Archive - Jun 2010
June 8th
Swiss National Bank Intervention Half Life: Down To 2 Hours
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/08/2010 12:37 -0500
From the moment the SNB intervened in the EURCHF, to the point where the pair went unchanged on the day, a whopping two hours have expired. The last time the SNB intervened, the return to unchanged took 4 hours, and 8 before that. The next time the SNB buys up EUR, we expect the return to unchanged to take one hour or less.
$36 Billion Three Year Auction Closes At 1.22%, 3.23 Bid To Cover
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/08/2010 12:31 -0500
Today's 3 Year $36 billion Auction closed at a high yield of 1.22%, with a 3.23 Bid To Cover, which was the third highest ever recorded, after a 3.27 in May, and the record 3.33 in November. The auction saw a fairly "new normal" distribution in which 16.3% was taken down by Directs (also the third highest on record), 46.7% by Indirects, and 37% by Primary Dealers. The Hit Rate for the Primary Dealers came in at 17.59%, also unspectacular. Overall, a mediocre auction.
RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 08/06/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 06/08/2010 12:29 -0500RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 08/06/10
China Sovereign Wealth Funds Announces 10% MTM Loss For May
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/08/2010 11:55 -0500The China Investment Corporation, also known as China's sovereign wealth fund, and the entity that allocates China's nearly $3 trillion in foreign assets, which in February filed it first ever 13-F statement disclosing just under $10 billion in holdings, has announced a 10% Mark-To-Market loss in the month of May according to RanSquawk. We are trying to get confirmation whether this is equivalent to a $1 billion loss on equity investments - we will get you more as we get it. In the meantime, here is the snapshot of CIC we conducted in February. With the recent 10% plunge, the fund has now wiped out all of its 2009 gains, which were announced at 11%!
How Cross Selling Of CDOs Between Banks "Created A Big Ponzi Scheme"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/08/2010 11:42 -0500Two weeks ago we disclosed that a proposed amendment by Maine Republican Susan Collins would disqualify TruPS securities from bank regulatory capital, "which if passed into law, will trim about $108 billion from bank holdco Tier 1 capital, an amount which is about 13% of the "Big 4" banks' total Tier 1 capital according to Moody's." The reason for this long overdue proposal is that TruPS are nothing but a fancy way that banks bought and sold CDOs to each other in what can only be qualified as one big Ponzi scheme involving worthless assets. There are no longer just our words. Bloomberg's Yalman Onaran and Jody Shenn have written an extensive piece on the dangers facing bank balance sheets and liquidity as a result of having approximately a tenth of their capital locked into the same kinds of securities that are now the reason for Goldman's ongoing legal troubles.
A Steel Glut Imminent?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/08/2010 11:04 -0500Turning back to fundamentals, we note an interesting piece on the prospects before the steel and copper industry. It appears that the record restocking has finally started to take a toll on the supply/demand intersection. As a sellsider puts it, there is a lot of pain to come for the steel industry, to wit: "1. Weak demand - particularly auto and appliance (flat rolled) 2. Production cuts coming 3. Iron or benchmark prices to peak in Q3 (CLF is largest US name) 4. Challenging 2H for steelmakers." Chinese overstocking on copper is also not going to help the bulls.
There's A Very Nasty Storm Brewing in Euroland and Umbrellas Are Selling At Premiums With Insolvent Counterparties Attached - Prepare For It to Get Ugly!
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 06/08/2010 10:47 -0500The title is quite self-explanatory...
As For The Facts On This Alleged Diamond Offshore Rig "Spill"...
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/08/2010 10:42 -0500There seems to be a lot of misinformation floating around on what some have purported to have discovered as a second leak in the Gulf, presumably this one emanating from Diamond Offshore's Ocean Saratoga rig. All of this appears is just innuendo attempting to generate page views and support collapsing Nielsen ratings, and to reinforce today's Goldman takedown of the offshore oil industry (so far for reasons unknown, but as we pointed out earlier, Goldman had a buy on Rig with an $87 PT two weeks ago, only to go and kill the space today with a brand new hit piece - is someone preparing to LBO a perrenial take private candidate or two, i.e. DO and RIG, and needs Goldman's help for this). After some actual investigation, it appears rumors of a second leak are false.
Here Comes The SNB Again
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/08/2010 10:16 -0500
The SNB bought over €50 billion in euros in May to keep the CHF low as we posted previously. They have not learned their lesson. Here is the latest intervention as it happens. Soon the Swiss Bank's balance sheet will be full of increasingly worthless euros and the CHF will still be at parity with the euro.
Update 1: intervention half life now 5 minutes. EURCHF going back to UNCH. The cost to the SNB for this little fiasco: about €10 billion.
Goldman's Sellside Team Does A Bang Up Job Again, Offshore Drilling Edition
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/08/2010 10:12 -0500
Goldman's Daniel Boyd CFA, the firm's rig analyst, has once again confirmed that Goldman really places its clients above all else. After issuing a report on Transocean, two short weeks ago on May 24 with a Buy rating and a $87 price target, today, the same analyst has decided to downgrade it to Neutral and a $54 PT. And here we were thinking that with the worst of the oil spill had already taken place in mid May and the bulk of the bad news for the drillers was already priced in. We wonder how much of Goldman's 560,527 RIG shares the company was selling during the past two weeks?
FX-Risk Spread Recouples Like Clockwork
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/08/2010 09:40 -0500
The daily EURJPY-ES decoupling is promptly becoming the most profitable trade around. As we pointed out yesterday, for the third time in as many days, the EURJPY-ES spread decoupled to a level that would generate a profitable P&L for those putting on the convergence trade. Sure enough, like clockwork, in under 24 hours, the spread has collapsed completely, and the two are once again trading on top of each other. We will continue bringing you these glaring divergences which are becoming increasingly prevalent as the traditional correlation arb players are more busy with fielding margin calls and liquidating assets than actually looking for arbitrage opportunities.
Bearish Trio Complete: Albert Edwards Chimes In: "We Have Not Seen The Worst Yet"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/08/2010 09:33 -0500First confirmed permabull Jim O'Neill presented 10 "grizzles" why the bear market may be coming back, then Bob Janjuah reiterated his very bearish outlook on life, and, right on cue, here is Albert Edwards with his latest crucifixion of unwarranted bullish sentiment."As we head into a double-dip, the current technical correction will rapidly turn into a resumption of the structural bear market for stocks. We have not seen the worst yet." Perhaps BMO's recommendation for a zero equity weighting is spot on...
BMO Has A Simple Message To Its Clients: Go To Cash Now
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/08/2010 08:38 -0500In a surprising development, the most bearish, and easily most comprehensive, report that we have read in a long time comes from Canada, of all places, via BMO's Quant/Tech desk. The report's title is simple enough: Go To Cash - In Plain English. Not much clarification needed. Here is the gist: "We advocate switching out of equity positions and going to cash. The European sovereign debt crisis appears to be nowhere near over. The global credit environment is worsening. Cost of capital is going up and availability is going down. There are large gaps between where the credit market prices risk and where the equity market is priced. Equity is lagging the deterioration in credit conditions. Moves in currency, equity and commodity markets are mirroring the moves in the credit market. Global growth, in a credit-constrained environment, will slow. Profits will be squeezed by the higher cost of capital...We advocate a zero weight toward equity, and that investors convert their equity positions to cash."
Swiss National Bank FX Assets Explode In Failed Intervention Attempts To Tame Swiss Franc
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/08/2010 08:17 -0500
The SNB has released provisional data indicating FX investments on its balance sheet have exploded by 50% in just the last month, to CHF 232 billion from CHF 153 billion, is indicative of a rate of FX intervention in the market more than double the prior record set in April! All this has occurred as the SNB has tried to keep the EURCHF above 1.40. It has now officially failed at this attempt, as the Euro just hit a fresh all time low against the Franc of 1.3763. Furthermore, recent market talk indicates that the SNB will no longer directly intervene in the pair, thus confirming that there is likely much more room for CHF appreciation in the near term, and more pain for Eastern European countries, where the bulk of real estate bubble borrowing has been denominated in CHFs. In the meantime the side effects of consistent SNB intervention are hard to miss: the Swiss balance sheet has increased to 3 times its pre-2009 average. Unlike the US, it is not loaded up with toxic GSE filth but merely with currencies increasingly backed by such filth, such as euros.
Dissecting JPM CMBS offering
Submitted by Cheeky Bastard on 06/08/2010 08:04 -0500Something interesting just happened.





