Archive - Feb 8, 2010

Tyler Durden's picture

Jim Grant On California And Greece





With Greece getting all the imminent default attention, have we forgotten California? Jim Grant chimes in.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

3 And 6 Month Bills Price At 0.11% and 0.17% Yields, Direct Take Down Solidly In Double Digit Range





The $24 Billion 3 Month Bill closed at 0.11% high rate (just 7.85% allotted at high). Bid To Cover was 4.46 versus last weeks 4.06, and 3.96 over the past year. The demand for Bills surges as does direct bidders take down which was a whopping 17.2% of the total $22.7 billion. Indirects came in surprisingly weak at 28.9%. The balance is Primary Dealers.

The $27 Billion 6 Month Bill closed at 0.17% high rate, with 43% allotted. Bid To Cover was 3.83 versus last week's 3.88 and an average of 3.8 over the past year. And as in the 3 Month, the Direct take down was a whopping 18.2%, with Indirects at 39.2% and the balance for PDs.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Rosenberg Recaps The European, And Sovereign, Risk Soap Opera In Ten Paragraphs Or Less





While nothing new to constant Zero Hedge readers, Rosenberg's recap in a few simple paragraphs of what is happening in the European periphery, the EMU, and with sovereign balance sheets is a must read for all recent entrants into fundamental sovereign default analysis.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Leaking Credit Ignoring Sudden Dollar Strength As Stocks Trade With Every Tick Of The DXY





As always, a much more rational credit market is not following the sudden intraday exuberance of stocks, which are trading in lock step with the DXY and specifically the EUR-JPY pair: every correlation engine is primed to copy step for step how the Euro and Yen trade in the stock market. With all indices green for the day, the culprit is solely the DXY which has taken a downleg over the past 30 minutes for no particular reason. In the meantime IG, HY, SovX and, yes the STUPIDs, have all put their fireman's hat on: IG is 2.5 wider, HY is 15 wider, SovX is 6 wider to 112, the UK passed a hundred and the prevalent STUPIDity is surging to 242 from 235, another recent record.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Two Hedge Funds One Bank? Is There A Concerted Effort To "Destroy" Greece?





In the pre-math of the Greek collapse, conspiracy theories are swirling about who keeps blowing Greek CDS spreads wider. The answer, so far completely unconfirmed, is that a large US investment bank (we "wonder" just which US investment bank dominates the sovereign CDS market), and two major hedge funds are behind the CDS "attacks" on Greece, Portugal and Spain. According to Jean Quatremer, and his Coulisses de Bruxelles, UE blog, the plan involves blowing spreads to record levels, and is prompted by the hedge funds' anger at not having been allocated substantial amount of the recent €8 billion GGB issue, in order to lock in profits from their CDS long exposure. Being thus unhedged with a short bias, their alternative is to continue buying protection else risking to mark losses on their extensive CDS short risk exposure.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Back To Normal: Insider Selling Outpaces Buying By 58 To 1





After last week's outlier data, in which 3 buyers pushed the balance for the first time in over a year to a positive buyer/seller ratio, this week we are back to the new normal: a/k/a selling deluge. $488 million in shares was sold in the past week in 192 documents transactions, while just $8 million was bought in 38 deals. Notable dispositions included Bill Gates selling $85 million worth of MSFT, Roger Pensky dumping over $100 million, and Juniper Chairman Scott Kriens selling $12.5 million worth of JNPR stock. Also, after announcing a major trimming in his GOOG portfolio, Sergey Brin sold some "pocketchange" worth of Google stock worth $7.6 million. Source: FinViz

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk 8th February US Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.





RANsquawk 8th February US Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

China Investment Corporation Discloses $10 Billion Worth Of Holdings, Files First Ever 13-F





Last week the China Investment Corporation (CIC), also known as China's sovereign wealth fund, and the entity that allocates China's nearly $3 trillion in foreign assets, posted its first ever 13-F filing, which disclosed holdings of just $9.6 billion. Missing were CIC's Blackstone stake and the fund's first 2008 Morgan Stanley investment. Furthermore, the listing omits any real estate, fixed income, and foreign securities, implying that the true holdings of the sovereign wealth fund are likely much more extensive. We are confident that the CIC likely is a major holder of Treasury securities. As a reminder the CIC reported about $300 billion in AUM at the end of 2008 in the fund's first annual report. Combing through the 13-F (presented below) indicates that while the fund has a soft spot for commodities and financials (its investments in Teck, MS and Blackrock), the prevalent holdings of CIC are, surprisingly, in ETF.

 

madhedgefundtrader's picture

The Aussie/Euro Cross is the Carry Trade in its Purest Form





Ready for a breakup of the Euro, anyone? How long can a sober, conservative German grandfather be expected to indulge the disgraceful habits of its party animal, thrill seeking, drug addicted grandchildren? They’re actually worried about inflation down under. If you want to know how the big boys are coining it, come this way. The trade that George Soros and Paul Tudor Jones glory in.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: February 8





  • No job growth for small business spurs recovery doubt (Bloomberg)
  • S&P plunge fails to shake Gabelli on technology (Bloomberg)
  • El-Erian favors Brazil bonds, Chinese Yuan. Whatever happened to Bunds? (Bloomberg)
  • Is the market priced for perfection? (NYT)
  • America's #1 creditor holds the ultimate weapon (Post)
  • Conan's Majestic duplex on West 72nd Street on the block for $35 million (Post)
 

Tyler Durden's picture

Deutsche Bank And Unicredit Pull Out Of Greek Repo Market, Cease Lending Against Greek Collateral





Bailout rumor refusal - check, bank/country run - check, collateral pulls - check. If anybody tells you there is everything in common between Greece and Lehman/AIG, believe them. The latest escalation in the Greek crisis comes courtesy of Greek daily Banking News which notes that the latest nail in the Greek coffin comes from formerly major Greek players, Deutsche Bank and Unicredit, which over the past 2-3 weeks have ceased accepting Greek collateral and have pulled out of the Greek repo market altogether.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Daily Highlights: 2.08.10





  • Australia removes large-deposit guarantee amid signs of economic recovery.
  • Brazil poised for Latin America's first rate increase as growth picks up.
  • Corporate bond yield spreads widen the most since November: Credit Markets.
  • Euro, Asian stocks fall as G-7 fails to end concern over Greece, fiscal budgets.
  • G-7 governments risk 'muddled middle' with plan to spend now, save later.
  • Greenspan sees 'slow' recovery, would be 'very concerned' if stocks drop.
 

Tyler Durden's picture

RANsquawk 8th February Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.





RANsquawk 8th February Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk 8th February Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.





RANsquawk 8th February Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.

 

Leo Kolivakis's picture

Drop in Dividends Leaves Pensions Exposed?





In the UK, the data shows the financial crisis led to a £6bn fall in dividends from the banks, leaving drug, tobacco and oil companies to fill some of the gap. Meanwhile, UK commercial property is benefiting from huge pension flows. Is this a wise long-term investment?

 
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