Archive - Jun 14, 2010
Guest Post : Two Decades Of Greed - The Unraveling
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/14/2010 08:24 -0500We are currently in the midst of a Fourth Turning. This twenty year Crisis began during the 2005 – 2008 timeframe with the collapse of the housing bubble and subsequent repercussions on the worldwide financial system. It is progressing as expected, with the financial crisis deepening and leading to tensions across the world. It will eventually morph into military conflict, as all prior Fourth Turnings have. The progression from High to Awakening through the Unraveling took from 1946 until 2006. The most treacherous period of the Saeculm is upon us. The intensity of a Crisis is very much dependent upon how a country and its citizens prepare for the Crisis during the final years of the Unraveling. The last Unraveling period in U.S. history from 1984 through 2005 was symbolized by Boomer greed, materialism, debt and selfishness. When Michael Lewis graduated from Princeton University in 1985 and joined Salomon Brothers, I’m sure he didn’t realize that he would end up book-ending the Unraveling period in his two best-selling books about Wall Street.
Morning Gold Fix: June 14, 2010
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/14/2010 08:23 -0500
Last week in an appearance before the House Budget Committee Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke was asked what he thought about the recent highs in gold. Bernanke replied that he didn’t really know but suggested it wasn’t from inflation, noting “the spread between and nominal and inflation-indexed bonds, the break even, remains quite low, suggesting the markets expect about 2 percent inflation over the next 10 years.”
He further elaborated that “Other commodity prices have fallen recently quite severely, including oil prices and food prices. So gold is out there doing something different from the rest of the commodity group.” Which we think is silly. First, as a rule, Bernanke rarely says he “doesn’t know” unless he knows and doesn’t want to say. Second, Gold is not a commodity (at least lately); it is a competing currency. I thought Ben looked like he was swallowing a canary when he answered that question. To quote Jim Rickards, of LTCM bailout fame, one of many who feel the same way, “This will help end confusion: Gold's not a commodity. Gold's not an investment. Gold is money. If you'll need money in future, get gold.”
The Only Stocks That Matter: Meet The HFT Darling Top 25
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/14/2010 08:04 -0500As Institutional Investor points out, "forget the Dow 30 - the 25 companies listed here are the favorites of high frequency traders in the US." In other words, here is where you get the best beta bang for your buck (what is this eahlfa?) as computer tries to outsmart computer in just these 25 shares, where the bulk of the market volume is focused. Can you spell churn? And, not surprisingly, this is where the bulk of the liquidity rebates provided by the exchanges if focused. Soon this list will be 5, and soon thereafter: SKN (DarkPool: SKYNET, share price: infinity).
Frontrunning: June 14
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/14/2010 07:50 -0500- Kyrgyz crisis tops Russian headlines for four days, rest of world couldn't care less (Russian Scoop)
- America's municipal debt racket (WSJ) - Notable as the household sector's holdings in munis surpass $1 trillion for first time ever (Z1, p.64)
- Fed to conduct first test auction of bank CDs (WaPo)
- Carry-on charging Spirit Airlines grounds all flights through June 15 as pilots go on strike(Bloomberg)
- BP stock lower as the firm faces containment deadline as Obama seeks escrow (Bloomberg)
- Cost of fixing Fannie, Freddie at $140 billion, $1 trillion worst case (Bloomberg)
- Morgan Stanley: Just say no to double dip (Morgan Stanley)
- John Paulson takes ex-SEC bigs on board (Post)
- Liquid assets: Bordeaux 2009 futures sell 700 cases and hour, freeze computer (Bloomberg)
Surge In European Bank Rush To Safety Brings ECB Deposit Facility Holdings To Fresh €384 Billion Record
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/14/2010 07:14 -0500
Even as Goldman is urgently forcing a EURUSD squeeze following its last week target revision lower to 1.15 (just as predicted on Zero Hedge), in an attempt to shake out the latest batch of weak hands (aka clients) in the second highest EURUSD net short position last week, forcing all correlation desks to bid up all risky assets and pretend all is good, Europe liquidity is now even more frozen than ever before. While earlier reports from the FAZ that Spain is next in line for the EU/IMF rescue facility may or may not be true (very likely the former, but no confirmation will be provided until after the fact), looking at the ECB's deposit facility usage paints a grim picture: usage increased by $18.4 billion through the weekend, and was at an all time high €384 billion: European banks have put aside nearly half a trillion dollars away due to concerns about counterparty risk. For those still confused why this data series indicates that the FV of the EURUSD is likely close to or at parity, the topic of the ECB's deposit facility usage was covered exhaustively by Bloomberg overnight in "Europe's Banks May Face Second Funding Squeeze Amid Sovereign-Debt Crisis."
Daily Highlights: 6.14.10
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/14/2010 07:13 -0500- Asian shares were mostly higher Monday, lifted by Friday's mild gains on Wall Street.
- ECB governor said interest rates in the euro zone will remain on hold for many months.
- Euro concerns put plan to introduce a single currency for GCC nations on hold.
- Euro volatility signalling weakness as traders lose confidence in currency.
- French, German banks continued to hold the greatest exposure to euro-zone countries.
- South Korea's Won advances on tighter forwards curbs, risk of intervention.
- Taiwan, China say they reach a basic agreement on reducing trade tariffs.
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung Reports EU, IMF Prepare To Bail Out Spain; Europe Denies
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/14/2010 06:54 -0500A potentially destabilizing report appeared earlier today in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (FAZ), according to which countries in the EU are preparing to bail out Spain, which has immediately prompted denials out of both the EU Commission, which claimed that the "report on aid for Spain is completely untrue." Of course, in January Joaquin Almunia almost ate that Bloomberg reporter who, for the first time ever, suggested that the EU would need to bail out Greece. Four months later Greece was bankrupt and the EU was on hook for a cool trillion. And in adding to the ongoing contradictions, Spain's Treasury Secretary has said Spain has no problem financing its debt, even as it was reported that Spanish banks have raised a record €85.6 billion in ECB funding, and Spain's Ocana understated that the "liquidity freeze in Spain in foreign markets is a problem." On the other hand, of course Spain has no problem in "financing" its debt - the ECB is gladly monetizing it all. Lastly, the fact that Spanish unions have called for a general strike is likely going to shift the balance of power to the truth instead of the baseless propaganda, and within a week or so, Spain will be another raging Greece.
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 14/06/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 06/14/2010 04:23 -0500RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 14/06/10
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