Department of Labor Regulation on Pensions


Pension-Crisis

These changes which start next April will eventually lead to the take over of private pensions; for as all government programs they start in one direction and then take you in a few years someplace entirely different..

For those who would like to review the actual text of the new regulation, here it is.

savings-arrangements-final-rule

US Feds to End Private Prisons


Prison

The idea behind private federal prisons was to save money, but they did not. They billed the government the same and now they are losing their business. The US Justice Department has announced that it will phase out its use of privately owned prisons. They are citing safety concerns because of investigations that revealed rampant abuses with dozens of deaths stemming from substandard care and widespread medical neglect. Contracts with the 13 private prisons will be allowed to expire over the next five years.

The stock of Geo Group collapsed from almost $33 to under $20. The reason the Fed’s really went to private prisons was because the guards were then not government employees so it changed all the legal rights. They would have been subject to Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests on how they treated inmates, but after private prisons, suddenly, there were no FOIA requests since the guards were not government employees.

The Supreme Court recently declared that private prison companies who operate federal facilities cannot be sued by inmates for constitutional violations. Inmates can still sue the individual officers, but the court would not extend the protection to include the corporation — a much more lucrative proposition. In Richardson v. McKnight (1997), a prison inmate sued two guards at a prison in Tennessee that had been privatized. The plaintiff alleged that the guards had deprived him of a right secured by the Constitution. Hence, the plaintiff alleged that the guards were liable to him under 42 U.S.C. Section 1983. The district court held that the guards were not federal employees so they did not qualify for immunity and the court of appeals affirmed. However, the case went to the Supreme Court. There, Justice Breyer delivered the opinion of the court and noted several distinctions between government and private agents. He noted that government agents typically work within civil service rules that provide them some security and “may limit the ability to punish individual employees.”

However, firms in the marketplace face pressure to encourage sound decision-making. Also, firms do not have to contend with civil service restrictions — thus they can use inducements (carrots and sticks) to motivate employees. Thus, immunity would not improve the quality of decisions made by firms and agents. They assume giving government employees immunity is a good thing that improves “quality” rather than the reality that it removes the fear of going too far. Hence, police can kill anyone and get away with it 99% of the time.

Ultimately, in Richardson v. McKnight, the Supreme Court held that employees of private firms could not invoke the immunity defense available to state government actors. The court recognized that the incentive structure differs between government and private providers. They noted that private firms seek to maximize profits, which involves minimizing costs. Without meaningful oversight, the court argued that firms might engage in harmful activity to either increase revenue or lower the costs. Thus, liability rules are necessary to discourage such behavior.

The government also cheats people to save money. The court pretends this does not happen and simply assumes that government agents always act in the “public’s” best interest; thus, to ensure that the public’s interest is carried out properly, immunity should be granted like in Hillary’s case.

On November 27, the U.S. Supreme Court refused to hold corporations under contract with the federal government liable for constitutional violations in Correctional Service Corporation v. Malesko 122 S.Ct. 515 (2001). The case involved a federal inmate and a private contractor with the U.S. Bureau of Prisons (BOP). So, you could not even sue the company who operated the prison for murder. Only the guard could be charged.

Hence, private prisons are going away, at least in the Feds. In states, they can do as they like with impunity.

Corruption Knows No End


White House Hillarys Den of ThievesHillary’s connection to Ukraine is starting to surface. Oligarchs who once supported Viktor Yanukovych, the fourth President of Ukraine who fled during the revolution, have cleaned their image by donating money. The Ukrainian billionaire Victor Pinchuk, who spoke at Davos, was also the top donor for Clinton’s pretend charitable foundation. Since 2006, Pinchuk has given about 13.1 million dollars to the Bill, Hillary, and Chelsea Clinton Foundation. Why are foreign billionaires donating to Hillary’s charity in the USA?

Central Banks Cut Interest Rates 667 Times Since ’08 & Owns $25 Trillion Of Financial Assets – Episode 1058


From X22 Report Click On Picture To See Larger Picture Gold slammed down again. Subprime auto delinquencies surge. Durable goods orders decline. Capital goods shipments decline. Services PMI declin…

Source: Central Banks Cut Interest Rates 667 Times Since ’08 & Owns $25 Trillion Of Financial Assets – Episode 1058

The Condo Market Turning Down


Porsche Building

The condo bubble has broken in many markets. Even rentals in Miami and other prime markets have begun to decline. In part, the rise in the dollar is now curtailing foreign investment. Likewise, I personally know some British friends who are selling property in the states to take advantage of the huge profit in the drop in the pound when converting back to the base currency.

As with every peak, developers see how condos sell so they have increased the supply right into the peak in prices. This cyclical pattern repeats over and over again. The foreign investors who got into US property back in 2011 have made a fortune in the home currency and are taking profits.

China & Its Debt Problems


Shanghai-8-25-2016

With a total debt of almost 250% of GDP, China’s debt problems are well known. Meanwhile, the government is working on resolving the issue by following the playbook of US investment banks and creating securities structures to offload bad debt (remember CDOs?). The slowing economy has caused rising defaults. Analysts suspect the NPLs ratio to be 30% of bank loan portfolios versus the official ratio of 1.81% as of the end of June 2016.

The corporate bond market is also feeling pressure as 41 companies have defaulted on R25.4bn of bonds since the beginning of the year. In an effort to restore confidence in the banking sector, Bank of China and China Merchants Bank sold off some of its NPLs as securitized products. It seems like an asset swap to other banks with 50-60% of the book being sold to other banks. Furthermore, 95% of the riskiest tranches were sold to a state-owned asset manager. Meanwhile, in an effort to support growth, the Chinese government is promoting lending to small and micro businesses, which carries higher risk and reduces peer-to-peer lending.

Corporate debt is estimated at 145% of GDP with the non-financial state-owned enterprises representing half of the bank credit. Chinese banks have a greater concentration of individual customers with the top customer of Agriculture of China accounting for 7% of its loan book and the top 10 customers comprising 17% of its loan book.

Copper-8-25-2016

Chinese credit is currently growing at 2x GDP, meanwhile, fixed capital investment growth slowed to 3% during 2015. Watch copper that is used for loan collateral in China and has recently broken weekly technical support with a Directional Change during August and the next turning point in October. A breach of the $2.00 level will indicate further lows.
Categories: China
Tags: China

Call It Judgment Day: Obama Faces a Reckoning Over Payments to Iran


From the New York Sun By SETH LIPSKY Call it judgment day. It looks like the Obama administration might yet face some kind of reckoning — in Congress, at least — over its payoff of a long-simmering… Only a Muslim would do something like this Obama is a criminal for sure; both he and Hillary should be in jail.

Source: Call It Judgment Day: Obama Faces a Reckoning Over Payments to Iran

Julian Assange’s Lawyer Found Dead After Being Struck by Train


Source: (Before It’s News) John Jones 48, one of Britain’s  top human rights lawyers, and a representative for Julian Assange, was killed last Monday, 15 August 2016, when he was struck by a …

Source: Julian Assange’s Lawyer Found Dead After Being Struck by Train

A History Of Manufactured Regime Change And Civil Unrest: Is America Next?


Source: Zero Hedge Truthstream Media outlines the history of elitist run regime change and cultural overthrow in the past century. As Alt-Market’s Brandon Smith notes, Truthstream thankfully …

Source: A History Of Manufactured Regime Change And Civil Unrest: Is America Next?

US budget deficit approaches $600bn, public debt to reach 77% of GDP


Slower revenue growth and large spending will expand the US budget deficit to $590 billion in the fiscal year ending September 30, according to the Congressional Budget Office (CBO). * Read more US…

Source: US budget deficit approaches $600bn, public debt to reach 77% of GDP