Archive - Feb 2011
February 14th
In Re VaLeNTiNe'S Day 2011
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 02/14/2011 07:36 -0500Love means never having to say you're convicted...
Today's Economic Data Highlights
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/14/2011 07:15 -0500The administration’s FY 2012 budget and one Fed appearance of note…There is a micro $1-2 billion TIPS POMO to celebrate Valentine's day.
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 14/02/11
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 02/14/2011 05:06 -0500RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 14/02/11
Trade Against The Retail Herd 14th Feb
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 02/14/2011 02:24 -0500USDCAD has been in the strong short zone for a while, Fridays action saw a strong drop in the pair and has led to an equally dramatic change in retail positioning, retail traders are now 79.53% long USDCAD the highest level of retail positioning we have seen in a many month. GBPUSD has moved back into the Strong Long zone.
Vega Strategies: Loan Request To Ben Shalom Bernanke: Divide One Upcoming Day's Worth of Asset Purchases Between Wall Street and American Entrepreneurs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/14/2011 01:18 -0500Ben Shalom Bernanke, we the entrepreneurs of the United States of America request that you divide one upcoming day's worth of asset purchases between Wall Street and us, to wit, may the tiny sum of $3 billion, minuscule juxtaposed with the hundreds and hundreds of billions of dollars you are feeding your Primary Dealers and their clients in your Quantitative Easing program, may the modest sum of $3 billion be used for a pilot program to purchase securities issued by American entrepreneurs in connection with the startup of 3,000 validly formatted new business enterprises, such $3 billion to be used to purchase $1 million of the Perpetual Subordinated Capital Securities of each. Your pilot program, Ben Shalom, will show results almost immediately, thereupon you should expand the program, first to $5 billion, a little more than half of one major day's worth of asset purchases, for the startup of 5,000 validly formatted new business enterprises, then to $7 billion, almost all of just one major day's worth of asset purchases, for the startup of 7,000 validly formatted new business enterprises. A validly formatted new business enterprise is one with a valid business purpose and whose management is mentored by the SBA's resource partner the Service Corps Of Retired Executives. The SBA will manage the Perpetual Subordinated Capital Securities positions purchased by the Federal Reserve System. Transactions will be executed on a first come, first served basis, venture capitalists aka vulture capitalists neither welcomed nor required.
Mubarak steps down while Canadian trade figures blow past estimates and US consumer confidence helps S&P rally to new highs
Submitted by naufalsanaullah on 02/14/2011 00:43 -0500With the economy strong, EM underperforming, US yields rising, and no signal of QE2 being extended, USD could be poised to rally here. The recent breakout in USDJPY could signal a shift of carry funding back to the JPY, as the summer 2010 double-dip fear-induced USDJPY plunge is unwound.
February 13th
Rubber Hits An All Time High As Last R-Bubble Approaches Escape Velocity; Rubber Curve In Backwardation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/13/2011 22:45 -0500
Now that the Rare Earth bubble has come and gone (and may well come back again depending on how much China wants to stretch its political muscle), the Rice bubble is in progress, and may see prices going back to the $24 range we saw last in 2008 when net CBOT non-commercial spec contracts were approaching the 8k levels, the last R-bubble prediction is coming true. Back in October, Zero Hedge said the next bubble are the 3Rs -Rare earths, Rice and Rubber. Lo and behold, rubber just hit an all time high on the Tocom, after returning 30% YTD. And far more importantly to those who care about such things, the rubber forward curve is in backwardation. No need to explain what that means.
"Get Ready For Margin Collapse" Goes Mainstream
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/13/2011 22:11 -0500
First it was "Get Ready For Higher Food Prices" going mainstream... Now, logically following, it is "Get Ready For Margin Collapse." As Zero Hedge has long been warning, the one immediate consequence of surging commodity prices as a result of endless liquidity, is a collapse in corporate margins. Now, about 6 months after we first broached the topic, it has finally hit the mainstream media. The WSJ highlights what is so obvious, it is no wonder no sellside "strategist" is willing to touch the topic with a ten foot pole: "This earnings season has seen a much-welcomed return to revenue growth, giving investors another reason to push stocks to two-year highs. But beneath the surface lurks a fresh worry: For many companies, the cost of raw materials is rising at a faster pace than revenue. Blame it on soaring prices of everything from cotton to copper and corn. That has squeezed profit margins more markedly than many analysts anticipated—and is serving as a worrying sign for future earnings." But yes, aside from the painfully obvious collapse in margins, and thus plunge in net income (sorry, companies can't fire their skeleton crew workers any further) which will mean 2011 S&P 500 EPS will come far, far lower than prevailing consensus, everything is fine...and don't forget to BTFD.
I Smell a VAT & (tax) Holiday Fun
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 02/13/2011 19:59 -0500Some strange bedfellows on tax deals that hurt the Democratic base?
Guest Post: Democracy And Its Contradictions
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/13/2011 18:42 -0500Democracy, as Churchill said, “is the worst form of government except for all those other forms that have been tried from time to time,” the assumption being that because the state is the only conceivable form of government (and therefore necessary for civil society to exist), the democratic state is the best state, even if it is merely the best among bad ones. This flies in the face, of course, of the godlike esteem in which democracy is held around the world, both by those who are ruled by such states and by those who yearn to be. Democracy, after all, is based on “the proposition that the legitimacy of all political power arises from, and only from, the consent of the governed, the people” – the assumption being that the democratic state embodies this noble proposition.
Who the REAL Taxpayers Are & Why Income Inequality Isn't Nearly As Much of a Problem As Critics Claim
Submitted by Stone Street Advisors on 02/13/2011 18:12 -0500The top 25% of earners pay almost 87% of Federal Income Tax! And that was in 2007, I doubt that number has gotten any smaller in subsequent years.
A Look At The Week Ahead: All Eyes On Chinese CPI And Lending Growth Data
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/13/2011 17:45 -0500In the early part of the week (Monday – Tuesday) China will release key lending growth data. Goldman expects the amount of CNY loans made in January to be around Rmb1.1 trillion, up from Rmb480 billion in December. The yoy growth of CNY loans is expected to fall to 18.5% yoy in January from 19.7% yoy in December. Also, January net exports are expected to decline to US$9.8 billion vs.US$13.1 billion in December. Meanwhile China CPI is expected to continue to rise to 5.3% from 4/6% previously.
The End Of The MUB Bounce? Republicans To Block Renewal Of Build America Bonds
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/13/2011 17:35 -0500The final nail in the zombified Build America Bond program may be finally approaching, in which case the dead cat bounce in the MUB may be about to end. After late last week Gerald Connolly,
D-Va, proposed an extension to the BAB program through 2012, resulting in yet another risk bounce in the one asset class that has seen a major walloping in early January, not to mention record outflows (and a corresponding inflow into US equities), it seems that the GOP is not very excited about the prospect of further state subsidies. From the WSJ: "Key Republicans signaled they would block renewal of the Build America
Bonds program as the Obama administration prepared to reinstate the
bonds in the 2012 budget plan due Monday. Build America Bonds were originally introduced as part of the $787 stimulus program in 2009 but expired at the end of last year. They allowed states and localities to sell taxable bonds and receive a federal subsidy payment from the Internal Revenue Service equal to 35% of the interest costs on their bonds. But Sen. Orrin Hatch (R., Utah), the ranking Republican on the Senate Finance Committee, said late Friday that BABs were "simply a disguised state bailout." "These bonds rightly expired at the end of 2010 and it is my hope the Obama administration does not try to resurrect such a nonsensical provision in their upcoming budget," he said." Yet that is precisely what the president intends on doing, while somehow pretending that the budget will actually cut $1.1 trillion from the deficit over the next decade. Just how crazy is it to request that at some point America has a president and economic advisors who actually understand at least the most basis mathematical concepts, the key of which is that spending does not equal saving...
Is That a Pyramid in Your Portfolio or Are You Just Happy to See a United Egypt?
Submitted by MoneyMcbags on 02/13/2011 16:16 -0500The market rallied on Friday as Hosni Mubarak abdicated his manipulatedly elected throne, walked out of the country like...
Stock World Weekly Newsletter
Submitted by ilene on 02/13/2011 15:17 -0500"As it turns out, our ‘Secret Santa’ was The Bernank – and he bought us a bag full of money!” - Phil










