Archive - Oct 2010
October 18th
Stocks Continue To Underperform Gold
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2010 15:08 -0500
While the biggest near-term catalyst for the market will be the imminent earnings release from AAPL, which itself defines the market due to its massive weighing in various indices, stocks once again fizzled when priced in gold. The S&P for October continues to underperform gold, and today closed unchanged priced in non-fiat, which merely reaffirms that the loss in dollar purchasing power is not being compensated by the stock bubble. And yes, this happened even though it was a POMO day. As we have speculated, gold has become nothing less than a natural short hedge to stocks: one, which, however unlike traditional shorts, has no upside limit. As long as retail refuses to throw its hands up and join the ponzi orgy, the relative underperformance of stocks will continue. In the meantime, there is no POMO tomorrow.
As French Strikes Continue, Country Runs Out Of Gas
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2010 14:46 -0500
As the ongoing strikes in France against austerity continue, and see increasingly more participation, the latest development is all too familiar to all those who travelled through Athens in the summer: huge lines for gas. About 1,000 gas stations across France have run out of fuel because strikers had blocked access to oil refineries and depots, Alexandre de Benoist, a Union of Independent Oil Importers official, told CNN on Monday. It gets worse: per the AP, the head of France's petroleum industry body said fuel reserves were "enough to keep us going for a few weeks." Jean-Louis Schilansky, president of the Petrol Industries Association, warned however that if the strikers continue to block fuel depots and if the nation's truckers join the movement, "then we will have a very big problem." Sure enough, truckers did join the fray on Monday, staging organized slowdowns aimed at snarling highway traffic. French TV showed images of cars and trucks on a "Snail Operation," driving at a snail's pace along the main highway between Paris and the northern city of Lille, with red union flags waving out the windows. Will Europe's little experiment with Austerity be doomed, as the continent realizes that there is no solution to the imminent insolvency of the PIIGS and soon everyone else, and should just enjoy it last months and days of the existing status quo?
Oil’s Not Well
Submitted by ilene on 10/18/2010 14:27 -0500We have a clueless top 10% partying on as if the World revolves only around their net worth while the bottom 90% of the people tumble into the abyss - getting a little poorer and a little madder every day.
JP Morgan’s Analysts Agree with BoomBustBlog Research on the State of JPM (a Year Too Late) but Contradict CEO Jamie Dimon’s Conference Call Statements
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 10/18/2010 13:53 -0500Less than an hour after my CNBC Squawk on the Street segment on JP Morgan I read JP Morgan's analysts predict that forced repurchases of soured U.S. mortgages may be the “biggest issue facing banks”. I'm simply flabbergasted. Didn't I say the same thing on the 12th, as well as the 18th (OF JANUARY!!!). Worse yet, it appears as if Jamie Dimon didn't get the memo or read BoomBustBlog before the conference call. Somebody buy him a subscription!!! Yeah, I know I'm not making too many new friends on the Street, but I try to call 'em as I see 'em...
Interactive Brokers' Peterffy Lashes Out Against The Broken Market, As Nanex Conclusively Proves HFT's Were Cause For Flash Crash
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2010 13:47 -0500
A recent speech by Interactive Brokers' CEO Thomas Peterffy at the World Federation of Exchanges may just be the watershed insider conversion event that finally opens the eyes of all those who have been living for years with the delusion that modern markets are fair, honest and transparent. As the Interactive Brokers head says: "It is not so much anymore that the public does not trust their brokers. They do not trust the markets, the exchanges, or the regulators either. And why should they, given our showing in the past few years? I must confess to you that I was an ardent proponent of bringing technology to trading and brokerage. Unfortunately, I only saw the good sides. I saw how electronic trading and recordkeeping could be used to force people to be more honest, to make the process more efficient, to lower transaction costs and to bring liquidity to the markets. I did not see the forces of fragmentation and the opportunity for people to use technology to keep to the letter but avoid the spirit of the rules -- creating the current crisis. It is vitally important that we bring an end to this crisis of trust before it spreads any further; that we bring back order, fair dealing and trust in the marketplace." And if there is anything that the 23 sequential outflows from equities demonstrate, it is precisely that the average investor no longer has any trust in either the markets, or its regulator. Furthermore, the latest piece of evidence from Nanex, definitively confirms that not only was the Waddell & Reed's order not the catalyst for the May 6 flash crash, but it was the HFT buyers of this sell order, that "transformed
a passive, low impact event, into a series of large, intense bursts of
market impacting events which overloaded the system. The SEC report uses an
analogy of a game of hot-potato. We think it was more like a game of dodge-ball
among first-graders, with a few eighth-graders mixed in. When the
eighth-graders got the ball, everyone cleared the deck out of panic and
fear." At this point, to the SEC's chagrin, there is nobody left to watch how this particular game of dodgeball, or the latest propaganda scapegoating campaign for that matter, will end.
Dollar Index: Key Level Here And Now
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2010 12:50 -0500
Just a brief intraday update on the USD. We have potential H&S formation in EURUSD, AUDUSD, and inverse H&S in DXY. Furthermore we are very close to the 61.8% retracement from the highs in AUDUSD at 99.26, and while in EURUSD the level is 1.4035, we have resistance around the highs of 10/0 and 10/10 between 1.4010 and 1.4031. Overall the USD if it must find support should ind it around here. AUDUSD chart shows massive saturation on the slow stochastic and the RSI is at levels where the market corrected both in May and October 2009. - Nic Lenoir
Gonzalo Lira On What Brian and Ilsa Said To Their Bank: “Show Me The Note”
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2010 12:18 -0500I wrote a couple of weeks ago about Brian & Ilsa, a retired couple in their sixties who were trying to refinance their house through HAMP, but were being jerked around by their bank—probably so the banks and servicers could get government bonuses that created perverse incentives to put homeowners into the HAMP program, then toss them out after a three-month "trial mod". In this update of their story, we find out the happy ending they got—and the cattle-prod to the crotch that their bank got. All Brian and Ilsa needed to do was say four little words: "Show Me The Note." — Gonzalo Lira
Atlanta's Dennis Lockhart Joins Doves Begging For QE2
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2010 11:56 -0500On the wires:
- Fed's Lockhart says leaning in favour of more monetary stimulus, decision not clear cut
Somehow this will lead to even more QE "pricing in", even though by now it is "priced in" about 150%. Of course, this is no surprise as Lockhart has long been in the opposing camp of an ever increasing group of hawkish Fed presidents such as Hoenig, Bullard, Kocherlakota and to some extent, Fisher. That only one of them is a voting member is irrelevant. After all at the end of the day, only one madman has the launch codes.
A Video Reminder Of Wall Street's Criminal Activities
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2010 11:53 -0500
As if anyone needed a reminder of how corrupt Wall Street is, here are two easy to digest videos providing some additional perspectives on why the entity that controls the Fed, Congress and the Senate, not to mention the teleprompter in chief, is nothing but a bunch of criminals. While nothing new to regular readers, the NYT's Louise Story has taken a look at securities lending, dominated by firms such as State Street, BoNY and JPM, which she describes as follows: "funds lend some of their stocks and bonds to Wall Street, in return for
cash that banks like JPMorgan then invest. If the trades do well, the
bank takes a cut of the profits. If the trades do poorly, the funds
absorb all of the losses." In other words, just one more of two magic coin flips in which the US taxpayer always has a 100% chance of losing. The response by JPM on allegations that it entices clients in a rigged game is memorable: "If customers lose money that they have entrusted with the bank, he said,
that “can lead to a loss of clients and can affect the reputation of
the business." Um, what reputation? And in another clip, the Huffington Post Investigative Fund also takes a look at JPMorgan (is the administration's former war with Goldman now shifting over to the house of Dimon? That will teach you to turn down that SecTres post Jamie...) in a documentary which look at what it dubs Wall Street's new sweet spot "as surrogate tax collectors who see profits in tacking on fees and threatening to foreclose when homeowners fall behind on property taxes." Well, at least the whole foreclose bit is off the table for now.
Social Security, Illegal Immigration and Ben
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 10/18/2010 11:24 -0500What is good is not always good.
Bearish VIX Bets Surge To 2010 Highs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2010 11:22 -0500
One of the more notable 2010 "highs" achieved recently (and in a year when pretty much every metric is trading at or near all time highs, thanks to the Fed becoming the primary market maker in virtually everything), is the surge in Net non-commercial speculative positions in the VIX futures, which also confirms the latest bandwagon trade du jour. At -17,181, the net outstanding bets are at the most bearish for 2010, surpassing the previous record from August 17. However, while then the market was plunging, and the bet was a contrarian one, now it is one of momentum chasing, as pretty much everyone expects stocks to continue going higher, leading the VIX to plunge to fresh lows. So far it is working. Of course, as it the problem with every bandwagon trade, the second someone blinks and the direction in stocks is interrupted (and it will unless stocks continue rising every day from now until the last POMO officially takes America into a Fed-facilitated, ponzi-driven hyperinflation), the unwind will be vicious, as these are levered bets on what is basically a second derivative on stocks, which in turn are a first derivative on stocks. Anyone who wants to bypass all the daily noise and put a big bet either way, should just go the 4th or 5th level of leverage, and merely bet on whether this trend in record VIX bearishness continues, or, if it will stall. And since everything is now predicated on the moves in the dollar, and thus the EURUSD, the only question is how long will Europe tolerate incursions by the dollar in the 1.40+ space, which results in big losses to Germany's export sector, and thus, a very angry Angela Merkel.
RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 18/10/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 10/18/2010 10:46 -0500RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 18/10/10
Graham Summers’ Weekly Market Forecast (Currency Pairs Edition)
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 10/18/2010 10:41 -0500Thanks to the world central banks’, particularly the US Federal Reserve’s, constant liquidity injections combined with the automation of almost ALL trading courtesy of the massive rise in high frequency trading programs (HFTPs) and other computerized trading systems, the world financial markets have entered a period of incredible correlations between asset classes.
In plain terms, everything is now moving in near perfect direct correlation or near perfect inverse correlation to everything else on an almost tick-for-tick basis.
Insider Selling To Buying Update: 2,019 To 1
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2010 10:36 -0500Just when everyone thought we may see some moderation in the wholesale dumping of equities by those who actually know what their companies are worth better than moronic stock pumpers on stations that are rapidly losing their viewership, here come the same insiders and pull the rug right from underneath the latest batch of hot potato recipients (that would be various collocated computers mostly, and involuntary taxpayers course). Two weeks ago, insiders sold "only" 1,169 times more than they bought. Alas, last week selling apparently is the new black again, with selling outpacing buying on the S&P by a factor of 2,018. Insiders in Oracle, GameStop, Google, CSX and General Mills appear to be particularly partial to the new black. Something tells us CNBC will not pick up this particular piece of news.
Massive $6.3 Billion POMO Closes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2010 10:11 -0500Ben Batmanke saves the day again. Today's POMO is a whopper: at $6.3 billion it is the largest since the announcement of QE Lite (not the largest ever mind you - next month, for example we will see $15-20 billion daily POMOs). The submitted to accepted ratio was 3.5x as PDs gladly tried to convert $21.8 billion worth of 7-10 Year Bonds into shares of Apple, Amazon, Google and Netflix. Following last week's $4.7 billion POMO, today's action bring the Fed's balance sheet to $831 billion. Japan - watch out. And now the HFTs are stuck in churn mode as the liquidity infusion is done for the day. Next POMO - Wednesday.







