Archive - Feb 10, 2010
Goldman's Greek Budget Deficit Mea Culpa. On The Dot
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/10/2010 11:56 -0500As expected, following earlier protestation by the Greek finance ministry, Erik Nielsen recants (but not entirely). After all, who knows what else the Greek FinMin can disclose about GS swaps and other "financial innovation" exports, should this devolve to a full blown mudslinging competition.
Rosenberg's Musings On The Global Bailout And Other Things
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/10/2010 11:51 -0500Here we are, 2½ years into the global credit crunch and investors are still salivating over bailout prospects — the chatter is that the troubled European countries, Greece in particular, is on the precipice of receiving such a package, primarily, it seems, in the form of German loan guarantees. So, what we see today is Greek bond yields plunging and German bund yields on the rise. Great deal for the German taxpayer, don’t you think? Maybe it should be the Deutschland that plans an exit strategy (Martin Wolf’s column in today’s FT, and its dire conclusion, is worth reading — “a currency union whose core country not only exports deflation but also stands aside as members collapse is in deep trouble”). Investors seem to be believe that such a lifeline is being made available because the cost of insuring Greek bonds against default (CDS spreads) have collapsed 36bps, to 343bps (and down 15bps for Portugal, to 189bps since one bailout will most certainly beget another — this is a classic example of PIGS (Portugal, Ireland, Greece, and Spain) lining up at the trough). - David Rosenberg
Portugal Prices €3 Billion 10 Year Bond At 99.841, 4.823% Yield, 140 bps Over Swaps, 163.7 bps Over 2020 Bund
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/10/2010 11:18 -0500Portugal has managed to price the much anticipated €3 billion 10 Year bond.
Terms:
- Price: 99.841
- Yield: 4.823%
- Coupon 4.80%
- 140 bps over Swaps
- 163.7 bps over 10 Year Bund
- Ratings Aa2/A+ (ha ha ha ha)
Fixed Income Update: Bunderful
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/10/2010 11:08 -0500As we have been discussing the Bund seems close to a medium term top to us. We tested the resistance of the daily channel Friday afternoon, the slow stochastic has now validated the break, and we have a potential H&S pattern in progress here, with the top of the second shoulder around 123.50/60. We would be sellers here, adding to shorts if we break on a break of 123/122.95.
Greece Finance Ministry Official Denies Budget Deficit Explosion, Says "Goldman Misunderstood Data"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/10/2010 10:48 -0500Goldman is not making any friends today (to be expected - Greece likely does not need Goldman's creative swap accounting anymore - after all, they (Greece, not Goldman) are bankrupt right? Why else would they need a bailout). Earlier we first reported about Goldman's novel read of the "revised" Greek budget. It appears Greece is not too happy with this and is already blaming Goldman for data misinterpretation. We await Erik Nielsen's mea culpa.
Full Bernanke Testimony
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/10/2010 10:42 -0500Cliffnoting the just released Bernanke testimony in praise of the printing presses. Lots of theory, no forward looking calendar. "At some point" in the future liquidity will be tightened. But not yet. Not yet.
RANsquawk 10th February US Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 02/10/2010 10:39 -0500RANsquawk 10th February US Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
Maastricht Treaty Article 103 (a)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/10/2010 10:02 -0500"Where a Member State is in difficulties or is seriously threatened with severe difficulties caused by exceptional occurrences beyond its control, the Council may, acting unanimously on a proposal from the Commission, grant, under certain conditions, Community financial assistance to the Member State concerned. Where the severe difficulties are caused by natural disasters, the Council shall act by qualified majority. The President of the Council shall inform the European Parliament of the decision taken." - Maastricht Treaty, Article 103(a)2
Rally Killer? German Report Says "EMU States Can't Guarantee Other States' Debt"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/10/2010 09:26 -0500Confusion reigns day 2, only this time add a pinch of political dissent. Germany's ruling coalition of the Free Democratic Party and the Christian Democratic Union has commissioned a parliamentary report which concludes that "member states may not guarantee the debts of another member state" reports daily Handelsblatt.
Don't Expect A Formal Greek Annoncement Until Friday
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/10/2010 09:24 -0500For all Commodore 64 HFT setups expecting an imminent relief rally following a formal Greek bailout announcement, you may have to wait at least two more days. Dow Jones reports that a German official has said that finance ministers meeting this afternoon are "unlikely to make any decision and there is no aid for Greece on the agenda of Thursday's summit of EU leaders." Furthermore, "There doesn't exist any decision on such aid and it also isn't pending at present". Additional data points to the shape of the bailout: it appears a guarantee is the only, if any, way to go, after a source noted that a "refinancing of debt is not in Greek interest, as it would be seen as a default." With €3 billion in ten year notes set for auction by Portugal, we could be in for a very volatile day. The Portuguese 10 year Bund spread is currently 11 tighter to 137 bps.
Breaking Headlines: INTERNAL REPORT SAYS GERMANY GOVT CANNOT AID GREECE: PRESS
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/10/2010 09:17 -0500More as we get it.
Buy Toyota When There is Blood in the Streets
Submitted by madhedgefundtrader on 02/10/2010 09:16 -0500Toyota has been slammed by the perfect storm. Dozens of deaths, thousands of accidents, and a worldwide recall of 9 million vehicles. What happened to the serial killer of American car companies. Toyota has not turned into GM overnight.
Greece's 2009 Budget Deficit Was Just Revised From 12.2% To 16% Of GDP
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/10/2010 08:50 -0500Goldman's Erik Nielsen lands the bombshell that the Greek deficit mysteriously increased from €29.4 billion to a shopping €37.9 (keep in mind, this is not Bernanke notation where only quad- prefixes impress people at this point). This increases the (running) 2009 budget deficit from 12.2% to 16%! While certainly not the last time we hear of "prior revisions", the question of just how patient Germany will be, should this number approach, oh say, 50% once the artificial support of various Goldman swaps expires (and at 50% the BSDs like Goldman will surely round up to 100%), is very much open.
Daily Highlights: 2.10.10
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/10/2010 08:49 -0500- China's exports jump 21% as imports gain 86% in January, Government says.
- Fed to reveal its strategy for raising interest rates.
- Germany along with EU plans to offer Greece, other members loan guarantees.
- Japanese core machinery orders increased 20.1% in Dec, much better than expected.
- Oil drops to near $73 in Asia after report shows US crude supplies jumped last week.
- Stocks, commodities, Korean Won rise on speculation of Greek aid, China's growth.
Asia Times' David Goldman Discusses The Imminent Chinese Asset Dump
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/10/2010 08:38 -0500
The Chinese dumping story is really catching on. After even Alphaville reprinted it, it seems that everyone in the blogospehere is aware of the imminent, and far greater than a Greece contagion, danger of Chinese dispositions. Here is David Goldman who originally broke the story for Asia Times' Inner Workings blog, discussing not only Chinese dumping and the implication for cost of capital (ca. 11 minutes into the clip), but shares color on the topic du jour, Greece, along with Rick Santelli and Larry Kudlow.




