Archive - Nov 2009
November 21st
Naomi Klein And Joseph Stiglitz Discuss The Cause And Effect Of The Financial Crisis
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/21/2009 22:16 -0500Alan Greenspan's economic legacy is slowly but surely deteriorating from that of one created by a "Maestro", to the deranged hungover flashbacks of the most inept monetarist dilettante and plutocrat puppet in the history of fiat capitalism. And with ever increasing honest and truthful observations as those shared by Naomi Klein and Joseph Stiglitz in the 1 hour + program attached, courtesy of Fora TV, only the remnants of the quickly evaporating close circle of Bernanke and Co., will have anything favorable left to say for the man who took the mundane task of building bubbles and converted it into rocket science so complex that only a few people at Goldman Sachs figured out how to benefit from it. We encourage all readers to spend some time watching the program before, just like Barney Frank and other bribed politicans, deciding that changing the status quo vis-a-vis the Fed is a step in the "wrong direction."
Shadow Banking Topology
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/21/2009 21:33 -0500
A topological representation of the shadow banking system, which as many may have already forgotten, smiled upon such lunacy as infinite leverage. The recreation of the latter is the ever elusive (so far) holy grail for the Federal Reserve.
The Liberation Treatment?
Submitted by Leo Kolivakis on 11/21/2009 21:23 -0500CTV's W5 exclusive report on a groundbreaking new experimental treatment for multiple sclerosis, including the first-time the 'liberation' surgery was filmed.
What Stands In The Way Of Taxing Derivatives: 1,479+ Lobbyists
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/21/2009 17:52 -0500There are about $1.4 quadrillion of them. So why not tax them? As Tim Geithner says "That's not something we are prepared to support." Some are curious, who is this editorial "we" in this case. According to a co-sponsor of an upcoming bill, he has been called three times by none other than Jamie Dimon to promote the party line...guess which side of the fence the JPM CEO is on.
Why The "Output Gap" Inflation Model May Be Fatally Flawed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/21/2009 15:04 -0500Could it be that the fundamental economic indicator that is gospel not only to Goldman Sachs, but to Ben Bernanke in estimating and determining monetary policy, the output gap, provides a flawed reading of the economy? As a reminder, Ben Bernanke has repeatedly expressed little regard for either commodity inflation or US dollar exchange as having an impact on overall US inflation. As Askari and Hochain state: "according to [Bernanke's] theory, inflation was related only to the output gap. As long as the output gap was negative, that is, if actual gross domestic product was below potential GDP, the economy was at no risk of inflation. Hence, he argued that the central bank had to adopt an aggressive money policy until the output gap closed. Such is the policy prescription from what is called the Taylor Rule or the Phillips Curve. Because potential GDP is not a measured macroeconomic variable, it can be estimated in millions of ways. There are, therefore, millions of ways for estimating an output gap, making the concept difficult to use as a policy tool." The problem with these millions of estimations, is that especially courtesy of the Greenspan created bubble over the past 20 years, the American economy is, ironically, not a true representation of itself. And thus, the output gap estimates need to be normalized for a "bubble free" GDP environment. It is precisely this issue that none other than the St. Louis Fed addresses in its latest paper: "Has the Recent Real Estate Bubble Biased the Output Gap?" The conclusion is startling: based on a production function output gap normalization (an approach "based on a relation between available productive inputs (such as capital and labor), their current utilization rates, and aggregate production"), Bernanke could be fatally wrong about the economy's "capacity for inflation" courtesy of the CBO's overestimated output gap, and that his loose monetary policy could end up being a disastrous precursor to rampant (and not distant) hyperinflation, due to his blatant avoidance of simple logic when interpreting the economic output gap.
Guest Post: Fed-Covert Money Printing Alert
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/21/2009 12:17 -0500A big picture perspective of why the American public, and the world, should be very concerned about the fate of the U.S. dollar courtesy of one grotesquely irresponsible act by the Federal Reserve after another.
Is America Finally Starting to Stand Up To Wall Street?
Submitted by George Washington on 11/21/2009 00:09 -0500???
November 20th
November OpEx Update
Submitted by naufalsanaullah on 11/20/2009 22:13 -0500The S&P 500 remains in its downtrend from October 2007 and its rally from March is getting very extended, as the risk asset melt-up courtesy of the ubiquitous dollar-funded carry trade runs dry of dollar liquidity. Leading indicators continue to imply deflation.
Nov 19 CDS Heatmap
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2009 21:44 -0500
With the equity market sell off yesterday, it is not surprising that the weakness as a result of bad economic data spread to all products, notably credit. The CDS heatmap, or in this case redmap, demonstrates how bad the mauling in IG NA was, where for each name tighter there were 40 credits wider. With all assets approaching a correlation of one, we fondly salute to the memory of relative value analysis.
Guest Post: Galleon Technology Fund: A Clipper Or A Barge?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2009 19:58 -0500The goal of this week’s post is to explore the factors driving Galleon Technology fund’s performance a bit deeper. The fund was widely known for its high turnover, rapid-fire trading and extensive use of options to leverage short-term bets. Therefore, it seems unlikely that this quintessential hedge fund could resemble a typical technology sector mutual fund. But, as we’ve already learned from our previous analysis of Renaissance RIEF, such massive trading may inadvertently result in performance that can be explained by a handful of directional bets.
Induced Bankruptcies Costing Taxpayers Billions?
Submitted by Leo Kolivakis on 11/20/2009 19:16 -0500Diane Urquhart's research has wider implications for employees and pensioners of other companies teetering on bankruptcy. If the explosion of CDS and leveraged buyouts is inducing a wave of bankruptcies, then why should taxpayers borne the cost? I say we tax the funds that are wreaking havoc on the real economy with their sophisticated financial "leveraging and hedging".
Weekly Charts And Trends
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2009 17:35 -0500More charts and trends than dollar shorts
Sen. Kaufman Urges SEC To Work Quickly On Uncovering Possible High Frequency Market Manipulation And Systemic Risk
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2009 16:18 -0500Sen. Kaufman admirably takes on the windmills again, this time sending a much more sternly worded letter to Mary Schapiro to finally step away from the game of taxpayer funded Solitaire, and instead of waiting for twitters and bloggers to hand her agency cases of insider trading on a silver platter, to finally do something proactive, before her thoroughly discredited agency comprising of what are apparently some of the most inept government workers in existence, is responsible for not only the biggest ponzi blow up (done and done) but for the greatest market collapse courtesy of a few unsupervised Atari consoles.
CIT CDS Auction Final Recovery Closes At 68.125
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2009 15:54 -0500At 2PM Eastern, CIT's CDS auction was priced at a final recovery of 68.125. This was over 2 bps lower than the inside midpoint market announced earlier. Going into the auction, there was $728.98 billion of open interest, indicating that basis traders were a dominant force and exlipsed correlation desks' influence in the auction. The 13 participating dealers submitted $4.5 billion worth of limit order, with an average bid of 65.66, just 3.6% away from the final settlement price, indicating that the option to low-ball into the Dutch auction and get hit on some insane bid has disappeared.
The Vampire Squid vs. the Sperm Whale
Submitted by RobotTrader on 11/20/2009 15:38 -0500Now that Goldman controls the bulk of NYSE trading, its basically down to the major wire house Robots doing mortal combat with each other, trying to push the tape one way or another. Meanwhile, individual funds with outsized concentrations are getting killed with maniacal squeezes and huge shank jobs exacerbated by Option Expiration Racketeering.






