Archive - Oct 2010

October 13th

Tyler Durden's picture

Gold Surges To Fresh Record Spot Of $1,367.65 On Report China To Put More Reserves Into Gold





And so gold takes off, as the CRB index passes 300, with America blissfully unaware $100 oil and 20% U-6 unemployment is next, leading to a total collapse in the economy. The catalyst: Bloomberg reports China to put more reserves in gold. This time gold is flying even as the dollar is not getting crushed, implying that capital flows are not simply "gold on, dollar on." The surge in gold once is again making relative stock gains for the day priced in gold negative. With nobody daring to actually short stocks on fear of random buy-ins (such as the one in IWM today) Gold continues to be the way to express a negative bias on stocks, and one which on a pair trade basis has been profitable on any historical horizon basis as gold's "beta" is better than that of stocks.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The Credit/Equity Disconnect Is Now Complete: All Financial CDS Are Wider





No one needs to look at stocks to know how JPM, and the other TBTFs are doing. After all they are now firmly in the clutches of the HFT/Citadel/FRBNY pump machine. Yet a glance elsewhere confirms that all correlations between stocks and credit are terminally broken. To wit, note the following CDS spreads as of moments ago:

  • JPM 85/88 (+4)
  • MER 184/189 (+6)
  • MS 170/175 (+5)
  • WFC 105/110 (+6)

Be careful trading financial stocks: JPM's earnings were actually very bad, and so far only credit has figured it out. Equities, being traded now exclusively by Fed-frontrunning retards and virus-infested robots, are a little slow.

 

Phoenix Capital Research's picture

Are You Ready for the US Debt Spiral?





At some point, and I cannot tell you when, the US is going to find itself facing a situation very similar to that of Greece. Indeed, if Greece’s numbers are “Crisis Worthy” investors should consider that the US’s fiscal condition is in fact AS BAD IF NOT WORSE than Greece’s.

The US is expected to run a $1.7 trillion deficit in 2010. Assuming that the GDP numbers are accurate (they’re not, but that’s an article for another time), the US economy is in the ballpark of $14 trillion. This means we’re running a deficit equal to 12.3% of GDP. That’s RIGHT next to Greece.

Then of course, you’ve got our Debt-to-GDP ratio. If you ignore unfunded liabilities like Social Security and Medicare, the US already has a Debt-to-GDP ratio of 98.1%. That’s only slightly off of Greece’s Debt-to-GDP of 112%.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

September China Imports Surge To Record, As Trade Surplus Drops, Misses Consensus





China released its September trade balance data, which at $16.9 billion, missed expectations of $17.8 billion, and was a sizable drop from the $20 billion in recorded in August, however was a 30.5% increase from a year ago. The reason for the sequential drop in the number was due to imports which at $128.1 billion surged to an all time high. This being China, of course, it was offset by a surge in exports to its two main export markets: the US and EU. US exports, much to the protectionists' chagrin, came at the second highest on record, or $27 billion, even as imports also grow marginally to $9 billion (see charts below). The the export saving grace was Europe, which imported $28.8 billion worth of Chinese goods, for a trade surplus (from the Chinese perspective) of $14.9 billion: the highest since the Lehman collapse. And confirming that September was a very much trade driven month, the gross notional trade balance with the Rest of the World (ex US and EU), surged to a record $99.7 billion ($44.1 billion in exports and $55.6 billion in imports, both at near or fresh record levels). The ongoing trade surplus will surely lead to more calls for Yuan revaluation, which of course simply means CNY-USD unpegging, as the CNY continues to benefit mostly to the Fed's ongoing devaluation of the dollar. How this is lost on our Congress critters and Senators is beyond us. Want CNY revaluation? Stop killing the dollar. And due to to traditional pick up in the trade surplus in the month of October, we expect screams for trade war to get ever louder next month once a fresh record Chinese export number is posted.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: October 13





  • For Orderly Dissolution Of The Fed, Before It Does Us Even More Harm (IBD)
  • Securitization Flaws May Lead Investors to Fight Mortgage Deals (Bloomberg)
  • China Foreign-Exchange Reserves Jump to $2.65 Trillion (Bloomberg)
  • Japan warns China on currency policy (FT)
  • More on the Fed's new mandate (which we are sure was cleared by Congress) targetting GDP and/or prices: Fed Mulls Raising Inflation Expectations to Boost Economy (Bloomberg)
  • Frank Aquila discusses what Zero Hedge noted weeks ago: corporate cash repatriation concerns - "since repatriating these profits
    means incurring a tax of as much as 35 percent, most overseas
    profits remain offshore" (Bloomberg)
  • Across the U.S., Long Recovery Looks Like Recession (NYT)
  • The economic crisis was an 'inside job' (WaPo)
 

Tyler Durden's picture

Peeking Behind JPM's Voodoo Numbers, As Jamie Dimon Confirms Borrowers Live Mortgage Free For 14 Months Before Foreclosure





Some accounting voodoo to start off the day. In a nutshell - the bank which missed total revenue expectations of $24.28 billion by almost half a billion at $23.824 (which you may find unadjusted on one place somewhere in the attached presentation but most likely not), and which is entering Q4 with the foreclosure fraud crisis chip on its shoulder, and halted mortgages, somehow is lowering its net charge-off provisions estimate by over a billion. Which is why, hey presto, earnings of $1.01 "beat" expectations of $0.88, and the robotic headline scanners go nuts over the stock. More importantly, in discussing fraudclosure, JPM admits that by the time there is a foreclosure sale, borrowers are on average 14 months delinquent. In other words, all those who end up being "thrown out" on the street, live mortgage-free for over a year! And one wonders where all the excess marginal money to buy worthless trinkets comes from...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Daily Highlights: 10.13.2010





  • Asian stocks advance as Japan Machinery orders, Intel sales beat estimates.
  • China has $16.9B trade surplus after exports rise 25% in September.
  • FDIC floats rules on closing firms; proposals require creditors to take hit.
  • Fed tilts to more monetary easing; Minutes show likelihood of QE2 in November.
  • Finland to raise $2B from sale of five-year bonds.
  • Foreclosure delays may cost US banks up to $6B, FBR's Miller says.
  • Hong Kong to temporarily restrict immigration to the city based on real-estate investments.
 

Tyler Durden's picture

Number of European Banks Using Fed USD Swap Facility Increases By 100% In Prior Week





Something odd happened today when the ECB disclosed the number of banks using the Fed's USD swap facility - it increased by 100%. And granted it was an increase from one bank to two banks, but still. As we have been highlighting for over a month, one bank had for five weeks in a row been responsible for borrowing $60 million from the Fed using the ECB as an intermediary, paying roughly 1.19% for the privilege, implying it had been constantly locked out of the USD interbank market. Today, bank #2 joins in, this time for a much more substantial amount of half a billion dollars. The most likely reason for this (absent some major behind the scenes front-end deterioration in a PIIGS bank, which in Europe tends to be given), is that as we highlighted yesterday, European liquidity conditions have recently gotten far more tight, courtesy of the massive liquidity extraction following the latest LTRO expiration. And whether one looks at it as a 100% increase in the number of banks, or almost 1,000% increase in the amount of borrowings, the development is certainly not good. Which, the cynics out there may say, is why stocks are up: it is most certainly not due to JPM missing revenues estimates, and booking and projecting a hilarious drop in charge-offs in light of the foreclosure freeze which will do precisely the opposite. But who cares about reality.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Today's Economic Data Highlights





Another data sparse day - after this morning’s data on mortgage applications, there is import/export price data and two Fed speeches.

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 13/10/10





RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 13/10/10

 

Reggie Middleton's picture

iSuppli Continues to Validate BoomBustBlog’s Original Thesis: Android as the Viral Game Changer!





The mobile computing market is unfolding exactly as we anticipated...

 

Pivotfarm's picture

Daily FX Retail Trader Contrarian Analysis 13th Oct





This daily report is designed to help traders find opportunities to trade against this group. The premise is very simple we are looking for 66% of retail traders to be trading either long or short a currency pair, we then look for opportunities to fade (trade against) this group. For example if 72.99% of traders are long the USD/CHF we look for opportunities to short that pair.

 

October 12th

williambanzai7's picture

Forget About the Fraudclosure Fiasco, How About My Bonus?





I don't know about you, I am tired of all this fraudclosure stuff...I am concerned that our best and brightest will not be adequately rewarded for all their good works!

 

MoneyMcbags's picture

10/12/10 Midnight Report: Fed minutes count down the seconds to QE2





It was another quiet day in the market as the expectation of QE2 continues to dominate the headlines like Securities Analysis dominates the insomnia drug market or like Gabourey Sidibe dominates a doughnut (or box of doughnuts to be more precise). The market still can't figure out what to do as investors continue to oscillate between delusion and ecstasy over the Bernanke Put which seems primed to lower real rates until they drop further than Meg Ryan's boobs.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Gold Surges After Japan Says It Is Considering New QE And Geithner Guarantees Currency Wars





A quick look at gold price action demonstrates that someone somewhere is actively debasing currencies. An even quicker scan of headlines confirms this to be the case: per Reuters "Bank of Japan Governor Masaaki Shirakawa said on Wednesday the central bank will consider expanding a new scheme for buying assets ranging from government bonds to exchange-traded funds when deemed necessary." Harakiri Shirakawa continued: "We have taken a very bold measure ... If the need arises in the future, making further use of the new fund as part of monetary policy is one of our strongest policy options." Judging by the chart below, either gold has a tent in its pocket or was really happy to hear this announcement.

 
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