Archive - Jan 2010

January 28th

Tyler Durden's picture

Why Is The Bond Market Ignoring All The Rosy Greek Rhetoric? And Has That Been The Plan All Along?





A Greek bailout is rapidly becoming an extreme likelihood. The implication is that coupled with the newly emerging austerity measures in Portugal, Europe, but mostly Germany, will run out of options very quickly. On one hand Trichet and Merkel have stuck themselves in a corner with all the recent anti-moral hazard talk (and the question of whether Europe's strapped public sources can accumulate enough bailout capital in time is still open), and on the other, as Lehman so well demonstrated, a colossal event such as a eurozone member defaulting, would likely have the exact same unpredictable domino consequences that everyone has long been warning about. The silver lining - an imminent drop in the euro, and a boost to European exports. Perhaps this is the agenda all along - Greece will be the sacrificial lamb which will satisfy the bloodthirst of French and German unions, and prevent political landslides in all of Western Europe. And the kicker - they can't tell Bernanke and the U.S. they did not go along with the G-20 plan of keeping the euro artificially high: after all this will be spun as an "exogenous" event...Ironically, the bitter medicine for the rescue of both Spain, Portugal and the other PIIGS may just the transformation of PIIGS to PIIS.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The Only Thing Better Than A Zero Hedge? Wells Fargo's "Never Lose" Economic Hedge





Did a hedge gone wild account for nearly half of Wells Fargo's Q4 earnings? More importantly, when the economy turns sour, will the same "hedge" drag the company's net income down faster than a financial weapon of mass destruction obliterates lower Manhattan? An analysis of Wells Fargo's Mortgage Servicing Rights and associated "economic hedges" indicates that investors should be concerned by a flashing red light hidden deep within the bank's assets, and the associated loose accounting principles.

 

Chopshop's picture

The Address Obama Should Have Given - For a Change to Freedom





In an often defiant tone, President Obama insisted that as far as he is concerned the era of “Big Government” is not only still here to stay, but needs to be dramatically expanded -- even if some recent elections and public opinion polls suggest that a growing number of Americans are leery of moving further in this direction.

In the face of Obama's determination to push for more “change” down the path of expanding political paternalism, one imagines what Stinky BO might have said in the State of the Union address if he had chosen to propose the type of (Austrian Liquidity Theory) change that really would have meant greater freedom and opportunity for the American people.

(courtesy of Northwood University & the Mises Institute) What he could have said might have been something like the following:

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Federal Reserve Balance Sheet Update: Week Of January 28 - New Record





  • Securities
    held outright: $1,913 billion (an increase of $67 billion MoM,
    resulting from $64 billion increase in MBS and $3 billion in
    Agency Debt), or a $7 billion increase sequentially. 
  • Net
    borrowings: $165 billion. Number for the January 28th week has not been updated.
  • Float,
    liquidity swaps, Maiden Lane and other assets: $196
    billion. The CPFF program was was at $11.2 billion, another fresh all time low. FX liquidity swaps declined
    by $1.075 billion to practically 0. Maiden Lane I
    and Maiden Lane II were at $26.8 and $15.4
    billion, while Maiden Lane III continues pretending it has value and came at $22.5 billion.
 

Tyler Durden's picture

The Printer Gets Another Cartridge





Chairman Bernanke was voted back in today. Interestingly the markets reacted very little to it, and if anything equities showed renewed weakness after the official confirmation whereas they had bounced from their lows earlier in the session. I think it was as much due to late stops into the close than anything but after hours will tell us the true story. - Nic Lenoir

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The Printer Gets Another Cartridge





Chairman Bernanke was voted back in today. Interestingly the markets reacted very little to it, and if anything equities showed renewed weakness after the official confirmation whereas they had bounced from their lows earlier in the session. I think it was as much due to late stops into the close than anything but after hours will tell us the true story. - Nic Lenoir

 

Bruce Krasting's picture

Alan Blinder on Ben Bernanke – Phooey!





The vote was as shoo-in all the way. There was some noise but it did not amount to much. Bernanke has too many friends for a Senate slap down. One of them is Alan Blinder. Let's just say we don't agree.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The Derek Zoolander Center For Children Who Can't Read Kindle Good And Want To Learn To Go Long AMZN Stock Good Too





You mean not every American bought 10 kindles last quarter? $116 better hold or then it is straight down to $100 and lower. And just in case the shorts don't get squeezed, the management announced the oldest trick in the book: a $2 billion share buyback. At 40x forward PE this seem like a total steal for management.

 

RobotTrader's picture

It's All About Ben





Never seen so many eyeballs watching the same microticks on 5 charts simultaneously and seeing virtually everything move in perfect lockstep tick for tick. Everyone waiting and wondering about when and if Bernanke is going to make the cut or not. Meanwhile Obama was desperately on the phone, attempting to get a post-SOTU "resubstantiation" rally in play.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Bernanke Cloture Vote Passes





Ben Shalom Bernanke reconfirmation now guaranteed. Sorry America - your senate has failed you. Enjoy the asset bubble and the coronation of the opaque US balance sheet as the biggest receptacle of toxic assets while you can - the next implosion will be the last.

 

Marla Singer's picture

Remember When?





The large gates of New York’s largest prison open and today’s group of newly released emerge. They pass a guard who lifts up a copy of The USA Today to reveal the headlines and date that tells us it’s 2002. Amongst this group we find a man carrying a small duffel.

And we know this man.  He is Gordon Gekko.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

PIIGS Fly As Greek Rescue By Germany Contemplated





Yet another rumor denied vehemently by the Greek Finance Ministry, which automatically means it is 100% true, is that Greece rescue talks are reaching a fever pitch, and according to FT-Deutschland, Germany is seeing increasing pressure to bail out the struggling country. As Dow Jones reports "rescue talks are being held in the EU and with certain capitals about aid for Greece, according to the sources, the report adds. Several options are being discussed, one of which being bilateral loans from some euro zone countries, where Germany would have to shoulder a major part as the euro zone's largest economy."

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Additional Perspectives On The AIG Fiasco





While Tim Geithner may hope the AIG situation is now dead and buried, it is likely anything but, with the recently launched investigation into disclosure fraud by the SIGTARP, and the relentless efforts by Darrell Issa to metaphorically crucify the tax-challenged treasury secretary currently ongoing. As these noble pursuits continue, we ask two simple questions.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

With Major Trendline Broken, Will Short-Term Support Hold?





The past week has seen a material break from the long-term support ever since the March lows. After peaking a short week ago, the market has found it impossible to rally on even the "great news" of earnings beats and on what is supposed to be a Bernanke reconfirmation today (should this "given" not transpire, or if even a vote delay is proposed, we hope everyone has an assortment of puts to hedge the fall). The more relevant question from a short-term trading exposure is whether the buying programs that emerge on every low-volume lull after a major selloff will be capable to sustain the increasingly shaky upward trajectory.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Currency-Stocks Correlation Is Back As Yen Is Preferred Funding Currency Once Again





After several weeks of driftless correlation between stocks and the DXY, stocks are once again correlating almost perfectly with the critical EUR-JPY pair. Due to the acute impact on the DXY via the EUR-JPY, this is the easiest way to push around the DXY levels. Furthermore, the correlation return could be indicative that the JPY is once again the carry currency of choice. Couple this with a weakness in the short-end of the UST curve, and one can speculate that carry traders are quietly repurchashing dollar shorts and selling Bill positions, meaning that the Yen will likely be seeing rather substantial weakness in the coming weeks.

 
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