Greece Observes Plunge In Bonds, Panics, Backtracks on Demand to Remove IMF From Bailout Group, Issues Statement
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/06/2010 - 12:57The insane asylum has issued a statement. G-Pap has seen that his country would be Friendo'ed if Greece does not agree to austerity (which was part of the original agreement but whatever) and so has issued the following statement: "Responding to questions by journalists regarding actions taken by Greece to change the recent EU summit aid mechanism, the Greek Finance Minister clarified that there has not been any action on behalf of our country to change the terms of the recent EU Summit agreement." In the meantime rich Greeks have likely moved pretty much all their domestic deposits to some other Goldman Sachs controlled provenance.
- Comments: 38
- Reads: 4,291
Guest Post: Quantitative Easing And Its Effect On Inflation And The Economy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/06/2010 - 12:45The Fed's response to the financial meltdown was twofold: Interest rates were effectively set at zero, and the monetary base was increased 140%. While it is not known exactly what formula the Fed used to arrive at the 140% increase of the monetary base, the expansion from roughly 800 billion to 2.2 trillion roughly correlates with the asset backed securities since purchased by the Fed. Quantitative easing is nothing new, as between 2001 and 2006, Japan used QE to gradually increase the monetary base by about 70% in an attempt to spur loan growth and promote inflation. The extra liquidity provided by the Bank of Japan did increase lending and promote inflation, but once the liquidity was withdrawn, the deflationary pattern resumed. Apparently liquidity alone did little or nothing to promote long-term price stability.
- Comments: 58
- Reads: 4,968
Weakest 4 Week Auction Since July 2009 Closes at 0.16%, Bid To Cover Of 3.56 Lowest Since August 2009
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/06/2010 - 12:17
Another $34 billion 4-Week auction closed, whose high rate of 0.16% was not only the highest in 2010, but the highest since July of 2009. The Bond vigilantes are finally stirring, not only on the long end, but are starting to question the quality of Bernanke's alleged royal flush quintuple all in. The Directs come to save the day as usual, taking down 16.6% of the auction, well over double the one year average Direct Take Down of 7.2%. Today we also saw a $26 billion 52 week auction close, which just like the 4 Week ended at the weakest rate, 0.49, since 2009, June to be precise when the auction closed at 0.55%. The Bid To Cover came in roughly as expected at 3.66.
- Comments: 23
- Reads: 2,916
BLS Releases Latest Job Openings Data, Number Of Unemployed People Per Open Spot Increases In February To 5.5
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/06/2010 - 11:41
The number of unemployed persons per job opening has started to increase again, hitting 5.5 in February, as just disclosed by the BLS' most recent Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey. In February, the total number of job openings declined from 2.85 million to 2.72 million sequentially. The job openings rate was little changed over the month at 2.1 percent. The hires rate (3.1 percent) and the separations rate (3.1 percent) were also little changed in February. Most importantly, there is no improvement in the rate of Hiring, which declined from 4.09 million to 3.96 million. Attached are the main charts of relevance along with BLS commentary.
- Comments: 40
- Reads: 8,820
Greek 6M-1Y Curve Inverted, Spread Difference Between 3M And 6M almost 300 bps.
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/06/2010 - 11:00
As an indication of just how royally... busted... things are in Greece, note the most recent GGB curve below. While the 10s30s inversion is not too surprising as at this point nobody expects Greece to be solvent for 30 years, what is more amusing is the inversion of the 6 Month - 1 Year points. Furthermore, the surge between 3 and 6 months over almost 300 bps indicates that the market is pretty much convinced D-Day for Greece will occur, as we expected, sometime between July and September. Which is two months before the Mid-Terms.... And is two months before the deadline that the Israeli Deputy Secretary of Defense said Israel will likely have to attack Iran by. Second half of 2010 should be significantly more volatile than the past 12 months.
- Comments: 21
- Reads: 4,979
US Military Releases Official Investigation Results Relating To Wikileaks Iraq Massacre Video
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/06/2010 - 10:42The US Military issues its official retort to the Wikileaks video. Here are the official US Army recommendations based on that episode:
I ratify the appointment of the investigating officer, MAJ [Blanked out]
The recommendation that:
-(10a) Members of the press be encouraged or required to wear identifying vests or distinctive body armor within the MND-B AOR is (approved) (disapproved) (remanded to the BCT Cdr).
-(10b) Coalition Forces be notified when members of the press are operating in their AORs is (approved) (disapproved) (remanded to the BCT Cdr).
-(10c) Condolence payments be made to families of the two children wounded in this engagement is (approved) (disapproved) (remanded to the BCT Cdr).
I remand the matter to the 2/2ID Cdr for appropriate action.
- Comments: 178
- Reads: 6,580
Rumors That US-Targetted Greek Bond Issuance Scrapped, As Americans Have Purported "Short Party" In Greek Bonds
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/06/2010 - 10:03According to Bankingnews.gr, yesterday's disclosure that Greece would attempt to raise money by targeting US bond investors is now being refuted, and that this will likely "not happen." With record wides across the bond complex, it is not difficult to see why. In the meantime the entire high beta euro sovereign market is melting down. We are stunned US stocks are not up on this latest piece of horrible news: the market has proven quiet resilient in climbing the wall of sovereign bankruptcy in recent months. And now for some comic relief: after alienating Germans in perpetuity, Greece is now targeting the US, and the IMF and specifically its main backer - the US. I guess if you have to go down in flames, might as well try to burn all those who are trying to help you, if only you would cut your profligate ways... Which simple requirement, as was already disclosed, is out of the question. Bankingnews.gr is blaming the plunge in 10 Year GGB on American selling. We are not sure if a "Short Party" is the same as a "Pants Party." We don't want to find out.
- Comments: 16
- Reads: 3,349
Morning Musings From Art Cashin
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/06/2010 - 09:46"While the pundits and the papers try to force fit the economic data to the market action, currency controlled again.
Quite simply, you could credit the better numbers in the ISM service sector and in Pending Homes sales for moving stock prices higher. With a little finesse you could even credit that data with sending crude prices higher (economic recovery, etc.).
It is less easy to credit that data with helping to push gold higher. Today’s rule of thumb is that if the Troika (oil, gold and stocks) is moving in the same direction, the catalyst is currencies. If the Troika is up, odds are that it’s based on a weakening in the dollar. Conversely, if the Troika is down, you can bet the dollar is probably firming.
Is that boring and frustrating? You bet it is! But it is the dominant force in today’s markets." - Art Cashin
- Comments: 11
- Reads: 3,054
NYSE In Dire Need Of iPads, Some Floor Brokers Unable To Log In To Handheld Devices
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/06/2010 - 09:32We know it blends. The real question: is there an app for GETCO's DMMs to "see" the order flow ahead of everyone else? Time for an iPad push on the floor?

- Comments: 13
- Reads: 1,243
Collapse Accelerates: Greek 10 Year Hits New EMU Record, Bund Spread Now 55 bps Wider On The Day At 400 Bps
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/06/2010 - 09:13And scene - Greek 10 Years now at worst level since 1998. Well, that bailout thingy lasted all of 10 days. Next stop: US bond investors to gobble up every piece of Greek debt with Other People's Money.
Update: 405. Capitulation. Too bad that chapter in the CDS scapegoating manual is missing.
- Comments: 15
- Reads: 3,917
Frontrunning: April 1
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/06/2010 - 09:10- Typical headline these days: Euro weakens, Greek bonds slump on funding concern; stocks gain (Bloomberg)
- LBO capital raising plummets 81% from peak in 2008 (Bloomberg)
- Times gropes at hope with talk of job surge (Post)
- The man who knew all about Repo 105 even as our own Fed was retarded, RBA's Glen Stevens hikes discount rate to 4.25% to cool his overextracting economy - watch for the AUD carry trade (Bloomberg)
- A Florida doctor has told patients who voted for Barack Obama that they should seek care elsewhere (RCM)
- California's $500-billion pension time bomb (LA Times)
- Mighty America's 5 stages of rapid decline (MarketWatch)
- Tanker rates seen sinking 35% amid refinery cutbacks (Bloomberg)
- Comments: 5
- Reads: 1,444
Greek 10 Year Spread To Bunds Surges To Highest Since January 28, Hits 385, +35 Bps
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/06/2010 - 08:41Update: 392 now
As we expected yesterday, the Greek rebellion over having the IMF on boad of the bailout package is about to give the GGB curve some prolapse issues: GGBs are tumbling, and no - not from CDS buying - this is all cash sellers baby. Oh, and good luck Greece with selling your bonds to US investors - they may be dumb, but they are not that dumb (unless of course you make your Bond covenant lite, add a 6 month Call, and use at least half the proceeds for dividends to Greek dictatorshipholders). Also, bankingnews.gr says the spread is about to hit 400 bps imminently. Prepare to have a deja vu freak out over Greece all over again - maybe 3rd time is the charm.
- Comments: 16
- Reads: 1,982
Daily Highlights: 4.06.10
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/06/2010 - 08:21- Asian markets traded mostly higher with Australian market reaching an 18-month high.
- Australia raised its cash rate target a quarter percentage point to 4.25%.
- Bank of Japan may keep policy unchanged as Tankan shows economy improving.
- China says firmer yuan not key to U.S. trade imbalance.
- Euro declines on speculation Greece will struggle to raise further funds.
- Fed finds record-low OECD inflation.
- Interest rates climb; 10-year Treasury yield touches 4 percent for 1st time since June.
- Comments: 7
- Reads: 907
RANsquawk 6th April Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/06/2010 - 08:16RANsquawk 6th April Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
- Comments: 2
- Reads: 737
Guest Post: "Extend and Pretend": Where Are We After One Year Of The Suspension Of FASB Rules?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/05/2010 - 22:57In 2008, when Lehman went bankrupt because of all the “toxic assets” on its balance sheet, the severe credit crisis that happened as a result was because everyone realized that Lehman was the canary in the coal mine. All of the American banking system was insolvent, for more or less the same reason: Assets on their books simply were not worth anything close to their nominal value. Between September, 2008, and March 2009, the Fed backstopped the entire US banking system—but it still wasn’t enough. The losses were too great, the holes in the balance sheets too big.
So on April 2, 2009, a key FASB rule was suspended: Specifically, rule 157 was suspended, related to the marking of assets to market value—the so-called “mark to market” rule. However, ever since April 2, 2009, when the FASB rules were suspended, the American banking system has been floating on nothing by air. By suspending rule 157, none of the banks have had to admit that they’re insolvent. With the suspension of mark-to-market, accounting rules are now basically mark-to-make-believe.
- Comments: 68
- Reads: 8,905


