Archive - Nov 2009
November 16th
80% Of Consumers Say They Would Not Pay For Online Content
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/16/2009 14:36 -0500In a blow to ongoing plans by Murdoch (and others) to capitalize on premium content, a new study from Forrester shows that 80% of consumers would not be willing to pay for online news content. As readers are able to move from one content aggregator to another with greater facility than the Fed prints another billion dollars, Rupert's approach will likely entail a massive "game theoretical" strategy whereby either all move to a premium model or none do: if even one "defector" remains, it will render the "premium-paid" plan DOA.
Guest Post: To Be A Fed Chairman
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/16/2009 14:03 -0500This report explains the method I use to interpret the financial markets, economics, and potential
investment opportunities. I have found this method to be very helpful. Please Note: The econometric
models used in this report are real. I created and tested them myself. If had to name my method, I would call it the Multiple Personality Financial Market Economic Investment Disorder, or simply (MPFMEID).
Record 35.1 Million Foodstamp Recipients Believe Every Word Of Bernanke's Propaganda
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/16/2009 13:36 -0500Someone should translate Bernanke's speech extolling the virtues of Goldman Sachs never having to worry about being broken up or giving up its prop trading operations, and that the American economy is sizzling, to the just announced record 35.1 million food-stamp recipients. That's right: a record number of Americans are now subsisting courtesy of foodstamps. One wonders at what point these people say enough and decide to start their own prop trading shops, as that is the only guaranteed way to make money these days. If these millions are allowed to simply replicate Goldman's trading feed, we are confident that the entire economy would recover practically overnight.
Can We Save America?
Submitted by George Washington on 11/16/2009 13:18 -0500Yes . . . but only if we get off our butts.
Full Ben Bernanke Speech Before Economic Club of New York
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/16/2009 12:17 -0500The foreign exchange value of the dollar has moved over a wide range during the past year or so. When financial stresses were most pronounced, a flight to the deepest and most liquid capital markets resulted in a marked increase in the dollar. More recently, as financial market functioning has improved and global economic activity has stabilized, these safe haven flows have abated, and the dollar has accordingly retraced its gains. The Federal Reserve will continue to monitor these developments closely. We are attentive to the implications of changes in the value of the dollar and will continue to formulate policy to guard against risks to our dual mandate to foster both maximum employment and price stability. Our commitment to our dual objectives, together with the underlying strengths of the U.S. economy, will help ensure that the dollar is strong and a source of global financial stability.
No mention of Gold
Beazer Homes' CEO Ian McCarthy Receives Wells Notice From SEC
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/16/2009 12:14 -0500Bad news for Beazer's CEO, Ian McCarthy, courtesy of the angry and completely impotent hornet's nest that is the SEC.
Rosenberg: "Obama's 'Deja Vu' Over-Consumption, Over-Borrowing And Over Building Policy Is Doomed To Failure"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/16/2009 11:39 -0500"In 1982, Ronald Reagan was President (two consecutive terms as Governor of California), Don Regan was Treasury Secretary (35 years of financial sector experience), Martin Feldstein as the Chief Economic Advisor to President Reagan (the dean of business cycle determination), and Paul Volcker was Fed Chairman (9 years of prior financial sector experience). Compare and contrast to Barrack Obama (junior senator from Illinois for 3 years); Timothy Geithner (21 years experience in government, three years as a lobbyist); Larry Summers (no private sector experience; 27 years of academia and government) and Ben Bernanke (no private sector experience; 30 years of academia and government). Which team do you think deserved the higher multiple — the one with actual experience in the real world or the one immersed in academia and government?" David Rosenberg
SEIU Organizing Protest In Front Of Goldman's D.C. Office At Noon
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/16/2009 11:02 -0500The Service Employees International Union must not have gotten the revised scriptures. Which is the presumably why the SEIU is organizing a protest at noon in front of the Washington D.C. cephalopod cathedral: "Enough is enough. Join hundreds of taxpayers on November 16th, when we demand that Goldman Sachs give its $23 billion in bonuses to foreclosure prevention programs and press Congress to implement rules that would protect Americans from big bank greed."
The Golden Melt Up
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/16/2009 10:14 -0500
Melt up occurring in every aspect of the markets as the dollar is in its last death throes. Helicopter Ben is now upgraded to Conviction C5 Galaxy Ben by Goldman Sachs.
SEC Probing 3Com Option Trades
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/16/2009 10:10 -0500The SEC has no problem being all over what is handed to them on a silver platter. As to the pyramid scheme that the market now is, they'll just leave that one alone. " Bullish bets on 3Com Corp. options four hours before Hewlett-Packard Co.’s bid for the maker of computer-networking equipment are being investigated by regulators, according to a person familiar with the matter."
Guest Post: Goldman's Abacus CDO (And Other CDOs), AIG, And Global Systemic Risk
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/16/2009 09:47 -0500"I have been a big critic of the systemic risk posed by excessive leverage, problematic CDOs and the credit derivatives written against them. But I did not specifically criticize Goldman’s deals until it became an issue of public interest when AIG blew up. Goldman may not have to answer to sophisticated investors, but it should answer for its role in the systemic risk posed by AIG’s near collapse, its role in the way in which AIG was bailed out, and the fact that the U.S. taxpayer had to bail out the global financial system along with a number of Goldman’s trading partners." - Janet Tavakoli
Empire State Manufacturing General Business Conditions Index Plunges 11 Points To 23.5 In October
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/16/2009 09:26 -0500Cash for Clunkers hangover is permeating everywhere, with the latest casualty being the Empire States Manufacturing Index General Business Conditions, which tumbled from 34.6 to 24.5 in October. Never one to leave on a sour note, the NY Fed's survey indicated that respondents are even more optimistic even as coincident data trends turn negative, curiously on expectations of deteriorating margins, and a hope that no additional cash will have to be spent as the "new normal" is attained.
Deadly flu spreads across Ukraine
Submitted by Project Mayhem on 11/16/2009 09:23 -0500Deadly flu continues spread across Ukraine, criminal World Health Organization lies to the public, MSM maintains radio silence.
S&P Outlook For The Week
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/16/2009 09:04 -0500
We had discussed last week that even though the S&P future was back around the tops for the year, we did not have enough elements to think the turn was right upon us as the price action and its fractal nature did not have the makings of a complete bullish impulse. We are now starting to have some elements. Purists will realize we made the tops last week with only divergence on a 30-minute and 60-minute interval charts, which is historically only indicative of a short-term retracement. As can be seen on the 60-minute chart we had slight divergence on the 11th and we have been consolidating since in a wave 4. It is not clear whether wave 4 is completed just yet. Watch 1,095.50 for now. As long as this level is not violated we may be in the last leg up of the impulse started at 1,026, but if it violated expect a pull back towards 1,082/1,084 before we make new highs.
Frontrunning: November 16
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/16/2009 08:59 -0500- Retail sales ex-autos at 0.2%, miss expectations of 0.4%, huge downward September revision (AP)
- Evans-Pritchard: China has now become the biggest risk to the world economy (Telegraph)
- Remember Europe? Greek bonds decline, spread with bunds widest in four months (Bloomberg)
- NY $10 billion budget gap looms as lawmakers returns to Albany (Bloomberg)
- Obama talks human rights, censorship with Chinese students but event is not broadcast nationally (ABC)
- GM reports $1.2 billion loss, generates $3.3 billion in cash
courtesy of CfC and other subdisides that keep it out of liquidation,
threatens to pay back government loan back with more government money (Bloomberg)




