Archive - Aug 12, 2010
Arbing Moody's Sovereign Ratings Via CDS Pair Trades
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/12/2010 14:02 -0500
Now that sovereign CDS (and ratings) are back in vogue with everyone finally expecting the world to relapse into a double dip, Zero Hedge has compiled Moody's sovereign ratings and spread these alongside the CDS levels in any given bucket to propose several trade ideas taking advantage of Moody's market lagging inefficiency.
Will BP Skip the Relief Well, Declare Mission Accomplished, and Abandon Ship Without Permanently Killing the Oil Leak?
Submitted by George Washington on 08/12/2010 12:34 -0500Leak? What leak?
Guest Post: If Deflation Wins, What Will Gold Stocks Do?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/12/2010 12:31 -0500The talk of a possible double dip is now common banter on TV investment programs. And indeed, deflationary forces seem to have the stronger grip right now than inflationary ones. So if deflation is the next reality we have to face, what happens to our favorite stock investments? There’s lots of data about what gold does during periods of high inflation, but less so with deflation, partly because we don’t see a true deflation all that often. But of course we’ve got the biggie we can look at, and the seriousness of the Great Depression can give us a big clue as to how gold stocks behave in a true deflationary environment. From 1929 until January 1933, the stock of Homestake Mining, the largest gold producer in the U.S., rose 474%. Dome Mines, the largest Canadian producer, advanced 558%. In spite of the gold price being fixed at the time, gold stocks rose dramatically. At the same time, the DJIA lost 73% of its value.
$16 Billion 30 Year Auction Prices At 3.954%, 2.77 Bid To Cover, Lowest Primary Dealer Take Down
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/12/2010 12:21 -0500
Today's auction of $16 billion 30 Years closed at a high yield of 3.954% (55.98% allotted at high), and came at a 2.77 Bid To Cover: the lowest since May. The yield was the third lowest in history, higher only than the February and March 2009 auctions (3.54% and 3.640%). Direct Bidders came in at 18.6% - a surprisingly high number, and bigger than the previous auction, yet nowhere near the record 29.6% from March of 2010. What was most surprising was the record low Primary Dealer participation (blue segment in attached chart) - the Fed's lapdogs took down just 35.3% of the auction: the lowest in many years, if not ever. Are the PDs turning their back on the inflation risk associated with holding LT securities, and/or do they think they would be unable to offload these to retail customers? Keep an eye on PD take down in future auctions for further indications on this.
BP Is Hiding Dead Animals to Avoid Fine of $50,000 Per Dead Animal (and the Bad Publicity)
Submitted by George Washington on 08/12/2010 11:50 -0500Dead critters? What dead critters?
The Dallas Fed Reminds That The Economy Is Doing Much Worse Than In The Administration's Worst Nightmare
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/12/2010 11:35 -0500
The Dallas Fed has released an economic paper titled "Keynes' Wet Dream"... just joking - the real titles is - "Can The Nation Stimulate Its Way to Prosperity" in which the author concludes wisely: "While the overall weight of the evidence suggests the stimulus plan has provided a short-term boost, it’s unclear exactly how large this boost has been. What is clear is that stimulus funds have exacerbated near-term fiscal imbalances." Mm hmm. More taxpayer capital well-spent. Yet in the paper is contained the following chart which we hadn't seen in a while, and which says all one needs to know about not only the real benefits from the stimulus (as opposed to those limited strictly to Wall Street), but also is the best grade card of the Obama administration's economic "prowess" to date.
RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 12/08/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 08/12/2010 10:56 -0500RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 12/08/10
Will The Onslaught Of Baby Boomers Further Exacerbate The U.S. Current Account Deficit And Entrench The DM-EM Capital Flows?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/12/2010 10:36 -0500
Lately, Goldman's economists and strategists have been looking at the long-overlooked topic of demographic shifts within a society as a major driver to shaping consumption trends, economic outcomes, and, as a result, investment decisions. A few days ago, Goldman's Anthony Carpet penned "Demographic Dynamics: A case study for equity investors" in which he did an extensive analysis of what the demographic shift of America, driven primarily by the tide of baby boomer retirement which commences this year, means, and presented several stock choices that would likely benefit the most from this generational transition. We will present that report in the immediate future, but for now we wanted to bring your attention to the Goldman economic paper, "Current Accounts and Demographics: The Road Ahead" in which Goldman takes off the investment advisor suit, and puts on that of the economist. The study has some interesting observations as pertains primarily to the ever critical Current Account (which as we pointed out yesterday hit a two year high $49 billion deficit). In a nutshell the current account, or trade balance, is a proxy for the marginal savings or consumption that occur in a given country. The US has ran a current account deficit for as long as it can remember, with the result, as recently as several years ago, being a negative savings rate. The Current Account also tracks the international flow of capital, as global savers (Emerging Markets), tend to fund the deficits of global spenders (using their own recycled money) courtesy of the "spenders" flooding the world with their own currency. This phenomenon is the primary reason for the symbiotic relationship between China's saving society and the US consumer base. As is well-known, one of Obama's more ambitious plans is to double US exports over the next five years which means a collapse in the current account deficit. Yet as more and more Americans exit the prime savings age bucket, and become spenders, is Obama's current account reshaping plan doomed from the start? Goldman explains.
Time For The Weekly Refinance: 30 Year Fixed Mortgage Hits Record Low At 4.44%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/12/2010 09:34 -0500It is time for the weekly refi: the 30 Year Freddie cash mortgage just hit another fresh all time low. And with the 10 Year plunging and soon to drop below 2.5% as the bond bubble is becoming ever more primed, we expect the 30 Year to eventually drop as low as 4% if not further. Will this force more incremental homebuying activity? Absolutely not.
John Taylor Explains Why The "Global Frown" Will Turn Europe Upside Down
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/12/2010 09:17 -0500"Although the US signaled the beginning of the coming recession, the Eurozone is still naively expecting its €750 billion rescue plan with austerity thrown in to save the day. Our analysis argues that this plan will start crumbling within the next few weeks, sending the euro sharply lower once again and ushering in the deep recession of 2011." - John Taylor
How Google is Looking to Cut Apple’s Margin and How the Sell Side of Wall Street Will Enable This Without Sheeple Investor’s Having a Clue
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 08/12/2010 09:07 -0500The title says it all...
The Boycott Continues: 14th Sequential Week Of Equity Outflows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/12/2010 08:43 -0500
Another week, another vote of no confidence in the market. It is getting really bad: we have now had over a quarter of non-stop redemptions by mutual funds, which of course means, by end-retail investors. The problem is that now everyone is starting to notice the stench that the market is not supported by anything except momentum manipulation and primary dealer machinations. Per ICI, the week ended August 4 saw an outflow of ($2,788) MM, bringing the total to over $46 billion in domestic equity redemptions year to date. Retail is now fully boycotting stocks, as the no-volume surge of July was not even sufficient to bring one meager week of inflows, and in fact, July saw almost $16 billion in outflows. If not even a 10% surge in stocks is capable of bringing retail back into stocks, perhaps it is time the administration and the SEC ask themselves, "what will?" We can not wait to see how the market drop of this week impacts fund flows. If history is any indicator, it will not be pretty.
Bill Gross Issues Ultimatum: GSEs Keep Government Guarantee Or Else
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/12/2010 08:10 -0500In an interview with the FT, Pimco's Bill Gross flatly warned the government, in advance the housing finance conference that will begin deciding the fate of the GSEs next Tuesday, that unless Fannie and Freddie bonds retain their government guarantees, he would cease purchasing GSE debt. On the other hand, Gross may have overplayed his card: he already took the government for the proverbial ride, loading up the flagship TRS fund with GSE debt in early 2009 and riding the surge higher for the entire year, then selling virtually everything: TRS has just 16% of its $234 billion in AUM in mortgage securities as per the latest Pimco Fund update. Nonetheless, the Newport Beach bond pundit's warning is a clear shot across the bow indicating just who is the primary force in GSE decision-making, right after the Treserve.
Pivotfarm Daily News Harvest 12th August 2010
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 08/12/2010 07:59 -0500Markets in a Flash
· The USD is starting to look stronger today. Against the JPY it is pulling back some of its losses.
· The EUR/JPY appears to be pushing to new monthly lows today. It is trading around the 110.000 level.
· US equity futures are lower today suggesting the selloff will continue when the markets open.







