Archive - Feb 7, 2011

Tyler Durden's picture

Egypt Downsizes T-Bill Offering On Weak Investor Interest, 3 Month Bill Rate Jumps To 11%





Today Egypt came to market in an attempt to pull a Geithner, and fund $2.52 billion worth of deficit spending at the expense of external investors: a privilege for which it was prepared to pay a lot of money. And even despite ultimately paying a rate of 10.972% that even Portugal would cower in fear and shame from, the Egyptian Central Bank was forced to reduce the size of its combined 15 billion Bill offering by over 2 billion Egyptian pounds as interest just wasn't there.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Bangladesh Stocks Plunge By More Than 10% For Third Time In 2011





Bangladesh investors just can't catch a break. After the Dhaka stock exchange dropped by 7% in December 2010, leading to widespread rioting and mostly looting, this was subsequently followed by two other market crashes in January both of which were about 10% in magnitude. Today, third time for 2011 may or may not prove to be the charm for the DHAKA, after overnight the stock exchange was in a 10.3% free fall. It is about time Sack Frost hold seminars to the less than developed nations, and teach them just how to deal with that phenomenon, which the WHO recently declared as extinct, known as selling, on those rare occasions it does flare out despite inoculations to the contrary. And while stock market induced rioting comes and goes as margin lenders realize that money is long gone, it is nothing compared to what may happen should the Rough Rice rocket continue taking out all highs. And one look at today's grains and softs futures demonstrates just what happens to commodities nominal prices when the Chairman refuses to allow even one down day in stocks.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: February 7





  • A Modest $500 Billion Proposal (Rand Paul, WSJ)
  • AOL Agrees To Acquire The Huffington Post (HuffPo)
  • When HuffPost Met AOL: "A Merger of Visions" - Ariana Huffington Explains The Logic Behind The Deal (HuffPo)
  • Fed Spends 40% on Benchmark Treasuries as Newest Proves Cheapest (Bloomberg) actually no, they are very rarely cheapest as Zero Hedge has actually demonstrated instead of insinuating
  • China Moves to Strengthen Grip Over Supply of Rare-Earth Metals (WSJ)
  • Tunisia takes steps to halt "security breakdown" (Reuters)
  • Suleiman holds talks on Egypt reforms (FT)
  • More bad news for wheat: Perth Area Declared Disaster Zone as Bushfires Rage Near City (BusinessWeek)
  • 'Toxic' Assets Still Lurking at Banks (WSJ)
  • European corporate tax plans under fire (FT)
  • Sputnikonomics (New Yorker)
 

Tyler Durden's picture

One Minute Macro Update





Markets in positive territory in the early going as Friday’s mixed-message job data continues to be debated. We believe that it will be another month at least before the data is confirmed/denied, but the changes to the denominator do not give us a lot of faith despite the headline. The week’s light calendar will put focus on geopolitical issues including Egypt and Euro sovereigns. 10s and 30s are scheduled for issuance later in the week after long dated purchases on Tuesday. This should test the selloff observed last week. Implied Fed Funds point to an opportunity in the front end, though we are still a bit off of the hike expectations that were priced in mid December. Bernanke testimony to the House Budget Committee on Wednesday will generate sound bites ahead of the debt ceiling debate.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Morning Gold Fixing: JP Morgan Accepts Gold Bullion As Collateral – Silver Backwardation To Lead To Short Squeeze?





JP Morgan announced today that from now on they will accept physical gold bullion as collateral. This is a sign of gold’s further remonetisation in the global financial and monetary system. It may signal that JP Morgan is having difficulty in securing gold bullion in volume. JP Morgan is the custodian for many of the gold and silver exchange traded funds. They will not accept ETF trust gold as collateral. In October, the clearing house of global exchange CME Group – CME Clearing – announced it will now accept gold as collateral for trades on the exchange. Gold bullion can be used for margins for CME trades, ranging from crude oil, gold, grains, equity indexes and Treasury bonds. Given the current monetary, macroeconomic and geopolitical risk gold is an attractive alternative to debt, equities or other paper assets as collateral. JP Morgans’s move shows how gold bullion’s fungiblity and tangibility as an asset makes it attractive and shows gold’s increasing importance in the financial system. Interestingly, the CME is storing their collateral gold at JP Morgan Chase Bank in London. The exchange said it hoped to add additional depositories in the future but there has been no announcement of developments in this regard.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Weak German Manufacturing Data Sends EUR Lower





After the EURUSD hit on overnight high of 1.3625 on the now traditional meltup which precedes that of stocks, courtesy of a very tight EURUSD-ES linkage, the last 4 hours have seen a persistent sell off in the pair on the back of weaker German manufacturing data, which was to be expected: after all Merkel's trade off to keep the dollar weak, and thus stock markets in the US (and Europe by sympathy) strong, was bound to have an impact on Europe's strongest economy. And so it has. Market News has the details: "Industrial orders in Germany fell by a
stronger-than-expected, seasonally-adjusted 3.4% on the month in
December, the Economics Ministry reported on Monday, on expectations of -1.5%, and a +5.2% previous print
.
-- Germany December orders m/m below MNI median fcast (-1.9%)
-- Germany November mfg orders unrevised m/m at +5.2%
-- Germany December orders 3-month moving avg (October-December:
September-November) +1.1%
-- Germany 4q mfg orders +2.7% q/q, 3q +1.8%, 2q +7.4%
-- Germany December domestic mfg orders -2.4% m/m, foreign -4.2% m/m
-- Germany December foreign mfg orders: EMU +3.7% m/m, non-EMU -8.9%
-- Germany December capital goods orders -6.6% m/m
-- Germany December consumer goods orders -0.1% m/m
-- Germany December basic goods orders +0.6% m/m." Time for the algos to switch to a dollar strength = stock strength regime.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Today's Economic Data Highlights





Just consumer credit today…A $7 – $9 billion POMO will monetize just issued 3 Year bonds.

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 07/02/11





RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 07/02/11

 

smartknowledgeu's picture

Technical & Fundamental Analysis Fall Woefully Short in Assessing Manipulated Markets





Though fundamentals may drive behavior in the long-term, fundamentals have had, at times, zero effect on the price discovery of assets in the short-term. At a time when everyone but the most naïve of the naïve understand how grossly distorted capital prices are both to the upside (in global stock markets) and to the downside (in gold and silver markets) due to massive manipulation schemes executed through collusive bullion-bank and government efforts, it makes zero sense to continue to put faith in technical analysis in a vacuum as well.

 

Pivotfarm's picture

Trade Against The Retail Herd 7th Feb





Retail 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.

 
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