Archive - Nov 18, 2010
Bernanke Claims That Contrary To Consensus, He Is Not Spawn Of Satan, Deflects Fed Blame To China
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/18/2010 23:54 -0500Futures are currently experiencing a stunning moment of weakness, something not seen unless the entire Liberty 33 trading crew is at Scores. The culprit according to the three sober traders we could track down is the recently unembargoed speech to be delivered by the Bernank tomorrow in Frankfurt. In it, not too surprisingly, the inkmaster considers revealing details of his most recent DNA sequencing result to prove once and for all, that he is not the antichrist. More relevantly, what Bernanke has done to defend his reputation is to claim that QE will work, and that everything is really mercantilist China's fault, and the Fed is just woefully misunderstood. In other words nothing that has not been said before many times, just another overture which will likely precipitate a prompt round of Chinese retaliation in the form of accelerating trade wars, to be followed by further commodity price inflation in the US, leading to another ramp in Chinese inflation, etc. China now will have no choice but to either hike rates (which will pretty much end of the tech bubble), remove even more excess liquidity (real estate bubble burst) or merely export another $20 billion of crap to the US each month, pretending nothing happened (leading to more QE in the US). As Albert Edwards summarized so well earlier, the global game of chicken will continue until either China's or America's population decides it has had enough of being treated like a experimental gerbil in the endgame of failed economic chess.
NYC Pensions Adjusting to the New Normal?
Submitted by Leo Kolivakis on 11/18/2010 23:39 -0500New York City may reduce the assumed return on its $100.5 billion of pension investments from the current 8%, Comptroller John Liu said. Welcome to the new normal...
A Bailout a Day Keeps the Sanity Away
Submitted by MoneyMcbags on 11/18/2010 23:33 -0500The market absolutely flew today as if it were late to the only showing of Natalie Portman's first lesbian scene thanks to a European country needing to be rescued from the brink of bankruptcy, retail investors being able to buy stock again in...
M2 Passes $8.8 Trillion, Non Seasonally Adjusted M2 Surges By $57 Billion In Prior Week
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/18/2010 23:06 -0500
Seasonally adjusted M2 has just surpassed $8.8 trillion for the first time, hitting a record $8,802.2 billion, a jump of $16 billion on a SA basis. This is the 17th out of 18 consecutive weeks that M2 has increased. On a non-seasonally adjusted basis, M2 also jumped to a record high, hitting $8,765 billion, a jump of $56.9 billion W/W, and an increase if just over $100 billion in the past two weeks alone. While the jump itself is not surprising as it comes in anticipation, and realization, of QE2 (we would love to have the semantic and highly theoretical debate of whether or not the Fed "prints money" but will focus on the practical for now), the last week's components of the M2 change were odd to say the least. In the past week we saw both the biggest drop in commercial banks savings deposits in 2010 ($61.3 billion) and the biggest jump in demand deposits ($57.6 billion).
Man U Player Of The Century Eric Cantona Appeals For Peaceful Revolution Against Banks, Calls For Europeans To Pull Their Money
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/18/2010 20:32 -0500
A few weeks ago we noted that December 7 is becoming a grass roots "banker mutiny" day, in which citizens across Europe will pull money from their banks and thus force a pan-European bank run on what is already a bankrupt financial system, which survives each day only at the expense of the continent's increasingly indebted citizens, their life of increasing austerity, and of course, the US Federal Reserve and its final backstop. In some ways we discounted the potential reach of this movement. Enter Eric Cantona - just ask any sport afficionado who the most entertaining, flamboyant and skillful football player of 1990's Manchester United was and 9 out of 10 times you will hear that name. The icon (both in England and France) whose on field antics were only matched by his kung fu skills, and who has a massive popular following, has been recorded agitating viewers (many of them), to enact a bloodless revolution against French banks: "We don't pick up weapons to kill people, to start the revolution... the revolution is really easy to do nowadays. What is the system? The system revolves around the banks. It's based on the power of the banks... so it must be destroyed starting with the banks. This means that the 3 million people with their placards on the street... they go to the bank, withdraw their money from the banks and these ones collapse. 10 million people and the banks collapse and there is not real threat, a real revolution. We must go to the bank. In this case there would be a real revolution. It's not complicated. You simply go to the bank in your country and withdraw your money. If there are enough people withdrawing their money, the system collapses. No weapon, no blood, or anything like that." A peaceful anti-banking revolution, brilliantly explained so that everyone can understand.
Market Recap: 11.18.2010
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/18/2010 19:44 -0500A recap of the day's key action in equities, futures, FX, rates, commodities and credit.
How the Fed and the Treasury Stonewalled Mark Pittman to His Dying Breath
Submitted by ilene on 11/18/2010 19:41 -0500It’s now two years later, Bloomberg has won at both the U.S. District Court and the Second Circuit Appeals Court and the information is still being withheld.
SocGen Presents Its Vision For The Future In Several Pretty Charts
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/18/2010 18:45 -0500
Substantially more sanguine than their two key strategists Albert Edwards and Dylan Grice, SocGen's Cross Asset research has come out with a report looking at the future of the world, and the various scenarios that may end up taking us there (although the actual reality will of course be something unforeseeable). So while we play predictive games, here is how SocGen believes the upside/neutral/downside cases could look like across asset classes, and across the globe.
Guest Post: What Could Trip Gold Up?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/18/2010 17:45 -0500
Can you visualize a possible scenario that could put a sudden end to the secular rise now underway in gold and silver? In a recent conference call with the research team of The Casey Report, we once again collectively tried to imagine what situation… what scheme… what government manipulation… might finally put a stake through the heart of gold. Setting the stage, I think it’s safe to assume that in order for the gold bull to decisively reverse direction, the following general conditions would have to be precedent in the economy...
More Hot Water For Phil Falcone? Company Once Linked To Kennedy Assassination Reveals Informal Investigation Of Harbinger Trades
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/18/2010 17:07 -0500As if the recent scandals surrounding Harbinger's redemptions, his money withdrawals from a locked up fund, and his pledging of artwork to procure a loan for a mysterious capital need were not enough, next we read courtesy of Matt Goldstein that Phil Falcone is also facing an informal probe in the fund's "investments and trading in securities of particular issuers." What is very curious is that Harbinger Group was once the very infamous Zapata Corp, which has been implicated in everything from the Kennedy assassination, to the Bay of Pigs, to Watergate, to Iran Contra! While we will ignore any possible link between Falcone and the Bushes (not to mention the CIA), we will point out that Phil Falcone is chairman and CEO of the current iteration of Zapata, and that Harbinger Inc and Harbinger Capital Partners are intimately tied. And this is where the real problems arise.
FDR Wasn't FDR ... Until His Hand Was Forced By Civil Disobedience
Submitted by George Washington on 11/18/2010 16:36 -0500Progressives are disappointed that Obama is no FDR.
But FDR himself wasn't who we think of as FDR until he was forced by protests, strikes and other forms of civil disobedience. We've let Obama play footsie with the big banks without making those in power uncomfortable in any meaningful sense ...
RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 18/11/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 11/18/2010 16:26 -0500RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 18/11/10
Getco Churns Nearly Entire GM Float As Stock Closes At Lows Of Day, And $1 Below Break Price
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/18/2010 16:07 -0500
The only clear winner from today's GM IPO? All those who got IPO shares and flipped them to the sheep. And of course GETCO, which churned 452 million of GM's 478 million share float: in other words 95% of the entire float was traded by computers! As for everyone else, you lost: with the stock closing at the lows of the day, all retail investors who bought in post the break, and on the way down ended up with losing positions.We eagerly await the teleprompter's appearance at 4:15 pm eastern to spin this in the right way and convince people that a loss is really a gain.
Leaving New York: Mike Krieger On The Biggest Trade Of His Life
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/18/2010 15:51 -0500One thing I do not want this article to be is a giant bashfest of New York City. I love this place. It is where I was born and it has shaped my personality in every way. The energy is like nothing else on the planet and it will always hold a spot near and dear to my psyche. Who knows, maybe I will return. That said, the current leadership in this city, and by that I mean the financial services industry and the TBTF banks in particular are destroying the city to such a degree that I think it could take a generation to recover. I hope I am wrong on this, but the longer the paper ponzi pushers control this town the worse the devastation will be... I feel very uncomfortable in New York City right now. It and Washington D.C. are at the heart of the gulag state and I have chosen to physically remove myself from it. Even if none of this was happening, I still feel like I eventually would have found myself out West. It just feels like the journey I am meant to take. The lower taxes and open spaces aren’t so bad either.








