Archive - Jan 21, 2011
David Tepper Presents The Core Tenets Of Bailoutism
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/21/2011 10:16 -0500
Recently, the most trendy (not to mention profitable) socio-political class is not that of capitalists, socialists, communists or even fascists (despite what some would claim), but that of the "bailoutists": those enlightened individuals who have bet everything on black, when black is the certainty that global governments will stop at nothing to, well, bail out the worst of the worst (to an extent explaining the continued outperformance of the worst stocks compared to quality names, a fact which as we predicted a year ago will make traditional long-short investing obsolete). For the full agenda of what a bailoutist believes in, we present today's follow up David Tepper interview with CNBC. In it, in addition to explaining what the creme of the crop of today's hedge fund world sees as the upside in a bailout driven world, the Appaloosa manager touches on such things as his market target for 2011 (S&P earnings of over 100 and a P/E multiple of 15, you do the math), corporate efficiency (the realization that companies can get away with much more, by firing many, and paying the remaining far less), the reasons for his caution (not many, though certainly the balls and the wall made legendary from his prior interview have no certainly diverged), but mostly why the same investment strategy that worked in the past (the central bank cartel rescuing everyone and everything) should continue to work indefinitely. And why shouldn't it: with taxpayers around the world apparently ok with transferring their wealth to the oligarchy in the form of a record steep yield curve, an unrepayable debt load, and increasing inflation, governments and bankers have a carte blanche to do as they see fit. And last, say what you will about the tenets of bailoutism... at least it's an ethos.
The Ten Things That Would Make David Rosenberg Bullish On America
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/21/2011 09:49 -0500David Rosenberg submits a list of the ten things that would make him bullish on the US economy. As precisely zero of these have a snowball's chance in hades of happening, we are not too concerned about Rosie leaving the "realist" fold any time soon.
Chinese Silver Demand Surges Four Fold in Just One Year
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/21/2011 09:25 -0500Gold is flat and silver marginally lower despite dollar weakness this morning. Some market participants are blaming the precious metal sell off on speculation that China may take more monetary action to curb surging inflation. This is unlikely to be the reason for the sharp selloff, rather it looks like another paper driven sell off in the futures market by leveraged players on Wall Street with various motives. The fact that silver is again in backwardation at the front end of the curve suggests that tightness in the physical bullion market continues and may even be deepening. Indeed, the massive increase in silver bullion demand from China (confirmed overnight - see below) suggests that silver’s bull market remains very much intact despite becoming overvalued in the short term towards the end of 2010.
Shanghai To Hike Minimum Wage By 10%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/21/2011 09:13 -0500While rising prices alone are traditionally never seen by conventional economists as sufficient to push inflation into the stratosphere, due to the claim that flat wages prevent a comparable rise in spending, the same can not be said about the combination of rising prices and wages. In fact, when that happens, there is little that a deflationist can assert will offset the price pressure. And it just happened in the epicenter of the Chinese frothy excess liquidity driven inflationary bubble, after Shanghai just announced it will hike minimum wages by 10%. This also means that labor costs are about to surge, corporate margins for Chinese corporations will plummet, and CEOs will be forced to sell their trinkets to the US at higher prices to offset the margin plunge. Which in turn means prices for "commodity" made in Wal Mart prices will be forced to also go much higher, setting off screams about wage hikes in the US, which in turn will force either US companies to see margins drop even more, or the Fed to assume that it has to offset the resulting equity weakness with more money printing. In other words, bad news all around.
John Taylor's Controversial Outlook On Inflation: "Not Here, Not Now"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/21/2011 08:46 -0500Commodity prices are flying higher, interest rates are near zero, base money growth is staggeringly high and inflation expectations are going to the moon. It looks like inflation is back, but it isn't the kind of inflation the Germans worry about or the kind that leads to high interest rates followed by a deep recession. If this is not the inflation of post-WWI or the 1970's, then what is it? Although the current bout of food shortages and price increases have helped topple the government in Tunisia and led to food riots in Algeria, these commodity price increases and the excess money being spread around should not have any impact in the G-10 countries, unless some central bank makes a big mistake and hikes interest rates. Why is it so different this time around? - John Taylor
Suddenly, Gold Becomes a Pariah
Submitted by RickAckerman on 01/21/2011 08:28 -0500There they go again! No sooner had we finished praising the Wall Street Journal for their blunt assessment of the coming train wreck in municipal bonds than they do a hit-job on gold.
Frontrunning: January 21
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/21/2011 08:24 -0500- Peter Orszag: America must brace itself for turbulence (FT)
- ECB Flags Risks of Higher Prices (WSJ)
- Spain Plans Partial Nationalization of Savings Banks (Reuters)
- BofA Reports Loss on Costs Tied to Bad Loans, Mortgage Unit (Bloomberg)
- European Governments Weigh Bond Buybacks (WSJ)
- Portugal Vote Imperils Accord (WSJ)
- Obama Taps GE's Immelt to Head Economic Advisor Panel (Bloomberg)
- Hu defends Beijing’s Currency Policy (FT)
- GE Net Rises 31%, Tops Estimates Amid Finance, Health Gains (Bloomberg)
- Nigeria oil fund fears hit bond issue (FT)
- Ivory Coast's Gbagbo Faces Financial `Asphyxia' by EU (Bloomberg), bad news for bondholders
Bank of America Reps And Warranties Reserve Surges Five-Fold As Claims Rise Steadily
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/21/2011 08:01 -0500
Three months ago, in light of the then released news that various parties among which the New York Fed and PIMCO are seeking to putback $47 billion worth of mortgages to Bank of America, we looked at the bank's reserve for reps and warranties and came to the conclusion that it was woefully underreserved (see: Can You Spell U-N-D-E-R-R-E-S-E-R-V-E-D? If Not, Here Is A Visualization Aid). Today, to our complete lack of surprise, we find that the Bank's reserve for such demands has exploded nearly five fold to a number that is probably the highest in history, at $4,140 million compared to a tiny $872 million in Q3, primarily driven by the settlement by Fannie and its sell out General Counsel Tim Maoypoulos. This is also the main reason for the bank's huge "charge" today which caused Earnings to be well below expectations. That said, that particular settlement is just the beginning of the firm's putback woes. Of course, what the bank is doing here is pretending this is a one time charge and hoping investors will give it credit for the Q3 number being the trendline, as opposed to the Q4, when it is precisely the reverse. Furthermore, we predict that soon enough declining reserves in all other categories will soon be reversed much higher as the sad reality of the US consumer, who has already extracted all benefits from not paying a mortgage, will become very evident and bank charge off ratios will be the first to suffer.
One Minute Macro Update
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/21/2011 07:47 -0500Futures in positive territory bolstered by earnings and European growth signals. Yesterday's data was mixed with leading indicators and claims reporting better than expected results while Philly Fed came up short of expectations. Today is a blank on the US economic front with next week scheduled for the FOMC and home price data. The FOMC will be closely watched to see if the statement is used to correct the previously mentioned communication problem and if there is any reference to commodity price inflation versus wage/labor inflation. NYT report that municipal bankruptcy legislation is on the table, such actions would provide the states a negotiating table with pension obligations.
German IFO Business Survey Climbs To Fresh Records
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/21/2011 07:32 -0500
Germany (i.e., Europe) sure is milking the one-time destruction of its currency this past year for as long as it can. To wit: the just released IFO Business Survey in January continues to reach to all time highs, on the back of a one-time export renaissance. Of course, now that the euro is so tremendously volatile, and little in terms of trade effect can be projected based on daily 200+ bps gyrations in the currency, expect confidence to continue to surge until, just like a high beta stock, it plunges upon the realization that it is time to kill the euro once again, and resume the "Greece is getting expelled any day now" rumors.
Bank Of America: Major Miss On Both Top And Bottom Line
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/21/2011 07:09 -0500Going through Bank of America's apples to monkeys numbers, and awaiting the Q4 presentation eagerly, but for now BAC missed both the top and the bottom line by a mile: the company reported sales of $22.67B, vs. consensus $24.87B with EPS of $0.04 on expectations of $0.21.
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 21/01/11
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 01/21/2011 06:21 -0500RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 21/01/11
QuaNTiTaTiVe SQuiDiNK (LYiN' PRiNTiN' EyEs)
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 01/21/2011 04:20 -0500"We have seen the stock market go up..."
Trade Against The 90% That Lose Money 21st Jan
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 01/21/2011 02:19 -0500Retail traders are notoriously wrong at picking market direction/tops and bottoms. Most retail traders very naturally seem to adopt a counter-trend stance and this offers very accurate signals for individuals looking to trade against this group. This daily report is designed to help traders focus their efforts on higher probability pairs.
When All Else Fails, Just Buy The Dip
Submitted by MoneyMcbags on 01/21/2011 01:03 -0500The market was down strong in the morning as both fears of rising inflation in China and common sense seemed to hurt sentiment, but then...
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