Tim Geithner Says The Administration Will Offer A Fannie And Freddie Reform Package Next Year
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/24/2010 - 11:36Juts headlines for now, paraphrasing Geithner's comments in the House Budget Q&A. We are confident the package will be offered only if perpetuation of the Ponzi scheme is safe and sound. Should the incremental 50% in debt hit the books at the current run-rate, America will likely become a B2/B rated junk credit.
- Comments: 36
- Reads: 2,399
Full Bernanke Testimony And Live Webcast
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/24/2010 - 11:26Chairman Frank, Ranking Member Bachus, and other members of the Committee, I am pleased to present the Federal Reserve's semiannual Monetary Policy Report to the Congress.
Although the recession officially began more than two years ago, U.S. economic activity contracted particularly sharply following the intensification of the global financial crisis in the fall of 2008. Concerted efforts by the Federal Reserve, the Treasury Department, and other U.S. authorities to stabilize the financial system, together with highly stimulative monetary and fiscal policies, helped arrest the decline and are supporting a nascent economic recovery. Indeed, the U.S. economy expanded at about a 4 percent annual rate during the second half of last year... Etc
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New Home Sales Plunge To All Time Record Low, 309K SAAR Is Huge 11.2% Sequential Drop, On 355K Estimates
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/24/2010 - 11:13
The housing sector just went back from critical to comatose - U.S. new-home sales plunged in January, setting a record low and erasing all gains made in the market during the past year. Well, if new homes can't sell now with all the current bells and whistles, they pretty much never will. One idea - lower prices. Oh wait, that would go against the first directive of the Federal Reserve. Equities still a little shell shocked, and unable to fathom that the double dip is now official.
- Comments: 67
- Reads: 7,701
Guest Post: If I Were Federal Reserve Chairman I Would …
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/24/2010 - 11:04I think I’d shoot myself. [Laughing] I don’t think I’d go to work in the morning. If I were Chairman of the Federal Reserve I would let free market forces unfold. I would let rates rise to where they should rise. These are not normal rates that we have now. I would have to raise rates. I’d have to do it over time. - Fred Hickey
- Comments: 44
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Art Cashin Morning Thoughts
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/24/2010 - 10:36Tuesday’s selloff took the S&P down through the initial support of 1098/1102. The intra-day low of 1092 rested on the top of the next support 1088/1092. Several top technicians note that the bounce from the February low has had trouble with the 50 day moving averages. The S&P needs to stay above 1082 to keep the rebound alive. For today, we’ll start with support at 1088/1092 with a backup at 1080/1083. Resistance looks like 1102/1106 and then 1113/1118. - Art Cashin
- Comments: 8
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Mortgage Zombie Freddie Mac Reports Q4 Loss; Another $5 Billion In Taxpayer Money Out The Window To Support Fake Home Prices
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/24/2010 - 10:22Freddie Mac had positive net worth of $4.4 billion at December 31, 2009, compared to positive net worth of $9.4 billion at September 30, 2009. As a result of the positive net worth, no additional funding was required from Treasury under the terms of the Purchase Agreement for the fourth quarter. The decline in positive net worth for the fourth quarter of 2009 resulted from the fourth quarter 2009 net loss of $6.5 billion and the dividend payment of $1.3 billion to Treasury on the senior preferred stock, partially offset by a $2.7 billion decrease in unrealized losses recorded in accumulated other comprehensive income (loss) (AOCI) primarily driven by improved values on the company's available-for-sale (AFS) securities. Freddie Mac had a net worth deficit of $30.6 billion at December 31, 2008.
- Comments: 29
- Reads: 2,934
Frontrunning: February 24
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/24/2010 - 10:10- Nationwide strike paralyzes Greece, clashes between rioters and Police begin (WSJ, Bloomberg)
- Protests have spread to Spain (El Pais, h/t Paul)
- Dutch snap elections scheduled for June 9 (FT)
- Geithner may give regulator leeway in applying volcker rule (Bloomberg) - Note: Vince Reinhart is co-author of the seminal "Conducting Monetary Policy at Very Low Short-Term Interest Rates" in which the Fed considered buying equities and foreign sovereing bonds
- Reinhart: Bernanke's confidence game (The American)
- Home purchase loan demand at lowest since 1997 (Reuters)

- Comments: 22
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Daily Highlights: 2.24.10
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/24/2010 - 09:19- Asian shares fall for first time in three days on US consumer confidence.
- Dollar weakens versus Euro on speculation Fed to hold rates.
- German business confidence unexpectedly drops as snow hampers retail sales.
- Hong Kong raises tax on luxury homes to cool market after 29% price gain.
- Japan January export growth accelerates to 40.9% as overseas demand drives recovery.
- Oil hovers below $79 in Asia after US crude supplies drop, suggesting demand up.
- Treasury said it will borrow $200B and leave money on deposit with the Fed.
- Comments: 9
- Reads: 1,691
RANsquawk 24th February Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/24/2010 - 09:16RANsquawk 24th February Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
- Comments: 1
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Guest Post - Is Ben Bernanke Smart Enough To Be A CEO
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/23/2010 - 22:55Ben Bernanke has got to be laughing it up after being reappointed to another term as Federal Reserve chairman. What else could we expect from the ex-lawyers and lifetime Beltway bandits voting on global monetary policy? As he starts his second term, I’m once again reminded about how supremely unqualified this man is for the job. Prior to becoming Fed chairman, Ben Bernanke basically had zero experience outside academia. His resume only includes three full-time years working for the Federal Reserve and eight months on George W. Bush’s Council of Economic Advisors. The other 23 years of his career were spent teaching college.
- Comments: 67
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The $100 Trillion Problem: Can America Learn From Chile Before It's Too Late?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/23/2010 - 22:14
Jose Pinera provides an Entitlement State 101 lecture, in which Chile's former Labor and Social Security Minister demystifies the U.S.'s $100 trillion unfunded benefits problem. Since Pinera is the man who many years ago privatized Chile's entitlement system, America, and the entire Western system, which for the past century has been relying on unfunded liabilities to provide benefits to the population in the hopes that funding day will never come, may do well to listen to what he has to say. His message: the American way of life, more so than anything else, in which reckless spending, living on credit and not saving for the future, is precisely why the US will be bankrupt very soon. Chile swallowed the bitter pill 30 years ago and after a lot of pain, managed to get out of the hole. Will enabler state #1, America, fail where this allegedly "backward" South American country succeeded?
- Comments: 97
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Six Questions For Ben Bernanke
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/23/2010 - 21:06Tomorrow's Bernanke testimony will be eagerly watched by all, not so much for anything that may be revealed in the prepared remarks (those will not disclose anything not already known), nor for the Q&A (because unfortunately the people in Congress who understanding the first thing about monetary policy can be counted on two fingers), but because it is not every day that the undisputed and underrepresented ruler of the not so free world gets to sit down in a kabuki theater in which he pretends to be accountable to some 300+ million peasants and a couple million compulsive gamblers and kleptomaniacs. All in all good, wholesome, TiVoable, and, luckily, just biannual fun. Yet for those who hope to get something out of this meeting than merely a popcorn overdose, we recommend the following Testimony Preview from Goldman's Hatzius & McKelvey, which goes through not only the background of the spectacle but focuses on some oddly relevant questions which our Congressmen may be wise enough to ask. We point out the latter, because we know full well that nobody will ever ask the really relevant questions (until it is too late), unless of course Alan "Taz" Grayson is wearing his dollar tie, In which case all bets are off.
- Comments: 24
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ABC Consumer Comfort Index Drops To -50, New 2010 Low And Just Four Point Above All Time Record Low
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/23/2010 - 19:33
Not a good day for consumer confidence. First, the vastly irrelevant Conference Board crashed and burned earlier, dropping nearly 10 points below consensus expectations after its only driver, the market, turned down in January, showing just how unreliable this index is, and now the ABC Consumer Comfort came in at the "dreaded" -50 level (and don't get us started on UMich, whose entire rolodex consists of the home phone numbers of Blankfein, Dimon and Pandit). The is the lowest reading for the index since -51 recorded in October 2009, and just 4 points above its 24 year record low. Of the three main readings in the index, the Personal Finance component declined even as Buying Conditions and the National Economy both stayed at depressed levels. Notably, the racial gap among the respondents who view the economy as being in total shambles has all but disappeared, even as increasingly more Democrats perceive the economy as worse off than Republicans. Funny, isn't the president a Democrat?
- Comments: 76
- Reads: 5,217
Is The Federal Reserve Buying Greek Bonds?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/23/2010 - 18:26With Geoffrey Batt
With everyone's attention drawn to each and every step the IMF takes, while contemplating the imminent Greek bailout, which without exception and with the grace of a drunk 3-ton bull in a China store, leaves nothing but annihilation and currency boards in its wake, is the popular opinion once again getting the Houdini treatment courtesy of the mainstream media? One thing learned over the past year is that everything is a distraction for something else, and that something else, quite usually without failure, ends up being the Marriner Eccles building on Constitution Avenue in D.C. What we refer to is disclosure from a paper written by none other than the Maestro Jr, in 2004, titled "Conducting Monetary Policy at Very Low Short-Term Interest Rates" (oddly appropriate). In this paper, Bernanke discusses not only the possibility of purchasing corporate assets (bonds and stocks), but emphasizes that one other security class which the Fed may be inclined to acquire under conditions such as those today, and has an explicit authority to do so, are foreign government bonds. After singlehandedly rescuing every Wall Street bonus in the prior year, is the Fed now the shadow backstop for the Greek economy as well?
Cutting straight to the chase, and to Bernanke's musings:
- Comments: 78
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Erin Callan Out Of Credit Suisse - Charlie Breaks Another One, CNBC Likely Fuming
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/23/2010 - 17:11From Fox Business News and its latest addition, Charlie Gasparino:
[Erin Callan] went to Credit Suisse and then she went on a lengthy leave of absence. It was pretty bizarre—she was gone from the scene, until, from what I understand—I checked yesterday—December 31st she’s officially out of there.”
Note: not a single mention of this on CNBC yet. Of course, nobody gives a rat's ass about Lehman's former CFO, or this news in particular. What is interesting, are the dynamics at play now that CNBCOMASTAGANDA (49/51) is stuck without even one investigative reporter in possession of even half a rolodex. Sure, flashing wire headlines are great, but anybody can do that, even fringe bloggers. Absent Rick Santelli (and on occasion David Faber), the network does not have a single person worth unmuting the TV for. And if we want to listen to propaganda ad nauseam we are sure someone will recreate Goebbels constant radio droning on some 24/7 stream relatively soon. And this is precisely what Bloomberg TV and Fox Business are waiting to pounce on.
- Comments: 58
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