Archive - Aug 27, 2010
U.S. Postal Service Starts Quoting SDR to Dollar Conversion Rates, and IMF Endorses Replacing Dollars with SDRs
Submitted by George Washington on 08/27/2010 12:11 -0500Anyone else find this interesting?
Rosie's Observations On The GDP Number, On Bernanke's Address, And On The Market
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2010 12:05 -0500
David Rosenberg has provided his typically succinct summary of the day's heavy dataflow, starting with the GDP number, parsing though Bernanke's speech, and concluding with a broad overview of where the market is heading, which is now so disconnected form a bond-implied FV in the upper 700s it is no longer funny.
Nanex Dissects Yesterday's CMT Flash Crash: Catches BATS, NASDAQ HFT Algo Red-Handed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2010 11:11 -0500As readers will recall, yesterday we highlighted the HFT-driven flash crash in Core Molding (CMT) after an algo very obviously went insane and took the stock price to $0.0001 in the span of one second. Today, courtesy of our friends at Nanex, we get a transposition of the events at 14:19 in all their visual glory, together with a succinct explanation of everything that went wrong.
RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 27/08/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 08/27/2010 11:00 -0500RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 27/08/10
Is Today's Bond Selloff Driven By Goldman's Announcement 2.50% Target On 10 Year Reached
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2010 10:39 -0500While there is nothing to suggest a fundamental improvement in the economy, and judging by the latest batch of data the economy is in fact continuing to deteriorate, we have so far seen a substantial sell off in bonds across the curve, with the 2s10s steepening by 11 bps (just in time for the bull flattener bandwagon to enjoy some out-of-steepener rotation pain). So what is the catalyst for the selloff? Francesco Garzarelli's note to Goldman clients titled "Forecast Reached, Risks Now Balanced", in which he implicitly advises to take profits on USTs, sent earlier may provide some clues...
Aggressive Push To Ramp Stocks Higher Via AUDJPY Provides Today's Convergence Arb
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2010 10:11 -0500
A major campaign is in process to attempt to push stocks higher via the AUDJPY, whether in cooperation with the BOJ and FRBNY, and Europe close or not, as the spread between the ES and the AUDJPY suggests that stocks are materially lagging (10-15 ES points). The trade right now, which takes advantage of Mr. Sack's generosity with taxpayer capital, is to buy ES and sell the AUDJPY as broken market provide numerous convergence opportunities.
ECRI At -9.9% As Downward Historical Prior Revisions Continue
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2010 09:46 -0500
The ECRI Weekly came in at an annualized -9.9%, once again straddling the critical -10% boundary. Of course with two previous downward revisions, it appears the index' creators have taken up the government's favorite data fudging ploy of downward revising prior data, as the past week's -10% now ends up being -10.1%. No doubt next week this week's -9.9% will be revised to a worse number. But by then all the beneficial impact of the better number will be long forgotten.
Market Response To Negative Data Glut: Serrated Edge, With FRBNY's Brian Sack Rushing To Scene To Cauterize Bleeders
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2010 09:18 -0500Update: LOL - Intel is now up after cutting guidance. We are done here. Central Banks of the world: market is sold to you.

What do you get when you flood the market with an Intel downward guidance update, a disappointing money printer dictate, and a drop on consumer confidence? In a word - total market insanity. Risk is now moving straight line up or down: the AUDJPY (and its derivative the stock market) has lost all semblance of normalcy and is now up or down in 30 pips increments with no rhyme or reason, as dogs and cats chase their respective tails, in what can only be defined as a perfect sawtooth pattern. Have fun trading: Brian Sack will gladly be on the other side off all your sell orders.
Even With Clawbacks, the House Always Wins in Private Equity Funds
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 08/27/2010 09:04 -0500So, Mr. Private Equity Fund Man says, "Give me $10 in order for me to lose you $8, and I'll give you $2 dollars back for your inconvenience." Am I in the wrong business or what?
Bernanke Speech Summary: Concerned About Inflationary Response To Additional Monetization
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2010 09:02 -0500I believe that additional purchases of longer-term securities, should the FOMC choose to undertake them, would be effective in further easing financial conditions. However, the expected benefits of additional stimulus from further expanding the Fed’s balance sheet would have to be weighed against potential risks and costs. One risk of further balance sheet expansion arises from the fact that, lacking much experience with this option, we do not have very precise knowledge of the quantitative effect of changes in our holdings on financial conditions. In particular, the impact of securities purchases may depend to some extent on the state of financial markets and the economy; for example, such purchases seem likely to have their largest effects during periods of economic and financial stress, when markets are less liquid and term premiums are unusually high. The possibility that securities purchases would be most effective at times when they are most needed can be viewed as a positive feature of this tool. However, uncertainty about the quantitative effect of securities purchases increases the difficulty of calibrating and communicating policy responses. Another concern associated with additional securities purchases is that substantial further expansions of the balance sheet could reduce public confidence in the Fed’s ability to execute a smooth exit from its accommodative policies at the appropriate time. Even if unjustified, such a reduction in confidence might lead to an undesired increase in inflation expectations. - Chairman Shalom
Intel Cuts Revenue, Gross Margin Forecast, Shares Halted
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2010 09:00 -0500Oops. Only half an hour in and Brian Sack is already way in over his head.
BN 6:58 *INTE CUTS 3Q REVENUE, GROSS MARGIN FORECAST
UMichigcan Consumer Sentiment At 68.9, Misses Expectations Of 69.6
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2010 08:56 -0500How did they not massage this consensus number lower? The expectations component came in at 62.9 on consensus of 63.5 (previous 64.1); the Conditions came in at 78.3, a slight beat of expectations at 78.0. 1/5 Year inflation expectations come lower/higher compared to before at 2.7% and 2.8% (2.8% and 2.7% before).
Goldman's Take On Q2 GDP: Ongoing Inventory Accumulation Still A Correction Threat
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2010 08:43 -0500Sorry folks, nothing good to extrapolate based on the just released (and soon to be revised lower one final time) GDP data - from Jan Hatzius: "Implications for Q3 growth are probably slightly negative, though much depends on the monthly data to be released over the next few weeks, starting with Monday's report on consumer spending in July. The reason for this bias is that inventory accumulation, at an annual rate of $63.2bn in the second quarter, is still high enough (+3.7% at an annual rate) to put the economy at risk of at least a mild correction in this component as demand slows to a rate well below this rate. Although final sales to domestic purchasers were revised up to a +4.3% annual rate, this includes an increase in residential investment that is already in process of reversing as well as the effects of the decennial Census. And while much of the trade drag may well be reversed, the starting point for Q3 is a deep hole, so that's more likely to be a Q4 event." The only question is does Joe LaVorgna revert to a 10% H2 GDP now that his flip flopping on Q2 GDP (which he conveniently revised to 1% a few days back) was proven to be too fatalistically dire.
More Are Waking Up To HFT Terrorism: Iridian Asset Management's Latest Investor Letter Blasts High Frequency Trading
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2010 08:23 -0500In their Q2 letter to clients, Jeff Silver and Ben Hunt of Iridian Asset Management provide an update of the fund's performance and some notable holdings (long: TOO; short: TXT) but the core of the letter is the recap of the firm's "Hollow Market" theme, this time refocusing on what we have long claimed is the biggest threat to market integrity, High Frequency Trading: "On May 6th we saw the hollow market revealed via the so-called “flash crash”, where liquidity throughout US equity markets vanished in the time it takes to turn off a computer server running a high-frequency trading algorithm. As we wrote to our investors that afternoon, we believe that it was the interaction of trading algorithms, ETF’s, and decentralized venues that created the flash crash." The firm proceeds to highlight the two outcomes of what is now known as the Hollow Market paradigm: i) a constant, non-trivial chance of severe market dislocation (which includes a reference to the seminal paper Is High-Frequency Trading Inducing Changes in Market Microstructure and Dynamics, first posted with comments on Zero Hedge, and ii) the need for a Tobin tax, another topic long endorsed by Zero Hedge as a means of fixing the market. Furthermore, all those still confused by Zero Hedge's fascination with VWAP strategies, can finally sleep well after reading this letter. All in all, a must read analysis for everyone (and even the two employees at the SEC with an IQ greater than single digits), curious as to how screwed up our current market truly is (also, thanks for the shout-out).
Guest Post: From $100 Million To $2.16 Billion In Under Ten Years - Proposing an Overnight Gold Fund
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2010 08:05 -0500
Consider a hedge fund starting in 2001 with $100m, with the strategy of being long gold from the PM to AM fix, and short gold from the AM to PM fix. That hedge fund would be worth $2.16billion today, before any fees and expenses. This should be enough to catch any investor’s attention. Even without shorting gold during the intraday period, limiting exposure to gold to just the overnight period enhances returns enough to justify using this as a basis for a trading strategy.





