Archive - Apr 28, 2011

Tyler Durden's picture

Simon Black Podcast: The Most Sound Opportunities Are Outside The Western World





"In the long run, as decades of capital misallocations and inefficiencies in the global economy get shaken out, there’s going to be a redistribution of the wealth. And I think the wealth is going to go to where it’s treated best. And at the end of the day, that’s really what I’m looking for: the places that have the most solid fundamentals and the best growth potential." So states Simon Black, who travels the world (over 20 countries in the past 3 months) in order to assess and report on the investment and lifestyle opportunities offered by various international destinations for the readers of his blog, SovereignMan.com. His boots-on-the ground observations lead him to conclude that there are a number of resource-rich and fiscally-sound developing nations that are much better positioned to meet the future than the US and its developed counterparts. Smart investors, in his opinion, can't afford to ignore the stability and returns (both financial and lifestyle) these countries offer. They should be asking themselves: do I have sufficient exposure to these opportunities?

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Crispin Odey: "The West Will Become Flooded With Inflation"





Some interesting observations from the transcript of Crispin Odey's Q1 2011 conference call. In a nutshell: inflationary re-exports from the developing world back into the developed is about to make life for chairprinters a living hell.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Indirects Flee From Poor 7 Year Auction Which Pushes Bond Curve Wider





Today's final auction of the week just closed in the form of a $29 billion 7 year bond issue (Cusip: QG8). While we will find out whether or not this is the auction that broke the debt ceiling camel's back when everything settles on Tuesday of next week, the internals were downright ugly: the WI of the bond was trading at 2.68% when the auction priced at 2.712%, a surprisingly wide tail into what everyone claims is a risk free asset. As a result the entire curve has been dragged wider on the news. Among the internals, the Bid To Cover came at 2.63, far weaker than both the previous (2.80) and the average (2.79). But the most notable metric as usual was the Indirect Bid, which traditionally strong at the belly of the curve, saw only 39.1% of the auction going to foreign bidders. This compares to 49.31% in the last auction and 51.45% on average. This meant that Primary Dealers, better known as Brian Sack, were forced to preemptively monetize 53% of the auction, and 7.8% going to Directs. Overall a very poor auction, considering that conventional wisdom was that when the Fed launches QE3 it will focus on bonds at the belly and to the right, in order to moderate inflation. Hopefully (for some) this is not a harbinger that the Bill Gross thesis is finally starting to materialize.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

As One Million Exhaust Jobless Benefits, A Look At What Recent Deteriorating Layoff Trends Means





In addition to today's broad economic disappointment that once again nobody could have foreseen (save for a few comments from us back in January predicting just this most recent contraction), another incrementally negative development which will force the spin doctor to earn their overtime is the observation that over the past year at least 1 million unemployed have now officially fallen off the 99-week gravy train, and exhausted their entire jobless benefits. Luckily, for 10% of the US population there is the magically levitating S&P. For everyone else, there are foodstamps (for now).. and of course the worthless dollar. And in other news, Peter Tchir looks at the recent deplorable jobless claims numbers (wonder why you aren't hearing much about today's initial claims on CNBC? that's why) and comes to the following logical conclusion: "Currently expectations for next Friday's NFP is 183k.  I think the
number will be 160k, but in this world it makes no difference since that
will encourage belief in QE3 which will trigger dollar weakness which
will cause stocks to go up.  Since its hard to go long stocks with this
logic, it leaves me looking at precious metals." Tchir is not the only one doing so.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: Bernanke's Press Conference, August 1, 2012





August 1, 2012: Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke once again defended the Fed's accommodative monetary policy at today's press conference. Mr. Bernanke was late to the conference, which was shielded from protesters by riot police. In his absence, a pet parrot was brought out to amuse the waiting journalists, who had been carefully vetted by the Fed to "represent the nation's media." The parrot had apparently occupied a perch in the Fed's conference room, for it repeatedly squawked, "Stocks are up, stocks are up." The Fed chairman finally emerged sometime later, looking somewhat distracted. Recent developments in the global economy have cast a shadow on the Fed's continuation of zero interest rates and quantitative easing, the term describing direct purchases of assets such as mortgages, Treasury bonds and stocks. As the dollar continued its slide, unemployed German workers shouted "Death to America" in mass protests in Germany's industrial heartland. With the euro worth $2, German exports to the U.S. have shriveled, causing a sharp contraction in the once robust German economy.

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 28/04/11





RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 28/04/11

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Today's Chinese Fraud Du Jour: Sino Clean Energy (SCEI): "Complete Hoax" Per Alfred Little





If there is a day that passes without another Chinese fraud bottling up the Nasdaq's trading halt page, we feel a vague sense of abandonment. Luckily: not today. Alfred Little has just released his latest report on what appears to be the most recent Chinese fraud: Sino Clean Energy (Nasdaq: SCEI). This one apprears to be a total donut: "Sino Clean Energy (NASDAQ: SCEI) is the most outrageous Chinese fraud to date committed against U.S. investors. SCEI management pre?announced its first quarter 2011 results Tuesday in a press release (here) stating that revenues were $33.7 million. In its 2010 10?K (here) SCEI reported 2010 full year revenues of $106.2 million and adjusted net income of $27.9 million. However, four months of surveillance of SCEI’s three coal water slurry fuel (“CWSF”) factories clearly show nothing more than backyard?sized money losing operations. Incredibly, in December, SCEI’s fee?hungry investment bankers, Rodman & Renshaw and Axiom Capital Management, raised this scam company $33 million ($29.6 million net proceeds after deducting $3.4 million of investment banking, legal, due diligence and other fees). Did the banksters do any due diligence at all? Simply observing these idle operations proves SCEI is a total fraud, a fact urther confirmed by official tax records. Investors will never recover any money from SCEI and ts shares are worthless." As always remember: careful with buying options on a stock that may never reopen post the halt...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Feeling Vindictive? Here Is Your Chance To Bet Bernanke's Printing Career Will End Before December 31, 2011





Feeling like the economy is not the only thing that has taken a dump for the worse? Harboring a nagging suspicion that the Chairman's chances to continue presiding over the free world with a Hewlett Packardian fist may have taken a bit of a hit, and his Wall Street overlords are starting to consider pulling a Hudsucker Proxy and replacing him with Mark Zandi? If so, InTrade has you covered. As of today, you have the chance to bet that the mutant second coming of Rudolph von Havenstein and Gideon Gono will be shown the door, either voluntarily or not, by the end of 2011. In some ways this is perfect way to hedge one's precious metal, stock market, and rates bets, since the entire fate of capital markets continues to rest squarely on the Chairman's shoulders. We wonder how long before Goldman securitizes this InTrade contract and sells the equity tranche to idiot European and Korean money managers...

 

Phoenix Capital Research's picture

Bernanke Has Officially Killed the Dollar





Yesterday, Bernanke staged a “conference” answering “questions” from “journalists.” It’s striking that the man with the most power in the world would be handled with kid gloves. After all, if he’s in charge of directing the world’s reserve currency, surely he could answer a few hardball questions about his insane policies However, instead of holding this miscreant accountable for his monetary madness, the “journalists” let him prattle on with his meaningless drivel. The markets, on the other hand, read through his BS. Soon after the conference the US Dollar collapsed to a three year low.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Wal Mart CEO: "Shoppers Are Running Out Of Money"; There Is "No Sign Of A Recovery"





When a month ago the CEO of Wal Mart Americas told the world to "prepare for serious inflation", the Chairman laughed in his face, saying it was nothing a 15 minutes Treasury Call sell order can't fix (granted net of a few billions in commissions for JPM). 4 weeks later the Chairman is no longer laughing, having been forced to hike up his inflation expectations while trimming (not for the last time) his economic outlook. "U.S. consumers face "serious" inflation in the months ahead for
clothing, food and other products, the head of Wal-Mart's U.S.
operations warned Wednesday talking to USA Today.
And if Wal-Mart which is at the very bottom of commoditized consumer
retail, and at the very peak of avoiding reexporting of US inflation by
way of China is concerned, it may be time to panic, or at least cancel
those plane tickets to Zimbabwe, which is soon coming to us." In  light of that perhaps today's words of caution from Wal Mart CEO Mike Duke will be taken a tad more seriously (yes, even with the $50 billion in "squatters rent" that the deadbeats spend on iPads instead of paying their mortgage: that money is rapidly ending). Warning is as follows: "Wal-Mart's core shoppers are running out of money much faster than a
year ago due to rising gasoline prices, and the retail giant is worried. "We're seeing core consumers under a lot of pressure," Duke said at an event in New York. "There's no doubt that rising fuel prices are having an impact.
" Tell that to Printocchio please.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Silver Backwardation Doubles Overnight





Yesterday we correctly predicted that the entire 10% silver correction would be momentarily taken out as the Comex news is properly digested. And so it continues - as silver is once again pennies away from $50 and a fresh new nominal all time high, we take a quick look at the futures curve where as expected the backwardation is confirming the "negative convexity" (yes, yes, we know silver is not a duration security) once the $50 stops are taken out will send silver surging to unseen before levels (which also considering it will be at a new record over $50 is pretty much intuitive). In the meantime, the chart below is the worst nightmare of anyone still holding short silver positions. While the near-far contract backwardation was about $0.75 yesterday, it has since doubled in less than 24 hours. We can't wait to see what surprising nuggets the Comex will bring us today.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Goldman On GDP And Surging Claims: Expect "Softer Nonfarm Payroll Growth In April Than March"





Not at all surprising, Goldman's economic team continues to (pretend) it is in denial, knowing full well the second it downgrades its Q2 and H2 numbers it is game over. As such its "review" of the ugly Q1 GDP number came out smelling like rainbows and unicorns, namely "this mix of growth - stronger consumption and less inventory building - suggests a bit more momentum heading into Q2." Let's see how this mix is revised in the second and of course third GDP revision. However, where Goldman gets ominous, is its observation of next month's NFP number. If Hatzius is correct (and with his 1.75% Q1 GDP he was the closest of all to the real number), look for the nonfarm payroll number to be beyond ugly, fully opening the door for further QEasing.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Keynes Vs Hayek: The Sequel





Just over a year ago, Econstories managed to successfully, if briefly, fuse the worlds of rap and monetary policy in the form of "Fear the boom and bust" - a Keynes vs Hayek rap anthem. And now, when with every passing day the shamanism of Keynesian voodoo is exposed for all too see, courtesy of the tide of endless credit and free money finally flowing out, we get the sequel. Enjoy.

 

williambanzai7's picture

BeRKSHiRe HaTHaWaY--HeY Moe!





9:30AM NYUK Opening Bell: Berkshire Hathaway has further escalated its war of words with former executive Curly Sokol...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

FMX Connect Morning Gold Fix: Silver Warehouse Shenanigans Or The Real Deal?





Our friends at Zerohedge did some excellent discovery and analysis last night on the recent drawdown in Comex Silver stocks eligible for delivery. We have personally seen this activity before, and while we do not doubt the authenticity of the draw down from the Registered (for delivery) stockpile described below; We add that this has happened many times in the past in short -cons meant as exit strategies for big longs. So far, if this is an exit strategy, it is basically what happened in 1997 when Buffet took delivery, but on a much bigger scale, a long –con if you will. But if the reason is that someone bigger that the usual investor community with pockets and a will deeper than all the Bullion Banks combined has decided to de-dollarize their FX reserves, like say China, then this is the way to do it. We think this is real and will describe why briefly after the ZH analysis.

 
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