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Futures Flat Ahead Of Strike-Impacted Jobs Report; Commodities Approach Bull Market

Futures Flat Ahead Of Strike-Impacted Jobs Report; Commodities Approach Bull Market

After yesterday's two key events, the ECB and OPEC meetings, ended up being major duds, the market is looking at the week's final and perhaps most important event of the week: the May payrolls report to generate some upward volatility and help stocks finally break out of the range they have been caught in for over a year. However, even today's jobs number will likely be skewed as reported previously as a result of the Verizon strike which is said to trim some 35,000 jobs from the headline print, casting anything the BLS reports today in doubt.

Exposing The ECB's Illusory Independence

Following Mario Draghi's seemingly constant mention of The ECB's credibility during yesterday's press conference, none other than ECB member (and Austrian national bank chief) Ewald Nowotny exclaimed rather oddly that "The ECB is the most independent central bank in the world." This was apparently more than former Greek FinMin Yanis Varoufakis could handle as he unleashed a scathing op-ed to explain why, in fact,  The ECB is the least independent central bank exclaiming that "the pretense of independence serves as a fig leaf for interventions th

Delayed Consequences: Germany Angers Turkey With Genocide Vote

Delayed Consequences: Germany Angers Turkey With Genocide Vote

Submitted by Michael Shedlock via MishTalk.com,

A year ago, Germany’s Green Party wanted to hold a vote on responsibility for the Ottoman massacres, a systematic expulsion and annihilation of over 1 million ethnic Armenians in 1915.

Germany delayed the vote, not wanting to upset Turkey... until yesterday, when Germany held the vote, upsetting Turkey much more.

After a near-unanimous vote, Turkey recalled its ambassador to Germany calling the vote, “null and void”.

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