Archive - Dec 2010
December 10th
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX – 10/12/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 12/10/2010 05:59 -0500RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX – 10/12/10
Trade Against The 90% That Lose Money 10th Dec
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 12/10/2010 02:27 -0500Retail traders are notoriously wrong at picking market direction/tops and bottoms. Most retail traders very naturally seem to adopt a counter-trend stance and this offers very accurate signals for individuals looking to trade against this group. This daily report is designed to help traders focus their efforts on higher probability pairs.
December 9th
Guest Post: Euro Until The Endsieg
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2010 20:55 -0500Breathless but futile discussions about the creation of a new layer of debt in the form of Eurozone bonds are going nowhere. Jean-Claude Juncker, head of the eurozone group of finance ministers, now clashes with France and Germany who both reject the proposal as it would raise their financing costs. On Thursday he said in Germany's main TV news "Tagesschau" that Eurozone governments would have to finance 40% of their debts via Eurozone bonds, which would lead to a northward conversion of German yields with their weaker Euro brothers in arms. As the Euro dream has rapidly mutated into a nightmare for Greece and Ireland, with Portugal and Spain to follow for sure, I note a fatal tendency in EU circles to hold out for the Endsieg despite all the contrary evidence pointing to a not too distant disintegration of the common currency.
Austerity, Inflation Or Default: SocGen's Guide To 2011
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2010 19:52 -0500Some serious bedside reading here. Lots of pretty charts too, if a little too much undue optimism.Still, certainly one of the less Koolaidish reports out there.
Goldman Implicated In CDS Price Manipulation Scandal
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2010 19:42 -0500One of the recurring topics on Zero Hedge since inception has been that Goldman's flow/prop operations, simply by dint of their massive, monopolistic size, allow the firm to manipulate various securities, among which equities, structured products, and especially CDS. And while the firm has migrated to a more wholesale market manipulation paradigm when it comes to equities due to the far smaller bid/ask spreads, requiring the need for Goldman to become either an SLP on the NYSE, or to create market manipulating algorithms, such as that it is currently accusing Sergey Aleynikov of stealing, where the firm has always excelled has been in the far thinner, and far more profitable, courtesy of wide bid/ask margins, CDS market. Today, we get confirmation from Senator Carl Levin, to whom it appears Goldman has the same trophy value as SAC to the New York District Attorney and Federal Task Force, that Goldman was engaged in precisely the kind of CDS manipulation we have previously alleged the company was involved with.
Market Recap: 12.9.2010
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2010 18:55 -0500A recap of the most important events in equities, corporates, rates, vol and FX.
A Treasury Curve Refresher
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2010 17:59 -0500
Considering how suddenly it has once again become fashionable to talk the Treasury curve (as expected, the halflife of the contagion conversations was 2 weeks), after conveniently ignoring it for about 6 months when it continued to show deteriorating profitability for banks, we think it is useful to provide a reminder of what the curve looks like currently.
Pentagon Papers Whistleblowers Call for a New 9/11 Investigation
Submitted by George Washington on 12/09/2010 17:45 -0500They support WikiLeaks ... did you know they also support a new 9/11 investigation?
M2 Rises To Fresh All Time Record, 19 Of 21 Consecutive Weekly Increases
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2010 17:03 -0500
One of the funniest lines in Bernanke's speech last 60 Minutes speech is when he said that the currency in circulation has not increased despite his monetary easing - ergo there is no inflation. Of course, as even doorknobs know by now currency is merely one component of physical and binary money out there. But trust a pathological liar to expect 60 Minutes' viewers to be dumb as a bag of hammers. Of course, a far more important metric of the moneyness of the system, is the M2 aggregate (technically M3 is far more important, but as per the Fed's March 23, 2006 decision, M3 was discontinued as "M3 does not appear to convey any additional information about economic activity that is not already embodied in M2 and has not played a role in the monetary policy process for many years. Consequently, the Board judged that the costs of collecting the underlying data and publishing M3 outweigh the benefits." Ah yes, the Fed is worried about costs...) Anyway, the M2 has just risen to a fresh all time record: in the week ended November 29, Seasonally Adjusted M2 was $8,812.2 billion, which is the 19th week of the last 21 in which this metric has increased. Is inflation about to prove just how much of a monetary phenomenon it really is? But not to worry - the Chairman is well ahead of everyone in withdrawing all of this excess money already percolating through the economy.
Eric Sprott's Double Barreled Silver Issue
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2010 16:32 -0500Regular Markets at a Glance readers may have wondered why we remained so silent on the subject of silver over the last several months. Considering the significant exposure we have to silver as a firm, we can assure you that it wasn’t for lack of desire to share our views, but rather due to strict solicitation restrictions imposed on us by the cross-border listing of Sprott Physical Silver Trust (PSLV) this past October. It therefore gives us great pleasure to finally share our views on silver with you. We have included two separate articles in this issue of Markets at a Glance: the first was written back in June 2010, and contains the information we used in the prospectus for the PSLV. The second is an update article written this past month that discusses new developments in the silver market and confirms our views on the metal. We urge you to read them both in order to understand our investment thesis for silver, and we hope they compel you to take a much closer look at silver as a long-term investment. Silver’s dramatic rise over the last two months is no fluke - it’s the result of a compelling supply/demand dynamic within a unique market structure. We hope the following articles convey our enthusiasm for "the other shiny metal" as an exceptional investment opportunity.
RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 09/12/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 12/09/2010 16:31 -0500RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 09/12/10
THe BaNZai7 2011 CaLenDaR iS HeRe
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 12/09/2010 16:09 -0500Dear Zero Hedge readers...
PIMCO Loads Up On Even More Mortgage Backed Securities In November As El-Erian Boosts Economic Forecast
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2010 15:55 -0500
First the bad news: in November the AUM of Pimco's flagship TRF fund did something it hasn't done since the Lehman collapse: it declined. After hitting an all time high of $255.9 billion in October, the fund's net assets dropped by $6 billion to "just" quarter of a trillion. Now the good news: Bill Gross is long ever longer duration positions, with his holdings of sub-3 Year paper the lowest since November 2008. The fund raised its Treasury holdings from 28% to 30%, and continues to accumulate ever more paper in the belly of the curve- between 3 and 10 years, which this month amounted to a total of 67% of all exposure. This is also the area that over the past month has gotten hit the worst, and is one part of the reason why the various publicly traded PIMCO indices have gotten whacked. But another far more important reason is that for the 6th month in a row the TRF's MBS holdings continue to scream higher, and have now are at 43% (with 10% margin cash): the highest since July 2009 when PIMCO was actively selling its MBS holdings to the Fed in anticipation of the end of QE1. With such a jump in duration, PIMCO better hope that inflation concerns don't pick up, as their part of curve exposure will be the first to be impacted.
John Williams Talks To BNN About The "Great Hyperinflationary Collapse"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2010 15:03 -0500
Any interview that starts off with John Williams saying "Eventually it is going to be a hyperinflationary great depression" is sure to be controversial. While not necessarily news to those who subscribe to the Shadowstats.com editor's newsletter, sometime we wish that Blackhawk Ben was among them, because despite his 100% confidence that rates will never do the kind of move that they exhibited in the past two days, they, well, did. To quote Williams, who actually keeps track of the US economy as if it were a GAAP audited corporation: "The annual deficit is running $4-5 trillion a year, that includes the Y/Y change in the NPV of unfunded liabilities... There is no political will to deal with this." The catalyst is well-known: "When you see panic selling of the US dollar, that's when you have to be really careful. But what's already been done with the dollar has spiked oil prices, and other commodity prices." On the question of why Bernanke would not be able to pull off what Volcker did in the early 1980s, Williams' explanation for why this time it is different, mostly focuses on the size of the US trade and budget deficits, which are not even remotely comparable on both an absolute and relative basis. Most specifically what consumers should do in the post-apocalypse world, Williams is not too optimistic. Ironically, he notes that Zimbabwe in its hyperinflation may have been lucky in that it had the dollar to fall back on in the black market, and now every market. However the US does not have that facility, and this "will get very difficult when food starts disappearing from shelves." Having goods for storage and barter would be critical. However, there may be a snag...
Car Containing Prince Charles And Camilla Attacked In London By Angry Protesters
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2010 14:44 -0500
And now for something amusing: austerity it seems bites back - while driving on Regent Street, Prince Charles, with Camilla in tow, have been attacked by angry student protesters on their way to the London Palladium for a show. The story is being covered on Sky News. In the meantime, the protests are getting increasingly more violent.






