Archive - Nov 22, 2011
Policy News Trumps Economic Data As Biggest Driver Of Tail Risk Events
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/22/2011 22:54 -0500The last six months have been anything but 'normal' in terms of market movements. Whether equity, bond, or FX markets, the high correlations and crashing disconnects have at times been incredible - leaving every risk manager's VaR calculation and desk-quants gamma-hedging program sorely lacking. Goldman specifically surveys the largest moves across asset-classes of the last six months and finds that it is policy announcements that have been far larger drivers of outsize market moves than economic data. This is a significant departure from the previous six months and while neither policy or economic outcomes are specifically harder to hedge, it is the Knightian uncertainty of the desparate policy-makers that is perhaps most worrisome going forward - especially given the lack of resolution anywhere in the world.
Bull Market in Food : Rosenberg and Hendry on Ag
Submitted by South of Wall Street on 11/22/2011 21:43 -0500Rosenberg's note today mentioned the global bull market in agriculture. Which,as I recall, was becoming an issue pre-lehman. Inflation is just about the only thing stopping food prices from levitating once again. Trade balances, supply constraints, changing weather patterns, and emerging market demand continue to support a structural bull market.
HSBC China PMI Contracts, Tumbles To 32 Month Low Of 48, From 51 Previously
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/22/2011 21:35 -0500
Adding Asian insult to European injury we just got the Preliminary HSBC China November PMI reading which posted the first drop since July, tumbling from 51 to 48, which is a 32 month low. Expect risk to be solidly off for the balance of the night... and then the BTPs will resume trading. Only this time they will be accompanied by the OATs which will likely spike to record yields on fears of an imminen French downgrade courtesy of the Dexia debacle.
A Majority of Americans (Including Both OWS and the Tea Party) AGREE on the Most Important Issues … We Just Don’t Realize It
Submitted by George Washington on 11/22/2011 20:59 -0500Stay divided and conquered, America ... stay stupid (Love, the Bernanke, Turbo Timmy, Lloyd "Doing God's Work" and the gang)
Guest Post: Is Gold Still The Answer For Investors?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/22/2011 20:57 -0500
Though late to the party as usual, the proverbial man on the street – along with members of mainstream media and Wall Street heavyweights – is finally waking up to the decade-long, 700% increase in the price of gold, joining a growing buzz around the monetary metal. From questions whether gold is in a bubble to predictions that soaring prices are just around the corner, one thing is clear: a new phase of awareness for gold is upon us. How far might it move before these troubling times are over?
Dexia Bailout On Verge Of Collapse, Threatens To Take France AAA Rating Down With It
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/22/2011 19:58 -0500
Having followed the fortunes of the beleaguered Belgian bank from before it appeared on anyone's worksheets, we are hardly surprised that the EU Commission charged with confirming the good-bank / bad-bank restructuring is concerned at the deal that Belgium has with the French (and Luxembourg) government to backstop/finance Dexia's debt. Belgium's De Standaard (and two other European newspapers) today suggests the Belgians fear the EUR90bn deal is 'not feasible' as it stands (with a Belgium 60.5%, France 36.5%, and Luxembourg 3% weighting). Given the change in market conditions the commission, according to the article, is concerned at the ability of each country to finance its respective guarantee (most obviously Belgium) and therefore can renegotiate the October bailout deal. Belgian FinMin Reynders would not confirm the renegotiations but was evidently waiting on the commission's 'comments or additions'. The French are obviously not-amused and of course, any increase in the size of France's guarantee will further impact its ability to maintain the much-vaulted AAA rating. It seems that Belgium is 'pulling a Greece' - knowing that it has all the leverage and France has much larger exposure to the problem - once again the unintended consequence of TBTF is writ large.
Live Feed From The Protester Occupied Electric Power Company In Athens
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/22/2011 18:51 -0500As was reported yesterday, while nobody gives a rat's behind about events in Greece any more now that the focus is completely on Italy, Spain, Belgium, Austria, and France, or in other words, the core, things in Greece have been getting far worse since the so called coalition government was implemented. As AP reported recently, "protesting power and municipal workers blockaded several state electricity company buildings around Greece Monday, in protest at an emergency property tax being collected through electricity bills. Members of an electricity workers' union cut off power last week to the Health Ministry for four hours, and on Monday blocked the entrance to a site where power disconnection orders are issued. Pharmacies also closed in greater Athens, demanding that state-assisted health insurers settle growing debts. On Tuesday, transport workers are to hold a four-hour stoppage to protest staff cuts." Judging by the live video below from Stop Cartel TV, which is broadcasting live at 2 am local time from Athens, the occupation of the electric power plant has continued into the second day, and according to the narrator the owner has threatened to use violence to clear out the protesters.
"No Fly Zone" Over Syria Imminent?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/22/2011 18:18 -0500Roughly six months after the imposition of the No Fly Zone over Libya, which ultimately led to the liberation of the country's Light Sweet Crude and the placement of an Eni SpA executive (Italy's largest oil company) as Libya's oil minister and also had a side effect of getting Gaddafi murdered in broad daylight by the reformed freedom fighters, the script is about to be rewound from the beginning, and a few thousand miles east, this time next to explosive powderkeg Syria. Albawaba news, which cites Kuwait's al Rai daily, reports that Arab jet fighters, and possibly Turkish warplanes, backed by American logistic support will implement a no fly zone in Syria's skies, after the Arab League will issue a decision, under its Charter, calling for the protection of Syrian civilians. In other words, foreign countries will take it upon themselves to do what only America has done with impunity so far: decide what is best for a given sovereign nation's population. Granted, we have yet to verify the credibility of both Al Bawaba and Al Rai, although at first blush they appear substantially more credible than Debka-type fly by night operations. Which then leads to a sobering conclusion: if indeed Europe and the Western world is dead set upon an aerial campaign above Syria, then all eyes turn to the East, and specifically Russia and China, which have made it very clear they will not tolerate any intervention. And naturally the biggest unknown of all is Iran, which has said than any invasion of Syria will be dealt with swiftly and severely. Then again, the Iranian war foreplay has gone on for far too long at this point that we have gotten to where headlines about the "imminent" Iranian war are almost as ignored as headlines about how "Europe is bailed out" all over again.
Cutting The Deficit: They Won’t Because They Don’t Have To
Submitted by testosteronepit on 11/22/2011 17:59 -0500The emasculated credit markets watch nervously.
Super Tuesday Committee Failure - So What?
Submitted by ilene on 11/22/2011 17:18 -0500The conclusion is inescapable. Fox News is deliberately misinforming its viewers and it is doing so for a reason.
GroupOff - GRPN Back To IPO Price
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/22/2011 17:01 -0500
As of this moment, everyone who has bought and held GRPN stock since the IPO price is at best flat, and almost certainly at a massive loss, as only a few banks were allotted shares at the $20.00 offering price, which were quickly flipped to subsequent greater fools. As of this moment, GRPN is back to the IPO price or precisely $20.00. We expect once this is taken out for the one way Grouponzi Red Light Special to fair value, somewhere around $0.00, to take a few months at most.
Treasuries at 7-Week Low Yields As HYG Signals Way Again
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/22/2011 16:59 -0500
UPDATE: CONTEXT - the broad basket of risk assets has now caught up and is supporting post-stress-test equity weakness after hours as TSYs slide lower in yield.
Gold and Silver outperformed their less precious commodity cohorts today as equities (and credit in general) managed a see-saw day centered around a dud IMF-bazooka and more-of-the-same from the FOMC. Stock and Bond markets stayed in sync early on as risk was decidedly off this morning following the weak GDP print though we do note that IG protection was bid even as stocks managed a small rally across the open. Equity and CDS indices tracked each other (as liquidity in the latter is low this week already) but the IMF-credit-line news jagged both notably higher and out of sync with HYG (the high-yield ETF) once again, and then as the FOMC minutes offered little immediate hope of QE3, reality set back in and equity and credit markets drifted back to the reality of HYG's risk aversion. The late day plunge in ES on the back of the stress-test announcement is not being followed by IG, HY, or CONTEXT for now as Gold and Oil were flat, FX marginally lower USD though TSYs were the main driver of risk weakness ending at the day's low yields and their lowest yield since 10/05. Implied Correlation diverged upward from index vol into the close suggesting strong macro-protection demand even as VIX leaked lower. Equities remain in catch-up-to-credit-weakness mode and given the reaction to today's mini-IMF-bazooka, we suspect derisking is here for the week.
Futures Plunge As Fed Discloses New Stress Test: Fears US Banks Will Need To Raise Tens Of Billions In New Capital
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/22/2011 16:20 -0500
It appears that the key news of the day was not the fluff about the IMF which as we said was total non-news, but adverse news from the Fed which just announced that it is launching its 2012 bank stess test which unlike previous iterations may actually demand capital raises from US banks. Reuters reports: "The U.S. Federal Reserve plans to stress test six large U.S. banks against a hypothetical market shock, including a deterioration of the European debt crisis. The Fed said it will publish the results next year of the tests for six banks with large trading operations. Those banks are Bank of America, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley and Wells Fargo. The Fed said its global market shock test for those banks will be generally based on price and rate movements that occurred in the second half of 2008, and also on "additional stresses related to the ongoing situation in Europe." The heightened stress test for those six banks are part of a larger supervisory test the Fed will conduct on 19 firms' capital plans. The Fed's review of those plans will determine whether the banks can raise dividends or repurchase stock. The banks must submit their capital plans by Jan. 19, 2012." Incidentally, this is a clever way for the Fed to wrap up all the loose ends regarding European exposure: considering each and every day news appears about one bank or another having excess exposure to Europe, it stock punished, this may be the best comprehensive package. The problem is that next steps will certainly involve tens of billions in capital raises demanded of the above six banks (and probably Jefferies) by the Fed. Not surprisingly, ES has collapsed on the news to just over 1180.
RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 22/11/11
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 11/22/2011 16:18 -0500Heeeeeere's Jonnie (Corzine)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/22/2011 15:35 -0500Corzine's permanent expatriation plans may have to be delayed as Corzine is called in to explain why he didn't leak news of MF Global's demise to Congress ahead of time so the 435 insider traders could profit on the outcome.
- MF GLOBAL TRUSTEE LEARNED OF $1.2 BILLION SHORTFALL AT WEEKEND
- HOUSE PANEL WILL HOLD HEARING ON MF GLOBAL FAILURE ON DEC. 15
- CORZINE CALLED BY HOUSE FINANCIAL SERVICES OVERSIGHT PANEL
In the meantime, the theft at MF Global is getting more and more staggering by the minute.






