The Governor's office announced they will accept a $15 million donation from Dakota Access LLC.
The
money will go to the North Dakota Department of Emergency Services
(DES) to help deal with debt brought on as a result of the Dakota Access
Pipeline protests.
The donation was wired this afternoon to the
state-owned Bank of North Dakota and it will be used to pay off loans
taken out by DES.
According to a press release sent by the
Governor's officer, a bill passed by the state legislature in 2017
included language saying the Governor and DES could "accept
reimbursement in the form of land, cash, or other assets from from
nonstate sources for state cost incurred relating to unlawful activity
associated with the construction” of the Dakota Access Pipeline.
Another
bill passed in 2017, HB 1024, required that any reimbursements received
must be used to repay the Bank of North Dakota loans.
Currently
the state has borrowed $43 million from the Bank of North Dakota. $40
million for DES and $3 million for Morton County.
During a budget
interim committee meeting at the State Capitol Thursday, they voted to
accept a $10 million grant from the U.S. Department of Justice to
reimburse the state for law enforcement support costs.
The personal attacks on President Trump continue but he's the first president who is finally getting around to doing things that should have been done a long time ago. And he's getting results.
Past presidents were co-conspirators in North Korea's move to ICBM-nuclear weapons. President Trump still has a number of arrows in his quiver before he even has to consider the military option, and already we see significant results.
China has told North Korean companies operating in its territory to close down as it implements United Nations sanctions against the reclusive state.
The companies will be shut by early January. Joint Chinese and North Korean ventures will also be forced to close.
China, Pyongyang's only major ally, has already banned textile trade and limited oil exports.
The move is part of an international response to North Korea's sixth and most powerful nuclear test.
We might see little rocket man launch a flurry of ICBMs tomorrow and he may test an H-bomb over the Pacific Ocean this weekend, but the tea leaves certainly suggest little rocket man finds himself in a box. Reagan, Bush I, Clinton, Bush II, Obama -- never did a thing to stop North Korea. Amazing what a little tough talk can do.
In that short BBC article linked above, the writer did not have enough space to put the word "Trump" into the story, simply calling it an "international response."
Obviously the BBC is very conflicted over all of this. It doesn't fit the narrative.
If North Korea launches a nuclear-tipped ICBM targeting Guam, would one rather have Dirty Harry in charge, or Barney Fife?
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NFL Blinks
The tea leaves suggest that the NFL is going to stand during the National Anthem. The controversy will continue but there's no question the NFL knows their fans really are patriots.
Later: I assume the game is over. I don't recall who is playing; I don't even care who won. I'm most interested in who stood / who didn't. That's what the NFL is doing to its fans: more interested in the pre-game show and no longer caring about the game itself.
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested 101 people for
immigration violations in Los Angeles as part of a broader operation
targeting sanctuary cities, netting nearly 500 arrests across the U.S.
According
to ICE, "Operation Safe City" focused on cities and regions where "ICE
deportation officers are denied access to jails and prisons to interview
suspected immigration violators or jurisdictions where ICE detainers
are not honored."
A total of 498 people from 42 counties and
multiple cities were arrested as part of the operation, an ICE press
release stated. The operation came to a conclusion on Wednesday.
Of
these individuals, 101 were from Los Angles; 28 were from Baltimore; 30
were from Cook County, Illinois; 63 were from Denver; 45 were from New
York; 107 were from Philadelphia; 33 were from Portland, Oregon; 27 were
from Santa Clara County, California; 14 were from Washington, D.C.; and
50 were from Massachusetts.
Look how much money the federal government saves not having to plan sweeps across the country. They can simply target sanctuary cities. Reminds me of the answer Willie Sutton gave when he was asked why he robbed banks -- "because that's where the money is."
Russell 2000 (small cap) -- this is huge -- up until today, this was the one major indice that had not set new records
S&P 500 -- barely, but it closed at a new high today
Dow Transportations -- also set a new high; Dow Theory comes to mind
Others:
Dow 30: not a new high, but a good day
NASDAQ: not a new high, but a good day
"Yields" are up.
WTI: solid move down today -- helps refiners.
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Bye, Bye? Nope, Buy, Buy
Disclaimer: this is not an investment site. Do not make any investment, financial, job, travel, or relationship decisions based on anything you read here or think you may have read here. But having said that ...
I've said this repeatedly, so instead of writing de novo, I will simply cut and paste from an earlier post:
Longest running reality show/soap opera continues. These summer
re-runs are getting a bit boring. No real need to post / link the most
recent update. I will simply copy/paste what I wrote September 19, 2017.
Bye-bye? Nope, buy-buy. CNBC contributor had it exactly
right today -- whether GOP
repeals ObamaCare or whether it doesn't, investing in US health care
companies is a no-brainer. Bottom line for the contributor regarding health care
investments: buy-buy. Buy if ObamaCare is "repealed" (wink, wink); buy
if ObamaCare survives a GOP vote to repeal. I've said the same thing for
months.
For investors: thank Paul Rand and John McCain for scuttling ObamaCare
Lite. Rand and McCain insure that the big insurance companies
will be the big winners, and for investors, that's good news.
So, what's new?
Senator Schumer says the Senate is very, very close to bailing out the major, publicly held insurance companies. The story is here. ObamaCare, bye, bye? Nope, buy, buy.
regional insurer Medica is pulling out of the North Dakota's health exchange for 2018 at the last minute
state
regulators denied the health insurer's request for a rate increase to
account for uncertainty over funding for Obamacare cost-reduction
subsidies
Wednesday was the deadline for insurers to commit to offering plans on the exchanges for 2018
senators
Lamar Alexander and Patty Murray say they will try to revive their
bipartisan effort to approve funding for CSRs and stabilize the health
insurance exchanges for the next two years
Standing Rock chairman who helped instigate #NoDAPL protests gets thumped in re-election campaign.
The often violent and often unlawful #NoDAPL protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline made David Archambault, chairman of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, something of a national and even international celebrity. He appeared on national television shows. He’s been on something of a lecture tour of college campuses and other venues. He even visited a United Nations event in Geneva.
But last night his fellow tribal members voted him out of office, and it wasn’t even close.
His opponent/the new chairman: “We kind of neglected our own” by taking the lead on the pipeline protest, he said. “We did what we had to do, but we didn’t realize we were going to hurt our economy that much.”
"Hurt our economy so much"? ---- Only way to interpret that is casino gambling revenues are way down.
I used to send contributions to a native American charity in South Dakota on a quarterly basis but with the DAPL protests, I sent a note to that charity informing them that my contributions would cease. They got the message; I no longer receive "solicitations" from them. A simple note from them saying they did not support the DAPL protests and I gladly would have continued the contributions.
So, was Archambault voted out of office because he lost the battle with DAPL or because his protest was wrong for the tribe in the first place? For me, it does not matter. Good riddance!
Market: in early trading, market is flat. On the NYSE there are 46 issues reporting 52-week highs, including BRK-A; Navistar International; Norfolk Southern; Oasis Midstream Partners; Phillips 66; Royal Dutch Shell; UNP; Valero Energy.
Equifax: to allow lock/unlock feature free of charge.
Inflation: the whole argument that the employment / unemployment rate is linked to the inflation rate turns out to be a wrong model. What was missing; why was the model wrong? Technology. Period. Dot.
Inflation: argument on CNBC this morning -- what drives inflation? I thought the science was settled.
OPEC: does the Saudi Aramco IPO affect the future of OPEC? Some thing so.
September 29, 2017: yesterday, below, I posted a snarky comment about the credibility of GOP congressional leaders. Today in The Hill: distrust of US Senate grows, which led with a picture of Susan Collins and John McCain. No more needs to be said, except, the president's tax plan has no chance of passing. The good news: it's not "tax reform" and it's not needed. The bad news: if GOP can't pass this bill, the GOP is pretty much done for the rest of this term.
Disclaimer: this is not an investment site. Do not make any investment, financial, travel, job, or relationship decisions based on what you read here or think you may have read here.
forecast for new claims: 275K -- an increase of 17K after a huge drop last week (a drop of 23K last week); range: 260K to 300K
actual: 272 -- 3,000 less than what consensus was; so up 12,000 from previous week;
actual, 4-week average, rose 9,000 to 277,750, the highest level since February, 2016 (think hurricanes)
when the Fed (aka Janet Yellen) raises rates in December, folks in Texas, Florida, and Puerto Rico will still be struggling with after-effects of three huge hurricanes
Tax reform: my 2-cents worth. Why the Trump bill will not pass --
political leadership is not there (Trump, McConnell, Ryan)
after the healthcare debacle, is anyone even paying attention to McConnell or Ryan any more? I know I switch stations when Ryan shows up for an interview (or at least hit the "mute" button -- all hat, no cattle)
"never Trumpers" and Dems will never pass "tax reform" initiated by President Trump -- that's simply a fact; some GOP senators have already said clearly they will not vote for this
42% of Americans do not want to see tax cuts (previously posted)
any middle income investor paying attention knows that raising the marginal rate from 10% to 12% means taxes on investment gains will increase (as I understand it; could be wrong) -- that may be offset by doubling the standard deduction
there is no urgency to get this done
equity markets at all-time highs
US economy plugging along at an "okay" rate; no headlines that US in dire straits
the big pole in the tent dragging down US economy: cost of healthcare and that issue has not only NOT been addressed, but is actually getting worse
cost of housing might be the second issue but trails healthcare costs as an issue for the middle class
college education may be the third issue but that affects a segment of the population that is hard to define and seems to be a niche issue
corporations (where most of the impetus lies for tax reform) have learned to deal with the tax code and seem to be doing just fine, thank you, regardless of what some say
no urgency, and we've run out of time this year anyway
perception that, with some exceptions, tax reform not needed; there is a perception that under current political environment, greater chance of "shenanigans" than "real" tax reform