Archive - Aug 12, 2010
Morning Gold Fix: August 12
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/12/2010 07:51 -0500Gold opened Wednesday’s trading at $1202.8 per 100 troy ounces. While it rallied as high as 1208, the metal could not sustain these gains and fell below 1200 again, closing out the day at 1197.5. Today, August gold was up 5.6 to $1202.4 per 100 troy ounces as of 8:21 AM EST, this morning. The September U.S. dollar index was up .806 to 81.730. October platinum was up 2.3 to $1539.3 per 50 troy ounces. Silver was up 5.2 cents to 18.210. Yesterday Goldman Sachs released its latest commodity recommendation. It is calling for Gold to touch $1300 by year end. The report is pretty sparse in comparison to some of the other serious research we have read from Tudor, Barclay’s and other banks. But that does not mean it is wrong. It means that Goldman has its finger on the pulse and think a tipping point may be near, fundamental, structural, cash flow or otherwise. So they are putting out a red herring. Here it is in the nutshell.
Jobless Claims Deterioration Continues - Print At 484K Versus Expectation Of 465K, Prior Revised To 482K
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/12/2010 07:31 -0500Continuing claims improved marginally to 4,452MM from 4,535MM expected (previous revised to 4,570), but much of the volatility in this series is due to transitions into EUC and Extended Claims. The one main indicator, initial claims, continues to deteriorate and will soon pass the 500,000 mark which will be the final confirmation the US never left the depression but merely enjoyed an 18 month sugar high courtesy of tens of trillions in incremental debt. And here come the jobless who had fallen off insurance rolls: EUCs surged to 4,493,351: an increase of over 1.15 million! Add the Extended Claims jump of 180K, and those on total extended rolls jumped by 1.3 million in one week. These are votes that surely would not have gone for administration come November if their subsidies had not been returned.
Frontrunning: August 12
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/12/2010 07:28 -0500- Former St. Louis Fed president: Say Goodbye to Fannie and Freddie (NYT)
- China PLA warns U.S. over fresh military drill in region (Reuters)
- Debts Rise, and Go Unpaid, as Bust Erodes Home Equity (NYT)
- Spanish Crisis Threatens Second Front as Catalonia Rates Rise (Bloomberg)
- China Shows Further Signs Of Slowing (FT)
- Foreclosure Crisis Spreads Across U.S. as Idaho Defaults Mount (Bloomberg)
- The great false choice, stimulus or austerity (FT)
- The Rubin Con Goes On (The Nation)
- Thousands Crowd Housing Authority For Section 8 WAITING LIST, Fights Break Out (HuffPost)
- Australian Employment Growth Cools, Pushing Jobless Rate Higher (Bloomberg)
Daily Highlights: 8.12.2010
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/12/2010 07:28 -0500- Bank of England lowers UK's GDP growth outlook. Stirs speculation of more intervention.
- Buyers' Credit helped home prices rise in two-thirds of U.S. metropolitan areas in Q2.
- IEA warns of Gulf spill effect on new oil supplies.
- India looks to shake up its banks; Central bank reviews banking ownership rules.
- US trade gap swells to 21-month high; deficit with China more than half of total.
- Advance Auto beats by $0.13, posts Q2 EPS of $1.16. Revs up 7.2% at $1.42B. Plans $300M share repurchase program.
- AIG to sell 80% of its money-losing consumer-lending business to Fortress Investment.
Euribor Declines As Euro Extends Slide To 100 DMA, Europe Poised On Verge Of Relapse Into Full-Blown Crisis Mode
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/12/2010 07:06 -0500The most stable correlation in recent months continues to persist with the EUR dropping further earlier today to a fresh 3 week low, on more bad news out of Europe, yet coupled with a decline in interbank rates. The EURUSD printed at 1.2811, mere pips away from the 1.2800 100DMA (at the same time as the EURCHF plunged to below 1.36 after hitting a high over 1.38 yesterday). As expected, this has led to a decline in the Euribor rate, whose fixing came at 0.899% (3 Month), versus 0.903% previously. Both 1 Week and 6 Month Euribor also declined. The ongoing macro weakness in Europe is predicated on two big macro events: the confusion surrounding Slovakia's refusal to participate in a Greek bailout, as well as rumors of another round of ECB purchases in the Irish 6 and 9-month (€0.5 Billion each) T-Bill auctions, which priced at 2.458% (previous 1.367%) and 2.81% (previous 1.800%), respectively. The Bid To Cover was 3.6 and 3.1, versus 2.8 and 3.4 previously. Further underscoring Europe's own relapse into a PIGGSy inferno, was Greece's announcement of May unemployment at 12%, versus 9.5% last year, but more relevantly, the country's GDP declined more than expected, coming in at -3.5% from last year, on expectations of -3.3%, and a 1.5% QoQ (-1.0% exp). They should just wait to see what happens when all the strikes are factored in. All in all, it should prove to be another interesting session.
Foreclosure Activity Jumps, Reverses 4 Month Declining Trend
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/12/2010 06:47 -0500
After having declined for 4 months in a row, July foreclosure activity once again took a leg up, increasing by 4% from the prior month to 325,229 in July according to RealtyTrac. There was deterioration across all three foreclosures categories: default notices, foreclosures auctions and bank repossessions (REO). “July marked the 17th consecutive month with a foreclosure activity total exceeding 300,000,” said James J. Saccacio, chief executive officer of RealtyTrac. “Declines in new default notices, which were down on a year-over-year basis for the sixth straight month in July, have been offset by near-record levels of bank repossessions, which increased on a year-over-year basis for the eighth straight month.” Of note is the ongoing increase in bank repossessions as banks seems increasingly less motivated to put foreclosed properties in auctions lists. Per RealtyTrac: "Lenders foreclosed on 92,858 U.S. properties in July, a 9 percent increase from the previous month and a 6 percent increase from July 2009. July’s bank repossession (REO) total was the second highest monthly total since RealtyTrac began tracking REO activity in April 2005 and was 1 percent below the monthly REO activity peak of 93,777 in May 2010."
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 12/08/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 08/12/2010 05:07 -0500RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 12/08/10
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