• GoldCore
    01/13/2016 - 12:23
    John Hathaway, respected authority on the gold market and senior portfolio manager with Tocqueville Asset Management has written an excellent research paper on the fundamentals driving...

Archive - Sep 10, 2010

Reggie Middleton's picture

The Blacker the Berry, the Smaller the Market Share?





JPMorgan Said to Test IPhone for E-Mail (that's 22,000 employees)as More Bankers Bypass BlackBerry the day after I give my nth warning that Research in Motion is in serious trouble due to the iPhone and Android! RIMM's daily chart looks sick! And this is just a couple months before the biggest Android upgrade ever comes to market, v. 3.0

 

George Washington's picture

The Anniversary of 9/11





Grow up ...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Why Nobody Trades During Regular Hours Any More (And How Prop Funds Just Stop Trading When Volatility Spikes)





For those who follow our periodic updates on intraday stock volume, today's article by the Wall Street Journal which focuses on the dramatic decline in activity during regular working hours will come as no surprise. In a piece looking at prop trading shop Briargate (oh so witty anagram of arbitrage), founded by several former NYSE specialists, we learn that at least one firm (and likely many more) now no longer does any trading during the hours of 11 to 2. As this creates a feedback loop of inactivity, pretty soon the core of daily stock market activity will merely be the half an hour of action at the open, and the dark pool-ETF-open exchange rebalance at the very close, with everything inbetween deemed obsolete. Of course, what this will do, is create even more volatility in trading, force an even greater decline in stock trading volumes (and pain for Wall Street firms), and a further divergence between stocks and fundamentals, as momentum trading gains an even more prominent role in determine "price discovery."

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Goldman's Roadmap Of The Progressive Economic Deterioration





Like a rabid bulldog that refuses to let go, Goldman's Ed McKelvey has bitten on the fact that the US economy continues to deteriorate, despite the occasional data point which the feedback loopers latch on to, only to find out the data was either manipulated or "estimated", and provides a "roadmap" for how the ongoing depression will manifest itself over the next two quarters. As his economic team has been more correct than all others, investors will be paying far more attention to his estimates, than those of a now ridiculous David Greenlaw of Morgan Stanley, who after downgrading the economy three weeks ago, upgraded Q3 GDP from 2.1% to 2.4%. High Frequency Forecast adjustments anyone? According to McKevley the ongoing weakness in the economy will manifest itself along these five key verticals: consumer spending, housing start weakness, industrial activity, ongoing labor market deterioration, and deflation. Of course, this should be sufficient to get bizarro stocks higher by a few percent today. Then again, nobody gives a rat's ass what stocks do anymore.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: Weekly Peak - The “Less Bad” Rally Is Looking for Something Good





I’ve been writing about a possibility for three weeks now that I could not have imagined writing about five weeks ago: a near-term rally in the S&P 500. The reason I couldn’t have dreamt of writing about the S&P 500 rallying is because my work starts with the long-term chart of the S&P 500 and the trend of that chart is very clearly down as is shown in the second section of this note. However, a little more than four weeks ago, I spotted what appeared to be a potentially bullish technical pattern in the S&P 500. If it had looked like the beginning of the rally we saw in July and what turned out to be a bearish Rising Wedge, I would have noted it as such and labeled this time period as another selling opportunity. But this one looked as though it had the potential to be bigger and longer. Specifically, the index appeared to be setting up for a somewhat significant move higher. Enter the unconfirmed and bullish Head and Shoulders pattern. - Peak Theories Research

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: September 10, 2010





  • Japan Alarm Over China’s JGB Purchases (FT)
  • Japan Finalizes 10.9 Bln-Dollar Stimulus to Counter Strong Yen (Xinhua)
  • Geithner Says China Needs to Let Market Drive Up Yuan (Bloomberg)
  • What Can Be Done to Slow High-Frequency Trading? (FT)
  • German Push to Delay Basel Capital Rules Meets U.S. Opposition (Bloomberg)
  • Weaning Banks Off ECB's Emergency Lending Will `Take Time' (Bloomberg)
  • Regulators Agree 7% Capital Ratio for Banks (BBC)
  • UK Unions to Flex Muscles Ahead of Government Cuts (Reuters)
 

Reggie Middleton's picture

Construction and Land Loans Look Ugly, Despite Extend and Pretend Lipstick





The FDIC bank data from the 2nd quarter reveals that banks, despite extend and pretend, regulator passes, and kick the can down the road policies, are still feeling the CRE crunch. 15% of the "Construction and land development" loans are non-accrual status (dead money). Leverage that 12x to 25x (about what banks are reportedly carrying) and we are talking some pretty heavy losses. Then, of course, there the real numbers if one could just look past the extend and pretend...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Today's Economic Releases





Just one second-tier indicator on the docket, ahead of President Obama’s news conference on the economy later in the morning….

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 10/09/10





RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 10/09/10

 
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