Archive - 2010
December 21st
Tinsel Tuesday – Market Decorations Make Us Merry
Submitted by ilene on 12/21/2010 16:13 -0500If I just read the WSJ, I find no reason to be bearish at all.
As ETFs Pass $1 Trillion In AUM, What Next?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/21/2010 16:13 -0500Today's breach of the critical $1 trillion barrier by the Federal Reserve On/Offshore Genocide Opportunities Fund, LLC in its Treasury holdings is not the only important "trillion" milestone in the past few days. As was reported by the WSJ previously, total assets under management in the ETF space also passed $1 trillion for the first time ever, primarily courtesy of SPY, which added $11.6 billion (even as it continues to be the most shorted NYSE security in the world with 294.1 million shares short on 700 million total shares), and the IWM which saw $976 million in new assets. Granted, these numbers are just a little suspect, since according to the monthly Invesco PowerShares report, total ETF assets were still "just" $934.4 billion, but we will take Blackrock's word for it. And, considering that mutual funds, already at record low free cash levels, continue to bleed dry powder (32, and soon to be 33, consecutive weeks of outflows), and are saved from liquidations only due to levitating asset prices on this joke of a market which has absolutely no volume to it, many are trying to make the case that ETFs are rapidly becoming the next target of retail flows. Perhaps. Looking at the numbers this is certainly not as clear cut as those who specifically wish to see this, pronounce it as a fait accompli. Below we demonstrate that of the $96 billion in net flows YTD into various ETF styles, it is certainly not the case that equities are the pure beneficiaries of retail flows. That said, we present the thoughts of BNY's Nicholas Colas, who provides a useful reference guide on the history of the ETF business, and now that it has (allegedly) passed the trillion mark, looks at where the next trillion will come from (incidentally, it took the Fed four months to accumulate an incremental $250 billion in holdings; ETFs, on the other hand, as noted above, have seen inflows of $95.8 billion in all of 2010 - just wait until the Fed pulls a BOJ and starts buying the SPY openly instead of through Citadel).
Both Liberals and Conservatives Hate Corporate Socialism (Where the Federal Government Favors Giant Corporations at the Expense of the Little Guy)
Submitted by George Washington on 12/21/2010 15:27 -0500Not left versus right, but Oligarchy versus the American people ...
Mike Krieger On Intensifying Police State Measures And Internet Demonization
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/21/2010 15:09 -0500Two very important articles have come out in the last couple of days that you must take the time to read thoroughly. The first is from the Washington Post and is entitled: “Monitoring America.” It is a lengthy article worth your time since it shows in no uncertain terms how the U.S. government has now officially started to turn war on terror technology and military weaponry on American citizens domestically. Stuff that had formerly only been “used in Iraq or Afghanistan” is now being turned on Americans and this newspaper reports it in a matter of fact manner. It also describes how anyone can just say that they think a fellow citizen is acting suspiciously and then all of a sudden the government’s “fusion centers” start snooping on you and a file remains “open” for five years. For nothing more than someone saying they thought you were acting suspiciously. Welcome to East Germany. This is where tax dollars are going, that and to pay bankster bonuses. - Mike Krieger
Fed Treasury Holdings: $1,000,341,000,000
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/21/2010 14:18 -0500
It's time for the Fed "one trillion" hats- as of 2:00 pm Eastern, the Fed's Treasury holdings have surpassed $1 trillion. Add to this the well over $1 trillion in MBS and agency debt held by the Fed, and there is your perfectly quantified reason why the S&P has just hit a two year high, and why the Nasdaq bubble is alive, back, and will soon retest its 2000 highs. Basically, with the Fed the de facto purchaser of all securities with a yield of under 4%, the entire definition of a risk-free rate per the MPT has to be scrubbed. To be sure, risk-free will very quickly become risk-full when and if the Fed, in its attempts to succeed with central planning where so many have failed before, either finally loses control over rates, or far less probably, decides to remove some of these extra trillions in free liquidity. Until then, the banker party is on in full force. The reason for the penetration of this key psychological barrier was the completion of today's second POMO operation, which added $1.619 billion in TIPS securities. By the end of this month, the difference between the Fed and the second largest holder of US debt will have surpassed $100 billion... and continue climbing at a rate of about $30 billion per week. And it will not stop.
THe TWeLVe ZeRo HeDGe DaYS oF CHRiSTMaS
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 12/21/2010 13:38 -0500On the twelfth day of Christmas what did Wall Street send to me...
Bank Of America's Latest Decoupling Strawman: Go Long Women
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/21/2010 13:09 -0500While Goldman Sachs' Jim O'Neill continues to push his theory for decoupling based on an extended developing world, which includes such countries as Nigeria and Iran, to drive global growth as per his recently launched BRIC replacement, the N-11, Bank of America's economics Ethan Harris and Neil Dutta, have taken a far more novel approach to finding "hidden" sources of pent up growth potential: women. Of course, neither dares to admit that the only real source of 'growth' is nothing less than previously unprecedented amounts of monetary stimulus in the form of endless free central bank liquidity. But in every bank's quest to find the missing link in the "virtuous circle" dynamo, we expect increasingly more ridiculous assumptions about what will manage to be a standalone driver for a 4%+ GDP growth for the US. In the meantime, the fact that the underlying "organic" economy, not to mention the stock market, would flounder absent trillions in cheap money supporting all asset prices continues to be resolutely ignored by everyone. Which merely confirms that the Fed will likely never hike rates again, as that would eliminate two years of what will soon amount to nearly $4 trillion in monetary stimulus in the US alone, which in turn represents roughly 25% of the stock market capitalization in the US alone. But going back to why Bank of America is now going long women, here is Harris' summary: "The wounds of the economic crisis will take years to heal. However, we expect female earnings to recover faster than male earnings. In many households, women already do most of the shopping. So, while we remain cautious on the trajectory for consumption, our sense is that women will increasingly drive consumer spending." At least BofA will have someone to blame it all on, when their latest ridiculous "economic" theory collapses in a pile of dust.
RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 21/12/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 12/21/2010 12:23 -0500RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 21/12/10
Interactive Visualization Of The 2010 Census Results
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/21/2010 12:08 -0500
According to the just released census data, whose collection and subsequent contribution to job numbers resulted in so much consternation over 2010, the US population is 308,745,538 with another 3,725,789 in Puerto Rico. Just as importantly, the data will result in a realignment in Congressional seat representation, with states such as New York losing republican seats, more than offset by pick ups in states such as Texas, Florida, Georgia, Nevada, Arizona, Utah, and others. For all those interested in a detailed break down of the 2010 census result, we present the interactive table below.
Why The Upcoming Issuance From The European Rescue Fund Will Reveal More Dirt About Europe's Broad Insolvency
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/21/2010 11:52 -0500After it was announced earlier by the EU that it would launch its first bonds under the EFSF and EFSM in January, of which €17.6 billion are slated for Ireland in 2011, and €4.9bln in 2012, it is useful to recall just what the dynamics of this last recourse fund are, and why not all is as good as the EU may want the broader population to believe. Below, we present the thoughts of Knight's Brian Yelvington who has a rather damning view of what this latest development means for the EU: "This latest band-aid solution obfuscates the issue that the EMU needs
the ability to print money and tax across member states in order to
match its common central bank and currency. There might well be a rally in spreads commensurate with what we have
seen for other band-aid like packages over the past two years. Once the
measure has been revealed to be inadequate by the market, discussions
around size will begin to emerge. Our view has been that the facility
was flawed from the start and we believe that view has become more
widely held during this most recent spread widening. Future upsize
discussions will no doubt see the specter of haircuts raised again –
this time more seriously – and this will serve to push sovereign spreads
wider." In other words, long-term bearish, short-term very bullish. Just like everything else in the battle to preserve the ponzi.
Beginning Of End For E&Y? Cuomo Files Civil Fraud Case Against Repo 105 Auditor
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/21/2010 11:36 -0500As we discussed in detail in March it would be only a matter of time before the AG would file some sort of suit against E&Y for the firm's involvement in Lehman's Repo 105 end of quarter window dressing violations. And as we reported yesterday, Andrew Cuomo has now officially filed civil fraud charges against Ernst & Young. While overdue following Anton Valukas' "examiner Lehman" report which obliterated all integrity E&Y may have had, and while we are confident there will be a settlement in this case as well, at least this final act by Cuomo as NY AG pretends to give the impression that the US judicial system is not completely corrupt.
First POMO Of The Day Closes, Brings Fed's Treasury Debt Holdings To $999 Billion
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/21/2010 11:13 -0500
Today's first POMO has closed, with Brian Sack buying $7.790 billion of Treasury maturing between 6/30/2016 and 11/30/2017. Among the bonds purchased was $689 million of PK0, auctioned off less than a month ago, meaning the Primary Dealers continue to flip bonds from auction straight back to the Fed, making a few million in the process each and every time. And while not even POMO matters anymore, in a market entirely dominated by Delta, i.e., Goldman (even Joe Kernen earlier announced on live TV that "Goldman can do whatever it wants in the futures market."), trades, and where the cumulative TICK is now progressively negative, the only thing that may be of relevance is when will the Goldman vol traders decide they have had enough and start unwinding the trade on which they are massively profitable at this point. What certainly does matter, is that total US debt is now $999 billion, just $1.3 billion away from a trillion, a level which will be breached, as we expected last week, during today's second afternoon POMO in which the Fed will monetize another $1.5-$2.5 billion in TIPS.
EURCHF Takes Out Stops, Down 100 Pips To Fresh All Time Low 1.2560
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/21/2010 10:57 -0500
Not everything continues to be happily melting up courtesy of today's first, of two, POMOs in progress. Across in Europe, the EURCHF continues to flash a red alert, demonstrating that despite the overeager attempts by the various central banks to paint a rosy picture into year end, just like in 2009, not all is good, as the EURCHF freefall refuses to abate, and the pair dropping as much as 100 pips on the day in a day of otherwise quite trading. The relevance of this pair was previously discussed extensively by Nic Lenoir and Bruce Krasting. At this point one has to wonder just how XXX-rated are the pics of Hildebrand that are in Ben Bernanke's possession for him to have so much leverage over the Swiss National Bank, which has pretty much given up on monetary intervention/stimulus. Oh well, who cares: it's only the current account side of the GDP. The country can simply stock up on a few hundred billion in inventories just like the US and call it growth. Mission accomplished.
Snowed In: A Photo Journey Across A Paralyzed Europe
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/21/2010 10:30 -0500
Traveling to Europe? Not so fast. Most airports in western and central Europe are at best open on an intermittent basis, and at worst completely shut down, with the UK taking the brunt of the storm. Disruptions in traffic continue for a fourth day as travellers across the continent are paralyzed and scrambling to find way to get home, with just 4 days until Christmas. For all those reading Zero Hedge from some airport terminal, our condolences. As always, nothing conveys the story as well as a few simple pictures: we have compiled a representative sample of snapshots from across Europe to show just why all those hoping for a strong holiday retail season in Europe will be very disappointed.







