Goldman, Morgan Stanley And Citi "Demonstratively" Delayed For Obama Meeting Due To Fog
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/14/2009 - 11:59It is good to see who is back in charge. Obama is patiently sitting in the conference room playing Brick Breaker on his Bbery. This probably means that private jets are finally back. Also, not a good endorsement of the Acela train.
"Executives from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS), Morgan Stanley (MS) and Citigroup Inc. (C) are delayed as they try to make it to a meeting Monday with President Barack Obama at the White House, Fox Business Network reports. Flights for Goldman Chief Executive Lloyd Blankfein, Morgan Stanley CEI John Mack and Citigroup Chairman Richard Parsons are being delayed by fog."
- Comments: 53
- Reads: 4,167
NY Gov. Paterson: "For The First Time Ever, At The End Of December New York State Will Have A Negative Cash Balance"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/14/2009 - 11:47
David Paterson speaks on CNBC. Not good news for New York inhabitants, or NY CDS shorts. Or not... NY State CDS hit an all time wide of 357 bps in December. They are now around 140. Any escalation of NY's fiscal crisis may simply imply more and more taxpayer bailouts. Swaption time.
- Comments: 31
- Reads: 4,094
Weekly Outlook
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/14/2009 - 11:25
We start the outlook for the week outlining Gold and EURUSD. Gold exhibits a lot of divergence on the hourly chart and has seen almost down to the dollar the Elliott extension for the 5th leg of the bearish impulse from the highs at 1,113.2. We expect a retracement towards 1,165/1,170 which corresponds to the 50% retracement from the highs and a move back to the wave 4 of lower order. If that zone holds on the upside we expect the market will then dip to 1,070 which is the next key support on the downside. Similarly, EURUSD shows divergence on the hourly and 3-hour charts. In terms of sub-structure we cannot exclude a final push to 1.4565, but overall we think the market should bounce this week to retest the 50-day moving average resistance at 1.4880. The slope of the 50-dma is in the process of flattening, and the daily MACD is now negative. This could indicate a much deeper correction is in the works on the bigger picture. This remains our view. We would recommend selling a bounce in the 1.4880 area if we do get there.
- Comments: 5
- Reads: 2,347
The Sovereign CDS-To-Leverage Correlation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/14/2009 - 11:08
As more and more of the broad public figures out what this thing called sovereign CDS is, the next logical question (especially for algos and correlation desks) is whether or not sovereign leveraged levels can be gamed, or is there any specific correlation that can be arbed as the dominos start to fall (not everyone has the luxury of printing limitless amount of the world's reserve currency). Below we present a chart correlating the CDS with the Debt to GDP ratios of various indicative countries. The chart excludes the outliers of Argentina, Venezuela and the Ukraine, which even though having less than 100% Debt-to-GDP are all trading 1000 bps and wider.
Is there a correlation here? You decide. The R2 is 0.5143, which probably means that algos will gradually start to flatline the correlation as more and more sovereign CDS-trading players emerge.
- Comments: 10
- Reads: 2,904
With Dubai Temporarily Contained, All Eyes Shift To Greece
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/14/2009 - 10:47
Today at 7pm, Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou will address “the economy, the productive model, the credibility of the state mechanism, the confidence of our European partners and, above all, the daily life and prospects of Greeks." The reason for this extraordinary measure (keep in mind this is Greece, not D.C., where the president provides hourly updates on the latest BLS releases) is the recent plunge in Greek stocks and government bonds, and culminating with several rating agencies either downgrading the country (Fitch) or putting it on downgrade review (S&P). Most recently, the yield on Greek 10 years hit 5.295% on concerns the country's fiscal deficit of 12.7% will makes its already extreme leverage even more unmanageable. And the biggest wildcard: the massive reliance of Greek banks on ECB repos backed by potentially soon to be much lass valuable government debt.
- Comments: 17
- Reads: 3,269
Frontrunning: December 14
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/14/2009 - 09:58- The bank with the worst balance sheet remembers it is bonus time, systemic risk be screwed, pays back TARP (Bloomberg)
- Matt Taibbi takes on... Steve Liesman in a blast from the past (The Nation)
- And all is good again: Nakheel bonds double from 51 to 109.5 (Bloomberg)
- Exxon to buy XTO energy for $31 billion in stock, not a single dollar in cash (Bloomberg)
- Goldman fueled AIG gamles (WSJ)
- Tullett Prebon will help brokers move out of U.K. (Bloomberg)
- Comments: 10
- Reads: 2,123
RANsquawk 14th December Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. (Dubai Bailout Special)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/14/2009 - 09:25RANsquawk 14th December Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. (Dubai Bailout Special)
- Comments: 5
- Reads: 938
Daily Highlights: 12.14.09
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/14/2009 - 09:24- Asian markets rebounded Monday after Dubai received $10B in financing from Abu Dhabi.
- China launches landmark natural gas pipeline tapping into Central Asia's vast reserves.
- Dubai gets $10B in financing from Abu Dhabi, part to be used to pay down Dubai World debt.
- Euro gains after Dubai gets $10 billion of aid from Abu Dhabi.
- France's Sarkozy to unveil details of euro35B plan to spur investment in universities.
- Germany's budget sees a record of $125B in new borrowing next year, spending rise of 10.5%.
- Comments: 1
- Reads: 1,203
Abu Dhabi Agrees To Fund $10 Billion For Dubai World Debt
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/14/2009 - 00:39The government of Abu Dhabi and the Central Bank of the United Arab Emirates agreed to provide $10 billion to the Dubai Financial Support Fund, allowing Dubai World to repay $4.1 billion of Islamic sukuk bonds that are due today, the government of Dubai said in an e-mailed statement. Statement from Dubai Supreme Fiscal Committee attached.
- Comments: 49
- Reads: 5,262
A Simple Yet Comprehensive View Of America's Unemployed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/13/2009 - 23:33
Lately there has been much back and forth over the definitions of (un)employment, of improving (deteriorating) trends therein, and of just what is going on with the labor pool in the U.S. Due to the lack of a definitive data series that tracks comprehensive unemployment over time, the possibility for loose interpretation exists and is (ab)used by many. In order to hopefully mitigate a lot of the debate on the margin, here is probably one of the more comprehensive charts available, which tracks Initial Claims, Continuing Claims and Emergency Unemployment Compensation (the last being somewhat notorious lately, and a datapoint that has to be considered due to the skyrocketing exhaustion rate) since 1967. The result does not need much commentary.
- Comments: 89
- Reads: 10,850
Obama Hypocrisy Meter Off The Charts: "I Did Not Run For Office To Be Helping Out A Bunch Of Fat Cat Bankers On Wall Street"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/13/2009 - 18:59"I Did Not Run For Office To Be Helping Out A Bunch Of Fat Cat Bankers On Wall Street. Some people on Wall Street still don't get it" - Barack Obama
Unfortunately, the people on Main Street get it, and at this point they can see right through your ever-escalating hypocrisy.
- Comments: 266
- Reads: 16,235
The Next Shoes To Drop In Commercial Real Estate - Part 2
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/13/2009 - 16:59Continuing our series of impending Commercial Real Estate debacles, today we focus on CMBX 3 (H1 2007 transactions). As Fitch disclosed on Friday, the November delinquency rate across CMBS increased by 43 bps to 4.29%, while more than double, 9.16% of the entire Fitch universe, was in special servicing. Of this CMBX 3 (together with 4) hold the brunt of the collapse in CRE. Of the 25 deals in CMBX 3, those performing the worst as of the latest remittance report were:
- COMM 06-C8, with 18.3% of all deals delinquent or in special servicing ($680.4 million of $3.7 billion total)
- CSMC 07-C1, with 16.5% of all deals delinquent or in special servicing ($552.3 million of $3.3 billion total)
- LBUBS 07-C1, with 15.6% of all deals delinquent or in special servicing(576.4 million of $3.7 billion total)
And highlighted below are the properties most indicative of the CRE collapse within CMBX 3, and in CRE in general. Once again, this is merely a sample with many other properties already in foreclosure and/or delinquency.
- Comments: 59
- Reads: 8,216
Italian Prime Minister Berlusconi Attack At Milan Rally Condemned As "Act Of Terrorism"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/13/2009 - 14:42
Populist anger is starting to awake all over the world, as the G-20's actions continue favoring only the "aristocratic" banker class. We hope Berlusconi's mistresses will still find him just as attractive even with a black eye, bleeding lips and busted teeth.
- Comments: 171
- Reads: 13,118
Steve Liesman: Round Two
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/13/2009 - 12:47With a charactersitic [sic] bout of nerve over wisdom, let me offer just one more reply:
What exactly are you arguing about here? Whether I'm a jerk or a tool? Is that even worthy of a single reply? Ok, don't answer that.
What would seem to be worth everyone's time is the focus on the issue raised by the essential disagrement between Rick and myself: are the jobs numbers improving or not and what is the right investment play relative to the direction of jobs and the economy?
-Steve Liesman
- Comments: 188
- Reads: 9,344
Some Questions For Goldman's Lucas van Praag And David Viniar
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/13/2009 - 00:41Earlier today the general public got one of its first public disclosures of what Goldman believes its prop trading operation contributes to the firm's top and bottom line. For those uninitiated with banker lingo, prop trading is basically the profit that Goldman makes by transacting exclusively as a hedge fund: this is not agency or facilitation revenue, but merely principal positions that represent balance sheet risk for the firm. Of course, with the Fed having made clear that America would fail before Goldman does, the definition of risk as it applies to Goldman is laughable. Yet considering that Goldman must disclose a trading VaR , or value at risk on a quarterly basis, which over the past year has averaged over $200 million, one can back into what the actual prop capital and revenue generated by prop strategies is (VaR is simply a statistical calculation of how much Goldman would stand to lose if a "one in twenty" event occurred. It is not the maximum loss risk that Goldman has exposure to - a good example of a terminal event, i.e., one which would leave the firm bankrupt overnight, or aVaR of infinity with a narrower confidence range, would be something like the recently notorious "what if" of an aborted AIG bankruptcy, courtesy of Tim Geithner). Goldman's head of PR claims the Goldman's prop trading accounts for only 12% of net revenue. Zero Hedge disagrees, and we would like to pose a question to Mr. van Praag which we hope Goldman will answer for us in order to refute our observation that Goldman may be disingenuous in its public statements.
- Comments: 58
- Reads: 8,403


