Chart Of The "Keynesian Normal": America's Tragic Divergence
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2013 - 17:56
There is a saying that debt can't buy growth. When it comes to the US, that saying is absolutely correct: only lots and lots of debt can "buy growth."
As the chart below shows, since officially leaving the gold standard in 1971, annual GDP growth has outpaced the growth of federal debt on just 11 occasions, and of these half were during the dot com boom of the late 1990s. Obviously this chart would look far worse if instead of just federal debt - which is merely a portion of total we used total credit market debt (which is some three time greater). But for illustrative purposes, merely Federal debt will suffice, because the parabolic "endphase" divergence between the two indexed lines - one showing GDP growth, the other debt growth - says more about the final outcome of this tragic Keynesian experiment than 1000 meandering, meaningless, trolling essays written by Nobel-prize winning economists ever could.
- Comments: 51
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Bass On Japan's Turbo QE: "It Won't Be Enough"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2013 - 17:12
If JGB investors 'believe' as Richard Koo earlier noted, in the BoJ's new actions and Abenomics (to double the monetary base and generate inflation), then, Kyle Bass explains, a rational investor is likely to sell a portion if not all of them. The BoJ only has JPY10 trillion cushion (after the JPY60 trillion deficit) to soak up this 'rational investor paradox' selling and this is dwarfed by the holdings of JGBs in the largest Japanese banks (who are now starting to rotate away from JGBs into foreign bonds). Simply out, Bass exclaims, they are going to have make the plan even bigger... if they are to successfully contain rates. With a quadrillion JPY of JGBs out there, if a mere 5% is sold (from 'Abe'lievers) then Japan's Turbo QE is not big enough which leads to the paradoxical increase in the QQE, moar inflationary 'belief', and moar selling pressure... The BoJ has been in the market every day but 2 since April 4th trying to hold rates down (and is failing)...
- Comments: 73
- Reads: 28,640
CME Hikes Nikkei-Associated Margins By 33%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2013 - 16:52Two years ago it was only gold and silver that saw the CME's wrath on a daily, and sometimes hourly basis. Back then, however, it was due to soaring prices. Today, it is due to the bone-crushing price collapse in the Nikkei which has just seen the CME hike most Nikkei-related outright futures margins by 33%. So not only will those who resume trading Nikkei-related products in the futures market see a big loss in their P&Ls, they will also have to post some 33% more margin. We can only hope they still have some collateral and aren't margined up 100%. That would not be good for the Japanese pennystockmarket and "experiment" no matter how much good luck Jens Weidmann wishes them.
- Comments: 35
- Reads: 4,921
"Dead Cat Bounce" Or "Pause That Refreshes"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2013 - 16:06
While the off-the-lows mentality of today's market performance was heralded by most as a signal that the BTFD'rs are back, we gently remind them that the Nikkei (futures) did not bounce at all... In fact S&P futures bounced to a rather eerily perfect 38.2% Fibonacci retracement of the overnight plunge and then faded into the close. All the major indices managed to get back to unchanged on the day (but the S&P 500 was the last to make it and instantly turned around once it did). Credit markets opened gap wider and did not bounce back anything like stocks. Treasuries sold off modestly from their pre-opening levels then drifted lower in yield into the close (ending down 2-3bps on the day but up 6-7bps on the week). The USD weakened most of the day and commodities gained on the day with gold and silver now up over 2% on the week. VIX fell from the open to the close but ended the day higher as we suspect hedges were lifted and exposure reduced into the bounce.
- Comments: 85
- Reads: 11,009
A Culture Of Fear And Intimidation...
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2013 - 15:38
Last week when Simon Black arrived in Bangladesh, the immigration officials there were positively ecstatic to see a foreign tourist entering the country. It’s not quite the same in the Land of the Free. In fact, before they even let people in the country, they program us to be afraid and intimidated. For one thing, all the immigration officers are armed. There’s absolutely no reason for a government agent to carry a loaded pistol when all he does is stamp a passport. This is extremely uncommon in the rest of the world. Only in the Land of the Free. When you step back and look at the whole government apparatus, it’s apparent that this culture of fear and intimidation applies across the entire spectrum. A particularly fitting quote, most frequently credited to Thomas Jefferson– “Where the people fear the government, you have tyranny. Where the government fears the people you have liberty.” It’s absolutely true.
- Comments: 220
- Reads: 15,497
Quote Of The Day
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2013 - 15:07The only sane central banker in the world, the Bundesbank's Jens Weidmann, take the prize for today's quote of the day with the following:
- ECB'S WEIDMANN WISHES JAPAN `GOOD LUCK IN THEIR EXPERIMENTS'
So do we. They will need it.
- Comments: 61
- Reads: 10,659
Full Text And Wordcloud Of Obama's "Don't Drone Me, Bro" Speech
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2013 - 14:39
One can read "The Lethal Presidency of Barack Obama" to get a true sense of Obama's "the best defense is a relentless drone everyone offense, ignore collateral damage and take out a few Americans in the process" policy. Or one can stare at rising stawks and enjoy their Obamaphones. Obe can't have both.
- Comments: 168
- Reads: 10,309
Richard Koo Warns Of "Beginning Of The End" For Japanese Economy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2013 - 14:23
The surge in Japanese long-term interest rates is likely causing some lost sleep among bond market participants and policymakers (despite their ignorance of the moves in the BoJ minutes) as Nomura's Richard Koo notes, if this trend continues (now added to by the collapse in stock prices) it could well mark the “beginning of the end” for the Japanese economy. Although the stock market has (until now) welcomed the yen’s continued slide against the dollar, Koo warns that this trend needs to be carefully monitored, as simultaneous declines in JGBs and the yen can be interpreted as a loss of faith in the Japanese government and the Bank of Japan. The biggest concerns are that the extreme volatility in Japanese stocks and bonds is occurring at a time when the BOJ was buying large quantities of government bonds. It is now clear that even large-scale BOJ purchases of JGBs cannot stop yields from rising. Simply put, Koo notes, the BoJ needs to rein itself in and state it will not stand for overshooting inflation expectations or the 'bad' rise in rates could crush both the nascent recovery and the nation's banking system.
- Comments: 79
- Reads: 17,187
The Winners And Losers In Today's NEE And AEP Flash Crashes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2013 - 14:04
(Milli)seconds after today's market open, utilities NextEra Energy (NEE) and American Electric Power (AEP) did what most stocks in the New Normal do when there is an unexpected event (like a 4 sigma plunge in the Nikkei): they flash crashed. What is different about AEP and NEE is that unlike most other daily stocks that implode in a matter of milliseconds, the collective market cap of the two companies was nearly $60 billion, which in turn sent the broader utilities index down over 10%. Of course, for a few milliseconds it was more like $30 billion: because that is how much in capitalization was lost in under one second, when today's flash crash du jour struck. But fear not: anyone who got stopped out under $76.19 in NEE and under $46.03 in AEP are the "lucky" ones, and the trades were marked as "Aberrant." Alas since that simply means the trades are excluded from daily high and low charts, that is hardly comforting for anyone.
- Comments: 38
- Reads: 8,629
UBS On Japan - Are You 'Abe'liever?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2013 - 13:42
We totally get why many are excited by the recent cyclical improvement in the Japanese economy. However, just because industrial production is turning up on the back of exports and 1Q GDP grew more than expected doesn’t mean Abeconomics is working. Most of the improvement in Japan is probably best described as a standard cyclical improvement in the aftermath of very depressed growth that was also heavily influenced by last year’s downturn in global trade. There are definitely signs that Japan’s economy are improving cyclically. However, as UBS notes, structurally, demographics remain a major headwind to raising aggregate demand. We feel many investors have not yet considered what slower growth for Asia will mean for Japan in the medium term. This will make it more difficult to raise aggregate demand above supply since capacity is sticky and Japan already has excess capacity. So for Abe-believers there will be fuel to support their optimism. However, once you move beyond that and think about what comes afterwards things look more challenging.
- Comments: 23
- Reads: 6,101
Oklahoma Tornado Devastation: Before And After Picture
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2013 - 13:12
The biggest story of the early part of the week was the massive 1+ mile-wide Tornado ploughing through a suburb of Oklahoma City leading to dozens of deaths and billions in damage. And while the story has already faded from the 15 minutes of collective random access memory, the following aerial picture showing just how devastating nature can be when it so chooses, is one to behold.
- Comments: 212
- Reads: 24,101
"Terminal State Of Broken"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2013 - 12:57
"The world has taken on a “virtual reality” with no reference to what really is. This is the biggest market power play of smoke and mirrors in history. It is happening because the financial system is in a terminal state of broken."
- Comments: 88
- Reads: 13,957
The Nikkei's Collapse: A 1987 Refresher
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2013 - 12:29
Last night's awe-full plunge in the Nikkei 225 may have come as a shock to many but it was right on cue if one believes in the past as a guide to the future. As ForexLive notes, the striking correlation between the current rampage in the Japanese stock market and that of 1987 is stunning. In 1987, the index had a remarkably smooth 89% rally that began in early November, lasted 186 days, and was followed by a 9.1% correction. Currently, the Nikkei 225 has had a remarkably smooth 85% rally that began in late October and has lasted 191 days culminating with last night's 9% correction. If past continues to be prologue, last night's wipe out should be entirely forgiven within three days and promptly forgotten (as a transitory blip). If, however, this time really is different, well...
- Comments: 58
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Anthony Weiner To Prop Up NYC Mayoral Campaign With Many More Naked Pictures Of Himself
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2013 - 12:01
Anothny Weiner, NYC's muppet former congressman, and as we reported yesterday, the man who following his disgraceful fall from grace announced his mayoral campaign on YouTube, continues to be the gift that keeps on giving... if mostly naked pictures of his anatomy to various women. As the WaPo reports, "Former congressman and newly announced New York mayoral candidate Anthony Weiner (D) said in an interview Thursday morning with WNYC-FM that there could be women coming forward with more e-mails or photos from the inappropriate digital conversations that led to his resignation in 2011." In other words, where there was one naked photo, there will be many, many more.
- Comments: 153
- Reads: 10,336
European Stocks Dive Most In 10 Months
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2013 - 11:40
There was quite a bit of dispersion among European equity indices today (with Italy worst and Spain actually holding up - albeit down 1.4%) but the European equivalent of the S&P 500 (the BE500) dropped 2% - its biggest single-day plunge in 10 months. Credit markets - just as in the US - have been warning of a disconnect for two weeks and today's equity dive has more than halved that divergence. European sovereigns are wider by 10-15bps. Europe's VIX is over 2 vols higher at 18.4% (its highest in a month). European financial stocks dropped by their most in 3 months and European high-yield credit worsened by its most in 3 months. A late-day ramp made things alook a little better than they had earlier with a 100 pip rally in EURUSD off earlier lows seemingly providing some help.
- Comments: 43
- Reads: 5,162


