Archive - May 19, 2010
New BP Insertion Tube Isn't Working
Submitted by George Washington on 05/19/2010 13:26 -0500S-T-R-i-k-e 3 ...
FOMC Minutes: No Asset Sales Until After First Rate Hike
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/19/2010 13:09 -0500In summary don't expect asset sales until 2099: "A majority preferred beginning asset sales some time after the first increase in the Federal Open Market Committee’s (FOMC) target for short-term interest rates."
Guest Post: White House Covers Up Menacing Oil "Blob"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/19/2010 13:00 -0500In an exclusive for Oilprice.com, the Wayne Madsen Report (WMR) has learned from Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers sources that U.S. Navy submarines deployed to the Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic Ocean off the Florida coast have detected what amounts to a frozen oil blob from the oil geyser at the destroyed Deep Horizon off-shore oil rig south of Louisiana. The Navy submarines have trained video cameras on the moving blob, which remains frozen at depths of between 3,000 to 4,000 feet. Because the oil blob is heavier than water, it remains frozen at current depths.
Coming To America: PIMCO's Total Return Fund Rotates Out Of Europe
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/19/2010 12:28 -0500
The April update for Pimco's Total Return Fund is out. The credit fund, which is now a quarter of a trillion juggernaut, clocking in at $224.5 billion, or $5 billion more than March, and 50% more than the $150 billion last April, has rotated aggressively out of non-US developed holdings (i.e. Bund and other exposure), and put the money back into the US. Total European holdings declined from $40 billion, or 18% of holdings, to $29 billion, or just 13%. At the same time, US holdings increased from 33% to 36%, or a $8 billion increase to $81 billion.Not too surprisingly, mortgage holdings are a scant 16% of holdings, compared to 86% in February of 2009. Is Pimco's European experiment over? Yet another bad sign for Bunds, which Pimco did a whirlwind tour pitching in early 2010 after it had established a position.
Hedge Funds Are Now All Momentum High Frequency Traders - UBS: "Hedge Fund Selling Hits 18 Month High"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/19/2010 12:14 -0500How quickly it all changes. Last month hedge funds were buying at the highest rate since October 2007. This month we see hedge fund selling at its fastest rate since January 2009. Also this month, investors were net sellers of cyclicals. During the market sell-off the underperformance of cyclicals was muted (below) and unusual things occurred. Net selling of Telecoms was more extreme than Mining (albeit just). Investors bought Food & Beverage at the fastest pace since August 2008, but also picked up more Consumer Discretionary (partly due to
Autos and currency). Has country risk replaced sector risk? - UBS
Perspectives From Rosenberg On Hyperinflation As A Loss Of Faith In A Currency
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/19/2010 11:43 -0500In today's note by David Rosenberg, the economist quotes a reader letter which provides a unique perspective on how hyperinflation arises: it is not so much a monetary supply/demand phenomenon, as it is one of faith in a currency, any currency. With the world stuck with the USD as a reserve currency, the question is how much more monetization and QE (and make no mistake, the Fed will be forced to do more of both of these activities) needs to occur before people give up on the greenback. And for all those who question what could possibly take the place of the dollar as the world reserve currency, we would like to point out that any country that has a massive stockpile of resources, an even more massive producing class (as opposed to consuming), a clean sovereign balance sheet, and a society hell-bent on being far more capitalist than the US, would likely make a great target. One specific country in Asia comes to mind. However, this will not occur before the next global economic collapse as century-old habits are difficult things to break. Once the economic reset button is pushed half way once again, and the US-China vassal linkage is broken, look for fund flows to redirect promptly across the Pacific.
Congressional Republicans Calling For Investigation Into ShoreBank Bailout
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/19/2010 11:26 -0500Yesterday we pointed out how insolvent South Chicago bank ShoreBank was rescued in the last minute by a consortium of banks led by Goldman Sachs, after early unwillingness to provide rescue funding to the bank was overcome once the President allegedly got involved. Today we learn from Fox Biz' Charlie Gasparino that congressional republicans, led by Spencer Bachus, are calling for an investigation into what could turn out to be another crooked scam to bail out an administration darling, because GM and Chrysler were not enough, even as over 70 banks have failed year to date, which however do not have the privilege of being in the president's very good graces.
RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 19/05/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 05/19/2010 10:56 -0500RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 19/05/10
200 DMA Taken Out, As ES Drops Below 1,100
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/19/2010 10:55 -0500
When this happened on the way up, it was being blasted endlessly on CNBC. Now, not so much. Watch out for the ongoing Liberty 33 stick save at the 1,100 level.
Hugh Hendry Sees 1920's Japan-Like Crash In China
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/19/2010 10:50 -0500Hugh Hendry, whose previous appearances have been well-logged by Zero Hedge, and who is currently raking the money thanks to long Treasury bet and his EURUSD short from when the pair was 20% higher, has never been a fan of China, and almost got into a fight with Marc Faber recently discussing the country's future prospects. In fact, Hendry uttered this memorable soundbite back in February, in which he mopped the floor with Goldman permabull Jim "BRIC" O'Neill: "I love Jim O'Neill. I love that Goldman Sachs guy. He says you either get it, or you don't. I don't get it. In the future there will be a Confucius saying: the wise man not invest in overcapacity. The flaw of the business model, at the center of it is a craving for power as opposed to profit." BusinessWeek reports that Hendry has now officially put his money where his mouth is and has bought puts on 20 companies that will profit from “a dramatic collapse” of China’s growth. With the Chinese stock market approaching 52 week lows, will Ecclectica soon become the next Paulson & Co. hedge fund iteration, even as the latter continues (allegedly) to bet on a US recovery, and thus stands to lose tens of billions if the thesis does not play out (although we are fairly confident Paulson's long stock positions are matched by even longer CDS hedges... but without additional data, we can never be sure).
SEC Report On May 6 Meltdown Discusses HFT, Has Not One Mention Of The NYSE's "Supplementary Liquidity Providers"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/19/2010 10:34 -0500The SEC has released its Preliminary Findings Regarding the Market Events of May 6, 2010, which find nothing, and just bring the promise of further investigations. The to-date proposed solution to the problem is laughable - more curbs, which do nothing to address the underlying issues at hand, which are that the modern version of market makers, HFT algos, pull liquidity away on a whim, and which can destabilize the market in an instant once "momentum ignition" strategies take over. As we have speculated, the SEC will find nothing material until such time as the next flash crash wipes out not 10% but puts the market into indefinite hibernation. One thing the report does do, is provide an extensive analysis of High Frequency Traders, a concept that was barely known as recently as a year ago. One thing that there is no mention of anywhere in the report, is the NYSE contraption known as Supplementary Liquidity Provider, a program created to give Goldman dominance over the DMM-parallel liquidity rebate system at the NYSE. One would think that the SEC would be aware of this program that was supposed to expire in early 2009, yet continues to be extended and provides Goldman and Getco with, arguably, unprecedented forward-looking information on order flow.
Record Swiss Franc Volatility: 300 pips Swing After Numerous SNB Intraday Interventions
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/19/2010 09:56 -0500
A 3 bps move in a currency in a short period of time is the endgame for any FX trader. The ECB is now indirectly performing stealth operations via the SNB. And as the net result is a weaker EURUSD, one could see the Fed's finger in this.
Market Talk: Greek Finance Minister Says Separation From EU May Be Considered, Greek Gov't Categorically Denies
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/19/2010 09:34 -0500Update: Greek government spokesperson categorically denies talk that Greece would consider leaving EU and Eurozone as reported by RanSquawk.
Market talk for now. With the ECB holding the bulk of Greek debt now courtesy of shadow monetization of Greek debt held by French, German and Italian banks, and the imminent default of Greece the second it leaves the eurozone, this should be a massively EUR negative development, as forexlive points out. Which is why we are rather confused by the straight up kneejerk reaction in the EURUSD.
Watching the Second Coming at the New York Hard Asset Conference
Submitted by madhedgefundtrader on 05/19/2010 09:23 -0500Welcome to the conference of bull markets. Gold hits a new all time high during the conference. Catering to the hard core faithful who suffered a 20 year bear market in hard assets, and even hung on during the dark days when gold plumbed the depths to $260/ounce in 1999. The nuclear power boom in China and the coming renaissance in the US. The new poster child for hard assets: the rare earths.
CRE Double Dip: Moody's/REAL Commercial Property Index Drops 0.5% In May
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/19/2010 08:58 -0500The Moody’s/REAL All Property Type Aggregate Index measured a 0.5% price decline in March, marking a second month of falling values after a slight rebound reported earlier this year. The index now stands at 111.16, down 24.9% from a year ago and 40.5% from two years ago. Prices peaked in October 2007, and at their lowest point thus far in the downturn (October 2009) they had fallen 43.7%. As of the end of March, commercial property prices are down 42.1% from the peak.





