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Archive - Sep 3, 2010

Tyler Durden's picture

Goldman Plans To Close Prop Trading (For Real This Time)





BN  10:03 *GOLDMAN SACHS SAID TO PLAN TO CLOSE PROPRIETARY TRADING UNIT
BN  10:03 *GOLDMAN PRINCIPAL STRATEGIES TRADERS IN NY MAY JOIN OTHER FIRM
BN  10:03 *GOLDMAN PRINCIPAL STRATEGIES HEAD SZE MAY START A HEDGE FUND

So as long as you do one flow trade a year, you are considered a flow trader? Brilliant.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Goldman Exposes The "Lend To Play" Conflict Scheme Involved In IPO Underwriter Allocation





In providing commentary to the FASB's attempt to solicit public response on its recent foray into bringing some transparency into "loans held to maturity" by Wall Street banks, Goldman Sachs does a terrific job of exposing the very prevalent, and very conflicted phenomenon better known as "lending to play" in Wall Street firms' attempt to get an allocation on the IPO underwriter syndicate of public company candidates, in exchange for providing debt to the same firm on very disadvantageous terms to both the underwriters' shareholders, and to secondary purchasers of such debt. In addition to providing broad mispricing incentive to an entire capital structure product, this practice also completely destroys the credibility of the ratings of the newly public company by the Underwriter syndicate due to tremendous conflicts of interest.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: Peak Denial About Peak Oil





It is par for the course that with oil hovering between $70 and $80 per barrel Americans have continued to buy SUVs and Trucks at a rapid pace. Politicians don’t have constituents screaming at them because gas is $4.00 per gallon, so it is no longer an issue for them. They need to focus on the November elections. It is no time to discuss a difficult issue that requires foresight and honesty. It is no time to tell the American public that oil will be over $200 a barrel within the next 5 years. Anyone who would go on CNBC today and declare that oil will be over $200 a barrel would be eviscerated by bubble head Bartiromo or clueless Kudlow. Bartiromo filled up her Escalade this morning for $2.60 a gallon, so there is no looming crisis on the horizon. The myopic view of the world by politicians, the mainstream media and the American public in general is breathtaking to behold. Despite the facts slapping them across the face, Americans believe cheap oil is here to stay. It is their right to have an endless supply of cheap oil. The American way of life has been granted by God. We are the chosen people. A funny thing happened on our way to permanent prosperity and unlimited cheap oil. The right to prosperity was yanked out from underneath us by the current Greater Depression. The worldwide economic downturn has masked the onset of peak cheap oil. Therefore, when it hits America with its full fury, it will be a complete surprise to the ignorant masses and the ignorant politicians who run this country. A Gallup Poll in August asked Americans about our most important problems. Where is the concern about future energy supplies? It isn’t on the radar screens of Americans. They are probably more worried about whether The Situation will hook up with Snookie on the Jersey Shore reality show.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Jim O'Neill Is Back To Pitching The Great Consumption Potential Of Turkey, Bangladesh And Iran... Next Up - Uranus





There are permabulls, and then there is Jim O'Neill. The Man U fan explains why, after it has been consistently discredited, people do not believe in decoupling: "because they are not prepared to get it." And just because people are really stupid and just don't get it, O'Neill pitches Indonesia, Turkey, Nigeria and Bangladesh, and, oh yes, Iran, as the "Next 11" once again. Because, gasp, 9 of them are up year to date. We wonder if Jim recalls what happened to the Russian market in 2008. Somehow we think his selective memory may have shut that one out. Also, it turns out Jim O'Neill does not appreciate fan mail bourne out of "weird blog site" commentary: "I received quite a few incoming hostile emails in response, and references to some weird blog sites who apparently opine on my views." Oops.

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 03/09/10





RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 03/09/10

 

Tyler Durden's picture

ECRI Declines, Passes Below "Double Dip" -10% Threshold Again





The ECRI Leading Indicator Index just came at -10.1%, a drop from last week's -9.9%, once again inflecting into double dip territory. One can only imagine what the spin proffered by the index creators will be this time: it was suddenly very credible last week, hopefully that credibility persists as it reaffirms a definitive double dip yet again.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Meanwhile, In Broken Correlation Land...





Correlation desks = today's full retard

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Big Miss In ISM Non-Manufacturing Index, Employment Component Comes In Below 50, Lowest Since January





ISM Services comes in at 51.5 vs expectations of 53.2, and a previous print of 54.3. This is the second lowest Service read of the year. And keep in mind services are what drives America. AUDJPY plunges on the news. All components come in below expectations (New Orders, Employment, Business Activity), except prices, which is almost deflationary, but not quite. And most critically, the employment read came in at 48.2: the first posted contraction since January 2010. But the US economy lost only 54K jobs (and over 160k not adjusting for birth death), ergo all is well and double dip is off the table. Crazy pills time.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Artist's Rendering Of Larry Summers' LinkedIn Profile





You knew it was just a matter of time before prudent Larry looked for greener pastures. Courtesy of William Banzai, we bring you Larry Summers' LinkedIn profile. No matter what you think of it, it is a victory for the bulls.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Goldman On NPF: "Better Than Expected But Below Rate Needed To Keep Jobless Rate Stable"





The survey of households featured a rebound of 550,000 in the labor force, split almost equally between increases in employment (290,000) and unemployment (261,000). As a result, the unemployment rate conformed to expectations, rising to a "high" 9.6% (9.642%). The rebound in the labor force was slightly less than ½ the cumulative loss registered over just the past three months. This underscores the difficulty of bringing unemployment down; if more increases are in the offing, as seems likely on trend, the trend in net hiring-perhaps best measured by private payrolls-will not prevent further increase in unemployment. Over the past three months, private payrolls have risen just 78,000 on average. And, despite last month's large increase in the labor force, the broadest "U6" measure of underemployment also went up, to 16.7% from 16.5%.

 

madhedgefundtrader's picture

Why Can’t We Be More Like Chile?





Counter cyclical Keynesian spending financed out of savings, instead of debt. Too bad they didn’t think about that here! Keynesian economists unable to gain a hearing in the US sell their wares in Latin America. (ECH), (CU).

 

Tyler Durden's picture

So With QE2 Now Dead Until 2011, What Fiscal Stimulus Measures Lie In Store?





Today's NFP number means QE is now firmly off the table until 2011: monetary stimulus is stuck with QE lite for at least 3-4 months. Incidentally, this was the big catalyst that everyone was looking for to go all in on stocks. And with the economy still deteriorating, the only option is fiscal stimulus, but don't call it a stimulus as that costs political brownie points. So what are the options that Obama has before him? Goldman's Alec Phillips highlights the options which can be summarized as: a hiring credit, a payroll tax cut, a small business tax cut, bonus depreciation, and an extension of the Build America Bond program. His full thoughts below.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

August Total Non Farm Payrolls Come At -54K On Consensus Of -105K, Unchanged From July, Unemployment Rate 9.6%, Birth Death Adds 115K





Private payrolls come in at +67K as Birth Death adds 115K, compared to just 6K previously, as U-6 rises from 16.5 to 16.7%, highest since April. Total Part time workers (all industries) increased by 401k from 18,157 to 18,558; part time workers for economic reasons increased by 331K. Workweek unchanged month over month at 34.2 hours, with average hourly earnings up slightly from 0.2% to 0.3%. 42% of the unemployed were out of a job for 27 weeks or longer, compared to 44.9% previously; average duration of unemployment at 33.6 weeks.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: September 3





  • Is this the reason for Japan's unwillingness to intervene: Japan Said to View U.S. Opposition as Yen Intervention Obstacle (Bloomberg) - Japan views probable U.S. opposition to intervention in the foreign-exchange market to address the appreciating yen as an obstacle to taking unilateral action, according to three Japanese government officials.
  • LOL European Stress Tests: Lenders Shunned on Stress Tests Doubts (FT)
  • LOL v2: White House: No Second Stimulus Being Considered (Reuters)
  • East coast braces for Hurricane Earl (WSJ)
  • French government vows to face down pension strike (Reuters)
  • Chinese Funds Post Huge Losses in H1 (Caixin, h/t Mark)
  • Bundesbank Asks German President to Dismiss Sarrazin After Race Comments (Business Week)
  • Does Grandma Cause Unemployment? (Barrons)
 

Tyler Durden's picture

Daily Highlights: 9.3.2010





  • Oil falls below $75 a barrel in Asia ahead of US employment report.
  • Russia said it would extend its ban on wheat exports into late 2011.
  • Russia to double gas imports from Azerbaijan in a fresh blow to EU-touted pipeline project.
  • US Pending sales of existing houses unexpectedly climbed in July from a record low.
  • US Retail sales in August top estimates on tax holidays, discounts.
  • 3Par determines revised HP proposal, for $33/share, is superior. Dell pulls out of race.
 
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