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Friday, November 8, 2024

Jack Smith Tucks Tail, Halts Trump Case As House GOP Demands He 'Preserve Records'

 Special Counsel Jack Smith has moved to pause his case against Donald Trump and vacate all remaining deadlines his federal J6 case.

What's more, he's been asked to preserve records for a GOP investigation.

As Jonathan Turley notes, the election reflected a certain gag sensation for a public fed a relentless diet of panic and identity politics for eight years.

The 2024 election will come to be viewed as one of the biggest political and cultural shifts in our history.

It was the mainstream-media-versus-new media election; the Rogan-versus-Oprah election; the establishment-versus-a-disassociated-electorate election.

It was also a thorough rejection of lawfare. One of the things most frustrating for Trump’s opponents was that every trial or hearing seemed to give Trump a boost in the polls. As cases piled up in Washington, New York, Florida and Georgia, the effort seemed to move more toward political acclamation than isolation.

These cases are now legal versions of the Flying Dutchman — ships destined to sail endlessly but never make port.

If there is a single captain of that hapless crew, it is Special Counsel Jack Smith.

For more than a year, Smith sought to secure a verdict in one of his two cases in Washington and Florida before the election. His urgency was seemingly shared by Judge Tanya Chutkan in Washington, but by few other judges or justices.

Around 2 am, Smith became a lame-duck prosecutor.

Trump ran on ending his prosecutions and can cite a political mandate for it. Certainly, had he lost, the other side would be claiming a mandate for these prosecutions.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/jack-smith-tucks-tail-halts-trump-case-house-gop-demands-he-preserve-records

NYC Mayor Ends Food Vouchers For Illegals, Ready To Work With Trump

 Facing an influx of illegal immigrants, Democratic New York City Mayor Eric Adams said he'd be happy to share ideas on the crisis with President-elect Donald Trump.

At a post-election press conference, Adams said New York now hosts 220,000 illegal immigrants and has received negligible support from the federal government.

“I want to see the federal government fix a federal problem. This is a federal problem,” Adams said when asked what help he would like to see.

It is estimated that feeding and housing the illegal immigrants for three years will cost the city $10 billion.

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul has allocated $2.4 billion for this year.

Which is perhaps why the NYC mayor said the city will phase out out a program that gave prepaid debit cards to migrant families in city-funded hotels to purchase their own meals and essentialsaccording to CBS News New York.

The program will provide migrant families with debit cards until the end of the year. After that, the city will deliver food directly to migrants.

“As we move towards more competitive contracting for asylum seeker programs, we have chosen not to renew the emergency contract for this pilot program once the one-year term concludes. For over two years, we have provided care to more than 222,000 migrants while saving $2 billion in asylum seeker-related costs,” Adams said in a statement.

“We will continue to implement and learn from innovative pilot programs like the immediate response cards program as we care for hundreds of new arrivals every week.”

Adams said he planned to call Trump but had not done so because the president-elect is likely flooded with calls at the moment.

“I communicated with the president yesterday to state that there are many issues here in the city that we want to work together with the administration to address,” Adams said.

“The city must move forward, and that is what our call is to do.”

He said that if the new president would be willing to listen, he would happily share his ideas and experiences.

As The Epoch Times' Oliver Mantyk reports, Adams has voiced disappointment with being unable to deport illegal immigrants who are repeat offenders after a number of violent criminals landed back on the streets after arrest.

The mayor has also been critical of the Biden administration’s handling of the border. According to Adams, his administration took 10 trips to Washington to negotiate a solution. Plans for a statewide “decompression plan” to involve more counties in helping the immigrants are also underway.

Though Trump’s platform promised to secure the border and deport illegal immigrants, New York’s sanctuary city laws would make it harder for the Trump administration to detain illegal immigrants there. The laws prevent police from assisting U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in many cases, and protect illegal immigrants from deportation.

At the press conference, the Adams administration reaffirmed its commitment to sanctuary laws.

Commissioner Manuel Castro, head of the Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs, said:

“As a sanctuary city, we intend to follow the law. And we expect that all our city agencies follow our sanctuary laws. ... And we will continue to be a sanctuary city, and protect our immigrant communities.”

Castro stated that the most harmful thing facing immigrant communities right now is fear and misinformation. He maintained that immigrants will get the help and information that they need.

When asked about any policy changes now that a possibly more supportive president will be in office, the mayor said that nothing would change, and that his administration would continue on the path it has taken with the Biden administration. He’s been advocating that big cities like New York should not be taking the brunt of the crisis, and that changes must be made, and support given.

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/nyc-mayor-ends-food-vouchers-illegals-ready-work-trump

China Disappoints With Latest "Bare Minimum" Stimulus As It Waits For Trump Tariffs

 There are three certainties in life: death, taxes and China stimulus disappointing.

For the latest example look no further than the plan revealed this morning by the National People’s Congress Standing Committee, which approved a 10 trillion yuan ($1.4 trillion) debt swap package for local authorities to refinance “hidden” local debt onto public balance sheets. Funds for that program - telegraphed last month but without a price tag or timeframe - will be provided through 2028, they said, after the move was authorized by the nation’s top lawmaking body.

The details of the 10 trillion (but really 12 trillion program) are as follows:

  • 1) A one-off increase in the 6tn yuan local government debt issuance, over 3 years (2024-26);
  • 2) 4tn yuan special LGB issuance under the annual quota, over 5 years (2024-29); and

Additionally, the government will guarantee to pay back 2tn yuan implicit debt related to shantytown redevelopment due in 2029 and after.

In total, according to the Chinese MoF, the implicit local government debt will be reduced from RMB14.2tn to RMB2.3tn, a total of 12tn.

While policymakers didn’t announce measures to directly stimulate domestic demand, Finance Minister Lan Fo’an promised “more forceful” fiscal policy next year, signaling bolder steps - and another round of stimulus - could come after Trump’s inauguration in January. The US president-elect has threatened 60% tariffs on Chinese goods that could decimate trade between the world’s largest economies, and blight exports that have been a rare bright spot for the Asian nation this year.

Putting it together:

  • The good news: this should reduce pressures from near-term debt repayment and lower debt-servicing costs, giving local governments more room to execute budgeted spending that’s needed to lift growth up to this year’s 5% target.
  • The bad news: this was the bare minimum and came at the very low end of market expectations. That said, some have suggested that Beijing doesn't want to burn all of its dry powder before it knows what anti-China measures Trump has in stock, so maybe just another reason to wait.

“Policymakers probably saw no need for a robust response to Trump’s victory before he takes office, given the relatively restrained post-election market response,” said Duncan Wrigley, chief China economist with Pantheon Macroeconomics. “Next year is a different matter, but officials will take that as it comes.”

China has labeled local government debt one of the three “major economic and financial risks” facing his country, as regions divert money away from growth-boosting projects to repay their debt. Most of that money is tied to entities known as local government financing vehicles (or LGFVs), which borrow on behalf of provinces and cities to finance investment in infrastructure.

But local authorities have struggled to service those liabilities in recent years as the property crisis wiped out land sales they relied on for revenue. Officials at the briefing said the outstanding value of so-called hidden debt was 14.3 trillion yuan as of the end of 2023, far short of the International Monetary Fund’s estimate of at about 60 trillion yuan.

While markets shrugged off the measures, Lan called the package “a major policy decision taking into consideration international and domestic development environments.” Policymakers also took the rare step of raising local governments’ debt ceiling mid-year for the first time since 2015.

That increase in the debt limit will allow local governments to issue six trillion yuan in additional special bonds over three years to swap hidden debt, Lan said at the briefing. Regional authorities will be able to tap another total of 4 trillion yuan in special local bond quota to be approved in tranches over five years — including 2024 — for the same purpose, he added.

“To really have a positive for markets, you want to see something which is two trillion or above specifically talking about consumption-related stimulus,” Bernie Ahkong, CIO at UBS O’Connor Global Multi Strategy Alpha told Bloomberg TV.  

So was this a disappointment?

According to the market - with Chinese stock futures and the yuan both tumbling - a resounding yes, but as SocGen's China strategist Wei Yao notes, it is more certainty on the forward looking part. Ahead of the meeting, SocGen had wondered if the debt swap could total over RMB10tn over next 3-4 years including the annual bond issuance quota. So the announced plan is slower but not smaller, and the bank didn't expect the entire package to be clarified today. Then some may argue that the RMB4tn is not "additional", but this statement can only be true if we had known about the debt issuance plan in the next five years. That is - is the 800bn per year really deducted from an already-set trajectory? No, not even the MOF knows what's the fiscal package for next year.

The problem is that markets were happy to frontrun all this and more: China’s boldest stimulus blitz since the pandemic had sent onshore shares soaring by about 30% since September, thereby taking the pressure off officials to act immediately, which of course reflexively meant that Chinese stocks would immediately dump - as they did - putting more pressure to act! Those rate cuts, along with stock and housing market support pledges, have put President Xi Jinping back on track to hit this year’s growth goal of around 5%, without taking on piles of extra debt to reflate the economy.

In any case, investors had waited for weeks for the fiscal side of that campaign, with media reports stoking expectations for much more spending to stabilize the property market and boost consumption. Sure enough, disappointment was palpable at the start of the presser, with the offshore yuan weakening as much as 0.6% before paring the decline to 0.3% as the full scale of the package was known.

What is the impact on the economy?

The debt issuance will not fund new measures and the MOF pledges to contain growth in any new LGFV debt. But the swap will free up fiscal resources and allow local governments to function more normally. That is, local government will be much abler to carry out necessary spending, reduce unnecessary fines and penalties, and pay back arrears owed to the private sector.

It remains to see how the issuance schedule will look like. The imminent issuance of RMB2tn LGB to replacement implicit debt, confirmed today, will require liquidity injection worth 100bp RRR cuts. This could also be managed by PBoC's liquidity operations.

What about stimulus?

Here China's message seems to be "be patient and to be continued." Markets were disappointed by the absence of any detail on anything else other than the local government debt. But as SocGen had cautioned, the SCNPC chooses to signal, rather than deliver, a more forceful fiscal budget in 2025. Regarding housing and bank recapitalization, the message today is that it's being worked out quickly - if not as quickly as markets wanted to see. Indeed, the test of market patience can be problematic for confidence.

Market momentum aside, Beijing's willingness to act to stop the deflationary spiral is still there, at least this is what Wei Yao is clinging some hope on. But clearly, Beijing wants to do things at its own pace. For one, the 2025 fiscal budget is not for now. The thinking may also be that:

  1. The economy is showing more signs of bottoming out, and so there is less rush to top up stimulus for 2024.
  2. There is still so much uncertainty around Trump tariffs - how much and when. Why show all the cards now? Indicatively, raising US tariff rate on Chinese goods from 20% currently to 60% could require RMB2-3tn additional fiscal stimulus to counter.

Then, what's next?

  • The banking recapitalization looks to be a bank-by-bank approach. And so, there should be details coming in the next few months, albeit likely in several batches.
  • The 2025 fiscal budget will be the real deal to watch in terms of "additional" stimulus for domestic demand. If one doesn't want to be disappointed again, then one might better not expect much detail before the year-end or even before March 5th NPC meeting next year. At the moment, we expect RMB2tn in special CGBs issuance (i.e. additionally) in 2025 to support demand, and more if we get to know the tariff plan by March.

Putting it together,  Beijing will do what's necessary to counter tariff shocks and stop deflation at least over the next few years, regardless of the timing of policy announcements, but not at a pace dictated by markets. And while Beijing's "policy put" is here to stay, Beijing's patience is tricky for confidence.

Investors will now be looking to December for the next major window for bigger fiscal measures, when the 24-man Politburo will discuss the economy at a monthly meeting and policymakers will huddle at the annual Central Economic Work Conference. By then, officials could have greater clarity on Trump’s stance on tariffs, and more time to devise a fiscal strategy to fireproof the economy.

Officials could still unveil a “meaningful” fiscal package in the near term, according to Xiaojia Zhi, head of research at Credit Agricole CIB. Additional spending of 12 to 13 trillion yuan is possible in the next three years, to offset the impact from aggressive US tariff hikes, she added. That said, by now everyone who has bet on a "bigger than expected" stimulus by China has been badly burned, so it's safe to assume that going forward the market will no longer react to promises but will instead demand actions.

https://www.zerohedge.com/economics/china-disappoints-latest-bare-minimum-stimulus-it-waits-trump-tariffs

Trump Outlines Plan To Decimate The Deep State

  by Steve Watson via Modernity.news,

President elect Donald J. Trump has outlined a detailed ten point plan to dismantle the Deep State.

Trump relayed the vision in a video message, promising to “clean out” those who have gone “rogue” and have been working “subversively” to damage the country.

Here are Trump’s ten moves to bury the Deep State.

1. “Immediately reissue my 2020 executive order, restoring the President’s authority to remove rogue bureaucrats.”

2. “Clean out all of the corrupt actors in our national security and intelligence apparatus.”

3. “Totally reform FISA courts which are so corrupt that the judges seemingly do not care when they’re lied to in warrant applications.”

4. “Expose the hoaxes and abuses of power that have been tearing our country apart.”

5. “Launch a major crackdown on government leakers who collude with the fake news to deliberately we false narratives and to subvert our government and our democracy.”

6. “Make every Inspector General’s office independent and physically separated from the departments they oversee so they do not become the protectors of the deep state.”

7. “Ask Congress to establish an independent auditing system to continually monitor our intelligence agencies to ensure they are not spying on our citizens or running disinformation campaigns against the American people, or that they are not spying on someone’s campaign like they spied on my campaign.”

8. “Continue the effort launched by the Trump administration to move parts of the sprawling federal bureaucracy to new locations outside the Washington Swamp.”

9. “Work to ban federal bureaucrats from taking jobs at the companies they deal with and that they regulate.”

10. “Push a constitutional amendment to oppose term limits on members of Congress.”

*  *  *

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/trump-outlines-plan-decimate-deep-state

Infighting Breaks Out Between Harris, Biden Camps Over Funds Loss

 A massive slap-fight has broken out between Joe Biden's and Kamala Harris's camps - with each blaming the other for Harris' historic loss to Donald Trump.

According to Axios, "In response to Trump's decisive victory, aides in both camps are blaming the other for being more responsible, according to interviews with more than a dozen people in the White House and Harris' campaign."

One person in Harris' camp told the outlet, "The 107-day Harris campaign was nearly flawless. The Biden campaign that preceded it was the opposite."

Another Harris person told them, "We did what we could. I think the odds against us were insurmountable," referring to Biden's horrendous approval ratings and late exit from the race following his disastrous debate performance in June that revealed his brain is mush.

Former top Obama-turned-Harris aide David Plouffe posted on X that the Harris campaign had "dug out of a deep hole." He later deleted his account.

Biden Team Strikes Back!

Responding to criticism of Biden top political aides Mike Donilon and Steve Ricchetti's decision to run Biden "for re-election at 80 years old," the Biden camp fire back - with one former staffer saying Harris' team is making excuses.

"How did you spend $1 billion and not win? What the fuck?"

Another person familiar with the dynamics said that some on Biden's team resent Harris for not using the president more during the campaign, even though he is unpopular and prone to gaffes.

  • "The Harris team benched [Biden] and then they lost, so now the people who represent Biden are saying, 'Maybe you shouldn't have benched him,' " they said. -Axios

Some Harris officials felt that many former Biden aides resented Harris and her ascension to the top of the ticket, while a former Biden-Harris official suggested that it was simply shitty governance that did them in.

"It's very clear we got it wrong on economic policy. People feel squeezed and when they do, they pick change. Our policy position and execution wasn't palpable to voters."

Another cited a range of frustrations: "The party was lied to about our candidate, and the leadership who lied were the same ones who never bothered to actually listen to voters and understand what was appealing to them about Trump — or why the Biden economy wasn't working for them even if it looked good on paper."

Democrats Has The Sads

Axios also reports on the "Deep Democratic Depression" gripping the party.

Check this out:

Democrats didn't just lose badly.

  • They lost to a convicted felon they ridiculed as a racist, misogynistic fascist — and an existential threat to democracy.
  • And they didn't just lose to President-elect Trump. They lost the Senate ... likely the House ... many Hispanic men ... all three Blue Wall states ... both Southern swing states ... even substantial support in the bluest of states and cities.

Why it matters: Top Democrats, including Harris advisers, tell us they feel like a lost party. Come January, they'll have scant power in the federal government, and shriveling clout in the courts and states.

  • The traditional media structure sympathetic to their views, and hostile to Trump's, was shattered.

In short, Harris just lost what Democrats had considered an 'eminently winnable race.'

Sad! Fat!

QuidelOrtho Corp (QDEL) Q3: Strategic Initiatives Drive Growth

Positive Points

  • QuidelOrtho Corp (NASDAQ:QDEL) reported Q3 revenue of $727 million, demonstrating solid progress in executing business improvement initiatives.

  • The company achieved adjusted EBITDA of $171 million, marking the first quarter in nine quarters to achieve growth in both adjusted EBITDA dollars and margin since the pandemic.

  • QuidelOrtho Corp (NASDAQ:QDEL) has strengthened its leadership team with the addition of experienced industry leaders, enhancing its focus on technology and human resources.

  • The company is implementing cost and process improvement initiatives expected to deliver incremental margin contributions in 2025 and 2026.

  • QuidelOrtho Corp (NASDAQ:QDEL) reinstated its full-year 2024 financial guidance, reflecting confidence in its business strategy and execution.

Negative Points

  • Total reported revenue declined by approximately 2% due to higher COVID-19 and flu revenue in the prior year period.

  • The company faces potential headwinds from China's anticorruption policies and changes to reimbursement on cardiac products in certain Chinese provinces.

  • Adjusted gross profit margin decreased to 49.2% from 50.5% in the prior year period, primarily driven by lower respiratory test sales.

  • QuidelOrtho Corp (NASDAQ:QDEL) anticipates a year-over-year increase of $25 to $30 million in SG&A expense related to expected bonus accruals.

  • The company is experiencing customer delays in instrument purchases and installations due to Chinese government policies, which could impact future sales.

Q & A Highlights


Q: Can you elaborate on the 100 to 200 basis points adjusted EBITDA margin improvement expected for 2025? A: Joe Busky, CFO: The improvement is primarily driven by the $100 million in annualized cost savings, with $20 million realized in the first half of 2025. Additional cost-saving initiatives are underway across procurement, IT, and other areas. However, we also anticipate a 3% merit increase for employees and normal inflation, which could impact margins. The timing of the 2024-2025 respiratory season could also affect margins.


Q: How predictable is the demand for consumables in the labs business, and what is the outlook for Q4 and 2025? A: Joe Busky, CFO: The labs business has good visibility due to five to seven-year contracts and predictable ordering patterns. We expect mid-single-digit growth in this business, with some variability due to timing between quarters.

Q: What are the expectations for the respiratory season, given the early start last year and the summer spike this year? A: Joe Busky, CFO: We are assuming a typical flu season with a 30% year-over-year decline in respiratory revenue for Q4. We are cautious about the timing of revenues, which could shift to Q1 2025. The COVID-19 revenue is expected to be in the range of $160 to $170 million for the full year.

Q: Can you provide more details on the organizational changes and their impact on the company? A: Brian Blazer, CEO: We eliminated the Chief Commercial Officer and COO roles to flatten the organization, improve speed and efficiency, and get closer to customers. The changes are at the top level and have no impact on customer-facing roles. We have strong leaders in place who will now report directly to me.

Q: What is the outlook for the China market, considering the cardiac reimbursement pressures and potential stimulus benefits? A: Joe Busky, CFO: We expect high single-digit growth in China for 2024 and mid to high single-digit growth for 2025. While there are potential headwinds from value-based pricing and anti-corruption policies, the Chinese government's economic stimulus plan could be a tailwind. We are monitoring the situation closely.


https://finance.yahoo.com/news/quidelortho-corp-qdel-q3-2024-073458319.html