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    01/11/2016 - 08:59
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Archive - Oct 13, 2011

Tyler Durden's picture

Jobless Claims 1K "Better" Than Expected 405K, To Be Revised To "Miss" Next Week; Record Trade Deficit With China





In today's weekly dose of BS from the BLS, we get the previous week's massive beat of 401K revised to 405K, cutting the 410K estimate beat in half. But what is important is that the expectation for this week of 405K was once again "massively beaten" by a whopping 1K at 404K. Of course, next week this number will be revised to 408K meaning the consensus was  missed but no robots will care. As for the non-noise, non seasonally adjusted claims soared by 66,442 in the week from 332,394 to 398,836. Spin cycle to commence imminently. In some modestly good news, the "cliffers", those on EUCs and Extended benefits, which have declined by 1.3 million in the prior year, increased modestly by 2K, meaning those playing Xbox and collecting benefits actually rose for the week. In other news, the Trade Balance came in line with expectations, at a deficit of 45.6 billion. However, last month's number which gave all the banks hope that Q3 GDP was going to be a whopping beat and got so many Lemmings to re-revise their GDP forecast higher, was reduced from -44.8 billion to -45.6 billion, meaning Q3 GDP is right back down where it belongs. Most notably, the Chinese trade deficit hit a politically convenient record, increasing from $27.0 billion in July to $29.0 billion in August. Exports increased $0.2 billion (primarily soybeans, fish and shellfish, and nonferrous metals) to $8.4 billion, while imports increased $2.2 billion (primarily other household goods and toys, games, and sporting goods) to $37.4 billion. Expect Chuck Schumer's head to explode in 5...4...3...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

European CDS Rerack #1





The European CDS rollercoaster has troughed. And now it goes back up...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Daily US Opening News And Market Re-Cap: October 13





  • Political and debt concerns surrounding Italy together with a downbeat ECB’s monthly bulletin promoted risk-aversion
  • Gilts received support following a well-received conventional Gilt auction from the UK, together with comments from BoE's Bean in favour of further QE
  • The USD-Index gained amid risk-averse trade, which in turn weighed upon EUR/USD and GBP/USD
  • The third quarter corporate earnings from JP Morgan beat on the EPS and revenue
 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: October 13





  • EU Bank Risks ‘Rapidly’ Growing, Andersson Says (Bloomberg)
  • Inside the Fed Fight Over Bond Buys (Hilsenrath)
  • France ready to give banks public capital (FT)
  • Berlusconi Will Defend Government in Parliament as Confidence Vote Looms (Bloomberg)
  • Germany urges treaty to strengthen bloc (FT)
  • China's Appetite for Commodities Wanes (WSJ)
  • China Exports Slow on ‘Severe Challenges’ (Bloomberg)
  • Fed’s Plosser: Operation Twist is fiscal policy (Reuters)
 

Tyler Durden's picture

Today's Economic Data Docket - And The Depression Rolls On With Yet Another 400K+ Jobless Claims Number





Today we get jobless claims and the trade balance, both largely irrelevant as they will merely confirm the downward trajectory of the economy. What matters are flashing headlines, HFT kneejerk responses, lies, rumors, innuendo, and endless bullshit.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Global Money Supply And Currency Debasement Driving Gold Higher





Developing China’s M2 money supply has been rising by a large 20% and Russia’s by a very large 30%. Even developed countries such as Switzerland have seen money supply growth of 25%. Japan’s M2 is gradually moving higher after the ‘Lost Decade’ and after recent events exacerbating an already fragile situation. Global money supply growth is increasing by 8%-9% per annum. Meanwhile annual gold production is less than 1.5% per annum. We looked at money supply growth and charts regarding global money supply, debt levels etc in a comprehensive article in early August (‘Is Gold a Bubble? 14 Charts, the Facts and the Data Suggest Not’ - http://www.goldcore.com/goldcore_blog/gold-bubble-14-charts-facts-and-da... ) when gold was trading at $1,670/oz or much the same price level as today. The charts and conclusions remain apposite. In order to fight economic problems brought about due to too much debt, debt based paper and electronic currency has been created at historically high levels. There is no sign of this abating any time soon given the scale of the global financial and economic crisis.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

JPMorgan Uses Surge In Its Default Risk As A $1.9 Billion "Source" Of Revenue And Net Income





A quick look at the JPM earnings this morning would indicate all is well and that the company beat on the top and the bottom line: after all the company generated $23.76 billion in revenue on expectations of $23.26 and EPS of $1.02 relative to an expectation of $0.92. So far so good. The only problem is that unlike in previous quarter, when the primary driver of the bottom line was releasing reserves, this quarter, when everything blew out and blew up, that would have been seen as massively disingenuous, even by such permaclown as Dick Bove (which nonetheless did not stop the bank regardless, and JPM did take a $170 million reserve release, granted less than the $1.2 billion in Q2). So what does JPM do? Why it pulls the "Fair Value Option" card, discussed recently in the context of Morgan Stanley when we speculated whether the bank's biggest asset was their debt. Turns out we had the concept right, but the bank wrong, because $0.29 of EPS Net Income, or $1.9 billion pretax, was a "benefit from debit valuation adjustment (“DVA”) gains in the Investment Bank, resulting from widening of the Firm’s credit spreads." That's right: the fact that JPM spreads blew out in the quarter, and its default risk soared, for one reason or another actually served to "generate" not only net income but also revenue!  And now you see why American banks can never lose - in a good quarter, they release reserves; in a bad quarter they take FVO benefits in the form of Debit Valuation Adjustments, or in this case both! Winner, winner, always a chicken dinner for Jamie Dimon. Expect every other bank to do the same accounting BS this quarter to pad their numbers.

 

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