Archive - Jan 2011
January 31st
WooLY Mu-BaRaK
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 01/31/2011 09:37 -0500Sam The Scam and the Pharoahs singing your Monday morning wake up tune...Watch it now, watch it now
Here Come the Black Swans
Submitted by madhedgefundtrader on 01/31/2011 09:20 -0500Could this be the third consecutive “sell in May and go away” year? While traders pile on their longs with reckless abandon, and retail flows into equity mutual funds turn positive for the first time in two years, I am hearing a rising tide of negativity from the jungle telegraph. There are “black swans” circling out there everywhere, and the risk is that they alight upon us in great unexpected flocks, like a scene out of Alfred Hitchcock’s classic film, The Birds.
Guest Post: American Eulogy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/31/2011 09:19 -0500
At the outset of the last century America was still a vital, free, growing country on the rise. The song of the century began as a joyous ballad and ended as a funeral dirge. The creation of a Central Bank, which could create inflation on demand, and allowing politicians the ability to buy votes through pork spending, paid for with ever increasing taxation, have sucked the life out of the American Dream...The Federal Reserve has not been alone in killing the American Dream. Politicians since 1913 have done their part in suffocating the dream. The tax code consisted of 400 pages in 1913 and tax rates ranged from 1% to 7%. In less than a century politicians of both parties have carved out 70,000 pages of payoffs, entitlements, and bribes for their contributors and constituents. Tax rates now range from 10% to 35%. Those 70,000 pages of rules, regulations and tax breaks do not benefit the average middle class American. They benefit those who had the money and power to buy off a Congressman.The Federal Reserve and the US Tax Code bastardized the American Dream, created barriers to economic advancement, and supported the accumulation of wealth and power by a select few. The ruling elite have used their power and control over the media to convince the majority of Americans that the American Dream is about accumulating material possessions with debt. The American Dream no longer meant attaining the fullest measure of your capabilities, but living in the biggest McMansion, driving the nicest BMW, watching the biggest TV and wearing the latest fashions, all acquired with debt. America is dying.
Gold Bar Premiums At 17-Year High In Hong Kong
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/31/2011 09:09 -0500
The geopolitical ramifications of the revolution in Egypt and the likelihood that it will spread throughout the Middle East, North Africa and possibly further afield is leading to volatility in markets. Equity indices in the Middle East and Far East were mostly down (except for China) overnight. European bourses were under pressure this morning but have recovered somewhat. Gold and silver are marginally lower after their strong showing Friday which resulted in silver closing the week 1.7% higher and gold being tentatively lower (-0.14%). Remarks by a People’s Bank of China advisor that the Chinese should diversify into gold and silver are very important (see below).
Frontrunning: January 31
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/31/2011 08:54 -0500- Lonely Analyst Warns of 2015 Bank Crisis Amid `Upbeat' Davos (Bloomberg)
- Wall Street's Collapse to Be Mystery Forever (Bloomberg)
- Egypt and Tunisia usher in the new era of global food revolutions (Evans-Pritchard)
- Central Bank Raises Priority of Price Controls (Xinhua)
- Brazil and China Trade Tensions Set to Rise (FT)
- United, Delta Profit at Risk From `Silent Killer' in Fuel Hedges (Bloomberg)
- Home Prices Sink Further (WSJ)
Savings Rate Drop To 5.3%, Lowest In 10 Months
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/31/2011 08:39 -0500
Of today's Personal Income and spending numbers, the most relevant one was the savings rate. Income came unchanged at 0.4%, in line with expectations (previous revised to 0.4%), Spending was higher than expected, at 0.7% compared to 0.5% consensus (an increase of 0.3% from the revised 0.3% November point), meaning that the savings rate as a percentage of disposable income was 5.3%: the lowest since March 2010. The saving inflection point appears to have been 6.3% hit in June 2010. Is it all downhill from here?
The Economist FTW - Part 2
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/31/2011 08:21 -0500
Part 1 of the Economist FTW cover series came a week in advance of the first Greek bankruptcy (not to mention flash crash). Here comes Part 2...
Maersk Suspends Egypt Activities
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/31/2011 08:06 -0500And so it starts, as the first of the shipping giants decides evacuation is the better part of valor. Reuters reports that shipping conglomerate Maersk has suspended shipping activities in Egypt. But fear not. The Suez Canal is open. For now. From Reuters: "Danish shipping and oil group A.P. Moller-Maersk has suspended its Egyptian port terminal operations and closed its shipping offices in the country rocked by turmoil, the company said on Monday." Surely this is bullish for stocks.
One Minute Macro Update
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/31/2011 08:01 -0500Geopolitical risk takes center stage following the weekend's geopolitical headlines and Friday's slight disappointment on GDP. The Fed does seem to be getting some consumer stimulus to go along with the commodity price inflation as the consumer contributed 3.04%age points of the 3.2% preliminary number on Friday. Today will see more critical consumer data points in PCE and consumer spending/income.
Rice Is Next
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/31/2011 07:52 -0500
The one commodity which has so far sneaked quietly between the cracks of rampant limit up opens and overnight price surges, just happens to be the most important one: rice. If the price of rice were to follow the same fate as wheat, not to mention chocolate, and if the world starts getting visuals of what is happening in Egypt transposed a few thousand miles east, smack in the middle of Guangdong province, then not even the Sack Frost dynamic futures lifting duo will be able to do much to instill confidence that the revolution is progressing "better than analyst estimates." And it appears that the seeds of rice's price surge may already have been planted. Bloomberg reports that "U.S. farmers are planting the fewest acres with rice since 1989 just as global demand surpasses production for the first time in four years, driving prices as much as 12 percent higher by December. Plantings in the U.S., the third-biggest shipper, may drop 25 percent this year because growers can earn more from corn and soybeans, according to the median in a Bloomberg survey of nine analysts and farmers. Rice, the staple food for half the world, declined 4 percent last year, extending a 2.9 percent drop in 2009. The other crops jumped 34 percent or more." Zero Hedge predicted in October of last year that the next real bubble will be rice. We stand by this prediction, which has so far not been validated presumably due to some quite interesting behind the scenes PM-for-food arrangement between China and one of the very popular US TBTFs. As the chart below shows, rice is poised for an imminent break out.
Egypt Rapidly Running Out Of Food
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/31/2011 07:20 -0500Forget Egypt ATMs running out of cash. A far bigger problem for the country is starting to materialize, one which would promptly shift the revolution into overdrive: the disappearance of all staples. CNN reports: "While discontent, resentment and nationalism continue to fuel demonstrations, one vital staple is in short supply: food. Many
families in Egypt are fast running out of staples such as bread, beans
and rice and are often unable or unwilling to shop for groceries. Everything
is running out. I have three children, and I only have enough to feed
them for maybe two more days. After that I do not know what we will do."
school administrator Gamalat Gadalla told CNN." And while the world is merely concerned about whether the Suez canal is still open, perhaps it is time for a little food paradropping exercise, because if the 80+ million strong population realizes there is nothing to eat, we may just see the kind of Somali ship piracy in the Red Sea we have all grown to love, move just a little bit inland.
Today's Economic Data Highlights
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/31/2011 07:18 -0500Personal spending and income, Chicago purchasing managers, and the Dallas Fed index…. And then the traditional 11am POMO of course- must monetize those bonds.
As Perfectly Expected, Moody's Cuts Revolutionary Egypt From Ba1 To Ba2, Outlook Negative, CDS Spikes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/31/2011 07:08 -0500The most predictable, (and certainly worthless: see Mark Zandi) entity in the world has gone ahead and done precisely what Zero Hedge said 24 hours ago it would. Moody's has just downgraded Egypt's bond rating from Ba1 to Ba2, with the outlook changed from stable to negative. The move which was as a surprise to idiots everywhere comes as "Moody's notes that Egypt suffers from deep-seated political and socio-economic challenges. These include a chronic high rate of unemployment, elevated inflation and widespread poverty. These, together with a desire for political change, have fueled popular frustrations." And as we predicted yesterday, Egypt CDS continues to slide ever higher, pushing around 460 on the offer side, in those rare occasions it is actually offered.
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 31/01/11
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 01/31/2011 05:41 -0500RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 31/01/11
Trade Against The Retail Herd 31st Jan
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 01/31/2011 02:34 -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.






