From The Rumor Bag
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/03/2009 - 08:37Is AIG's office about to get raided? Anyone with a camera phone at or about Pine Street please be on your guard for a slew of trenchcoated gentlemen carrying boxes full of toxic CDOs.
Guest Post: Dr. Blankfein, Or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love Goldman Sachs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/03/2009 - 08:11The Financial Crisis was a Hoax. The global casino is open again.
No worries! You actually believed there was a problem when Paulson and Bernanke threatened Congress last year with Martial Law; to blast the U.S. economy back to the 16th century; to crash the market unless ransom was paid requiring each American to fork over $100,000, give or take, dollars in impossible-to-payback future loans today to add to the hundreds of thousands each American already owes forever.
HAHAHA. It's all good, bro.
Whitney Tilson And High Frequency Trading v3
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/03/2009 - 07:41Whitney Tilson continues investigating High Frequency Trading
Frontrunning: August 3
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/03/2009 - 07:27- Goldman Sachs' reputation tarnished (FT)
- HFT Recap:
- Paul Krugman - Rewarding bad actors (NYT)
- RIse of hte machines (Economist)
- Countering High-Frequency Trading (Strategic Reasoning)
- Tradeanator 2: Settlement Day (YouTube)
- Wall Street profits from trades with the Fed (FT)
Market Is Reflecting Much More Volatility In Rates
Submitted by Cornelius on 08/03/2009 - 07:08Despite VIX on a steady decrease since late 2008, the market has seen a strong upsurge in rates vol over the summer.
Daily Highlights: 8.03.09
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/03/2009 - 07:05- Asian stocks rise, as Mitsubishi UFJ leads banks higher; Nissan advances.
- Bank, auto shares jump in Japan; Topix hits 9-month high but Nikkei fractionally lower.
- Britain's manufacturing sector grew in July; pound rallies on the news.
- Cash for Clunkers program could end unless Senate approves $2B in addln funding.
- China's Manufacturing grows in July as lending, stimulus counter slump in exports.
- China shares hit 14-month high as surveys show manufacturing is expanding.
Guest Post: Building Intuition Into The Macro Environment
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/02/2009 - 19:48"As asset prices begin to reflect real earnings, top-line sales, and restricted credit conditions, where will the market find optimism and upward pressure? Does American business have any more rabbits in the hat? After the lay-offs, cost cutting, and efficiency measures, will there be demand for their products in the face of worsening macro data? The question, simply, remains: Where will the money come from?"
On The Triviality Of Campaign Promises And "Letting The Process Work Its Way Through"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/02/2009 - 16:03Some more memorable blue pill moments brought to you courtesy of Washington D.C.
The Cost Of High Frequency Trading
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/02/2009 - 11:36Lately, as the topic of High Frequency Trading has gotten front page prominence, there has been much confusion as to the top line impact on traders that utilize HFT methods, and inversely how much of a "toll" on investors high frequency trading is. In other words: what is the cost of liquidity?
Weekend Reading
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/02/2009 - 10:08- More on GDP:
- GDP Report is just plain wrong (Chris Martenson)
- Wacky waving inflatable arm-flailing GDP report (Melting Pot Project)
- Been down long long it looks like up (Econbrowser, h/t Paul)
- Falling Imports versus falling Exports (Ritholtz)
- The next brewing scandal: Chase serves itself first in mortgage mods; MBS bond holders up in ARMs (DebtWire, h/t Paul) - "You have Barney Frank and the government raising all this noise about hedge funds and investors, and you have Chase … taking half the borrowers’ interest payment each month"
- Who is Capco? (NYT)
Radio Zero: Rats Chewing The Wires
Submitted by Marla Singer on 08/01/2009 - 21:30Not sure this will hold up, the new internet connection being iffy. We'll give it a try. Radio Zero returns. 11:00 ET. URL 15 minutes before. As usual.
Listen: http://89.248.169.94:8000/listen.pls
Flirt: aim:goim?screenname=radiozh
Goldman Correlation Desk Makes Mint On CIT CDS, Sallie Mae Up Next
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/01/2009 - 14:32One of Wall Street's biggest whipping boys since the post-Lehman days, culminating with the insanity in credit markets in early March, have undoubtedly been correlation desks. These trading outfits, which hit their heyday in 2004-2005, when CDS spreads were nice and tight, and negative convexity would at most bring a 20-30bps widening, would repackage securitization tranches whereby usually they kept the senior and equity wrap around a mezzanine piece, which was in turn sold to investors. Buyers of mezz tranches, whose junior and senior layers would become impaired after a 15% and 30% cumulative losses, respecitvely, saw what the definition of a world of pain is first hand recently, and effectively shut down the correlation business at many major banks. But not all.
Annaly Capital: Sherlock Holmes And The Mystery Of The Green Shoots
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/01/2009 - 13:52"In literature, it is difficult to find a protagonist more endearing, clever and flawed than Sherlock Holmes. Peerless in his attention to detail and his limitless powers of perception, what appears clear cut and evident to his trained senses bewilders those of lesser skills. His foil, Dr. Watson, his counterpart at Scotland Yard, the plodding Inspector Lestrade, and his arch enemy Professor Moriarty all wither in the face of Holmes’ masterful powers of logic and deduction. That said, I believe even the formidable Mr. Holmes would have a problem figuring out the truth behind the current economic state of affairs."
A Realistic Look At GDP
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/01/2009 - 13:24The backward revision economic data train continues, this time in GDP, which came in at a "better" than expected 1% while the prior quarterly data was adjusted significantly downward from -5.5% to -6.4%. Additionally, per a brand new revision to the way GDP data is presented, the GDP decline demonstrated over the past year is now the largest since World War II. Current quarter jiggering aside, downward revisions to prior quarters have left the decline in real GDP at -3.9% in the year through Q2. And to demonstrate, the severity of this downturn, the Q2 data concluded the first three-quarter consecutive period of falling GDP since 1953-1954.
Max Keiser's Latest With Dmitry Orlov and Dr Housing Bubble
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/01/2009 - 02:27Because sniping out the B&T crowd in Meatpacking at 3am is only so much fun.




