Archive - Oct 8, 2009

Project Mayhem's picture

Asian tigers roar back at US Dollar





Overnight, we have learned that multiple Asian central banks intervened to prevent rapid appreciation of their own currencies against the US Dollar. Could we be witnessing the beginning of a currency crisis, or is this simply more water under the bridge?

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Summary Of Same-Store Sales Data





Retailers are pushing higher on the tried and true platform of ongoing declines in absolute performance and declining same-store sales, yet on the face of yet another round of beating analysts' low expectations, who will likely use today's data to unleash a torrent of upgrades based on optimistic expectations. The question of who is actually doing the buying, as consumers are once again saving more instead of spending, with yesterday's disclosed drop in consumer lending by a greater than expected $12 billion in August, is irrelevant. Also, keep in mind September 2008 is when the shit hit the fan, and the second half of September was a writeoff for most retailers.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Some Additional Opinions On The Consequences Of The Dollar's Imminent Demise





Further to his insightful WSJ op-ed, David Malpass summarizes his views on what a declining dollar means to the United States. Gerald Celente also voices in on why it may already be too late to prevent the collapse in the U.S. currency.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

$12 Billion 30 Year Auction Closes At 4.009% High Yield, 2.37 Bid To Cover





  • Yields 4.009% vs. Exp. 3.994%
  • Bid To Cover 2.37 vs. Avg. 2.59 (Prev. 2.92)
  • Indirects 34.5% vs. Avg. 48.03% (Prev. 46.7%)
  • Indirect Bid To Cover: 1.51
  • Allotted at high 27.53%
  • 8.5% of accepted to directs
 

Tyler Durden's picture

What Happens If (When) The Dollar Rises?





There has been lots of speculation as to what may happen once Europe and the rest of the world wakes up and realizes they have been had by Bernanke. A useful regression analysis demonstrates the increasing risk to stocks at the moment when/if the DXY rises. While the straight red line is the simple regression analysis, the orange line indicates beta changes only on postive or negative moves. The variation in slopes demonstrates that DXY up days have a disproportionately higher impact to SPX down days than vice versa. Another way of saying this is that to push the market higher purely as a function of its dollar correlation, the dollar needs to devalue more and more for a measurable impact, alternatively when the dollar rises, the drop in the market is more pronounced than on dollar down days.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Jim Cramer's TheStreet Now Resorting To $500/Hour Psychics For Stock Picks





Not much commentary needed here.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: The Sound Of One Hand Clapping - What Deflationists May Be Missing





The hot topic of the day is "Inflation or Deflation?" and the camps are firmly divided into the inflationistas and deflationistas. When asked which camp I am in, I reply "Yes." Some would say that puts me in the confusionista camp, but I actually have an explanation for why are living in a world of 'both.' From a technical perspective we are absolutely in one of the most powerfully deflationary periods in history, yet besides housing prices and a few over-produced consumer goods, we find that stocks, bonds and commodities are all well bid at the moment. While we can ascribe some of this to the artificial wall of liquidity (come to think of it, is there any other kind?) being thrown into the financial market(s) by the Fed, it leaves hanging the question of why that money is not being completely swallowed into the bottomless black hole that the deflationist camp says lies at the heart of our current financial system. - Chris Martenson

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Merrill's Former REIT Analyst Steve Sakwa Dispenses Some Unexpected CRE Pessimism





Steve Sakwa, who we may have had some harsh words for in the past, primarily during his Merrill Lynch tenure, shares some perspectives on Commercial Real Estate. His observation:

"From a financing standpoint things are far worse; from a fundamental standpoint things are certainly getting worse."

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Banks Continue Upgrading Banks





The latest trend among financial analysts is the ongoing circular upgrading of banks by other banks. The most recent example is yesterday's report by Morgan Stanley "Q3 remains constructive for wholesale banks." In the piece, analyst Huw Van Steenis sees nothing but blue skies ahead of the financial sector, especially Credit Suisse and Deutsche Bank. The verdict: "We remain positive on some of the wholesale banks as we expect them to be beneficiaries of low rates, steep curves, compressing risk spreads and refinancing needs." The fact that banks are now effectively liquidity proxies for various printing presses, especially that of the Fed, which continues throwing liquidity into the market at a $35 billion a week clip, is strangely missing from the analysis.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Former Fannie Chief Credit Officer Says FHA Is $54 Billion Underwater





In keeping with the warnings presented by Kyle Bass warned that the entire housing bubble is now being ported over to the taxpayer's balance sheet, Edward Pinto, a former chief credit officer for Fannie Mae claims that the Federal Housing Administration will likely require a major taxpayer bailout "in the next 24 to 36 months" as it is likely to incur $56 billion more in losses than it can withstand.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

How Currency Devaluation Can Be A Bad Thing





Even as the dollar keeps hitting new daily lows, which continues being seen as a positive for the stock market, if not so positive for what little remains of world trade, not much has been said about the efforts by Latvia to do all it can to devalue its currency in the wake of a failed bond auction. The consequences are already metastasizing, as seen by the increasing volatility of related currencies, particularly the Swedish Krona which has been hit hard against the Euro on concerns of the country's exposure in Baltic states. Proposals by the Latvian government to rectify the lack of trust and to adopt a mortgage holder liability cap have not been met with enthusiasm. According to Commerzbank analysts any improvements attained from this, and other comparable devaluation approaches, would not achieve long-term goals and at best would result in short-term benefits.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

S&P Update





"If we do not break and extend, the Elliott wave 5 target of the move extension initiated yesterday morning is 1,075 on the nose, and the target for the move on 10/02 at the lows is 1,073. Given the previous highs are at 1,075.5, barring a break of 1,062 in the next few hours of trading it seems we are due for a retest." - Nic Lenoir

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: October 8





  • Must read from Buiter: After subverting bank insolvency, our leaders are now about to make a mess of liquidity (FT, h/t Paul)
  • The weak-dollar threat to prosperity (WSJ)
  • Fed aims to rein in bank pay abuses way below top execs (USA Today)
  • Boomers seen driving $10 trillion wealth management shift (Reuters)
  • Buffett selling means you shouldn't be buying (Bloomberg)
 

Tyler Durden's picture

Daily Highlights: 10.8.09





  • Asian stocks rise on Australian jobs report, Alcoa earnings; alumina gains.
  • Australian firms unexpectedly add jobs, driving bets of second rate rise.
  • China car sales growth will slow in 2010: China Auto Logistics Chief says.
  • Consumer credit outstanding fell $12B in Aug, reflecting reluctance to hold debt.
  • Dollar slips against rivals ahead of ECB, BOE meetings.
  • Gold advances to third record, oil gains on outlook for weakening dollar.
 
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