Archive - May 2010
May 24th
Your Far Less Than RDA Of S&Panax By Jim O'Neill
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/24/2010 07:11 -0500Did someone just spill some Gulf Of Mexico 2010 special BP vintage in the UK water supply? First Janjuah comes out bearish guns blazing, and now even the biggest permabull of them all, Goldman's Jim O'Neill, issues some very overcast observations, the most cheerful of which is the ominous stop of the clock of St. Paul's cathedral on Thursday when the market broke the 200 DMA... and yes, speculators will be blamed.
Bob Janjuah: "This Is An Uber Bear Early Warning Alert...Major Risk Asset Sell Off Will See S&P Into 800s...The Fed Will Start New $5Tr QE Program"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/24/2010 06:37 -0500Dear All
I am deeply troubled by the world and markets. THIS IS AN UBER BEAR EARLY WARNING ALERT:...I know its not what folks in general want to hear but hopefully you'll understand that I am trying to do my little bit to help....
First please refer back to my last comment, dd 26th April (Bob's World: What an idiot!)....2 takeaways from this note in particular - 1) my bearish trading call on risk assets, looking for a 10%/10%+ S&P selloff over late Apr and May from the 1220 level, driven by sovereign concerns, was spot on - maybe not bearish enough!, and 2) the point of market and taxpayer revulsion with the horrendous Keynesian/monetarist nightmare forced upon us by policymakers has come to bear. Sovereign limits and sovereign credibility concerns are not now a future risk - they are HERE. The enormous failure here is that the private sector has barely had time to catch a breath, let alone develop any form of self sustaining private sector recovery, before these limits have already begun to hit home.
As I Have Warned, the Fissures Are Widening in the Spanish Banking System
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 05/24/2010 06:36 -0500Spain is starting to show its true colors re: the NPAs in its banking system. When the dam bursts, one should expect a mini-daisy chain reaction to kick off due to the contagion effect. The only question is, which of the PIIGS group will come clean first? Or will they all keep sweeping the NPAs under the carpet until there is no more carpet to sweep under? In the mean time, those bank options are up 300% to 400% and counting...
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 24/05/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 05/24/2010 04:59 -0500RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 24/05/10
May 23rd
The Big Picture: Why Is It So Hard to Stop the Oil Gusher, and Why Was Such Extreme Deepwater Drilling Allowed in the First Place?
Submitted by George Washington on 05/23/2010 23:20 -0500The bigger picture ...
Guest Post: US State Department Says "Conspiracy Theories Exist In The Realm Of Myth"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2010 21:52 -0500The US State Department’s America.gov web site, which purports to engage international audiences on issues of foreign policy, society and values, has dedicated a special section to conspiracy theories and misinformation, claiming: “Conspiracy theories exist in the realm of myth, where imaginations run wild, fears trump facts, and evidence is ignored. As a superpower, the United States is often cast as a villain in these dramas.” Some of the conspiratorial myths “officially” debunked by the State Department include...
Goldman's FX Clients Getting Tactically Bombed On Daily Basis Now
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2010 21:11 -0500The latest tactical nuking of whatever remaining clients GS has in the FX (or any) arena has just been announced: from GS FX research "Stopped out of short USD/TWD with a potential loss of -1.2% May 24, 2010. We were stopped out of our tactical recommendation to be short USD/TWD at the London close on Friday with a potential loss of around -1.2%. We initiated the trade on 31 March on the back of strong macro data out of Taiwan and rising inflation which we expected the Taiwan central bank to fight via a stronger currency. While the macro arguments for the trade are still in place and the trade was well on its way towards the target a few weeks ago, the ongoing market jitters have pushed $/TWD a fraction past our stop of 32.1."
South Korean President Says Will Use "Self-Defense Measures" In Case Of New North Korean Provocation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2010 20:19 -0500From South Korea's president Lee Myung-bak: "If our territorial waters, airspace or territory are violated, we will immediately exercise our right of self-defense. Under these circumstances, any inter-Korean trade or other cooperative activity is meaningless. I solemnly urge the North Korean authorities to do the following. Apologize immediately to the Republic of Korea and the international community. Immediately punish those who are responsible for and those who are involved in the incident" Is this the last warning before war? While we await North Korea's response, now that the ball is again in its court, we have to score one for the South Korea's communist neighbors who once again have manage to bully it (and the US) into nothing but more posturing. Game theory is so much more fun when one of the actors is insane.
Guest Post: How To Trade Market Bottoms For SP500 And Gold
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2010 20:06 -0500
The stock market topped in April which was expected from analyzing stocks and the indexes. Back in April I posted a few reports explaining how to read the charts to spot market tops. Today’s report is about identifying market bottoms.
It does not get much more exciting than what we have seen in the past 2 months with the market topping in April and the May 6th mini market crash. This Thursday we saw panic selling which pushed the market below the May 6th low washing the market of weak positions.
Arbing Spot And Forward Curve Steepness
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2010 19:49 -0500
On Friday we pointed out that after nearly 9 months of straight line steepening, the Treasury curve, as depicted by the spot 2s10s, has collapsed, and has flattened from 290 to 240 bps practically overnight, in what has been an unprecedentedly rapid move in the curve, driven primarily by asset liquidations. Those with exposure to spot are panicking, and have been forced to cover what amounts to billions in levered notional positions. Some (the lucky ones) only have synthetic exposure, via Constant Maturity Swaps or other Robertson/Klarman-esque contraptions, thus limiting a downside they can walk away from. They are the minority. Yet an interesting observation, coming by way of Morgan Stanley's Jim Caron, who little by little is forced to wave the white flag of surrender not only on his 5.5% call in the 10 year by Year End, but also on his all out steepening trade, is that flattening has really only occurred in the spot curve: forward yield curves, both the 1y and 2y, have surprisingly retained their steepening bias in spite of unprecedented vol and liquidations. Why is this? Caron explains. However, more relevantly, his observation that a convergence between spot and forward curves is imminent could serve as an easy (famous last words) way to pick 100 bps.
Futures charts; May 24th
Submitted by Cheeky Bastard on 05/23/2010 15:34 -0500Here we go again .... and again
Presenting What Could Be The Oddest Capital Flow Observation In History
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2010 14:53 -0500It is no secret that the last few weeks saw massive liquidations along all asset classes. The result was a huge outflow across almost all products: Loans, HY Bonds, Municipals, Commodities... all a typical reaction to broad based liquidations. However, note we said "almost" - one class that actually posted a $6.2 billion inflow was equities. Yet not is all as it seems: peeking underneath the hood indicates that the bulk of this inflow, or $10.3 billion, had to do with inflow into ETFs... or rather, just one ETF - the SPY, accounting for $10.1 billion. Did someone prop up the entire equity market last week by massively pushing capital into the most liquid equity proxy available?
Updated Probable LBO Basket: Buy Protection On CBS, CLX, DGX, OMC And SLE
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/23/2010 14:15 -0500BofA/ML's Jeffrey Rosenberg proves once again why he is one of the best credit analysts on Wall Street. Two months ago, the Bank of American put together a basket of potential LBO names which included Pactiv, Lexmark, Lubrizol, US Cellular, and Harris Corp, duly noted on Zero Hedge. He also proposed ways to play these names, focusing on various CDS strategies, of which by far the simplest one was to buy outright naked CDS on the names. Sure enough, this week Pactiv blew out, on rumors of an Apollo LBO (we hope for the sake of Pactiv's employees, not to mention Calpers, that the deal never materializes) and the names in the basket have widened by 121%-257% since inception. For those who followed Rosenberg's advice and made a 20x annualized return on the recommendation, congratulations. Sure enough, the trade is now closed. Additionally, after it was noted that a consortium of private equity firms was likely to acquire Fidelity Information Services, Rosenberg noted on May 7 that the deal is unlikely to materialize. Subsequent to his note, the deal has now fallen apart. This week, Rosenberg provides an updated LBO basket, as well as several strategies on how to play these, either outright or as pair trade. We are confident that with liquidity soon to become overabundant yet again, that these specific LBO names are set to see their credit spreads blow out as usual.
Investor Sentiment: It Would Be Better If...
Submitted by thetechnicaltake on 05/23/2010 14:00 -0500This is my wish list and it would be better if....
Goldman Shares Poised to Fall After Rising on False SEC Settlement Rumor
Submitted by Static Chaos on 05/23/2010 13:14 -0500For those basting in the euphoria of last Friday's rebound in the financials thus believing Goldman's shares are oversold, I'm happy to reiterate that the downward trend from the technical chart remains intact.








