Archive - Jun 29, 2010
Department of Energy: Oil Well Drill Pipe Was Violently Ejected Upwards Into the Blowout Preventer
Submitted by George Washington on 06/29/2010 23:42 -0500Is this partly responsible for the failure of the blowout preventer?
Will We Have Inflation, Deflation, or Hyperinflation? Part 4 (Final)
Submitted by Econophile on 06/29/2010 23:11 -0500This is the fourth and final part of my major four part series dealing with what I feel is the primary question investors must now answer: is our future to be inflation or deflation? The answer has vast implications to our investment planning and decisions for the near term, and possibly for our long term. It is a very complex question with a lot of moving parts involving economics and politics. For those of you who have stuck with me for this series, thanks!
End of the Bull: Primary Trend Shifts as Markets Shatter
Submitted by Fibozachi on 06/29/2010 22:46 -0500Tuesday's relentless sell-off across US equity markets marked an undeniable end to the continuous series of higher lows that had been intact since July 2009; closing below 1,044.50 on the S&P 500 Cash, bulltards can no longer claim that the primary trend of equities remains bullish. With ZMH the only S&P 500 issue closing higher, could GETCO be anticipating a large order from Mr. Market for a new hip? Joking aside, what can we expect after such an all-encompassing technical rout?
Preparing for Next Big One?
Submitted by Leo Kolivakis on 06/29/2010 22:45 -0500“We will have a financial crisis again — it’s just a question of the frequency,” said the economist Kenneth Rogoff, who, with Carmen M. Reinhart, wrote a terrific book titled “This Time Is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly.” The title says it all. We’ve been through this before and will go through it again.
Guest Post: A Thought Experiment: Iran
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2010 20:16 -0500A whole bunch of American ships are headed to Iran, including one aircraft carrier. Some claim this deployment is “normal”, while others think it might be the first move in a U.S. offensive against Iran, either actual or diplomatic. From the Iranians’ point of view, there’s only one way to look at this deployment: As another provocation. American leadership—educated at the best schools and colleges, multi-cultural up the wazoo—don’t have a clue why Iranians feel besieged. They have no idea why Iran acts the way it does. They don’t even realize that they don’t understand Iran’s motivations. There has been a complete lack of imagination, in America’s dealings with Iran—and that failure of imagination is why things are so fucked up in the Middle East. (Is there any other way to characterize the whole mess? False politesse does not capture the sheer fucked-up-edness of the situation.)
Iran: The failure of imagination has been Iran.
So perhaps a thought experiment is in order—for once, let’s try looking at the world from the Iranians’ point of view
And The Nominees For The "Best Dive" Category Are Lionel Messi... And Gold
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2010 19:17 -0500
For all football fans out there, we have a suggestion: take a gold bar, put a number 10 jersey on it, and let it play on the Argentinian football team: the theatrics in the price of gold are only comparable to the ridiculous Latin American dives one observes on the pitch (for those unsure what we are talking about we have enclosed an informative video). Gold plunging from $1262 to $1240 in a few minutes compares only to a sweeper almost, but not quite, hitting Messi's leg. The rest is pure Oscar-worthy genius. Our advice: just like on the football field, enjoy the theatrics in the gold price, but don't take your eye off the big picture - in the end, no matter how many yellow cards Messi gets for fake diving, Argentina will win the World Cup. As will gold (which incidentally is what the Cup trophy is made of).
Are The Market's Pilot Fish, The Momentum Traders, Abandoning Stocks?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2010 18:36 -0500
It is no secret that recently market liquidity has been horrendous: on a high-volume day like today, when intraday TRIN hit that of the Flash Crash, and closed at the fifth worst ever, there were virtually no advancers and only decliners. Yet today merely follows days in which no volume melt ups have resulted in no decliners and just advancers. This type of trading pattern has made alpha generation impossible, with those hoping to generate any "above risk free" return being forced to rely on leveraged beta plays. Yet that is mostly a concern for hedge funds, who are paid 2 and 20 to outperform benchmarks. With the current quarter about to close, and P&L for most looking abysmal (we will post the latest HSBC study shortly), look for those redemption requests to start flying. In a last ditch effort to prevent liquidations, we fully expect hedge funds to ramp up every available ounce of leverage allotted them by their Primary Brokers, and ignoring alpha, to attempt to recoup all or some losses through excess leverage. All this means is that if you thought this quarter the market was volatile, wait until Q3, when daily levered liquidations will be the norm, and intraday market swings of less than 3% will be de minimis. We won't shed many tears for the unlucky ones. Yet one aspect of the trading community that has gotten whacked, have been momentum traders: those pilot fish of the trading world, who swim blindly, scour through much delayed 13F/Gs, and merely follow the loudest and most credible (for any given day) pundit to either rags or riches. For these less than sophisticated bottom feeders, a trading environment like that one we are currently seeing has been simply destructive. A directionless market, in which no momentum can be sustained, and Crazy Ivans are the norm, results in both retail and computerized momentum chasers getting carted out feet first. Which is to be expected: major market inflection points, either downward or upward, are always the death of the marginal players. The implications of this are major: as more and more of the penny-trading crowd grow disenchanted with the current regime, look for wide-ranging implications, including both majors drop in retail brokerage volumes, and in the popularity of momentum-trader focused media.
Daily Credit Summary: June 29 - Equity Catch-up
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2010 17:40 -0500Today's action in CDS land was negative pretty much across the board with breadth extremely negative as only a handful of single-names managed to eke out gains as there was a quite evident up-in-quality shift. HY names handily underperformed IG names on the day. High beta IG names also underperformed significantly as off-the-run indices underperformed on-the-run once again and the Top 100 CDO referenced names significantly underperformed the broad market.
Daily Oil Market Summary: June 29
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2010 17:24 -0500The oil complex was down steeply on Tuesday as traders saw bearish factors all around. Alex, reportedly on its way to being upgraded to a hurricane, was tracking northwest-by-west and seemed to be on course to leave the US gulf behind. It looks like it will make landfall in eastern Mexico later this week. That course was no longer seen as being positive for oil prices.
But the storm track was not the only bearish factor influencing oil prices. The US dollar was higher, and investors were leaving equities and flocking to the US dollar and treasury bonds. The DJIA ended down 268.22 points on the day, below 10,000. There were fresh concerns over euro-zone sovereign debt, and the European Central Bank was trying to reassure investors that Thursday’s expiration of a bank-lending program would not destabilize Europe’s financial system. Still, the euro broke below $1.22 in US dollars, and the trend against the dollar seems to favor the greenback over the next several sessions.
No, This Is Not An Onion Headline: S&P Puts Moody's On Downgrade Review
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2010 16:49 -0500We are now at the point where one can only sit back and cackle as the insanity unravels. The president earlier agreed with his supervisor that the Economy is doing swell on a day when the market posted the 5th highest TRIN rating in history, the ECB is saying all is well even as Europe is about to implode, and now, S&P has just announced it has put Moody's on creditwatch negative, the reason: "We believe there may be added risk to U.S.-based credit rating agency Moody's business profile following recent U.S. legislation that may lower margins and increase litigation related costs for credit rating agencies." Just so you understand what is going on here - S&P: a credit rating agency, is downgrading Moody's, a credit rating agency, on concerns finreg will impair credit rating agencies. Well, if "suiciding" your chief competitor is the best way to approach this situation, whatever works... Next week, Moody's downgrades S&P, followed by another downgrade of Moody's by S&P, until both companies bankrupt each other with a mutual D rating. John Nash would be so proud.
TRIN Index Goes Nuts, Second Highest Since Flash Crash, Fifth Highest In Recent History
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2010 16:28 -0500
Nobody would have thought June 29 would be a remarkable date - middle of summer, everyone watching the world cup, HFT computers out for their annual hard disk defrag and front running optimization, press release scanning robots out for their annual oil change, even hurricanes barely willing to form. Yet at the end of the day, June 29 ended up joining a list of such memorable dates as The Bear Stearns Crash, the May Flash Crash, the Lehman Crash, and the March 2009 666 crash: based on the TRIN/ARMS index, the NYSE index hit 5.88. It has been higher on just 4 other times before, specifically the four dates noted above. The indicator tracks up/down stocks divided by up/down volume on the NYSE -the higher the number, the greater the rush into decliners. Today's reading indicated that on the NYSE people could not get enough of selling, and in size. What is more worrisome is that in the last two months, we have seen an amplitude in the TRIN that has never occurred before: it has approached 0 (on low-volume melt up days), all the way to 12+ on 5/6 and nearly 6 today. This simply means that, as we have been claiming for a long time, there is increasingly less liquidity in the market. And we are talking real deep liquidity, not the churn BS that HFT algos do in Citi and now Tesla (thank you Goldman), and then, oops, drop all bids when something odd happens on 8,800 shares and the NYSE has to come in, bail out the market, and in the process derail the order flow of millions of shares of pent up supply and demand. A few more episodes like that and there will no demand and a lot of supply.
RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 29/06/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 06/29/2010 15:59 -0500RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 29/06/10
Guest Post: The Original Dollar Crisis And How It Led To Today's Crisis - Part 1
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2010 15:40 -0500To fully understand today's economic crisis and where we are heading, one must find the origin of this crisis -- the event or the culmination of events that put us down this path.
Stick Save Mission Accomplished - Goldman Closes Market Over 1,040, Bernanke Last Seen Puffing Cohiba
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2010 15:05 -0500
Nothing to see here, except another example of fair and efficiently manipulated markets. The HFT not-co-much-liquidity-but-certainly-volatility-and-momentum providers take the spree and accentuate it. At the end of the day, the market must close above 1,040 or else it is free fall from here. Mission accomplished.
Barney Frank Removes Bank Fee Provision From FinReg To Weasel Enough Votes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/29/2010 14:45 -0500Surprised? Don't be. The congressman from Fannie Mae is only doing what is in his best interest. Not in that of America, mind you. But his own? Absolutely. Presumably the bill will now have enough votes to pass. Barney also saying TARP funds, so generously provided originally by taxpayers, will be used to fill funding holes instead. End result: B.F. and Wall Street 1; America, and highly intelligent electorate who votes Frank into office year after year 0.







