Archive - Sep 22, 2009
$43 Billion 2 Year Auctions Closes At 1.034% High Yield
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/22/2009 12:07 -0500- Yields 1.034% vs. Exp. 1.0296%
- Bid-to-cover 3.23 vs. Avg. 2.85 (Prev. 2.68)
- Indireect 45.2% vs. Avg. 46.9% (Prev. 49.5%)
- Allotted at high 27.16%
The Noon Ramp
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/22/2009 11:45 -0500
Noon is the new 1:30pm, is the new 2:30pm is the new 3:30pm. Pretty soon algorithms will gun the market starting before the market opens.
Is Mary Schapiro Set For Another Showdown With Judge Rakoff
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/22/2009 11:40 -0500One of the pieces we highlights in today's frontrunning was commentary by Susan Antilla at Bloomberg, discussing the perfect world in which the SEC wasn't merely yet another tentacle of the Wall Street syndicate, slapping wrists and issuing statements now and then to remind of its worthless existence. One of Susan's points brilliantly Swiftian in its simplicity: "Considering the blinding evidence of dysfunction, it occurs to me that enough is enough. Why not just shut the place down?" Many would say this is such an obvious observation that it has escaped the thinking of the majority. Yet when this market bubble pops, which it eventually will, unless the Fed can somehow find a way to bring the value of the dollar to 0, a furious America will once again demand the heads of those who were supposed to oversee the irrational exuberance in progress. At that point Mary's tenure will be over, yet the travesty that is the SEC will likely continue in some form. However, there is a chance for an earlier resolution. Judge Rakoff, who so far has been the critical voice of sanity in a corrupt world, may cross paths with Mary even before her ultimate downfall. And he is not happy with the "regulators"
Carrie Butler Shares Some Thoughts On Leading Indicators
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/22/2009 10:30 -0500"For those of you who like conspiracy theories: The Fed is no longer publishing MEW (Mortgage Equity Withdrawal). This was one of the engines of the financial crisis - so much for an early warning on the next housing crisis. ISI will estimate the three main components of the Fed's report and like our estimate for some the old "M" statistics it will be there down the road when needed again." - Carrie Butler
FDIC May Seek Bailout From Banks
Submitted by Travis on 09/22/2009 10:27 -0500It's supposed to work the other way around. A bank fails, and it's depositors are protected up to $250,000. But, times, they are-a-changin', and the FDIC may just seek help from big banks to replenish funds.
Is Norway's DNO In Deep Trouble Over Iraqi Oil Spat?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/22/2009 09:59 -0500One story that has not made much headlines in the MSM is the sudden escalation in hostilities between Iraqi's Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and Norwegian E&P company DNO International ASA. The firm, whose trading on the Oslo exchange was suspended yesterday, and which likely will not trade for several days, has seen a forced halt to its key Iraq oil exploration over a dispute involving a potentially illegal stock sale. As Iraq operations account for a bulk of the company's enterprise value, many shareholders will be quite concerned when shares resume trading sometime on Wednesday.
Weekly US Railroad Carloading Decline Accelerates, Hits 1993 Levels
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/22/2009 09:21 -0500The latest data out of the Association of American Railroads has been released. While a month ago the weekly YoY decline hit a very troublesome -17.1%, the last weekly decline added another almost 3% to the deterioration, and is now down -19.8% for Week 36. Cumulative traffic decline is flat at -18.4%. Including intermodal traffic or ton-miles in the calculation does nothing to improve the conclusion. Not a single "carload originated" category has improved, and in fact even the relatively stable ones from the prior update have slumped.
Michael Pettis Extended Interview
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/22/2009 08:46 -0500Michael Pettis provides an exhaustive overview of his in-depth China views in a three part interview series with FT's Beijing Bureau Chief, Geoff Dyer. Must watch.
Cramer Launches Flash Defense Campaign
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/22/2009 08:23 -0500This particular Cramer infomercial (just like all others) brought to CNBC courtesy of whoever, as usual, has provided the most in GE indulgences for any particular donation campaign. Pure comedy value, and if you act now, CNBC will throw in the 8 pm spot for free.
Frontrunning: September 22
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/22/2009 08:02 -0500- China local governments may risk insolvency in investment drive (Bloomberg): Editorial alert - apparently this headline was too risky, so Bloomberg promptly changed it to "China Investment Drive May Imperil Local Governments"
- Crudele: What did Paulson know and when did he know it? (Post)
- What the SEC might look like if it did its job (Bloomberg, h/t Kevin)
- The government ponzi comes full circle: FDIC may borrow funds from banks (NYT)
- Fed effort to stoke growth may be undermined by "tight" credit (Bloomberg)
- Laffer: Taxes, depression and our current troubles (WSJ)
Good morning, worker drones: This Week in Mayhem
Submitted by Project Mayhem on 09/22/2009 08:01 -0500Project Mayhem reviews the most important financial and geopolitical news of the past week and takes a look at the week ahead.
Daily Highlights: 9.22.09
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/22/2009 07:36 -0500- ADB revised its GDP for developing Asia for this year to 3.9% from 3.4%.
- Asia will expand faster than expected through 2010 on stimulus: ADB.
- Asian shares were mixed Tuesday with investors cautious after Wall Street's pullback overnight.
- August passenger revenue taken in by U.S. airlines slid 21% from the year-ago month.
- China stops issuing new licenses to institutions seeking to join bidding for initial public offerings.
- China's auto exports fell 57% to 191,000 in first seven months this year.
- China's stimulus delays restructuring of economy to consumption, ADB says.
- Dollar falls as Asia-Pacific region's economic recovery spurs yield demand.




