Archive - Jun 3, 2010
A Bearish John Taylor Asks If Too Much Fear Is Priced In
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2010 14:09 -0500Our analysis of the long-term cycles points to a peak in the second half of July or August which would be followed by a long and increasingly dramatic decline that would continue into the middle of 2011 at the minimum. It is very likely that the global Central Banks will lower rates further, where they can, and will resort to increased amounts of quantitative easing. As much of the economic distress will be centered in Europe, the dollar will gain against the euro, but when the Fed eventually shifts into high gear – as it always does – the Asian currencies and maybe even the euro will outperform the dollar. - John Taylor, F/X Concepts
Rethinking the Inflation vs Deflation Debate
Submitted by Expected Returns on 06/03/2010 13:37 -0500The inflation vs deflation debate is one fraught with biases, misnomers, and rigid positions. What I've noticed is that both inflationists and deflationists selectively handpick data to support their respective positions. This is fine and dandy if your goal is to win an argument; but if you want to win as an investor, you must unemotionally interpret data.
Dead Cat Bounce In Progress; Key Resistance Reached
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2010 12:59 -0500
All eyes are on the NFP number coming out tomorrow. I personally believe that the number will match or beat expectations. HOWEVER the jury it out regarding the relevance of a number propped up by a birth-death model and census hiring. This week Citi Financial announced it was closing multiple branches and HP is going to reorganize 6,000 jobs and terminate an additional 3,000. Jobless claims are also not really painting that cheerful a picture, and neither did ADP earlier today. That's right even HP is still not done cutting jobs even though the stock is still up almost 100% from last March's lows and I am sure analysts are trampling each other to upgrade the price target. My macro view is that the global economy is imbalanced and too many jobs in the US are services which only thrive when the stock market is booming and the wealthy spends lavishly (do you seriously need a massage and a beer brought by someone you tip $20 every time you get ahaircut ?). Since we no longer have the possibility to run our economy on credit, we have reached the tipping point where we need real jobs to support growth otherwise without a strong middle class spending will drop and to make matters worse people will rely on asset sales to support whatever spending they still engage in as the political capital to use federal funds to maintain the economy afloat vanishes. - Nic Lenoir
Hoenig Says Fed Should Raise Rate To 1% By End Of Summer
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2010 12:30 -0500Reuters reports that the Kansas City hawk says Fed should hike to 1% by the end of the summer, and should sell MBS immediately and certainly by the time the hike at the end of the summer. Not stopping there he says the Fed should promptly proceed to raise rates from 1% to 3% thereafter. Hoenig also noted that the low inflation over the next year would increase as the economic recovery picks up. Of course, a raise in rates, would kill stocks, and promptly push the EURUSD to parity, also killing US exports, which is why we are confident Bernanke will completely ignore this most recent bout of deranged sanity from Hoenig.
Failed Bond Auction Bug Goes Viral: Romania Rejects All Bids In 600 Million Lei Auction
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2010 12:24 -0500Earlier we predicted that the dirt in Eastern Europe is about to clog up Bernanke's liqduity swap Hoovermatic, but had no idea we would be proven quick so fast. Romanian website zf.ro reports that in a 600 million lei auction conducted earlier, the "Public Finance Ministry has rejected all bids submitted considering them an unacceptable level of offer price." In other words, the Romanian government now thinks it is Greece and it doesn't need money it finds too expensive. In yet other words, this means a failed auction. This follows the news of a semi-failed auction in Hungary earlier today, and a busted auction in Germany two weeks ago. Does anyone know if there is an iPad app that magically makes direct bidders appear whenever and whereever needed, leading to a 10x Bid To Cover at 0.00% for any bond auction? If Jobs can come up with that, we would immediately bet the concrete bunker on AAPL stock.
Hungary CDS Off To The Races: +60 On News IMF Mission Chief Going To Budapest For Informal Talks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2010 11:50 -0500Retuers reports that the IMF mission chief Rosenberg is going to Budapest to hold informal talks with the new Hungarian government - is this a preamble to the latest admission of austerity failure in an IMF intermediation. Independent of this, Hungary CDS is now exploding wider, and was 60 bps at last check, however this name is now virtually bidless. In other news portofolio.hu reports that Hungary was forced to cut a bond auction today over subdued demand.
Goldman Adds Short EURUSD To "Favorite Tactical Themes", EURUSD Target Dropped To 1.18
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2010 11:35 -0500Goldman Sachs: "we’re going to add Bearish-EURUSD to our Favourite Tactical Themes. Overall, it looks like the chances of a downside break from the recent range on EURUSD to target 1.19-1.18 are increasing." We are not sure how David Kostin will take this move which directly threatens his recent S&P EPS target increase.
Egan-Jones Downgrades BP From A- To BBB+, Negative Outlook, 4 Notches Below S&P
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2010 11:22 -0500As Egan-Jones says,the downgrade should be a "big heads up for Money Market Funds." Not to worry, we are confident that two years after the Reserve fund broke the buck, financial regulation has moved far enough to contain any potential fall out from massive redemptions. Right. Right?
$70 Billion In 3, 10 And 30 Year Coupons On Deck
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2010 11:14 -0500The US Treasury has announced its coupon issuance timetable for next week. The US will auction off a total of $70 billion in 3, 10 and 30 years next week. In a surprising move, this number is more than a 10% decline from like issuance in the last month: the last pair of 3-10-30 raised a total of $78 billion. Is the US Treasury seriously "telegraphing" that the budget deficit situation is under control? What happens when the cash crunch gets acute again courtesy of half a trillion in Bill redemeptions this month and issuance has to work overtime just to catch up. This seems like a very foolhardy move.
RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 03/06/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 06/03/2010 10:47 -0500RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 03/06/10
Forint Slide Accelerates As Hungarian Default Risk Now 14 Wider To 277bps
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2010 10:36 -0500
Poor, poor Europe. Every room one shines a light in, the cockroaches don't even bother to scurry to safety any more. Yet what is glaringly obvious takes a media-reported soundbite to awake people. So is the case with Hungary today. After opening 7 tighter, Hungarian CDS are now 14 bps wider to 277bps. As the attached chart shows, the Hungarian Forint is now in freefall. Yet if investors are concerned about Hungary, they should take a look at some of its less lucky Eastern European neighbors which, just like Hungary, have been considered to be strong for so long.
Commodities: Time To Go Long and Physical
Submitted by asiablues on 06/03/2010 10:28 -0500The Gulf oil spill seems to one of the events which markets are having anxieties over. However, the recent pullback on commodities due to this mis-reaction should serve as a good entry point for long-term investors. A few options are discussed here.
Rosie On Gold Redux
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2010 10:27 -0500Rosie brushes off the WSJ's allegations that gold is nothing but a ponzi, and explains why despite a prevailing (currently) deflationary environment, savers throughout the world have forced global gold dealers to run out of inventory. "It is a reflection of investor concern over the monetary stability, and Ben Bernanke and other central bankers only have to step on the printing presses whereas gold miners have to drill over two miles into the ground." - pretty simple really. Everything else is just obfuscation.
Goldman Revises NFP Expectation To +600K From +500K, Entirely Due To Census
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2010 09:53 -0500Goldman is still off the Zero Hedge estimate of +700k. However, seeing how Goldman has the hot line to the BLS, especially on matters relating to NFP revisions 24 hours prior to actual announcement, we will go Hatzius on this one: "We are raising our estimate for tomorrow's nonfarm payrolls release for May to +600,000 from +500,000 previously. This is composed of a Census contribution of +450,000 (vs. +350,000 in our previous estimate) and a private sector contribution of +150,000 (unchanged). We also expect the unemployment rate to decline from 9.9% to 9.7% and average hourly earnings to rise 0.1% (both unchanged from our previous estimate)." - Goldman Sachs
The Equity Markets Are Ignoring Screams of FUD (Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt) in the European Money and Credit Markets: Enter Lehman Fiasco v2.0!!!
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 06/03/2010 09:46 -0500The title says it all...






