Archive - Jul 2009

July 29th

Tyler Durden's picture

Weak Five Year Auction Interest, Substantial Drop In Indirect Bids





- Yield 2.689% vs. Exp. 2.635%
- Bid/Cover 1.92 vs. Avg. 2.37 (Prev. 2.58)
- Indirect bids 36.7% vs. Avg. 45.94% (Prev. 62.87%)
- Allotted at high 31.16% (BBG)

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Intraday VIX Divergence





Once again, the VIX diverges from its underlying: as stocks continue their ramp up on JPY weakness, the VIX is holding its highs of the day (inverted scale). Someone remind us what is it again that the VIX was supposed to indicate?

 

Tyler Durden's picture

NY Fed's Bill Dudley On The Economic Outlook And The Fed's Balance Sheet





"The Federal Reserve is taking on some interest-rate risk in terms of its balance sheet. The excess reserves have an overnight maturity. These liabilities are being used to purchase longer-term assets. In principle, if short-term interest rates were to move up very sharply, the cost of funding could eventually exceed the return on the Fed’s assets. The bigger our balance sheet, the greater the amount of interest-rate risk we are assuming."

 

Bruce Krasting's picture

Cramer on BAC - Caveat Emptor





Cramer calls for a 35% pop in BAC. What's he selling?

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Loans Versus Bonds Relative Value: Week of July 23





The credit tightening squeeze is about to get silly. Indicative loans averaged a year to date tight of 461 bps while bonds were trading at 905 bps.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

HFRXEMN Hits Low Point For 2009





The HFRX Equity Market Neutral Index has hit a new low for the year. In other news, Goldman likely set to report record number of $100+ million trading days for the quarter.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

NYSE Leaves Confidential Infrastructure Data Exposed





"The information could allow an intruder to map the NYSE’s network architecture and determine what vulnerabilities exist in the system."

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Paul Wilmott: "High-Frequency Trading May Increasingly Destabilize The Market"





Paul Wilmott: "Thus the problem with the sudden popularity of high-frequency trading is that it may increasingly destabilize the market. Hedge funds won’t necessarily care whether the increased volatility causes stocks to rise or fall, as long as they can get in and out quickly with a profit. But the rest of the economy will care."

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Daily Highlights: 7.29.09





  • Home Prices in US cities post monthly rise; consumer confidence declines.
  • Japan stocks edge up amid corporate earnings, investors await US GDP data.
  • Shanghai's index fell by 5% on disappointing corporate profits, lower commodity prices.
  • US dollar mostly higher, gold falls in European morning trading.
  • Akzo Nobel 2nd quarter net profit down 13 percent to $220M, shares rise on margins.
 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: July 29





  • June Durable Goods down -2.5% on expectations of -0.5%
  • Let's break up the Federal Reserve (WSJ)
  • Americans rate Fed worst among 9 key agencies (SignOnSD, h/t Bob)
  • CRE companies drooling at taxpayer generosity, plan to raise a whopping $3 billion via TALF in September, only $3.997 trillion to go (Bloomberg)
  • China banks to slow lending with low targets (Reuters, h/t Gilgamesh)
 

Travis's picture

Washington’s Gimmick For the Easily Sold- a Zero Hedge Glimpse at “Cash for Clunkers”





While some would debate they’ve bailed-out the auto industry enough, the United States government gets into the often gimmicky, very corny and highly questionable art of selling cars. With $1 billion on the table, it’s soon to be a new model year- and Uncle Sam wants… your shitty old car!

 

July 28th

Bruce Krasting's picture

2 Year Note - No Juice for the Carry Trade





The cover rate on today's auction stunk. What rate on this Note would attract the leveraged players? Not 1.08%.

 

sacrilege's picture

From GE Commercial Finance to Zero Hedge, With Love





GE Commercial Finance, Stamford Connecticut:

On behalf of the Zero Hedge staff, I want to take a minute to apologize for our filtering your 439 packets today at our firewall.

 

Benjamin N. Dover III's picture

Selling Traditional Marriage Short





Now that the SEC has finally taken action to complicate the lives of the vermin known as short sellers, it can turn to the next dire threat to capitalism: gay marriage.

 
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