• GoldCore
    01/13/2016 - 12:23
    John Hathaway, respected authority on the gold market and senior portfolio manager with Tocqueville Asset Management has written an excellent research paper on the fundamentals driving...

Archive - Jun 14, 2010

Tyler Durden's picture

San Francisco Fed Makes The Case For ZIRP4EVA, Says No Need To Fix Fed's Bloated Balance Sheet





Well, not really 4EVA, but the uberdovish FRBSF has just released a paper by Glenn Rudebusch, in which the author claims "that to deliver future monetary stimulus consistent with the past—and ignoring the zero lower bound—the funds rate would be negative until late 2012." In other words, a realistic outcome over the next two years will involve not only ZIRP, but additional QE to satisfy the differential to the zero limit. Furthermore, once the economy fully relapses into a double dip, which should be confirmed at the latest by September, Bernanke will have to flush even more money into a monetary stimulus rescue, as the president's fiscal hands will be tied in advance of a landslide mid-term election loss. One possibility is the passage of legislation which allows negative fed fund rates: when all else fails, US citizens will be directly penalized to save money. The recession will further push back the expiration of the "exceptional" and "extraordinary" language well past 2020, by which time all the primary dealers will have bought every single bond repoable back to the fed, gunned up stocks, paid up trillions in bonuses, and reinvested the proceeds in hard (gold) and liquid (Bordeaux) assets. And there you have your roadmap for the next decade. And just in case a prudent voice of opposition to this insane policy were to arise, the author stops it dead in its tracks with the following illogical and non-sequitur statement: "the linkage between the level of short-term interest rates and the extent of financial imbalances is quite erratic and poorly understood." And now you know.

 

Chris Pavese's picture

Inflation and Monetary Regimes





“The damage and suffering caused by inflation during the course of history are enormous. Still, the worst excesses of inflation occurred only in the 20th century. This development was a consequence of the further technical development of money from coins to paper money and book money together with changes in the monetary regime or constitution ruling supply and control of money.” - Peter Bernholz, “Monetary Regimes and Inflation”

 

Tyler Durden's picture

And Some Humor From Angela Merkel...





...Who says that "Spain and other countries know they can use EU mechanism if needed." We hope this is not another diplomatic overture that hopes to set the market at ease. We are fully confident that Spain knows too well it will soon have no option but to follow in Greece's footsteps, as at some point its banks will have to roll tens of billions in Commercial Paper which are completely frozen courtesy of a dead interbank lending market.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Four Notch Moody's Downgrade Of Greece To Ba1 From A3, Confirms Country Is Junk





Massive four notch downgrade. Titlos SPV has now sprung, more troubles for the NBG. From Moody's which is currently without a head of sovereign research: "This uncertainty represents a risk that leads Moody's to believe that Greece's creditworthiness is now consistent with a Ba1 rating, a rating which incorporates a greater, albeit, low risk of default."

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Baltic Dry Index Rolls Over





The Baltic Dry index, which is the closest proxy for China's bubbleliciousness, has dropped to one month lows, and continues accelerating its drop to the downside. The dry bulk shipping sector, which was the bubble of late 2007 and early 2008, does not appear poised to make a repeat appearance just yet. As concerns over commodity overstocking in China, and Australian extraction concerns courtesy of the recent supertax, keep investors awake at night, is CNBC's "favorite" index about to retrace its 2009 lows? Furthermore, if the recent Afghanistan raw material discovery is even close to scale, the next big "thing" in Asia will be the Railroad Dry index, as construction of the world's biggest railway hub in Kabul is likely already underway. Throw in a few nuclear power plants, a couple of smelters, discover some bauxite and soon Afghanistan will eclipse Australia and Brazil as the premier commodity production center in the world. Is it time for Jim O'Neill to rebrand the N-11 index, formerly known as the BRICs, to the A index?

 

Reggie Middleton's picture

Throw a Little Conspiracy Theory into the Pan-European Sovereign Debt Crisis and an Impending Spanish Bank Collapse and Who Needs TV For Entertainment?





The global equity markets are in meltup mode again. I want to take this opportunity to reiterate that I am still quite bearish on much of the situation in Europe. Let’s glance at the credit markets, major banks and the state of sovereign indebtedness in Spain.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Pimco Loses Enthusiasm For German Bunds





In the beginning of the year, Pimco became the biggest supporter of German Bunds, actively adding over $20 billion worth of German sovereign securities to Pimco's flagship Total Return Fund. Yet in our monthly update of TRF holdings, we noticed a material rotation out of Bunds and back into USTs: an over $10 billion reduction in non-US developed holdings. In a symbolic Q&A with Pimco Managing Director Andrew Balls, we read the confirmation for the change in strategy in Newport Beach that brought about this defection from the continent. It appears that the fund which in many aspects is now the defacto market in most forms of fixed income (especially Build America: Pimco would just love if you could buy some Build America bonds... from them) has realized that as the European wave of uncertainty migrates further toward the core, it could become among the largest bag holders of a rapidly depreciation asset class. As Balls says: "given the potential for eurozone governments or the ECB to be drawn deeper and deeper into providing support, we do not see German Bunds as offering significant advantages over the secular horizon compared with U.S. Treasuries." The time may be approaching when Nic Lenoir's thesis of shorting the Bunds may finally come to a profitable fruition.

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 14/06/10





RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 14/06/10

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Explosions And Gunfire At Iraq Central Bank Leave 15 Dead, 40 Injured





Looks like Iraq has had enough of fiat experimentation. Press TV reports that explosions and gunfire at the Iraqi Central Bank have left 15 dead and more than 40 injured. No reports yet if any copies of Hayek's Road to Serfdom (incidentally, #1 at Amazon.com) have been found at the scene. More from the report: "Those behind the attacks on Sunday triggered eight explosions and took hostages, prompting a siege at the bank's whereabouts, AFP reported. Bank workers comprised most of the casualties, said one defense official. It is yet to unclear whether the assailants had meant to empty the vault, destroy the building or target the employees. Late last month, 15 people died during a deadly rampage of a series of jewelry shops in the southwest of the Iraqi capital." Is it time yet for an alligator infested moat to be built as a precaution around the offices at 33 Liberty?

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Is Tropical Wave Invest 92L In Danger Of Becoming A Hurricane Or Reaching The Gulf Of Mexico?





Invest92L is the name of the latest headache for all those focusing on the Gulf oil spill effort: as is well-known, should a hurricane strike ground zero, or get in proximity to it, the strengthened currents will likely disperse the oil aggregation sufficiently to where it will impact a materially larger swath of land and make landfall potentially all the way across the entire eastern seaboard. We take a look at Jeff Masters blog at Wunderground.com on predictions of whether Invest 92 is a serious danger to the BP clean up effort.

 

madhedgefundtrader's picture

Charles Nenner Says the Market Won’t Crash Until the Fall.





The technical analyst to the stars says tt is safe to buy the S&P 500 (SPY) this week for a summer rally because the big crash isn’t coming until the fall. You should use the current bout of weakness in the Australian dollar (FXA) to load the boat. Oh, and while you’re at it, short gold (GLD). The next swoosh down will be more violent and longer than anything we have seen so far. Emerging markets (EEM) to remain cool. A major long term bull market in corn, wheat, and soybeans launches after the summer.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Low Volumy, With An 80% Probability Of A Double Dip





Last week, we pointed out that the ECRI Leading Index dipped to negative for the first time in over a year, which on a historical basis tends to predict a recession with surprising regularity. Today, David Rosenberg takes this data and expands on his views of the probability of a double dip.An interesting observation: when the ECRI drops to -10 (from the current -3.5, and plunging at the fastest rate in history), the economy has gone into a recession 100% of the time, based on 42 years of data. At the current rate of collapse, this means in two months we should know with certainty if the double dip has now arrived.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Gallup Polling Paints A Much Bleaker Economic Outlook Picture Than UMichigan





Even as the increasingly more unreliable UMichigan consumer confidence index surged more than expected in June, to the highest reading in two years, in yet another doctored attempt to stimulate consumers to buy assorted trinkets they don't need and max out their credit cards, a comparable, and traditionally much more comprehensive Gallup polls, paints a vastly different picture. As the chart below demonstrates, the spread between those who see the economy as getting better (32%) and worse (63%) has hit 31, and is threatening to break out the highest reading recorded in the past year. It is no surprise that with nobody trading at all, US stocks are back to their old trickey of spiking ever higher on no volume and on increasingly worse news out of Europe, and not to mention on an atrocious NFP and retail saels report for May, both of which are now promptly forgotten.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

ECB Sovereign Bond Buyback Tally: €47 Billion And Rising





The ECB has announced that new bond purchases that settled in the past week amount to €6.5 billion, bringing the total to €47 billion. This amount likely accounts for the various "successful" auctions in Spain, Portugal and Italy. The €6.5 billion is higher than the €5.5 billion in incremental bonds that had settled in the prior week. As a result, the ECB will now conduct another fresh (and "quick") term deposit tender on Tuesday at 9:30 GMT, to drain the incremental liquidity from all the recent bond purchases, thus continuing the path of acute schizophrenia as the bank is worried as being seen too easy in its monetization ways by a hawkish (but increasingly less so) Germany. Lastly, "The ECB intends to carry out another liquidity-absorbing operation next week" - after all there are ongoing sovereign auctions in Europe that have no other bids aside from the ECB.

 
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