Archive - Jun 24, 2010

Tyler Durden's picture

30 Year Freddie Fixed Rate Mortgage Drops To All Time Low Of 4.69%





Full blown deflation is here: the 30 Year Freddie fixed rate mortgage just dropped to a fresh new all time low. The problem - not even record low mortgage rates are incentivizing consumers to buy homes. This is a complete disaster for the Fed which is now facing outright deflation in the face and will be forced, without debate, to monetize and launch another round of QE very shortly, as this trend suicidal to the banks' bloated balance sheets. If home prices continue dropping, look for the next Flow of Funds report to be a massacre for household net wealth. The nuclear option: giving away houses for free. Yet with yesterday's announcementby the GSEs that they will lock out any strategic defaulters, this has all the makings of a disaster for the administration.

 

madhedgefundtrader's picture

How US Job Losses Will End.





When foreign labor costs reach half of those at home, manufacturers quit exporting jobs. Chinese wage growth at the current rate takes them up to half our minimum wage in only five years. Recent indications that the Chinese will allow the Yuan to float, and therefore go up, will only accelerate this trend. (FXI), (EWY), (VNM),

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Guide To Gold Pin Risk





Today is July options expiration in silver and gold. We’d like to take this opportunity to go over some of the basics and correct some misconceptions on pin risk and what it entails.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: A Bankrupt BP - Worse For The Financial World Than Lehman Brothers





The BP crisis in the Gulf of Mexico has rightfully been analysed (mostly) from the ecological perspective. People’s lives and livelihoods are in grave danger. But that focus has equally masked something very serious from a financial perspective, in my opinion, that could lead to an acceleration of the crisis brought about by the Lehman implosion.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

How The Middle Class, Or The New Rentiers, Is Stuck Between Deflation And Hyperinflation





"In 2010, the authorities seem to have only two choices: allow defaults, which lead to deflation and
tremendous stress to the political system and public order; or inflate so that debts lose their
significance, which eventually leads to hyper-inflation and tremendous stress to the political system and
public order. Growth is a theoretical way out of this dilemma, but with shrinking populations and
increased regulation, Europe cannot manage this option. The US might, but the way will be difficult.
Cascading defaults will strip away many entitlements upsetting the rentiers and those who had planned
to become rentiers in the future. Countries that choose to allow defaults will see their currencies rally
as there will be a shrinkage of currency outstanding increasing the value of the rest, but collapsing
equity markets will test their resolve at every turn. We rentiers will be lucky if we can enjoy our dotage." John Taylor, FX Concepts

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Chinese Lack Of Liquidity At Dangerous Levels





A topic we have been following for some time now and which continues to get no mention in the broader media, is the accelerating liquidity crunch in China, as demonstrated by surging repo rates between banks, both ultra short-term (7 days) and slightly longer dated (30 days). As the chart below demonstrates, just overnight the 30 Day repo surged by 19 bps to a fresh record of 4.25%. Seeing how this was in the 1.75% range as recently as 45 days ago, China's banks are currently scrambling to fill the 1 month secured borrowing void. Some have said this liquidity deficiency is purely a function of the Agri Bank's upcoming IPO sucking out all available liquidity, yet with subscriptions to that becoming open starting July 1, the real explanation lies elsewhere. Are China bad loans finally catching up with the banks? We should find out soon enough - the PBoC will flood the market with CNY201 billion this week, the biggest reliquification event in over 4 months, to "smooth out volatility in money markets", as interactive investor points out. If that is unsuccessful in bringing repo rates lower, it will be time to panic as China does not have the same misrepresentation apparatus that the ECB/IMF does.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: June 24





  • Options Clearinghouse wants access to Fed's discount window (Bloomberg) next up - $1,000 E-trade retail accounts have access to TALF and TLGP
  • Jonathan Weil: Pimco's loss is a win for Wall Street crooks (Bloomberg)
  • Wall Street reform bill goes into final hours with key provisions still unresolved (Reuters)
  • BP relied on faulty US data (WSJ)
  • Swiss banks winning funds from investors with weakening euro, buoying franc (Bloomberg)
  • China central bank to inject 201 billion yuan into market this week to calm exploding money markets (iii)
  • Banks on hook for $6.5 trillion GSEs? Bank execs panic over proposed change to orderly liquidation authority -- Dodd unhappy with Brown -- Zero hour arrives as derivatives, 'Volcker rule' remain unresolved (Counteroffer, Politico)
  • Gillard breaks with tax policies that doomed Rudd (Bloomberg)
  • The best stimulus: spend less, borrow less (Fortune)
  • Venezuela to nationalize set of oil rigs belonging to Helmrich and Payne (Reuters)
  • Yuan closes higher after moving in wide daily range of 150 bps (iii)
  • Obama approval rating plunges on handling of BP catastrophe (Reuters)
  • On Wall Street - so much cash, so little time (NYT)
  • Simon Johnson endorses Paul Krugman for head spender, budget director and "quadrillion" redefiner (Baseline)
  • The drilling ban is Soros' bonanza (IBD)
 

Tyler Durden's picture

Initial Claims 457k, Down From 476k Revised, Durable Goods Down 1.1%





Initial claims at 457k, statistically insignificant compared to expectations 463k, down 19k compared to the prior weekly revised number (476k, from 472k). We expect another upward revision here. Continuing claims at 4,548, identical to expectations at 4,550 (previous 4,571k revised to 4,593k). Extended benefits once again blow out, +116,432 for the week ended June 5. Durable goods at -1.1%, compared to -1.4% expectations. Ex-transportation was 0.9%, versus expected 1.0%.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Global Sovereign Derisking As Greek 5 Year CDS Hits All Time Wide





So much for that Greek bailout plan. Greek CDS are now back at fresh all time highs as the market seems set on not only testing the EU's rescue resolve, but determined to get a fresh new bailout plan entirely. At last check CDS was just shy of 1,000 bps. The immediate catalyst is a Fitch report that says Greece risk has gone up and that the country will need further consolidation in 2011 and 2012. The broader catalyst is that the entire Greek credit market is completely dead (noi cash liquidity) and momentum trading has now arrived in CDS, which is the only place left to express a bearish stance on Greece. Should the spread onslaught continue, we expect all of Europe to follow Germany's example and immediately ban naked CDS shorts across the continent. Luckily, both China and India are now set to open CDS trading of their own.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Daily Highlights: 6.24.10





  • Asian stocks rose, led by material producers and Japanese trading companies.
  • China's chief auditor says rising debts of local governments are risky to economy.
  • China's yuan rises moderately against the U.S. dollar.
  • Fed offered a subdued assessment of the economy; affirmed rates would remain near zero for "an extended period."
  • G-20 countries divided on issue of stimulus spending versus soaring deficits.
  • Japan's exports rose 32.1% in May from a year earlier, the MoF - lower than expected.
  • Oil falls to near $76 in Asia on signs US crude demand.
 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 24/06/10





RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 24/06/10

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The Media Campaign Begins: BP Is Now Too Big To Fail





As prospects before BP get darker by the day, and the likelihood of bankruptcy grows, the TBTF propaganda begins. Evidence A - Bloomberg headline: "BP Demise Would Threaten U.S. Energy Security, Industry." Just as the failure of bankrupt banks was supposed to lead to the destruction of capitalism, so the bankruptcy of BP plc is now supposed to lead to the degeneration of US energy independence. And who in their mind would force the Chapter 11 of a systemically important company? Once again, free market capitalism is about to walk out through the back door...

 
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