Rand Paul Admits "Absolutely, The Deep State Exists"

Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) said Tuesday during an appearance on The Laura Ingraham Show podcast that the term "deep state" accurately describes how an unelected bureaucracy of national security officials in positions of power exert influence without Congressional oversight.

"Absolutely, there is a deep state, because the deep state is the intelligence agencies that do not have oversight," he said.

"Only eight people in Congress know what they're doing, and traditionally, those eight people have been a rubber stamp to let the intelligence communities do whatever they want. There is no skeptic among the eight people that are supposedly overseeing the intelligence community."

The "Gang of Eight"  that Paul referenced is made up of the majority and minority leaders of the House of Representatives and Senate, along with the chairmen and ranking members of the two intelligence committees, and are the select few members of Congress with real-time access to America's most sensitive intelligence.

Paul pointed out that he believed Obama-era CIA Director John Brennan, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper and others used intelligence collected "without any judicial warrants" for political purposes, in addition to "try to bring Trump down."

"John Brennan and James Clapper were doing whatever the hell they wanted, without any judicial warrants, and I think there were numerous people in the Obama administration who were using intelligence — one, to try to bring Trump down; but two, also, they were using it for political purposes," he said.

"And this is very, very worrisome."

Paul evidenced his point by noting Brennan's politicized tweet over the weekend calling Trump a corrupt demagogue, and promising that America would "triumph" over him.

"This is the real problem," Paul said.

"And [founding father James] Madison warned about this from the beginning. Madison said that men are not angels. And all you gotta do is look at John Brennan's tweet to know that he's not an angel. And listen to James Clapper lying to the Senate about whether they were spying on Americans."

Paul previously tweeted that Brennan's attacks on the "Bill of Rights" and "freedoms of every American" while running the CIA were "disgraceful."

Further solidifying Paul's point about "men are not angels," Samantha Power, former UN Ambassador under President Obama, issued an ominous tweet: "Not a good idea to piss off John Brennan."

Many took this tweet by Powers as an implicit threat on behalf of Brennan. After strong social media backlash following her tweet, Powers sent a follow-up tweet that aimed to walk back the implied threat she had first issued.

Russian Ambassador Hints At False Flag: "The UK Has A Long Record Of Misdoings..."

It appears the Russians are losing their patience with the proof-less accusations from The UK.

Russian ambassador Alexander Yakovenko has held press conference in London, denying the Kremlin was involved in the attempted murder of Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia using military-grade nerve agent.

"Britain has without any evidence blamed Russia for poisoning three people and continues to refuse to cooperate," he said. 

The UK authorities are violating Vienna Convention by not giving Russia access to Skripals, because Skripal has dual citizenship (the UK and Russia), Russian Ambassador to the UK Alexander Yakovenko said.

The Russian embassy has immediately requested details and materials of the case, the envoy stated.

While 10 days have passed, Moscow has received no response, while London has refused to pass samples of the poisonous substance allegedly used to attack Skripal.

Then Yakovenko turned a little darker, seemingly indicating concerns that this was nothing but a false-flag operation... (via SputnikNews)

The envoy called for checking how could British experts find out the exact type of the nerve gas used to poison Skripal.

Commenting on the death of former top manager of Russian Aeroflot airline Nikolai Glushkov, the ambassador stated that "we cannot take Britain's words on trust."

Alexander Yakovenko said that Britain has provided no proof of Russia's alleged involvement in the nerve agent attack.

He suggested that the samples of the so-called Novichok nerve gas could have already been in possession of a labaratory, which islocated just miles away from Salisbury.

"We have been refused consular access to our Russian citizen Yulia Skripal," Russian Ambassador to the UK Alexander Yakovenko said.

The UK is ignoring requests on case of Russian businessman Glushkov who died in London, ambassador stated.

Russian experts puzzled how UK managed to determine type of nerve gas in Skripal case, in days, but not weeks or months.

The UK has a long record of misdoings, he said, including the support of coup in Ukraine and the invasion of Iraq.

UK Prime Minister May is set to warn at a summit in Brussels that Vladimir Putin's brazen flouting of international law represents a threat democracies across the continent.

And then the ambassador turned his attention to the shocking comments from UK foreign secretary Boris Johnson who compared the Russian World Cup to Hitler's 1939 Olympics...

Johnson recently raised the bar for the UK government's barrage of accusations against Moscow to a new level. The British foreign minister compared Russia's hosting of this year's World Cup to the 1936 Olympics in Nazi Germany.

"I think the comparison with 1936 is certainly right. It is an emetic prospect to think of Putin glorifying in this sporting event," he told a receptive Foreign Affairs Committee on Wednesday.

Russia was furious:

"This statement is totally disgusting, it is not appropriate for any foreign minister," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said.

"Undoubtedly, [this remark] is offensive and unacceptable."

Additionally, Mr Yakovenko condemned the comments today, saying:

"Nobody has the right to insult the Russian people, who defeated the Nazis.'"

But The UK's propaganda is not just for adults, they are indoctrinating the kids too...

In case pupils in the UK don't understand the headlines on Russia and its president, a special publication for kids explains how "toxic Putin" is poisoning the West, without bothering to distinguish between fact and allegation.

The Day, a news website that produces short articles about current affairs meant to be used as teaching aids in British schools, has offered students two alternatives to believe about Vladimir Putin: he is either Europe's "most dangerous leader since Hitler," or a puffed up figure attacking other nations out of weakness.

Dow Futs Plunge 600 Points From Powell Highs, Below Monday's Lows

Well, that re-escalated quickly...

The Dow is down 600 points from its Powell highs...

 

And it's not just The Dow...

 

And Facebook is tumbling further...

 

Bonds and Bullion are well bid as the dollar sinks...

"Killing Each Other": Bill Gross On The "Beast" Hiding In The Market

As time goes by, Bill Gross' letters have become increasingly more bizarre, and at times morbid, and his latest monthly note is no exception.

It begins with a flashback to the days of wars, both real and fictional, and Gross' musings if indeed, as many believe, society is becoming more civilized or if we are merely internalizing all of the "murderous beastly" passions that always seem to spill over in some isolated or mass murderous event. As he makes it quite clear, the legendary bond-trading billionaire is skeptical:

Some say humanity is making progress, and that civilization is becoming more "civilized", but I wonder. Optimists would point to the global political focus on human rights and the slow, although sporadic, steps forward on racial and gender equality, but these are social morés generally unrelated to humankind's tolerance for evil on a grander scale. "Thou shalt not kill" is a commandment on Moses' tablet for a good reason, and yet our killing of each other in mass quantities continues unabated. Stalin and Hitler's atrocities seem perhaps long ago to younger generations, but then the "killing fields" of Pol Pot, the millions of lost souls in the Middle East, and the ongoing tribal carnage in parts of Africa testify to the "evildoing" of governments or religious factions in defense of Fascism, Communism and yes – Democracy."God", it seems, wears numerous hats, but almost always in defense of one particular ideology or another. "God Bless America"? Yes hopefully – but why not Cuba or the Congo? Chauvinistic mantras can be bonding but also destructive when used to kill masses of people for specious reasons. America – the self-proclaimed defender of freedom and equal rights – has proved vulnerable to those ideals in Vietnam, Iraq, and now Afghanistan and elsewhere.

Careful Bill, thoughts like those would be sufficient to brand you a Russian operative by the rabid "Resistance" which sees the KGB's finger any time someone dares to criticize either the US or the grand "neoliberal" order.

Then again, at age 73, Gross is probably not too worried if he will spend the rest of his days in prison following a ruling by some Marxist "people's court", instead he looks inside to unveil the "beast" that prompted him to become a "killer" for a cause not that long ago:

Having participated in one of those wars, I suppose I should look inward and question my own behavior when I was the age of 22, or even now at 73. I often do. I guess in part, that is why I question humanity's progress. If I was a willing killer then, how can I expect others and their governments to not do the same? I can't, but it's important for all of us to try to understand why humanity evolves slowly, if at all. For me, William Golding in his brilliant "Lord of the Flies" expressed it best. Searching for a murderous "beast" on a deserted island, a previously innocent group of young boys began to kill each other to ensure their own survival. "Maybe there is a beast", said one child, "but then maybe it's only us." Maybe it is us. Maybe we haven't evolved. Hopefully future robots can be programmed with a better understanding of Moses' commandment, so that when they take over, we will have a more civilized society.

Robots maybe... but what about central banks?

Because this long preamble by the Janus Henderson Unconstrained Bond Fund manager is just a way for Gross to get to the punchline of his note, something we have repeatedly pointed out here, and which boils down to the following: there is just too much debt in the world to allow rates to rise too high, or as Gross puts it:

The U.S. and global economies are too highly leveraged to stand more than a 2% Fed Funds level in a 2% inflationary world

Which is why Gross warned that "if more than 2 percent, a stronger dollar would affect emerging market growth and lead to perhaps premature tightening on the part of the ECB and other developed market central banks" and adds that, "the Fed's purported 3 to 4 hikes this year beginning in March are likely exaggerated." But where's the best? Well, it's shown in the chart below, and represents a record $233 trillion in global debt.

asd

So in hopes of avoiding a confrontation with the "beast", Gross next lays out his hope that Powell will keep the tightening cycle gradual and 'proceed cautiously':

When it comes to financial markets, (both bond and stock) the "beast" is really leverage, and while it's hard to pinpoint when enough is really enough, the Great Recession really informed us that Hyman Minsky was right – "stability leads to instability" as good times and higher prices lead to a false sense of optimism. The Fed, under Jerome Powell, hopefully has learned that lesson, and should proceed cautiously, as must his counterparts around the globe.

Perhaps he has learned that "lesson"; however as we first pointed out three months ago, Powell also has learned something else: the Fed has created the world's biggest asset bubble and - with its policies - is actively encouraging it.

I think we are actually at a point of encouraging risk-taking, and that should give us pause. Investors really do understand now that we will be there to prevent serious losses. It is not that it is easy for them to make money but that they have every incentive to take more risk, and they are doing so. Meanwhile, we look like we are blowing a fixed-income duration bubble right across the credit spectrum that will result in big losses when rates come up down the road. You can almost say that that is our strategy.

As for the upcoming showdown between central banks and the "beast" which they themselves created, that leaves Gross skeptical that assets will survive.

I write this – not in support of low interest rates and financial repression – indeed I have argued for the necessity of an eventual normal rebalancing if small savers and financial institutions such as pension funds and insurance companies are to continue to perform their critical capitalistic role.

In practical terms, this means that Gross believes that after just 2 more hikes the Fed will be done:

I believe, as does Fed Governor Neel Kashkari, that our financial systems' excesses cannot be expunged quickly by "liquidating assets" à la Andrew Mellon in the 1930's, but by a mild and gradual re-entry back to privately influenced, as opposed to central bank suppressed, interest rates. 2% Fed Funds in a 2% inflationary world is the current limit in my opinion.

As a result, Gross' conclusion is a somewhat contradictory take on his previous call for a bond bear market - he now sees the 10Y trading where it is as the great "global bond bear market" goes back into hibernation... if only for the time being:

Investors should therefore look for 3% plus or minus on the 10-year for the balance of 2018. That level should ultimately force German Bunds and UK Gilts to higher yields, perhaps 1% on Bunds and 1.75% on Gilts.Still, in my mind, this is a hibernating global bear bond market, not a beast. That may come later, much like our programmable robots that may control future society.

To be sure, between a race of despotic robotic overlords, and a 10Y in the double digits, which would send the S&P back into the triple digits, it is unclear which option our current Wall Street leaders would choose.

'Global Synchronous Recovery' Narrative Crushed As US, EU PMIs Plunge

Following the collapse of Europe's Composite PMI (to 14-month lows), US Composite PMI slipped notably from one-year highs. So much for the 'global synchronous recovery' narrative.

 

Commenting on Europe's flash PMI data, Chris Williamson, Chief Business Economist at IHS Markit said:

"While the first quarter average PMI reading remains relatively robust, indicative of GDP rising by 0.7-0.8%, the loss of momentum since the buoyant start to the year has been quite dramatic.

"At least some of the slowing may be ascribed to bad weather in some northern regions and, perhaps more importantly, 'growing pains' resulting from the strength of the recent growth spurt. Supply chain delays and raw material shortages were often reported to have stymied production in manufacturing (delays in German supply chains are currently more widespread than at any time in the survey's 22-year history), and both manufacturing and services sectors also saw activity being curtailed by growing incidences of skill shortages. Backlogs of work continue to rise as a result of these growth constraints.

"However, other factors are clearly at play. The fact that export order book growth has more than halved since the end of last year suggests the stronger euro is taking an increasing toll on export performance. Survey responses also highlighted how political uncertainty also appears to have intensified, dampening demand.

"The data therefore suggest that eurozone growth peaked around the turn of the year and the region is settling into a slower, but still robust pace of expansion. Price pressures have meanwhile also eased slightly, in part linked to cheaper imports arising from the euro's recent strength, but remain elevated."

In the US the picture was a little more mixed as the Services sector plunged but manufacturing jumped to a 3 year high (even as manufacturing output hit a 4 month low)...

 

Commenting on the US flash PMI data, Chris Williamson, Chief Business Economist at IHS Markit said:

"The flash PMI surveys indicate that the economy likely continued to expand at a robust pace in March, rounding off a solid opening quarter of the year. The surveys are running at a level consistent with annualised first quarter GDP growth approaching 2.5% (though we note that official GDP estimates may once again understate growth in the opening quarter of the year).

"The survey's employment index is meanwhile at its highest for nearly three years and indicative of another strong payroll rise in the order of 240,000 in March.

"The improved hiring trend reflects buoyant optimism regarding future growth. Companies' expectations for output in the year ahead remained elevated, dipping slightly in services but surging to a three-year high in manufacturing.

"Inflationary pressures meanwhile remain a key theme of the surveys, especially in manufacturing, reflecting increased raw material prices, notably for metals. The survey found average prices charged for goods and services are rising at one of the strongest rates seen since 2014. Furthermore, with factory costs showing the largest jump for seven years amid growing shortages of key inputs, inflationary pressures appear to be on the rise."

Stagflation anyone?

Funding Stress Contagion Spreads - European Banks Collapse To 11-Month Lows

In the past we exposed the globally contagious spread of funding market distress into the credit risk of major US banks, and today it has accelerated, spreading to Europe's banks as their stocks crashed to the lowest in 11 months...

Deutsche Bank is leading European banking's collapse...

But this is a serious move for the broad EU financial system...

 

Credit risk is breaking out...

As Credit diverges extremely bearishly from stocks...

 

And it's about to get even worse...

As three-month dollar Libor extended its streak to 32 straight increases, though the rise in the setting is the smallest since March 8. The crucial USD Libor-OIS spread rises to 56.8bp, widest level since May 2009 (as 3M Libor at 2.2856% is the highest since November 2008, vs 2.2711% prior session).

As we noted yesterday, the key is whether rising Libor rates will fuel a funding crisis - something we have been worrying about all year (as we detailed above with the blowout in the Libor-OIS spread)...

"We usually don't see this kind of divergence in rates without some sort of credit issue," said Margaret Kerins, head of fixed-income strategy at BMO Capital Markets Corp., referring to Libor's rise versus OIS.

"At what point does all this become damaging and how far does it go? That is the issue."

It appears to be damaging now..

"There has been sort of the perfect storm of factors tightening financial conditions," said Russ Certo, head of rates at Brean Capital in New York.

"Banks do have tremendous liquidity still, but it's at a higher price."

But, but, but... "fortress balance sheets"