Archive - Aug 23, 2010

Tyler Durden's picture

Marc Faber And Peter Schiff Take On The Bond Bulls; The Rosenberg-Faber Gentlemen's Bet





The debate over whether bonds are in a bubble is very much the topic du jour, and while some deflationists like David Rosenberg believe that not only is there no bubble, but the 10 year will soon slide inside of its all time tights at under 2.1%, others believe the 30 years bull run in Treasuries is the dumbest thing since the dot com bubble, and that if anyone is hoping to make money, it should be on the countertrend. Two such Treasury bears are Marc Faber and Peter Schiff, both of whom were on CNBC tonight, and both were dissecting what in their view is the fallacy of the long-UST trade. As for the Faber-Schiff view, no surprise: Peter encapsulates it best: "the bond market is the mother of all bubbles right now, and when it bursts the losses will dwarf the combined losses of the stock market bubble and the real estate bubble. There is no way for the government to pay this money back." And echoing a topic Zero Hedge has been warning on extensively, namely the maturity of trillions in short-term debt that rolls every month, Schiff notes: "I am afraid is that when people realize we can't pay this money back, we aren't going to be able to roll over all this short-term debt. And so it's not just paying the interest, we are going to have to retire the principal." Peter Schiff is correct that inflating our way out of this debt bubble is a lose-lose proposition. Schiff also notes the stupidity of crowds, by highlighting that 10 years ago everyone was chasing risk, by piling into stock market funds, followed by everyone knows what. The outcome for bond investors is clear: "this decade is going to be the worst decade for bonds in US history. Bond holders are going to get wiped out. Either the government is going to default, or it is going to inflate, but either way the people holding the bonds, are holding the bag."

 

derailedcapitalism's picture

Garrison Hill Capital Management: “Unstressful Assumptions”





Garrison Hill Capital Management issued its latest report on the macro economic environment. The firm looks at the ridiculousness of the European stress tests, summarizing as to why the CEBS report is absolutely meaningless

 

Bruce Krasting's picture

What’s Your Home Worth? Ask FHFA





Fun new app from FHFA. Cost? $400 billion.

 

Leo Kolivakis's picture

Financial Retraction Ahead?





When Fairfax Financial purchases $23 billion worth of protection (notional value) against the threat of deflation in the coming 10 years, you have to wonder whether financial retraction looms ahead...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

IOU Part Two: California To Issue IOUs For Second Year In A Row





The insolvent state of California which, just like the country of the USA, is operating without a budget (and who needs a budget when the Fed-PD complex will buy the bulk of anything and everything needed to fund ongoing daily operations), has once again ended up on the verge of bankruptcy. As a result, it has just passed a measure which for the second time in as many years (going all the way back to the Great Depression), will allow it to use IOUs in lieu of payment on everything from supplies to contracted services and health-care costs, so it can actually preserve cash to make payments to its generous debtors. On the road to banker serfdom, California has once again reached its goal.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Daily Credit Summary: August 23 - Low Volume, Low Range, Low Growth





Spreads closed marginally wider, at the worst levels of the day, after an anemic volume day that only picked up in activity when we weakened. Overnight angst from Australia combined with some weakness in EU data was marginally trumped early on by M&A chatter and headline spin on US ECO data but further evidence of a deflationary view of the world (NSC 100Y issue) seemed to provide some downward pressure and despite valiant attempts to steepen the curve or drive AUDJPY up, stocks ended at their lows of the day as did spreads at their wides.

We have had a number of clients asking about our views on the forthcoming GM IPO. Suffice it to say, and in the interests of brevity, we are not overly impressed and worry about this on many fronts as anything but a flipper's fantasy (drop us a line for somewhat more coherent thoughts). Most notably we have noticed something rather fascinating in the Auto sector. The relationship between GM's 2016 bonds and the Ford Equity price has been amazingly (and we mean incredibly) consistent for many months now - a simple arb at around 2.5x Ford's stock price explains huge amounts of variance in the GM bond price and we suggest tracking this going into the IPO for any signs of a preference. One we would expect is selling of Ford to buy into the GM IPO in hopes of flipping soon after and still leaving the manager equally exposed to the Auto sector - this would also be interesting as the GM bonds have residual ownership in the new GM and may be a decent hedge here should the deal be 'better' than many expected. Just thinking out loud on this but we will keep an eye on it.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

What Hungary's Foreign FX-Denominated Household Balance Sheet Can Teach The Rest Of The World





Goldman Sachs has put together a very informative chart, as part of its European chart of the day series, which shows the discrepancy between household accumulation in domestic and foreign denominated debt. While HUF-denominated debt is a mere 12% of GDP, FX-denominated is at almost 50% of GDP. Most of this debt is CHF-based, and with the CHF hitting fresh record highs, the pain for debtors is becoming unsustainable due to the relative FX strength. And while, as Goldman points out, new FX debt accumulation has plunged, the legacy positions will be there for a long time. For this debt to clear out, the Balance of Payments for Hungary and other non-euro countries will enforce a very prudent deleveraging regime, and will require that the economies grow, not contract. The last is something that is very much in question for Hungary, which as we pointed out recently, has decided to go it alone with IMF assistance, and thus without a safety net backstop should things not work out as expected. Either way, the bottom line is that as European countries loaded up on EUR-, and especially CHF-, denominated debt when the currencies were cheap, the current violent swings with a rising bias, will make the pain for the peripheral countries all that much more pronounced.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

In The Market For A Yacht? Head To Athens' Alimos Marina For "Blue Water" Specials





The ongoing disclosure about the tax-evasion habits of Greece's rich and famous, has recently hit new amusement highs: a crack down on the ultra high net worth individuals, those who have one or more powerboats parked in the Athens marina, indicates that a majority have declared incomes of less than €40,000 in the past year "an amount that would barely cover their cost of fuel." The good news is that with yacht owners sweating, the sale offers on Athens yachts has surged. The unpleasant alternative - if owners refuse or are unable to pay new taxes, which could include a VAT at 23% on the price of the boat plus another 10% luxury tax, as well as a punitive fine, amounting to 66% of the cost of a new boat, the authorities will confiscate the boats. And as can be seen by this satellite photo of the Alimos Marina, there is more than enough boats for sale to satisfy even the most snobbish tastes.

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 23/08/10





RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 23/08/10

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Gene Noser's 5 Suggestions On How To Regain Our Market Back From The Robots





As more and more people voice their displeasure with the hijacking of the stock market by assorted HFT bucket shops (and oligopolies), with persistent defense by such industry participants as Irene Aldridge notwithstanding, we would like to present the latest opinion by Abel/Noser co-founder, Gene Noser (whose firm recently confirmed that just 99 stocks account for 50% of all daily trading volume) who explains where, in his view, we went wrong with market structure, courtesy of the ever accelerating technological encroachment, and provides five suggestions on how to fix the market, and begin to eliminate the various parasitic influences of the HFT fake-market making brigade.

 

Reggie Middleton's picture

Is Illinois Worse Off Than Greece with a Little LTCM and Bear Stearns Thrown In? In Case You Didn’t Know…





What does Illinois have in common with Bear Stearns, Ambac Financial, LTCM and Greece? Come on fellas, let's roll the dice. I've got some pension money in case I come up snake eyes...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Norfolk Southern Prices $250 Million In Upsized 6% 100 Year Bond Reopening To Yield 5.95%





Need a 100 year inflation outlook? The market has spoken, and courtesy of the liquidity glut, it appears the outlook a century down the line, is for a 5.95% inflation give or take (yes, yes, we know this is not scientific: we are hoping the soon to be released 100 Year swap spreads will give a better read). One wonders what happens to this yield if the Fed's trillions in free money sloshing around the markets are eliminated.

Full pricing grid, courtesy of sole manager (and recent deflationist) Goldman Sachs:

Norfolk Southern Corp "NSC" Baa1/BBB+/BBB+ (s/s/s) upsized USD250m (up from $100m) 100y reopening of 6.00% March 2105 sr fixed rate notes launched at 5.95%. GS (sole books). Co-mgrs: Barclays.  UOP: GCP. Pricing today.   Original USD300m issue priced March 7 2005 (6.00% at 100).

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Hindenburg Omen Creator Has Exited The Market





As we reported first, last week saw the second confirmation of the Hindenburg Omen, most recently sighted for the first time on August 12. Presumably this is an indication of putting one's money where one's mouth is (and away from the market). “I’m taking it seriously and I’m fully out of the market now,” Miekka, a blind mathematician, said in a telephone interview from his home in Surry, Maine. “I would’ve probably stayed in until the beginning of September,” depending on how the indicators varied. “That was my basic plan, until the Hindenburg came along.”

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Mark Pittman Smiles After Appeals Court Refuses To Review Fed Attempt To Stop Bailout Disclosure; Supreme Court Now On Deck





It appears that the Fed is heading for its biggest legal confrontation ever. After, as Bloomberg reports, the U.S. appeals court refused to reconsider a ruling that requires the Federal Reserve Board to disclose documents identifying financial firms that might have failed without the largest U.S. government bailout, the one last resort to preserve the secrecy interests of the Clearing House Association which is basically the formal name for all the banks that have received Fed handouts in some form or another over the years, is now the Supreme Court of the United States. And should the SCOTUS go ahead and vote alongside the administration (in this case the Fed), as it did in the Chrysler case, the fallout could well be dramatic as it once again becomes clear that the one entity truly in control of this once-great country is a group of middle aged men, which conducts all of its decision-making in strict secrecy, and whose every decision is predicated upon the perpetuation of the ever more failed Keynesian status quo.

 
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