Archive - Mar 10, 2010
A Culture of Corruption?
Submitted by Leo Kolivakis on 03/10/2010 23:49 -0500David Loglisci, who was Hevesi's chief investment officer at New York's state pension fund, has agreed to dish to investigators for Attorney General Andrew Cuomo on a culture of corruption that existed in the office.
European Commission To Back CDS Trading Ban As Second Round Of Strikes Cripples Greece; Greek GDP Now Expected To Miss Worst Case Scenario
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/10/2010 22:35 -0500The Washington Post reports that the next "Lehman-sized" event may be just around the corner, as the European Commission is now supporting a ban on trading sovereign CDS. While we are in process of tracking down whether this is actual news or just some exaggeration based on semantics, we will caution, once again, that the consequences of a CDS trading ban will be severe and very likely result in the opposite of what the EC intends on achieving. Keep in mind that everyone expected the Lehman bankruptcy to be contained as it was at best a fringe cog in the financial system. The result was a systemic collapse as one interlinked component of the financial fabric imploded after another. The rush to unwind CDS positions ahead of a ban will be massive and have unpredictable consequences. But the biggest threat is what happens to bond prices, which once basis trades are made impossible, will be promptly unwound, leading to pervasive selling of the cash leg not by speculators but by plain vanilla mutual fund idiot money. What scapegoaters seem to forget is that the vast majority of existing sovereign CDS notional is tied into perfectly boring insurance "basis" trades, in which the bond is held in combination with associated CDS. Once there is an inability to have hedged cash sovereign exposure, the demand for European sovereign paper will plummet, achieving precisely the opposite of what the CDS ban is attempting to accomplish.
Guest Post: Stocks Up.... So Is Risk Aversion
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/10/2010 21:39 -0500S&P Futures managed to test the Jan 11th highs but risk aversion in credit remains significantly shifted since then which we find intriguing. VIX is slightly higher than at 1/11, 10Y TSY 10bps lower in yield with a notable duration extension into the 5-7Y region of the curve and away from 2Y and 30Y, DXY is up 4.5% but oil is a smidge lower while Gold is -$44. All of these changes as equities reach 2010 highs once again. It is the credit shifts that we find the most notable in the last 42 workdays. IG is 7bps wider than at 1/11 (with IG intrinsics 13bps wider!). HY is 43bps wider (and intrinsics 39bps) from the closing level on 1/11. Main and ITRX are also notably wider today (9bps and 25bps respectively). In single-names, wideners outpaced tighteners by a huge 6-to-1 and while FINLs outperformed non-FINLs handily in IG names, the majors have seen dramatic curve flattening in that period as well as decompression (remember IG13 has AIG/ILFC and none of the major banks).
PIMCO's El-Erian On The Inability To Grasp The Seismic Changes Currently Occurring In The Developed World
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/10/2010 20:36 -0500We have now reached a point when a Senator has to write a well-intentioned letter to the very administration he serves, (whose sworn duty is to preserve the wealth of all of its constituents, not just Goldman Sachs), with a cautionary tale that continued lying to the general population combined with a culture of opacity and persistent fraud, will lead to a disastrous effect to the economy and to the very fabric of American society. Alas, in a society in which those being lied to extract a satisfaction as great, if not greater, from this process, than those doing the actual lying, this is not too surprising. Sticking our collective heads in the sand has traditionally worked miracles for resolving the bulk of this nation's problems. And with the public sector now demonstrating a preferential treatment for the financial space, at the expense of 99% of the remaining population, it has become obvious US citizens can no longer rely on the US government for procuring the truth. Furthermore, with China now a vassal owner of America via its undisputed creditor status, we may soon lose the protection the government is entrusted with affording its citizens in other realms, from enemies certainly domestic (mostly located in south Manhattan), and very possibly foreign. Yet, another voice of caution that has recently emerged, and whose message is critical to all, is that of Pimco's Mohamed El-Erian. The Pimco executive has written another very relevant Op-Ed in the Financial Times, "How to handle the sovereign debt explosion" which does not so much disclose new things, as capture the essence of the groundbreaking transformation that is currently occurring within the entire "developed" world, and more specifically, the denial that the vast majority of "experts" are exhibiting when faced with a previously unseen process of unprecedented significance.
Guest Post: It’s 2010: What Should Investors, Traders and More Importantly What Should We as Americans Do Now?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/10/2010 18:36 -0500This report reviews the merits and shortcomings of portfolio diversification, the upcoming “restructuring cycle” for CRE and LBO’s of the credit cycle boom that burst in 2007, and the bone-crushing impact this recession is having and will continue to have on unemployment and state and local budgets. Readers wishing to gain insight into the macro picture and challenges that we as traders and investors will be facing over the next three to four years please read on.
Unemployment: Better, Worse or Less Bad?
Submitted by George Washington on 03/10/2010 18:10 -0500What do the January unemployment numbers mean? How about February?
Senator Brown Warns Summers And Geithner Not To Fill Fed Vacancies With Yet More Administration Puppets And/Or Idiots
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/10/2010 18:00 -0500In a letter to Larry Summers and Tim Geithner, Senator Sherrod Brown warns the administration to not simply place more Wall Street cronies in filling the three vacancies at the Federal Reserve, which will open up once Fed vice chairman Donald Kohn leaves this coming June. Instead of mere" maximum liquidity" automatons, Brown wants the new Fed members to be "committed to transparency, consumer protection and lowering the unemployment rate." Furthermore, Brown demands that "we need economic policy makers who possess the foresight to identify harmful economic trends, the courage to speak out about the necessity of addressing these practices before they inflict lasting damage to our economy, and the wisdom to listen even if their views are challenged." Alas, as transparency and rationa thought, coupled with proactive defensive actions means game over for the Fed, these conditions are an immediate deal killer, with the result being that the only affirmative criteria for new Fed membership is the endorsement of Lloyd Blankfein and current Fed Director Jamie Dimon. With the yield curve merely at record wides, there is certainly enough room for the current 2s10s spread of 282 to at least double as the American middle class still has a little money that can be stolen, in space or time, by Wall Street, with the Fed's endless blessings. Everything else is smoke and mirrors.
Goldman, GETCO & Ken Griffin Tighten their Vulcan Death Grip on Gold Futures
Submitted by Chopshop on 03/10/2010 17:15 -0500GATA must be gulping hard as Goldman, GETCO, Citadel, MS, UBS & DRW announce the purchase of minority stakes in NYSE Liffe U.S., which administers 100 oz. gold futures, 5,000 oz. silver futures, options on gold and silver futures, and mini-sized 33.2 oz. gold and 1,000 oz. silver futures. The long-suspected ringleader of silver futures short-sided shenanigans, JPM, was conspicuously absent from today's NYSE press release. David Simon himself (The Wire) couldn't write a seedier script of flagrant fraud and regulatory remiss.
A Modest Amendment Proposal To The "Move Your Money" Campaign: Increase Your Withholding Exemptions
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/10/2010 17:05 -0500Over the past few months, Arianna Huffington has initiated a grass roots campaign called "Move your money" whose purpose is to forcefully shift an allocation of the deposit base from the TBTFs which have captured the government via the Wall Street-D.C. lobby complex. While we hope this campaign succeeds, we are somewhat skeptical that it will achieve its goal. First, the logistics of transferring one's account are non-trivial and can be daunting to most people. Second, the overarching problem lies not so much with the banks themselves, as with the one supreme enabler of not just artificial "profitability engineering" but of the broad range of market interventions, which will ultimately result in the collapse of America. Just today we demonstrated that the US monthly budget deficit hit an all time record, which, paradoxically, and completely counter-intuitively was accompanied by a record drop in the interest rate paid on public marketable debt. This is an artificial and perverted relationship which will soon breaks, and when it does the suffering will truly begin. Yet therein lies the rub: as the Administration, with the full complicity of the Treasury, borrows deeper into the red and consigns America's future to a 3rd world fate, can now only be stopped by precipitating a full systematic reset of a Treasury-Fed duopoly set on testing whether or not America can default. Unfortunately, the guinea pigs in this experiment are some 300+ million Americans. We suggest a simpler solution to facilitate this the much needed reset: increase your tax withholding exemptions (a far simpler process to moving one's deposit account), thereby forcing the treasury to tip its hand on just how much debt it will need, as it pretends to have some semblance of authority over an out of control budgetary situation.
Social Security Trust Fund 1st Q 2010 Results - Still Slipping
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 03/10/2010 16:18 -05001st Q for the SSTF is like all of last year. Bad news.
Another Record: Treasury-Mortgage Spread Just Took Out 60 bps Support
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/10/2010 16:00 -0500
The 10 Year Treasury To Mortgage spread just broke the 60 bps barrier, and is now trading at a record tight 59.61 bps, after dropping as low as 58 bps earlier. Is the Fed now launching a short squeeze in MBS as well? Pretty soon Mortgages will be trading at negative rates, when the Fed realizes that the only way to get house prices higher is to pay Americans to take out a mortgage.
As Budget Deficit Hits Record High, Interest On US Public Debt Hits Record Low
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/10/2010 15:36 -0500
What is wrong with this picture: the MTS just announced that the February budget deficit was $220.9 billion, after receipts of just $107.5 billion with vastly surpassed by outlays of $328.4 billion. This is a record. Yet the interest on the public debt was a mere $16.9 billion (page 13 of the MTS report). The reason for this is because as TreasuryDirect points out, in February the interest on public marketable debt (actual cash outlays), which as of Monday stood at $8.061 trillion, hit an all time low of 2.548%. How is it possible that unprecedented debt accumulation can result in ever declining interest rates, and Treasury auctions, such as today's 10 Year reopening, in which the Bid To Cover hit an all time high? One answer: The Federal Reserve, which through complete domination of the entire capital market courtesy of ZIRP and QE has now turned market logic upside down by 180 degrees. In a normal world, the more money you borrow, the greater the associated risk, and the greater the interest payments on this debt. Not in America though. So can we assume that the Fed can forever keep rates on debt at record low levels? No. Which begs the question: what happens when interest rates do finally start going up?
Hand to Hand Combat in the Options Pits
Submitted by RobotTrader on 03/10/2010 15:22 -0500Things are really starting to get wild. CNBC should just eliminate the NYSE trading floor shots and replace them with battle scenes from "Hamburger Hill" or some of the medieval battles in "Lord of the Rings". Basically, everyone is out for blood today as panicked put and call holders are getting barbecued with Goldman's flamethrowers or getting bludgeoned to death by spiked clubs.
Party Boy Roubini Worries About Double Dip
Submitted by Econophile on 03/10/2010 15:04 -0500My favorite party boy economist, Nouriel Roubini, just came out with his analysis for the second half and he notes that we may be heading toward a double-dip recession. Too much negative news, he frets. I have been saying this for some time.
Your Usual Table, Mr. Papagiorgio?
Submitted by Chris Pavese on 03/10/2010 14:13 -0500It would appear that European leaders are back at their usual table.
Speaking at the Bookings Institute before meeting with the US administration, Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou blamed “unprincipled speculators” and “ill-regulated” financial markets for pushing Greece to the brink of financial ruin and dragging down the euro. Along the way he convinced France’s Nicholas Sarkozy, that another financial crisis is around the corner if the CDS market is not curtailed. Sadly, we agree with the conclusion, but many European “leaders” are confusing cause and effect. Keith McCullough, at Hedgeye, explained it best yesterday when he said, “markets don’t lie; politicians do . . . hearing politicians talk about markets is like watching a southern belle try to ice fish.”









