner is saying, listen to his logic on this subject.  Nenner explains,

“Let’s take one simple assumption. 

If there is a big war between China and Taiwan, do you think the market goes up?  Do you think there is a chance of it – 50/50?  So, there is a 50/50 chance only based on this idea the markets are not going to do well. . . .

Of course, China wants to take over Taiwan. . . . There is no history that it does not belong to China. . . . If US gets in a war with China, it will lose...

...US lost 15 out of 15 war games in simulated war with China.”

Nenner still likes gold for the long term and has been predicting it’s rise.  On silver, Nenner says, 

“Silver is behind, but starting in May, we expect silver to start catching up—finally.”

Nenner thinks interest rates are still in a long-term trend up, but there can be pullbacks. 

Nenner also thinks the US dollar is going to be okay and will not fall much more—for now. 

By the way, Nenner says he is up 40% so far in 2025.

There is more in the 37-minute interview.

Join Greg Hunter of USAWatchdog.com as he goes One-on-One with renowned cycle analyst and financial expert Charles Nenner for 4.22.25.

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/23/2025 - 09:20

MAHA Rising: HHS, FDA Announce Phase-Out Of All Artificial Food Dyes

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MAHA Rising: HHS, FDA Announce Phase-Out Of All Artificial Food Dyes

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr's quest to "Make America Healthy Again" grew far more substantial on Tuesday, with the announcement that the federal government will eliminate all petroleum-based synthetic food dyes by the end of 2026. The announcement came at a Washington DC news conference, with RFK Jr joined by Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Commissioner Marty Makary and National Institutes of Health Director Jay Bhattacharya. The podium was flanked by "MAHA Moms" and their children; the moms are a coalition of outspoken advocates of the Trump administration's health agenda.  

HHS Secretary RFK Jr was joined at the podium by NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya (left) and FDA Commissioner Marty Makary (Jose Luis Mangana/ AP via New York Times)

Kennedy framed the move against artificial, petroleum-based dyes using forceful language: 

“For too long, some food producers have been feeding Americans petroleum-based chemicals without their knowledge or consent. These poisonous compounds offer no nutritional benefit and pose real, measurable dangers to our children’s health and development. That era is coming to an end. We’re restoring gold-standard science, applying common sense, and beginning to earn back the public’s trust. And we’re doing it by working with industry to get these toxic dyes out of the foods our families eat every day.”

The first two dyes in the crosshairs are Citrus Red No. 2 and Orange B. The FDA is initiating a process to revoke their authorizations "within the coming months." The FDA will also pressure food producers to eradicate Red No. 3 earlier than Jan 15, 2027. The Biden administration had already set that deadline for its removal from foods and beverages, after long-running concerns about its potential to cause cancer and interfere with hormonal functions. The FDA will also pursue the removal of the remaining six previously-approved petroleum-based dyes by the end of 2026.  

Here's a small sampling of foods these artificial dyes are used in today:

  • Blue No. 1: M&Ms, blue sports drinks
  • Blue No. 2: Cereals, candy 
  • Citrus Red No 2: Enhancing the color of real orange rinds 
  • Green No. 3: Mint candy, Sour Patch Kids
  • Orange B: Hot dog and sausage casings
  • Red Dye 40: Flamin' Hot Cheetos, M&Ms, sports drinks, cereals 
  • Yellow No. 5: Mountain Dew, Froot Loops, Doritos
  • Yellow No. 6: Reese's Pieces, Cheetos, 
  • Red Dye No. 3: Drinks, cakes, cookies, frozen desserts, frosting, icing 

“For the last 50 years, American children have increasingly been living in a toxic soup of synthetic chemicals,” said Makary. Justifying the sweeping change, the former Johns Hopkins surgeon pointed to a Lancet study that found artificial colors cause "increased hyperactivity" in a study of 3-year-olds and 8- and a 9-year-old children. He also cautioned that there's more to America's health problems than petroleum-based food dyes: 

"There’s no one ingredient that accounts for the child chronic disease epidemic. And let’s be honest, taking petroleum-based food dyes out of the food supply is not a silver bullet that will instantly make America’s children healthy, but it is one important step.”

While noting that the FDA and Congress can force the desired changes, Makary said the drive to remove the dyes will initially take a collaborative approach with the food industry. “There are a number of tools at our disposal. I believe in love, let’s start in a friendly way and see if we can do this without any statutory or regulatory changes." 

Former FDA senior adviser and current Harvard professor Jerod Mande thinks Kennedy and Makary have a good chance of pulling it off. “It will meet some resistance, but since companies already eliminate these additives in other countries, I don’t expect a big fight," he told NBC News.

To facilitate the momentous change, the FDA will authorize four new naturally-sourced food dyes in the upcoming weeks, including calcium phosphate, Galdieria extract blue, gardenia blue and FDA-approved butterfly pea flower extract, which achieves blue and purple shades. Makary also illustrated other workarounds: “For companies that are currently using petroleum based red dye, try watermelon juice or beet juice. For companies currently combining petroleum-based yellow chemical and red dyes together, try carrot juice."

The transition will complicate the lives of countless brand managers across the food and beverage industry, with potential hits to profitability in the offing. Some brands have previously attempted their own voluntary removals of synthetic colors with bad outcomes. General Mills, for example, tried using natural dyes on its Trix cereal, but with the colors far less bold and people even complaining about the taste, sales waned -- and the company went back to synthetic dyes.  

CNBC reports that at least one company is poised to profit from the elimination of petroleum-based dyes: global seasoning and flavoring heavyweight McCormick, which helps brands achieve their desired tastes. "Reformulation activity has always been a part of the work that we do with our customer base, and we’ve been doing that for quite some time, but we are seeing a tick up in reformulation activity,” CEO Brendan Foley said on a March conference call.  

While the libertarian crowd may wince at the idea of governments telling companies what ingredients they can use, many of them will no doubt feel some relief at the end result. As for the choices food companies make, Kennedy quipped, “If they want to add petroleum, [if] they want to eat petroleum, they ought to add it themselves at home, but they shouldn’t be feeding it to the rest of us without our knowledge or consent." 

Tyler Durden Wed, 04/23/2025 - 09:05

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