Archive - Sep 17, 2009

asiablues's picture

The Wild, Wild West of Natural Gas Trading





In my last article, I discussed two of the major factors to this week’s run-up in natural gas - Operation Flow Orders (OFOs) and pre-configured stop orders being hit. Here, I’d like to take a look at some other concurrent distortions in the natural gas market.

 

Bruce Krasting's picture

Fed Clarifies QE Policy - Sort Of





I asked the Fed a question on what was QE. Their response surprised me. It also left me confused. Does this bring any clarity to this big question?

 

Leo Kolivakis's picture

OMERS Grants Nomura Six Years Free Rent!





The news in commercial real estate keeps getting grimmer by the day. This crisis will have severe implications for pension funds that are carrying these properties on their books and banks that are exposed to commercial real estate loans. In other words, the commercial real estate crisis isn't over - not by a long shot.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Annual Decline In CNBC Viewership Accelerates: Down 37% In Overall Viewers Category





CNBC continues to bleed vierwers. Whereas the last time we provided an update of CNBC's Nielsen score, the GE subsidiary was down 28% YoY, the September decline is even more pronounced: at 37% in total vierwers and 26% in the 25-54 demographic. We are, however, confident that the company will take appropriate measures to address the growing lack of interest of the general public in its content by continuing to provide hard hitting, probing and objective reporting (on issues such as pornogprahy) day after day.

 

Marla Singer's picture

Radio Zero: Flash Traffic





Flash Traffic: Radio Zero returns. A bit of anti-flash flash (just to show a little flash).  We'll go live around 8:30 ET.

Listen here: http://cdo.zerohedge.com:8000/listen.pls

Or pick up our West Coast Mirror (with 1000 slots) here: http://216.218.252.88:8000/listen.pls thanks to the mind-blowing generosity of EGI Hosting.

Chat up the DJ (send your .mp3 files) here: radiozh.

Or... #radiozh on EFNet (for the real chat nerds).

 

Marla Singer's picture

Geoffrey Raymond. ('nuff said.)





Just in case you haven't noticed, Zero Hedge is proud to offer a series of print reproductions by Geoffrey Raymond.  Yes, that Geoffrey Raymond.  This is your chance to own a piece of meltdown history, and support one of the great meltdown visionaries of our time.  The prints are limited runs, so get them while they last.

Visit the online catalog here:  http://www.zerohedge.com/ray

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Goldman Issues Favorable Report Within 20 Minutes Of Palm's Earnings Release... And Goldman's Follow On Offering





And so the pump and dump continues. Within 20 minutes of Palm's earnings release (one wonders just how much of a promptly completed "fill in the blanks" report this was) and disclosure that it is issuing a 16 million share follow on offering, joint-managed by none other than Goldman Sachs, the 85 Broad firm send out an email praising the company's glowing results...and its glowing new liquidity picture compliments of a follow-on offering joint lead-managed by... Goldman Sachs.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

SEC Votes Unanimously To Ban Flash Trading, Seek Public Comment





Developing story: absent some odd detour, this should be a good start. The next step is public opinion, and second vote at a later date, so things can still change. Furthermore, in the words of Senator Ted Kaufman: "Flash orders may be a symptom of a much larger problem." Zero Hedge wholeheartedly agrees.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

How Crazy Can It Get?





Keep in mind, in May 2008 there were MANY people we will not name who thought we were headed right back to the highs, so sentiment is not really prophecy and far from it in fact. This time it's different though... bears and reality are fighting the US government and its arsenal of liquidity. That's why we can have the market diverge so much while making new highs with indicators screaming "overbought". On top of it, while some time has been bought pulling the SFP bill program in order to debate the possible raise of the debt ceiling, should the Fed and the Treasury succed and have it raised we can't exclude more quantitative easing and hence more money being poured into the markets. I guess an hyperbolic collapse of the USD would then be the most likely outcome to bring back markets to reality. In the end, bonds mature, investors have to either be repaid or then default occurs, and there are a lot of maturities and mortgage resets rolling down the pipe. So given that the ISM is about to top, QE money is running out (we are below $15Bn remaining out of $300Bn or just about), and many stimulus programs are running as well, headwinds could start being felt again. Barring more US government intervention it is likely that recent exhuberance will come to an end sooner rather than later. However as always one must remain cautious because these days capital markets are a mere reflection of government action... as long as government remains unchallenged.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Fed's Balance Sheet Increases By $53 Billion





U.S. FED BALANCE SHEET LIABILITIES GROW TO $2.125 TRLN SEPT 16 VS $2.072 TRLN SEPT 9-FED

We will provide the full spread of the Fed's balance sheet later tonight

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Foreigners Purchase Disproportionate Amount Of Stocks Over Treasuries, Corporates; Sell Agencies






Continuing the analysis of yesterday's TIC data, a key observation is that in July, even as foreigners continued purchasing Treasuries, having bought over $31 billion in Bonds (Long-Term) during the month, split evenly between official institutions and other entities, their distate for Agencies was unchanged, selling $4.6 billion, while a curious rotation was evident out of Corporate bonds, with a total $11 billion sold, at the expense of stocks, which saw a $28.6 billion increase over the month, primarily driven by non-official foreign institutions. On an LTM basis, the purchasing of stocks hit a one year high at $91 billion, a number that was matched only by the $107 billion recorded in September 2008 (subsequent to which there was a quick withdrawal from all US equity participation).

 

RobotTrader's picture

Options Expiration Shanks Commodities, Investors Flee to Bonds





Another classic options expiration blowout. Commodity stocks across the board were blasted as Goldman assured itself of vast profits once again by vaporizing recently purchased calls, and at the same time re-instated the deflation fears to send money fleeing back into AAA-rated U.S. Confetti.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

SPY Trading Range: VWAP Bounds





After a failed breakout early, today's SPY was bounded entirely by two key VWAP levels: the support was yesterday's closing VWAP, while the resistance was both yesterday's close, which just happened to coincide with today's VWAP. The low volume VWAP algos continue to rule the universe.... Until such time as we see a high volume breakout.

 

Travis's picture

Hey, Wha' Happened? Washington Panel to Begin Meltdown Inquiry





Phil Angelides has a mission, and $5 million- to head a congressionally appointed panel and deliver a "no-holds barred" investigation into last year's economic collapse, including whether financial firms and government regulators were guilty of criminal misconduct.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

US Residents Dispose Of $29 Billion In Foreign Securities In July





An interesting money flow observation dervied from yesterday's TIC report is that as US residents were pumping money into domestic capital markets, they were aggressively pulling capital out of foreign stocks and bonds. In fact, in July, foreign equity purchases declined by $14.5 billion, while foreign bond purchases dropped by $14.2 billion, or a $28.7 billion combined. What is more notable is that on a TTM basis, the decline was much more pronounced, and from a combined $63 billion in June, the number has dropped to basically flat, at only $1.6 billion. As the chart below demonstrates, there is potentially up to another $200 billion of foreign capital repatriation by domestic investors. Ironically, with the US capital markets behaving more like an Emerging Market, courtesy of the domestically-funded dollar carry trade it is likely that much more capital reallocation will continue to come into US securities.

 
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