Archive - Sep 2010

September 13th

Tyler Durden's picture

Today's Economic Data Highlights: Geithner To Welcome More To The Recovery, And The Budget Balance





Nothing on the economic front, just Tim Geithner speaking and the budget balance…

 

Reggie Middleton's picture

Because 105% LTV On Depreciating Property Wasn’t Good Enough for the US Taxpayer…





Hey everybody, bank shares are rallying world wide today. The banking problems are over and bubble times are hear again, courtesy of taxpayers world wide. Many problems and the results of those problems from 2007 are present right now! Ridiculous loans, moral hazard, frail counterparties, liquidity traps, risk concentration, ralliying stock prices... Will we ever learn???

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 13/09/10





RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 13/09/10

 

George Washington's picture

The Warped Mission of the American Military: "Out-Terrorize the Terrorists"





Washington’s Blog

A number of American soldiers are blowing the whistle on the American
military practice of indiscriminately killing Iraq civilians - by
randomly firing bullets in a 360 degree circle - anytime that an
improvised explosive device hits a U.S. soldier.

 

George Washington's picture

Our Sun Will Eventually Turn Into a Multi-Trillion Ton Diamond





A REALLY long-term commodities play?

 

September 12th

madhedgefundtrader's picture

Legendary Hedge Fund Manager Bill Fleckenstein Says No Bond Crash Without a Dollar Crash





Stocks are headed for a big multiple compression. Go long the beneficiaries of the relentless running of the printing presses in Washington. Once the spike in interest rates starts, it will be “a big, big bear market,” that could go on for decades. An exclusive interview with the legendary hedge fund manager, Bill Fleckenstein, on Hedge Fund Radio. (GLD), (NEM), (AEM), (GG), (TBT), (TMV), (VZ), (AAPL), (FXC), (CYB), (CU).

 

Tyler Durden's picture

M2 Surges By $30 Billion In Past Week To Highest Ever, Even As Monetary Base Declines





Another week in which the M2 jumped to a fresh all time high, increasing by $30 billion W/W to just under $8.7 trillion. This was only the fourth largest weekly jump in this broad money aggregate in 2010, with the prior biggest ones clustered just around the time of the Greek "out of court" reorganization and the flash crash in May. This was also the 8th sequential increase in the M2 in a row. Oddly enough this occurred even as the Monetary Base (NSA) declined by $11 billion to $1.983 trillion. Currently, the M2-MB ratio stands at 4.4x, close to its all time lows, with the recent decline purely a function of the modest contraction in the Fed's balance sheet as MBS had been rolling off for the past 4 months. With QE Lite in play, expect the Fed's Balance sheet to remain flat, which will likely mean that the ratio of the Fed's asset to the Monetary Base will remain more or less unchanged at its elevated ratio of 1.15x (with a tendency toward declining), compared to the historical average of around 1.00. Note the (as expected) inverse relationship between the M2-MB ratio and the total size of the Fed balance sheet, as the monetary base has exploded courtesy of excess reserves, without this number actually hitting M2. Is the recent leakage in M2 higher, coupled with a contraction in MB the critical step that all the inflationists have been dreading (yet at the same time expecting)?

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Federal Reserve Balance Sheet Update: Week Of September 8





It is time for the weekly update of the only financial component that really matters: the composition of the Fed's $2.3 trillion (and rising) balance sheet.

 

Reggie Middleton's picture

Deustche Bank Raises a Boat Load of Captial to Buy the Insolvent!





As predicted in May, DB honors its obligation to flush good shareholder capital down the toilet.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Basel III Summary, And The Fed's Endorsement of 20x+ Leverage





Earlier today, the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision committee released Basel III guidelines, which are expected to have a material impact on curbing bank risk appetite... when they are fully implemented in July of 2019. Luckily by then the last thing on people's minds will be whose bank's Tier 1 capital (which includes such intangible "capital" items as mortgage servicing rights and preferred stock) was being misrepresented for the past 9 years, as real cap ratios are discovered to have had a decimal comma following the zero. In the meantime, here is the summary of the proposed changes to bank capitalization requirements, which apparently were so "stringent" that the Fed issued a Sunday afternoon press release patting itself, and the entire financial system on the back, for pulling off another multi-trillion toxic debt David Copperfield disappearing act. So for the next several years, banks will need to demonstrate a stringent 4.5% Common Equity cap ratio, in other, will be allowed leverage over 20x. And this is the "stringent requirement" that has forced Deutsche Bank to sell over $12 billion in new stock to raise capital. Furthermore, the coincident take over of Post Bank will surely allow DB to terminally confuse
its investors as to what its final pro forma numbers are supposed to
represent, and, more importantly, what the unadjusted actuals really
are... Surely this example of just how woefully undercapitalized European banks are (consider the DB action a stark refutation of the "all is clear" statement proffered by the Stress Test farce from July) will be enough to get the EURUSD back to 1.30 overnight.

 

Phoenix Capital Research's picture

Graham Summers’ Weekly Market Forecast (Time for the 200-DMA? edition)





Last week I forecast that the stock market would likely rally to test its 200-DMA. We didn’t quite get there, but that’s largely due to the fact that no one was actively trading the market last week.

Indeed, thanks to a holiday week that entailed both Labor Day and Rosh Shoshanna, market volume was truly abysmal. In fact, last week saw even lower market volume than during April 2010 top, which should give you an idea of just how few participants were involved:

 

Tyler Durden's picture

A Look At Global Economic Events In The Upcoming Week





The key datapoints this week include retail sales, IP, Philly Fed as well as the usual weekly jobless claims. Retail sales appear to have picked-up in August, judging from retailers reports. Other significant information will be the Q2 Balance of Payments data, the July TIC data (watch for continued China selling of Treasuries), DJP elections and their impact on the Yen, and lastly the SNB will meet on Thursday: watch for comments on the record strong CHF. On Friday the completely irrelevant Michigan sentiment will be released which will come far above consensus.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

A Detailed Look At China's August Trade Surplus





Last week the Chinese Customs Administration released its August trade balance details, which came at a hair over $20 billion, slightly short of analyst expectations. The number was a substantial decline from the July surplus of $28.7 billion, which had also resulted in a surge in the US trade deficit to $49.8 billion in the past month, which subsequently declined to $42.8 billion in July, prompting Morgan Stanley's David Greenlaw to boost its Q3 GDP estimate to 2.4% from 2.1%, after it had reduced its economic forecast three short weeks earlier. Notably the decline in the overall surplus was almost exclusively a function of declining exports, which dropped from $145.5 billion to $139.3 billion, which imports increased modestly to $119.3 billion from $116.8 billion. Most interestingly, for all those who considered this month's US trade data as indicative of a moderation in the reliance on Chinese exports, and a preemptive resolution of upcoming US-China trade wars, may want to reevaluate that assumption in the face of the Customs data showing that US Imports declined just marginally, from $27.4 billion to $26.7 billion, which was still the second highest number ever. In other words, with numbers near all time record on the margin, fluctuations at this point are merely noise as exporters and importers shifts shipments temporally: next month's data will most likely demonstrate a continued deterioration in the US trade deficit, putting further pressure on 2011 US GDP expectations, which an increasingly more pessimistic Goldman will likely soon reduce to sub-1%.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Peak Everything: An Interactive Look At How Much Of Everything Is Left





Scientific American has done a great summary of peak commodity levels as well as depletion projections for some of the most critical resources in the world including oil, gold, silver copper, not to mention renewable water, as well as estimating general food prices over the next half century. Generally speaking, regardless of whether one believes in peak oil or not, the facts are that stores of natural resources are disappearing at an increasingly alarming pace. And instead of the world's (formerly) richest country sponsoring R&D and basic science to find alternatives, the US government continues to focus on funding a lost Keynesian cause, debasing the dollar and perpetuating a system that will do nothing to resolve any of these ever more pressing concerns. Furthermore, as by 2020, the US will have around $23 trillion in debt (per CBO estimates), the government will be far too focused on using anywhere between 50-100% of tax revenues to cover just interest expense, than funding science and research. Then again it is probably only fitting that future generations will be saddled with not just $100 trillion in total sovereign debt, but will be running out of water, will see sea levels rising ever faster, will have no flat screen TVs, and will be using Flintstonemobiles to go from point A to point B. All so a few bankers and ultra-wealthy individuals don't have to recognize total losses on their balance sheets filled with trillions in toxic debt.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: 9/11 – A Fourth Turning Perspective





The current Crisis is deepening day by day. The ninth anniversary of 9/11 is revealing the dramatic mood change of the country. In the days following 9/11 there was little anger against the religion of Islam. President Bush went to a mosque and declared that Islam was a religion of peace. He said forcefully that anyone who attacked Arab or Muslim Americans in some kind of twisted attempt at revenge for 9/11 would be met with the full force of American law. Most right minded Americans agreed with President Bush. After 9 years of waging wars against Muslims, in which victory is unachievable, Americans are weary, agitated and ready to lash out...What is beyond a doubt is that the country is facing extreme peril as it tries to maneuver its way through an economic Depression, a looming peak oil crisis, unresolved long-term fiscal obligations, and antagonism from countries throughout the world. The cycles of history do not reveal the exact nature of the Crisis ahead, but previous Crisis periods give us a flavor of what to expect.

 
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