Archive - Jan 7, 2010
When the Bond Market Goes Boo?
Submitted by Leo Kolivakis on 01/07/2010 22:57 -0500Hold on to your hat, the bond vigilantes will be out full force on Friday. And when the bond market goes 'boo', its chill will be felt across all asset classes.
China Begins Liquidity Tightening, As Bubble Threat Looms
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/07/2010 20:48 -0500While the domestic money printing syndicate refuses to accept the glaring reality that endless money printing causes unavoidable hyperinflation (the only question being when), China has decided it is time to start closing the spigot. Bloomberg reports that, "China’s central bank began to roll back its monetary stimulus for an economy poised to become the world’s second-biggest this year, seeking to reduce the danger of asset-price inflation after a record surge in credit. The People’s Bank of China yesterday sold three-month bills at a higher interest rate for the first time in 19 weeks." Ah the benefits of a planned economy: controlling the supply and the demand at the same time. And further, being pegged to the dollar, China receives all the secondary benefits of the Chairman's endless dollar printing. Ain't life grand in Beijing...
We've Become a Government "Of The Bankers, By The Bankers, And For The Bankers"
Submitted by George Washington on 01/07/2010 19:54 -0500Yup ...
Is The Rambus HFT Fat-Finger A Precursor Of Things To Come?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/07/2010 17:51 -0500"Computerized algorithmic market making works in any type of oscillating market, as the computer can keep flipping out of it’s longs, and covering it’s shorts. It works in a trending market, as long as there is some type of choppy trade. The problem lies, when the computer system can’t flip out of the position. Most algorithmic systems are programmed with some type of risk parameter. If this risk parameter is breached, the computer will dump it’s position and cut it’s losses. This is what may have happened in RMBS today. An algorithmic system making markets on the long side, got too long, and was unable to wiggle out of the position because of the follow-through in selling pressure. Once it was down so much in the position (the risk parameter was breached), it dumped. This simply added fuel to the fire. That is why the sudden plunge to $16 happened. If you check the chart, you will not see this, because Nasdaq busted all trades under $22. But don’t kid yourself, these trades happened, and we should be very alarmed, because it will happen again, and it may happen to the entire stock market." Dennis Dick, Stock Trading
Fugly Farms Friday
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 01/07/2010 17:43 -0500Dangerous to try to handicap this number. I have tried and failed. I'll try again.
Argentina Central Bank Mutiny Costs Local Bernanke Equivalent His Job, Criminal Charges
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/07/2010 17:36 -0500A surreal harbinger of what may well transpire in the US some day was today's firing of the president of Argentina's Central Bank Martin Redrado by president Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner. The action followed his refusal to release reserves to the government to be used for debt service payments, as well as his refusal to resign. At least in Argentina the Central Bank is answerable to the president, instead of the other way around. The odd development follows Kirchner's enactment of a "Bicentennial Fund" which was to be funded with $6.6 billion of the $17 billion reserves, in order to make debt payments this year: the Argentine government has $13 billion in debt service payments due in 2010. One can imagine their jealously of the US, where such a situation would be met with merely a little more cash printing and a few more $40 billion 3 year auctions.
Interest Rate Observations From Morgan Stanley
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/07/2010 17:16 -0500
Morgan Stanley, which recently made the daring call for a 5.5% yield on the 10 year by the end of 2010, and which has recently caught the attention of many finance pundits, provides some more projections for 10 year rates not only in the US but globally. Curiously, out of all countries, Morgan Stanley only sees Japan lower by the end of 2010, with all developed countries higher, but none moving as much as the US. Furthermore, by the end of 2010, only Australia will sport a 10 year rate wider than the US, predicts MS.
Girlfriend of the Week
Submitted by RobotTrader on 01/07/2010 16:24 -0500Looks as if some girlfriends are getting traded in for some hotter models this week. Even as GOOG, PCLN, AMZN are getting smoked, money never leaves the market. It simply moves on to other sectors. Doesn't matter what the sector's prospects are, just as long as its "hot" and moving up.
TCW Scandal: Firm Files Lawsuit Against Gundlach's New Firm
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/07/2010 16:09 -0500Update: The LA Times adds that according to the suit, on the day TCW fired him, the firm found “inappropriate contraband” in his offices, “consisting of marijuana, drug paraphernalia . . . and a collection of 12 sexual devices, 34 hardcore pornographic magazines and 36 hardcore sexually explicit DVDs and videocassettes.”
Dear Valued Clients,
I am writing to inform you that today TCW filed a lawsuit against certain former members of its previous fixed income portfolio management team, as well as their new company, DoubleLine Capital Group LLC.
The charges in the complaint are serious, disturbing and specific, and confirm TCW's reasons for relieving Jeffrey Gundlach, and his colleagues Cris Santa Ana, Barbara VanEvery and Jeffrey Mayberry of their duties. There is no reason to recount these charges here, but they clearly support TCW's conclusion that members of TCW's previous fixed income portfolio management team engaged in a pattern of breaches of fiduciary duty and other unlawful activity, which threatened TCW¹s business and reputation. Specifically, and among other things, TCW learned that persons close to Mr. Gundlach, now involved with DoubleLine, systematically downloaded very large volumes of TCW proprietary information over a period of weeks before Mr.Gundlach's termination.
Private Risk Is Gone As Traders Hedge Long Positions With Sovereigns
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/07/2010 15:01 -0500The most recent broker to realize that private risk does not exist as a result of global moral hazard is Deutsche Bank, which is actively promoting ta long risk/short sovereign CDS trade. That is happening as IG13 trades at its all time record tights of 77 bps. In other words, buying an index of 125 investment grade credit provides less than 1% of incremental risk return. Pretty soon the ABX trade will be buying IG. Until then, however, the only risk continues being that of sovereign balance sheet, courtesy of onboarding of virtually all private sector risk at the Central Bank and via other backstop mechanisms.
Kansas City Fed's Hoenig: Fed Must Hike Fund Rate To More Normal Level Between 3.5% and 4.5%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/07/2010 13:06 -0500"The Fed must curtail its emergency credit and financial market support programs, raise the federal funds rate target from zero back to a more normal level, probably between 3.5 and 4.5 percent, and restore its balance sheet to pre-crisis size and configuration." Kansas City Fed President Tom Hoenig
Total NSA Unemploment Claims Hit Another Record
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/07/2010 12:58 -0500
Total Non-Seasonally adjusted insurance claims (consisting of Initial, Continuing and EUC claims) hit another record of 11,268,100. Make of this data what you will. We are confident the objective, mainstream media will find a way to spin this favorably (it can only go down from here... of course, unless it doesn't).
Welcome to another lost decade
Submitted by Vitaliy Katsenelson on 01/07/2010 12:55 -0500The stock market’s performance over the next decade will be very similar to the one since 2000: the WSJ appropriately named it “the lost decade.” Stocks will go up and down (setting all-time highs and multiyear lows), stagnate, and trade in a tight range. At the end of this wild ride, when the excitement subsides and the dust settles, index investors and buy-and-hold stock collectors will find themselves not far from where they started in 2000.
Take... These Broken Wings... And Learn to Fly Again.
Submitted by Travis on 01/07/2010 12:48 -0500Do your best Mister Mister and lament with Boeing Co. as they report that customers ordered a paltry 142 commercial jets in 2009.









