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Wednesday, October 2, 2024

Rabobank: Iran Just Made A Huge Strategic Error

 By Michael Every of Rabobank

As I mused yesterday, the Iranian foreign minister was bluffing when he implied Iran was not going to act in response to Israel’s attacks on its regional proxies. Overnight, around 200 ballistic missiles were again fired into Israel from Iran, most shot down in flight with the help of the US, UK, and Jordan, others hitting open areas near real targets, with only one casualty, a Palestinian. However, thinking this is a repeat of April’s “choreographed” Iranian strike that will be met by a token Israeli response is taking a bold bet.

Back in April, I said we’d revisit that episode with worse consequences; and here we are. For those who hadn’t noticed - that includes Haniyeh and Nasrallah - Israel’s strategic dynamic has changed. It’s no longer trading blow for blow with others within prescribed geography and scale but climbing the escalation ladder to force its enemies to jump off or be smashed. Iran therefore just made a huge strategic error. Indeed, PM Netanyahu, who restored Israeli deterrence while declaring there are no red lines for it in the region cannot now show Iran is off limits. Doubly, when central Israel spent the night before Jewish new year in bomb shelters. Triply, when Iran’s shield of Hamas and Hezbollah are dismantled. Quadruply, when his new coalition member is an Iran hawk and his most potent potential political rival, former PM Bennet, tweets now is the time to strike the head of the Iranian octopus. Quintuply, when western leaders are behind Israel.

Dutch PM Wilders insulted Supreme Leader Khamenei in Hebrew. Even the US stated it will help with “severe consequences” for what Iran just did rather than telling Israel to “take the win,” as reports are the US also backed Israel’s move against Hezbollah. In the second Harris/Walz-Trump/Vance debate, the first question was on the Middle East. Walz said, “Let’s keep in mind where this started,” i.e., October 7, and Israel’s ability to defend itself is “absolutely fundamental.” Vance concurred, “We should support our allies wherever they are when they’re fighting the bad guys.” Walz noted Iran is closer to being a nuclear power, a line Vance could also have used.

The list of Israeli targets proportionate to their escalation vs. Hamas, Hezbollah, and the Houthis is short:

  1. Military radar systems would leave Iran open for IDF air attacks.

  2. Iran’s nuclear program would require US assistance.

  3. The simplest target is oil infrastructure to remove the earnings paying for its and its proxies’ weapons, and to destabilise the regime.

Yet Iranian state Telegram chatgroups, and an Iranian professor of literature(!) interviewed by the BBC, say if their oil is hit, they will burn Saudi, Kuwaiti, UAE, Bahraini, and Azerbaijani oil – an escalation threat we have been flagging as a fat tail risk since immediately after October 7. (Note Qatar, a key supplier of LNG to the EU, is absent from this list despite ostensibly being a major US ally…) As such, the US might also oppose this move: but that doesn’t mean it won’t happen. Of course, Israel hitting Iran too hard could mean war, dragging others in; even so, it likely sees more risk in doing too little with its next strike than doing too much.

For markets, the risk is therefore also around where one’s strikes are placed. Oil went up around 5% yesterday and has only come down slightly since; indeed, the above may still be just a tail risk - a literature professor is after all an expert in fiction - but it’s as fat as they come.

In the Far East, trouble brews too. Japanese PM Ishiba, whom I noted yesterday is a foreign policy hawk who favours an Asian NATO with regional nuclear weapons, is making headlines today for [checks notes] supporting the creation of an ‘Asia NATO’ to deter China, Russia and North Korea with nuclear weapons – American or otherwise(!) This has huge implications.    

The ILA East Coast port strike began, with worrying implications for global supply chains already strained by the Houthis, who hit two ships yesterday. Some consequences being floated by one expert include: shipping firms declaring force majeure and dumping containers around the world; congestion hitting major terminals; ships docked in the US being stuck there; and delays returning empty containers to Asia, so shortages soaring. Ship queues are reportedly already building off the east coast and could soon exceed their Covid peak. In short, this is not “$5bn a day” in a $29 trillion US economy as some bean-counters put it. The knock-on effects are far larger, exponential, and unpredictable. Presumably, the ILA will get a huge pay rise but given this is the most labour friendly US presidency for a long time, and former President Trump just tweeted support of their claims, the union may not be in a hurry to return to work.

But back to the vice-presidential debate. For markets, only three other points were worth noting:

  • First, Vance said Trump’s economic plan is “not just a plan, but it’s also a record,” and that said plan is attacked by people who have PhDs but don’t have “common sense.” Walz responded, “Economists, can’t be trusted. Science can’t be trusted. National security folks can’t be trusted. Look, if you’re going to be president, you don’t have all the answers. Donald Trump believes he does. My pro tip of the day is this: if you need heart surgery, listen to the people at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, not Donald Trump. And the same thing goes with this.” True. Then again, like it or not, part of the debate around this election is that neoclassical economics is wrong; and that science aims to prove things wrong; and that an awful lot of national security people have been very wrong given where we are now.
  • Second, on housing, Walz seemed to imply houses are for living in not speculation (perhaps he picked that up on a China visit?); stressed the importance of getting access to mortgages; that giving $25,000 to new home buyers won’t push up the price of new homes by $25,000; and neither does high immigration. Vance, whom the moderator said is proposing building new homes on federal land, couldn’t say where, instead emphasizing the importance of lowering illegal immigration, energy prices, and regulation as the quick solution to cheaper housing.
  • Third, Vance underlined the heart of the Trump plan is high tariffs and low taxes for US production, with tariff revenue paying for social spending such as child tax credits. Walz argued tariffs are not a way to raise revenue, and it’s better to get the rich pay “their fair share,” with no details of how. Even neoclassical economists understand that the federal deficit is likely to get larger, not smaller, on that basis.

In terms of the election needle, I suspect it didn’t move much, even as Vance seems to win in some polls. However, it highlighted how much the Republican party has shifted, and that both vice-presidential candidates think, talk, and debate with vastly greater clarity than those at the top of their tickets. This was an actual debate; polite; and even had areas where the two men agreed.     

All of the above sits alongside yesterday’s notably weak employment and prices paid components in the US ISM manufacturing survey even as job openings beat to the upside: that was enough to get people just told “2 * 25” by Powell to talk about “50 – 50” again. Then again, so does everything.

Meanwhile, hedge funds are begging to get into a China bull market and Bloomberg says Chinese property buyers are queueing up to think about home purchases again. Color me cynical, but *if* this is the case, global commodity inflation is going to go a lot higher; and so, OECD interest rates are not going to be able to go a lot lower.

At which point, it won’t just be the ILA on strike, or Eastern German and Austrian centrist politicians who are out of office... 

https://www.zerohedge.com/markets/rabobank-iran-just-made-huge-strategic-error

Jumaane Williams, next in line for NYC mayor, got funds from donor feds flagged in Adams case

 Public Advocate Jumaane Williams — who is next in line to become mayor if Eric Adams resigns — received campaign contributions from a contractor accused by the feds of setting up illegal straw donations to Hizzoner, records show.

Williams received $5,000 in donations from Tolib Mansurov — an Uzbek American businessman who is identified as “Businessman-4” in the historic indictment against the mayor — and two of his employees, the Wall Street Journal first reported.

New York City Public Advocate Jumaane speaks during a debate.
New York City Public Advocate Jumaane Williams speaks during a debate.Getty Images

The indictment states Mansurov illegally reimbursed $8,000 total to employees who donated to Adams’ 2021 mayoral campaign, in addition to directly contributing $2,000 himself.

A spokesman for Williams said Mansurov’s donations to the public advocate will be reviewed, the Wall Street Journal report states.

Williams and his staff didn’t immediately return The Post’s requests for comment.

Campaign finance records show Williams received a $2,100 donation on Jan. 24 from Mansurov.

The same day, two employees at his United Elite Group contractor and construction management company donated $2,100 and $800, respectively, according to the records.

https://nypost.com/2024/10/02/us-news/jumaane-williams-next-in-line-for-nyc-mayor-got-contributions-from-donor-in-eric-adams-indictment/

Iran’s supreme leader tells West to ‘get lost’ as Israel vows retaliation for missile attack

 Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on Wednesday told the West to “get lost” from the Middle East after his country launched a massive barrage of missiles at Israel — as Israeli officials vowed payback within days over the Iranian strikes.

As the Middle East inched closer to a long-feared all-out war, the terror-supporting Iranian leader blamed the current escalation on the “US and some European countries” that “falsely claim they bring peace and tranquility to the region,” the Telegraph reported.

He added that Iran was hopeful of getting “rid of the enemies’ evil” and urged Western nations to “cut their badness.”

Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said Wednesday the West must “get lost” from the Middle East.via REUTERS

Khamenei’s remarks to a crowd in Tehran came just hours after he ordered nearly 200 ballistic missiles be fired at the Jewish state late Tuesday — dozens of which penetrated air defenses and struck Tel Aviv and other heavily populated areas. 

While Israel and the US quickly promised to retaliate against Tehran’s latest assault, Iran doubled down Wednesday and vowed to carry out even more crushing attacks on infrastructure if the threats were followed through on.

Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian said Israel would face a harsh reaction if it didn’t stop what he called “its crimes.”

Hours earlier,  Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu declared that Iran had “made a big mistake tonight – and it will pay for it.”

Meanwhile, the violence continued to escalate on the Israel-Lebanon border Wednesday as Israeli troops stepped up the pressure on the Iran-backed Hezbollah.

The Israeli military said regular infantry and armored units were now joining its ground operations in Lebanon.

Israel’s Iron Dome anti-missile system intercepting ballistic missiles in the night sky over Ashkelon, taken on October 1, 2024.REUTERS

The military has previously insisted that its ground operation is largely aimed at destroying Hezbollah tunnels and other infrastructure on the border — and there were no plans for a wider operation targeting Beirut or major cities in Lebanon’s south.

Hezbollah, on its part, said it was clashing with Israeli forces in the border town of Maroun el-Ras Wednesday after it had pushed back troops near another border town.

The terror group said it had also fired rockets at military posts inside Israel.

People taking shelter in central Israel during an air raid siren, after Iran fired ballistic missiles during cross-border hostilities in October 2024.REUTERS
The Iranian missile strikes and Israel’s operations in Lebanon have sparked global alarm — with Western leaders quickly mobilizing military resources as the threat of a wider conflict looms.

“France condemns the attack on Israel by ballistic missiles fired from Iran. It reiterates its absolute commitment to the security of Israel. It participated through its military means in the Middle East to counter the Iranian threat,” the French foreign ministry said in a statement.

Meanwhile, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said: “Iran is risking setting the entire region on fire – this must be prevented at all costs. Hezbollah and Iran must immediately cease their attacks on Israel.”

https://nypost.com/2024/10/02/world-news/irans-supreme-leader-tells-west-to-get-lost-as-israel-vows-retaliation-for-missile-attack/

Biden opposes Israel destroying Iran nuclear weapons sites: ‘Answer is no’

 President Biden said Wednesday that he opposes a possible preemptive Israeli attack on Iran’s nuclear weapons program sites as tensions between the countries grow.

“The answer is no,” the 81-year-old retiring president told reporters under the wing of Air Force One as he departed Washington for a trip to North Carolina to tour Hurricane Helene damage.

Iran on Tuesday directly attacked Israel for a second time this year — launching some 200 rockets that reportedly did little damage and caused no known Israeli casualties.

President Biden speaks to members of the media before boarding Air Force One en route to North and South Carolina, in the wake of Hurricane Helene, at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, October 2, 2024.REUTERS
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addresses the 79th session of the United Nations General Assembly, Friday, Sept. 27, 2024.AP
The reactor building dominates the nuclear power plant in Bushehr, Iran.AP
Tehran’s volley followed Israel’s stunning assassination Friday of longtime Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah in Beirut, after wiping out much of the Iran-backed Lebanese group’s leadership with a series of recent strikes and a spate of novel electronic pager explosions.

The White House vowed Tuesday to impose consequences on Iran for its latest attack on Israel — after a similar attack in April — but would not commit to tightening the enforcement of sanctions against Iranian oil exports, despite bipartisan calls to do so from Congress.

The fate of Iran’s nuclear program was the topic of the first question Tuesday night at the vice presidential debate — with Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, the Democratic running mate, declining to say if he would support Israel attacking Iran’s nuclear program and Republican Sen. JD Vance saying he would support whatever Israel decides.

It’s unclear if the Israeli government will listen to Biden’s latest policy preference — after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ignored Biden’s demand Monday that he not authorize incursions into southern Lebanon to disable Hezbollah sites.

The Jerusalem Post reported that Biden’s warning against an invasion of Lebanon was viewed in Israel “as almost pro forma, given that there was no threat nor was there any presentation of an imminent diplomatic solution.”

https://nypost.com/2024/10/02/us-news/biden-says-he-opposes-israel-destroying-irans-nuclear-weapons-sites-as-tensions-grow/