Archive - Dec 2, 2010
RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 02/12/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 12/02/2010 12:01 -0500RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 02/12/10
Gold Surges On False Rumor Of ECB Fat Finger: Instead Of Buying PGB, A Confused Trichet Hits GCG
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2010 11:30 -0500
Just kidding. More importantly, it now appears that the $1,400 barrier in spot gold will be breached shortly.
$8.3 Billion POMO Closes: Brian Sack Forbids Instantaneous Monetization Of Just Auctioned Off 10 Year
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2010 11:24 -0500Today's $8.3 billion QE has closed and the Fed has monetized 13 bonds of various CUSIPs between 2/15/2018 and 8/15/2020. The Submitted to Accepted ratio was a very low 3.3x, once again confirming that PDs had excess cash, did not need to rely on the Fed's generosity and as a result are now ramping stocks with aplomb. What is most curious is that after we have disclosed that in the last 2 POMOs the most monetized bond was the just auctioned off issue, today Brian Sack put CUSIP PC8, the 10 Year auctioned off on November 9 on the exclusion list (see bolded below), meaning PD were forbidden from flipping the most recent issue. We wonder if the New York Fed no longer enjoys being under the microscope in that it openly and flagrantly allows almost instantaneous monetization of "just issued" cusips? Of course, that QE2 continues to funnel billions of taxpayer money to Primary Dealers is not threatened one bit. After all millionaire bankers have to become billionaires through ongoing perfectly legal theft from the middle class in some way or another.
Chinese Gold Imports Surge By 500% Through October
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2010 10:53 -0500All who thought that China was merely posturing when it announced a few days back it was creating a fund to allow its domestic investor base to allocated capital to foreign gold ETF, may wish to reconsider after it was disclosed late last night that China gold imports jumped by 500% in the first 10 months compared to all of 2009 on concerns of rising inflation according to the Shanghai Gold Exchange.Other concerns probably include what is happening to the FX and stock market which have now moved on from cash flow to Keynesian failure discounting mechanisms: ironically the higher the S&P is pushed by the Brian Sack cabal, the more sovereign bonds are bought by the ECB, and the more bankrupt European countries are said to be doing perfectly ok by their new dictator Olli Rehn, the more gold will be bought across the world. China does not disappoint: from Bloomberg: "Imports gained to 209 metric tons compared with 45 tons for all of 2009, Shen Xiangrong, chairman of the bourse, told a conference in Shanghai today. China, the world’s largest producer and second-biggest user, doesn’t regularly publish gold-trade figures and rarely comments on its reserves." And that would be in the form of JPM's bogeyman: physical.
Max Keiser's Plan To Destroy JP Morgan Goes Mainstream, After The Guardian Posts His "Silver Squeeze" Thoughts
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2010 10:21 -0500As Zero Hedge readers know, the reason why the US mint sold a record amount of silver American Eagle coins in November is unlikely a coincidence, and very possibly an indication that the recently disclosed plan as espoused by the MKs (Mike Krieger and Max Keiser) to destroy JP Morgan is working: to wit, if every person buys an ounce of silver, JP Morgan and its massive synthetic silver short position, will have no choice by the cover, face unprecedented margin calls, and possible lead to an end for the New York Fed's favorite bank. Today, Keiser goes mainstream, detailing his thoughts in The Guardian, which courtesy of its massive circulation is sure to reach far more readers to whom this idea is new. To keep a track of how well this plan is working, we suggest readers check in with the US mint, which frequently updates the amount of silver American Eagles sold on its website (link). The full Guardian article is below.
Goldman Reveals The First 5 Of Its Top Trades For 2011
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2010 10:12 -0500Following yesterday's completely non-arbitrary release by Jan Hatzius of his about face economic upgrade at precisely 4 minutes ahead of the Fed data dump, Goldman has released the first 5 trades of its top 2011 trades. Hopefully these trades will perform far better than the basket of 2010 trades which left Goldman clients flat at best (especially the FX component which was a total disaster and which Thomas Stolper apologized for yesterday). On the basis of its suddenly rosy outlook for the economy (as always, Goldman by definition is buying whetever a client is selling and vice verse) here are the first five trades that Goldman believes will be the best money makets for the next year.
1. Short $/CNY via 2yr NDFs, currently at about 6.4060, target of 5.9, expected potential return 6%
2. Long US large-cap Commercial Banks (BKX), at 44.76, target of 57, expected potential return +25%
3. Long US High Yield (Selling protection on the CDX HY index), at a current spread of 528, target of 450, expected potential return of 8%-9%
4. Long Nikkei 225 (NKY), at 9,988, target 12,000, expected potential return +20%
5. Long a Basket of Crude, Copper, Cotton/Soybeans and Platinum (‘CCCP’), indexed at 100, expected potential return 28%
John Taylor On The Parallels Between The European Union And The Congress Of Vienna
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2010 10:05 -0500Some historical parallels on where the current state of disintegration of the latest artificial European Union construct falls in historical terms from FX Concepts' John Taylor. "As supporters of the hypothesis that historical events display cyclicality that if studied and understood can improve decisions about the future, we are always trying to place current events in a historical context. Our goal is always to develop a strategy that can anticipate the twists that current historical actors will take. The recent crumbling of the Eurozone has been a perfect example...Finding a way to examine these events, we compared the situation leading up to the troublesome periods. We found a very interesting parallel between the 34 years following the Congress of Vienna in 1814-1815 which ended with the tumultuous 23 year span of revolutions and nation-building in Europe, and the time that followed WWII until the millennium, a 55 year span. This period ended with the founding of the euro."
The Politics and Economics Of a U.S. Default
Submitted by Value Expectations on 12/02/2010 09:48 -0500There's an enduring myth that the U.S. has never defaulted on its debt, but that's merely a function of how default is defined. When Treasury abrogated the gold clause in 1933, holders of U.S. debt suffered serious losses, and as evidenced by the dollar's decline versus gold since 1971, Treasury has been a serial defaulter ever since. Assuming a default of the haircut variety, this has been the global norm for at least two centuries, and if the U.S. were to default in this way, it's not something we should fear. Post WWII the largest economic powers were regularly in default of the haircut kind, and the global economy boomed.
Taking a Nissan Leaf Out for a Spin
Submitted by madhedgefundtrader on 12/02/2010 09:47 -0500The vehicle that will upend the auto market in 2011. Aiming for 10% of the global car market by 2020, or some 5 million units. Tearing up the ball room at the San Francisco Auto Show. Don’t try looking for the tail pipe. PG&E is offering a special Plug-in-Vehicle electricity rate at a 92% discount. What will these cars be worth when oil hits $150 a barrel again? Giveaway price, free fuel, free maintenance. Hmmmmm.
Here Is What ECB Intervention Looks Like
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2010 09:36 -0500
Behold Jean Claude Trichet's fat finger. ECB now lifting every bid. Note that the PGB was at 84 before yesterday's two rumors that drove the market (both sovereign bonds and stocks) higher are now refuted. We have a suggestion: perhaps Trichet and Brian Sack can just take it out back and beat each other. The winner's currency goes to zero and the respective stock market goes to 36,000.
Goodbye Benefits... Hello "Interesting" Times
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 12/02/2010 09:23 -0500What’s truly strange is to see allegedly educated, intelligent people like Ben Bernanke talk as though the stock market is somehow an economic indicator. I’m sure it’s a great indicator of prosperity if you work at Goldman Sachs or are a corporate insider at a publicly traded company.
However, for those Americans who DON’T have flawless trading records (or stock option grants) stocks have NOTHING to do with your day-to-day activities.
After all, your typical American DOESN’T buy food or pay their mortgage with the profits from their day-trading; they pay with the money they earn from their JOB.
As Trichets Spins, ECB On Every Bond Bid
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2010 09:14 -0500Hearing that as the head of the ECB continues to not answer any question, his organization is buying Portuguese and Irish bonds actively. If the vigilante attack intensifies not even the ECB will be able to withstand the onslaught.
Initial Claims Come At 436K On Expectations Of 424K, Previous Revised Higher Of Course To 410K
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2010 08:30 -0500Headline scanning robots unhappy. In addition to the deterioration in initial claims, continuing claims also missed expectations, coming in at 4270K on expectations of 4200K with the previous revised from 4182K higher to 4217K.
Watch The ECB's Most Anticipated Press Conference Live At 8:30 am Eastern
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2010 08:11 -0500All who wish to watch the ECB's 8:30 press conference during which Trichet will finally reveal the size of his pocket bazooka (if one is revealed at all), can do so here.
Key notes:
- ECB's Trichet says ECB to continue to conduct 1-week, 1-month as fixed rate, full allotment until 3rd maintenance period of 2011
- "Overall the current monetary stance remains accommodative"
- ECB's Trichet says monetary policy stance, liquidity provision and allotment modes will be adjusted as appropriate
- ECB narrows range of 2011 GDP expectation from 0.5%-2.3% to 0.7%-2.1, 2010 seen in range of 1.6%-1.8 compared to 1.4%-1.8% prior
- 2011 inflation projected between 1.3%-2.3%, higher than September's 1.2%-2.2%.
- Notes flattening of yield curve.
- The teleprompter just broke here: says banks have stabilized balance sheets. What he means here is that the ECB's take over of the European banking system is proceeding on plan.
- ECB's Trichet says all Euro area countries should pursue ambitious multi year consolidation programmes: in other words, "plutocrats around the world, globalize."
- Prepared remarks end - no announcement on expected monetization. EURUSD sliding.
Daily Highlights: 12.2.2010
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2010 08:10 -0500- Brazil’s lower house allows Petrobras to be sole sperator of Pre-Salt Fields.
- Deficit panel tackles health care costs.
- ECB to keep unlimited liquidity operations.
- Gold gained for a fourth day, trading near the highest in almost three weeks.
- US foreclosure sales fell, discounts rose in 3Q.
- Acer said it’s aiming to capture 15% of global tablet-computer sales next year.
- Aegon will cut 400-500 jobs in US, take $290M in charges.






