Archive - Apr 1, 2009

Tyler Durden's picture

William Greiner is calling the bottom





Greiner, the CIO at UMB, thinks stocks are finally at the low end of the range on a 5-year range. He's also recommending his clients start getting back into equities. What is his rationale? "From a fundamental standpoint the table has been set for financial markets to stabilize and rebound." And why is that? Because in the face of almost of every single major bearish housing index, (a number released by the NAR, far from a non-partisan group) pending home sales is sitting at 2.1%.

 

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Ford Total Vehicle Sales Down 40.9%





Total Ford, Lincoln and Mercury sales totaled 125,107, down 41% from last year and higher 30% than February (GM's numbers should more than make up for this lack of slack).
Aslo it seems all those stupefying Volvo commercials aren't helping: only 6 thousand of Scandinavia's finest sold in March. The biggest hit by category was SUVs which was down 73.2% (-77.8 drop in Expedition and -69.8% drop in Explorer sales), as compared to cars (-36.6%), CUVs (-35.9%), and trucks and vans (-40.2%).

 

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Thornburg Mortgage Liquidating





Bad for Matlin Patterson, but very much as expected. As per a press release from the company, it is formally pulling the plug and shutting down.

 

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The Other Side Of The ISM Coin





Seems people are fascinated with this presumed ISM "bottom". Some thoughts on that phenomenon per the Rosenbergs.

Manufacturing sector remains depressed

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Morning Market Commentary





The equity-credit dislocation continues unabated. Optimism in equities after a 15 pt run up in S&P, while IG12 breaks 200 for the first time. Someone is wrong.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

G20 Protesters Break Into RBS Building In London





As CNBC makes fun of the G20 "fair with jesters and jugglers" in London, things are, in reality, getting serious. Just out of Foxnews:

 

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What John Hancock Tower Sale Implies For CRE





Zero Hedge's feelings about commercial real estate are no secret. Yesterday's sale of the John Hancock Tower to Normandy was an interesting market test, with media reports claiming it implied either nothing much or only good things about CRE and CMBS recoveries. A contrarian (and realistic) analysis on the transaction out of Morgan Stanely implies that based on this deal, not all is good in CRE land. (hat tip to reader David).

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Tyler Durden's picture

Sal Catrini Leaves JPM, Joins Bove At Rochdale





In a sad move for Wall Street news hounds, the creator of the most widely read "market intelligence" update has left the building. Sal Catrini, whose Early Look At The Market was required reading for bankers and hedge funders on their daily commutes, built a reputation for providing unbiased and comprehensive news summaries for many years while at Bear Stearns, and subsequently at white knight acquiror JP Morgan.

 

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Sonic Auto Warns Of Possible Bankruptcy





The Charlotte Business Journal reports that Sonic Automotive's days may be numbered.

 

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David Faber All Over The "Blogosphere"





Too bad Mr. Faber did not mention the source for the AIG information. But we love him anyway

 

Tyler Durden's picture

MGM and CityCenter Get Two Week Reprieve From Lenders, Bankruptcy





In an 8-K filed earlier, MGM Mirage announced its CityCenter lenders have agreed to forbear on certain defaults until April 13. In the meantime the company has to find a comprehensive solution or else CityCenter may be forced to file for bankruptcy, with potentially adverse consequences for MGM Mirage itself.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: April 1





  • Seattle FHLB Had ‘Material Weaknesses’ in Internal Controls (Bloomberg)
  • The real cost of the Geithner plan (RGE Monitor)
  • The real Geithner plan: a Nuclear option (WSJ)
  • Hades screws over the hound of hell: what happens to Cerberus now?
 

Tyler Durden's picture

ADP Job Report Drops By Record 742,000





ADP Private Job Report worse than consensus (-663k) by almost 100k at -742k, a record absolute drop. Also, the February revision is, unsurprisingly, lower from -697k to -706k. Amusingly, instead of slowing down job cuts are picking up. Also, the ADP is usually seen as a more optimistic version of tomorrow's initial jobless claims report.

 

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Month end on Japanese yen





As Zero Hedge has noted before, we think the market was underestimating the severity of the crisis in Japan. As we looked at the numbers, we couldn't help but think that some were being a little optimistic in light of the macro factors at play. At month end, the market reacted sharply to almost consistently bad news coming out from Japan; unemployment, production, retail and the Tankan indices all came out below expectations.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Month end on Japanese yen





As Zero Hedge has noted before, we think the market was underestimating the severity of the crisis in Japan. As we looked at the numbers, we couldn't help but think that some were being a little optimistic in light of the macro factors at play. At month end, the market reacted sharply to almost consistently bad news coming out from Japan; unemployment, production, retail and the Tankan indices all came out below expectations.

 
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