Archive - Sep 24, 2010

Tyler Durden's picture

Dollar Hits All Time Low Against Swiss Franc





The USDCHD just printed at 0.9780, the lowest ever in history. The dollar obliteration, and the rush to safety away from the psychopaths of the Federal Reserve continues. Surely the destruction that the Fed is reaping everywhere will get investors to regain their confidence in what is now nothing more than a battlefield where the central bankers of the world can conduct their own little pissing contest while the HFT algos watch in awe and buy shit.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

New Homes Sales Come At Third Lowest Number In History, Miss Expectations, Median Home Price Lowest Since December 2003





New home sales print at 288,000, missing expectations of 295,000, and coming at the third lowest number in history. The previous read of 276K was revised to 288K. New home inventory is now at 8.6 month supply. Add the roughly 12 months in supply at existing home sales in inventory and you can easily see why the stock market is up almost 2.0%. The median home price of $204,700 is now the lowest since December 2003.

 

Pivotfarm's picture

Live FX Relative Strength





Live individual currency strength meter.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

David Tepper Is "Balls To The Wall" Long (But Unlevered) The Fed





Earlier today David Tepper confirmed that virtually everyone is now hypnotized by the biggest fallacy in the history of capital markets: that stocks determine the economy, and not vice versa. Incidentally, this is precisely what the Fed banks on, as confirmed previously by Alan Greenspan, who said on TV that the Fed is far more interested in keeping the stock market artificially high than actually caring about its mandate of keeping unemployment and inflation low. Of course, Tepper couldn't resist but talk his book, and providing the most childish and discredited validation for his bullishness: the Fed will do QE in perpetuity. "Either the economy is going to get better by itself in the next three months...What assets are going to do well? Stocks are going to do well, bonds won't do so well, gold won't do as well. Or the economy is not going to pick up in the next three months and the Fed is going to come in with QE. Then what's going to do well? Everything, in the near term though not bonds...So let's see what I got—I got two different situations: One, the economy gets better by itself, stocks are better, bonds are worse, gold is probably worse. The other situation is the fed comes in with money." We are too lazy to do it, because we have done it about one hundred times in the past, but we suggest Mr. Tepper pull up a chart of the Nikkei and superimpose on it all the times Japan launched ever more impotent episodes of QE and FX intervention. How did that work out? Yes, you can devalue currencies infinitely via QE, but that only destroys the real value of assets. And as we pointed out after the latest FOMC meeting, we are now in a new regime, where gold benefits more than stocks on further currency devaluation. Period.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Mort Zuckerman Joins Volcker In Bashing The Chaos That Is US Homeownership: "The American Dream Has Become A Nightmare"





It is always fun to read Mort Zuckerman's post-"dark side" conversion rants. Especially since they tend to be very much spot on. His latest focuses on the nightmare of US homeownership, which incidentally is the last thing that prevents the all out collapse of the US economy. Should the dwindling mass of homeowners (sometimes referred to in endangered species textbooks as the "middilus classius") realize that just like stocks, owning a home is very much an overrated premise, that could well be reset push this country so desperately needs.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Fed 1 - Your Purchasing Power 0: Dollar Bloodbath Redux In Pretty Heatmaps





The only thing that matters today is the ongoing drubbing of the USD, which has just surged to 1.345 to the Euro, even as the Yen meanders this morning but continues to gradually push higher post overnight lows. Expect angry statements from the ECB, and promises to do more of the same failed thing. In the meantime, the middle class' purchasing power was once crushed. The Fed's transfer of wealth from savers to debtors continues. Which is the only thing that matters to stock.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Durable Goods Miss Consensus As Nondefense Shipments Plunge 40.2%, Ex-Transporation Beat Expectations





August Durable Goods come all over the place - total number is a major miss to expectations, but stripping away transportation and aircraft, these beat. As expected, the market will cherry pick what it likes and surges on the news.

  • US Durable Goods Orders (Aug) M/M -1.3% vs. Exp. -0.1% (Prev. 0.3%, Rev. to 0.7)
  • ( Update 1 , 08:32)
  • Durable ex. Transportation (Aug) M/M 2.0% vs. Exp. 1.0% (Prev. -3.8%, Rev. to -2.8)
  • Non-def Cap ex. Aircraft (Aug) M/M 4.1% Exp. 3.0% (Prev. -7.2%, Rev. to -5.3)

Perhaps someone should point out to Boeing and all US defense companies that Nondefense aircraft and parts shipments and new orders plunge by -13.5% and -40.2% in August.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: September 24





  • CNBC's new pet blog is off to an unsurprising start: not only does it steal Zero Hedge stories without attribution, but apparently it discovered the entire correlation story - (NetNet). As a reference, Jeff, here are Zero Hedge's nodes on implied correlation going back into 2009, and here is our Nicholas Colas post. But yes, we also were very shocked someone out there read this to begin with. So keep stealing guys, nobody will catch it.
  • Two quotes of the day: "Irish debt agency CEO not worried about daily swings in bond spreads" and "Irish Finance Minister says concerned by yields in recent debt sales "
  • China Will Focus On Peaceful Development: Wen (China Daily)
  • China Takes Lead In Financial Deals (FT)
  • Spat Tests Japan's New Government." (WSJ)
  • Eurozone Crackdown On Public Finances (FT)
  • Spain Under Pressure to Show `Hair Shirt' Budget as Yields Rise (Bloomberg)
 

madhedgefundtrader's picture

Reflections on Morgan Stanley’s 75th Anniversary





Love them or hate them, they’re going to be around for another 75 years. From gilded blue bloods to “Mack the Knife” to the “suits” in one generation. Saving the firm twice. Successfully demanding a huge equity infusion from the Mitsubishi Group, while simultaneously holding at bay the wolves from Wall Street and Washington. (MS).

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Failed Japanese FX Intervention Sends Gold To $1,300





At least one asset class is very much happy from the BOJ's latest FX intervention failure (see chart below): gold. Spot is pennies away from $1,300 and will pass it within hours if not minutes. To all those who still fail to see why the world is forcing a return to that barbaric relic - the gold standard - our condolences: keep shorting. To everyone else, to whom the fiat devaluation story presented on Zero Hedge almost 40% gold percent ago, is now as obvious as to those trading the JPY, well... 40%. Nuf said.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Daily Highlights: 9.24.2010





  • Asian stocks fall for third day on global economic concern.
  • Bank of Japan mum on intervention talk after yen's sudden drop against dollar.
  • China's control of a key minerals market has US military thinkers, policy makers worried.
  • Democrats abandoned plans to vote before Election Day on extending Bush-era tax cuts.
  • Euro weaker at $1.3317; dollar up to 84.72 versus yen.
  • German business confidence improves modestly in September; highest since June 2007.
  • Oil floats near $75 in Asia; mixed US economic data suggest weak crude demand.
 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 24/09/10





RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 24/09/10

 

Pivotfarm's picture

Daily FX Retail Trader Contrarian Analysis





Retail Traders as a herd are wrong…most of the time (sorry guys its true).

This daily report is designed to help traders find opportunities to trade against this group. The premise is very simple we are looking for 66% of retail traders to be trading either long or short a currency pair, we then look for opportunities to fade (trade against) this group. For example if 72.99% of traders are long the USD/CHF we look for opportunities to short that pair.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

BOJ Intervenes For Second Time In A Week, Fails





The half-life of central bank interventions is getting shorter and shorter. After Shirakawa decided to show the Fed who is boss, only to be met with the biggest beatdown the dollar has experienced since March, tonight the BOJ decided to show Bernanke how it's done. Too bad the idiots at the BOJ have learned nothing from the SNB's Hildebrand, who was last seen cowering in a fetal positions, underneath his desk. After surging by 100 pips post the second intervention in a row, the "wolfpack" is back, and the yen has retraced more than half it losses in under 2 hours. This pathetic attempt to weaken its currency has just cost the BOJ another few trillions yen, while the end result is the same: a Japan whose export economy is about to be crushed, and a central bank president who will now be forced to join the ranks of the unemployed within a month.

 

Leo Kolivakis's picture

Moody's Targeting Pension Woes?





Will Moody's force states to accelerate pension reforms?

 
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