Archive - May 22, 2010

Tyler Durden's picture

Max Keiser And Gerald Celente Deconstruct Financial Fraud





Max Keiser at his best, deconstructing the global ponzi with Gerald Celente, another very much outspoken critic of the broken financial system. Most ZH regulars will be quite familiar with the overriding themes exposing the mass corruption perpetrated by the kleptocratic oligarchy, yet Max as always delivers the message with his patented iconoclastic panache that just draws you in.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: Some Elliott Waves





A Wave 4 is described as a Profit-Taking Wave. It is not so much that the Bears are getting stronger as the Bulls are taking profits off the table as they see them eroding. The mini-crash on 6 May may not have been real in the eyes of many, but it did technical damage to the market. The emotions of traders are seen in the market as fear and greed have their way. That is also why I said in my post on 6May that the low of that day would be taken out, even though the massive rebound made many think it was just an anomaly. That low (1056) was broken Friday as ES dipped to 1051.25. I think we still have more to go, but I’ll take that new low for now. If that first leg down on 6May didn’t convince traders and investors that there was a significant correction beginning, then the more deliberate decline to the new low on Friday should have convinced them that there is trouble brewing with their new-Bull market. IMO, this is why technical analysis is so great. It is based on repeatable mass psychology, and it is driven by the emotions, fear and greed. Fear and greed are ever-present human emotions that form repeatable patterns in the market, whereas news and world events cannot be anticipated and measured by the lowly traders like myself.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Seth Klarman "More Worried About The World Than Ever" Redux





A few days ago we pointed out that Seth Klarman is bracing for yet another lost decade, as the legendary Baupost investor anticipates nothing good out of government incursion in capital markets, and has come up with the best description for the fake, busted and heart attack inducing market yet, comparing it to a "hostess twinkie" (full must read article summarizing his speech at the CFA Institute here). Another must read piece, for those who may have missed it the first time around, is his summary of lessons learned and unlearned from the financial crisis, found here. Today, the WSJ's Jason Zweig has a follow up on Klarman, who, as we noted earlier "is more worried than ever" and concludes that "all we got out of this crisis was a Really Bad Couple of Weeks mentality. I am more worried about the world, more broadly, than I ever have been in my career." And they say Zero Hedge is bearish...

 

George Washington's picture

The Giant Banks, Federal Reserve and Treasury Have All Blackmailed America





If you don't give us what we want, we'll shoot ourselves ...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Financial "Reform" Cheat Sheet





The reform bill is a joke. It reforms nothing, it fixes nothing, and it will not prevent the next much bigger crash from happening (with or without Goldman's Supplemental Lack of Liquidity Provider assistance) - just two items that need to be pointed out: $6+ trillion in GSE debt - untouched, $400 trillion in IR swaps: untouched. This is reform? However, if you care enough to know what a bribed and corrupt Congress and Senate have "reformed" here is a useful cheat sheet courtesy of the New York Times.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

It's Official - Cuomo Announces Run For Governor





The worst kept secret in New York politics is out: the Attorney General has officially announced he is running for governor. From nydailynews.com "After months of speculation of when he will make the formal announcement, Cuomo tossed his hat into the ring on his campaign website Saturday morning." Alas, any changes at the top will do nothing to cure the number one problem in both New York, as well as all other states: insolvency. Too bad New York is so bankrupt that pretty much nothing can help, least of all those tens of billions in NOL carryforwards at Wall Street's investment banks which will make sure New York State corporate tax receipt coffers are empty for years to come.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Jim Rickards Discusses Financial Warfare





Jim Rickards, who some may say has gotten a little too much media exposure recently, is on King World News this morning, discussing the presentation he gave to the US Treasury (closed to the public) in which he lectured Tim Geithner on financial warfare, read China, and how flawed trade policies can impact this ever so critical and increasingly tenuous relationship. To be sure, it is better late than never that someone advised the UST on what the right path is. Unfortunately, righting the US(S) Titanic at this point is impossible as it would mean undoing 2 years of flawed actions and policies, and the cost would be unbearable. Another topic touched upon is the recent correction in gold. The price move over the past week should come as no surprise to anyone. On May 19th we noted Goldman's most recent move to a bullish stance in gold, and we concluded that "we may well be in for a gold retracement, at least from a purely
technical standpoint, as Goldman "distributes" its newfound gold
holdings"
as Goldman moved to sell its gold to whatever few clients it has left. Sure enough, $70 dollars lower later, Goldman's ever-angrier clients who listened to this most recent horrendous tactical call, are only left with a receipt for a metric ton of KY. The gold move is nothing more than liquidation of real assets to cover margin calls in imaginary ones, such as LBO bonds which have moved from 10 cents on the dollar to par during the melt up, and are now seeing a bidless environment, a groupthink phenomenon of which a plunging FDC is the prime example. Those who have no reason to sell gold should obviously hold right - Rickards notes: "for every seller there is a buyer. The sellers are the daytraders, speculators and people in distress who need to raise cash, buyers could be foreign sovereigns, China, Russia, India, so we could be seeing a move from weak hands into strong hands. I see gold at $2,000 in the short-term, and $5,000 in the long-term." Also discussed is Germany's ban on naked shorting, which Rickards applauds, not so much as a policy move, but as a symbolic stand by European sovereigns against the bullying power of Wall Street, something we fully agree with is long overdue. "Merkel will definitely be supported by others. I know the French were a little but upset that she did it, but they are not upset because she did it, but that she did it first. Sarkozy will join in."

 

Leo Kolivakis's picture

The Paradox of Market Chaos?





It's silly to compare today's markets to those of the 1930s or even 1990s. Erratic moves have become the norm, not the exception. What's driving these moves and what is the paradox which threatens the integrity of capital markets and might ultimately threaten the global economy?

 

EB's picture

Paul & Grayson: The War Is Making You Poor Act





Fresh off his "You own the Red Roof Inn" tour, Alan Grayson gives another svelte performance as he introduces the latest soon-to-be buried-in-committee bill with the help of his trusty easel.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Weekly Chartology





David Kostin: The sinking of the titanic is orderly. Do not panic. The S&P will still close at 1,250. And if you are a client and have listened to us, our bad: "Our overweight recommendations (Energy, Materials, Info Tech) have generated -38 bp of alpha while our underweight positions (Health Care, Consumer Staples, Utilities, Telecom) have generated +12 bp of alpha." In other words we have lost you money on both your longs and your shorts.

 

 
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