Archive - May 20, 2011

Tyler Durden's picture

ES Once Again Rapidly Diverging From Everything Risky





And so the broader risk basket of AUDJPY, EURJPY, 10Y, 2s10s30s, gold, and oil once again rapidly diverges from the ES, which must mean that Citadel is busy processing FRBNY trade tickets on a FIFO basis. Expect the spread to close (buy the basket in a pro rata basis for an intraday correlation catch up), or not: all depends on just how aggressive Brian Sack is to indicate that life is good, wealth effect is wonderful, and the rapture is overblown. Bottom line: either play both legs outright in a pair combo, or sell ES for a FV 4 points lower.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Glencore Dips Below IPO Price On Second Day Of Trading





And while everyone is focused on the charade dot com resurgence courtesy of the LinkedIn IPO mockery, which is nothing but a VWAP magnet and a tool for Goldman to set a public comp benchmark for its plethora of upcoming "social" IPOs, things are a little uglier for the biggest IPO of 2011. In just its second day of trading, Glencore has already broken its IPO price. Reuters reports: "Shares in commodities trading group Glencore fell below their issue price of 530 pence on Friday, the second day of conditional trading, as investors fretted over its valuation. The world's largest diversified commodities trader
touched a low of 519 pence in unofficial grey market trade before
closing at 524 pence, down 1.1 percent after more than 200 million
shares changed hands, underperfoming a virtually flat FTSE index and a
0.4 percent dip in the broad mining sector.  "Basically, the valuation looks a little bit rich. They worked very hard to get a favourable price and one could argue the only reason it was up yesterday was support from the sponsoring banks," said analyst Nik Stanojevic at Brewin Dolphin. "I think the market feels the same way. It wasn't as if they sold this thing really cheaply with the expectation it would go up 50 percent on the first day."
Fools: they should have just packaged GLEN as a social network for commodity speculators and Glencore would have been the world's largest market cap company already..

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 20/05/





A snapshot of the US Afternoon Briefing covering Stocks, Bonds, FX, etc.

Market Recaps to help improve your Trading and Global knowledge

 

Reggie Middleton's picture

Is The Evidence For An Apple Margin Collapse Now Incontrovertible?





My many warnings on the impending dethroning of Apple by Google has produced more flak and negative response since any proclamation since my warning about Goldman Sachs in the spring of 2008. Of course, fast foward to the spring of 2011 an you will find Reggie was right on point. I am just as confident, or more, about Apple vs Google, and for the same reasons as I was confident about Goldman Sachs.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Zimbabwe To Trade Diamonds For Gold As It Prepares To Launch Gold-Backed Currency





A week ago we presented the idea floated by once hyperinflationary Zimbabwe, oddly jeered by most, that the country is seeking to move to a gold-backed currency, adding, somewhat surrealistically, that the "days of the US dollar as the world's reserve currency are numbered." And if anyone should know a hyperinflationary basket case, it's Zimbabwe. Well, today this bizarre story just went fuller retard, after the country announced that it may exchange diamonds for gold "so that it can have a gold-backed currency, according to a recent proposal from the governor of Zimbabwe’s central bank." Indeed we speculated previously why: "Zimbabwe, a country rich in natural resources, took so long to figure out that it was nothing but a puppet in the hands of western monetary interests." Well, others are now getting this idea - Commodity Online reports that "The country is a resource hub: It sits on gold reserves worth trillions. It has the world’s second largest reserves of platinum, has got alluvial diamonds that can fetch the nation $2 billion annually and even boasts of chrome and coal deposits." And since Zimbabwe is now fully on board this whole "pioneering" thing perhaps it should just go ahead and create the first diamond-platinum backed currency. Just don't give China and Russia ideas about floating a new reserve currency that actually has real commodity backing. What's that, you say? They are launching one soon? Oh well.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The Rich Are About To Get Very, Very Rich: Study Finds Global Millionaire Wealth Set To More Than Double By 2020





A new study by Deloitte confirms everyone's worst fear (and every millionaire's wettest dream): the wealth amassed by millionaire households is set to increase by more than 100% over the next 9 years. From a total of $92 trillion held by the world's richest in 2011, by 2020 the world's millionaire households will possess $202 trillion, or roughly 4 times current global GDP. Even though much of move up is attributed to the wealth surge in the developing world, the biggest beneficiary is, you guessed it, the United States where the millionaires (those with net wealth of at least $1 million), who currently account for $38.6 trillion of total wealth, will see their assets increased by 225% to $87.1 trillion! And while a comparable study of how much wealth the lower and middle classes are set to lose over the next decade, we are confident that it will be roughly comparable...inversely. So if anyone harbored any illusions that the current status quo was about anything but the rich getting richer, all those can be promptly swiped aside.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

And A Little Fuel To The Fire: Greece Downgraded By Fitch





Another oops:

FITCH DOWNGRADES GREECE TO 'B+'; RATING WATCH NEGATIVE

 

 

Bruce Krasting's picture

CBO report – “FHA ripping off taxpayers by $5 billion a year!”





The CBO takes a shot at the FHA.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: Greek CDS - Missing The Forest For The Trees





The Greek CDS market is actually fairly small. According to DTCC, there is only 3.8 billion euro of net CDS exposure on the Hellenic Republic. That compares to almost 300 billion euro of debt outstanding. There may be some additional exposure to Greece cds since it is included in SOVX, but the Greek portion of net SOVX exposure is very low, and some of the exposure is offset by investors who trade 'cds index arb'. Not only is the 4 billion euro of exposure relatively small, most of it is held in mark to market accounts, so a lot of the loss to the system is already accounted for. Since the net exposure is small, banks are likely beneficiaries of a credit event, and markets will see through this feeble attempt at avoiding the stigma of a default, the EU finance ministers should stop worrying about how a restructuring will impact CDS. They should focus on restructuring in a way that provides the best possible outcome for Greece and creditors and not worry about what happens in the CDS market as a result. If after sorting out the Greek situation, they still have time to think about CDS, they should spend that time figuring out who sold the protection and why? For every evil, vile, nasty, hedge fund who had bought credit protection, someone took they other side and sold protection? If the purchasers are so evil, does that make the sellers angelic?

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Norway Stops Aid Payments To Greece





And here comes the first domino: according to Swiss journal NZZ, the Greek bailout is about to take a turn for the worse. "Norway will first stop all further financial aid payments to the highly indebted Greece. The reason is that Greece does not fulfill its obligations descendants, the Norwegian Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Store said on Thursday before the Parliament." And with Norway which is a member of the European Economic Area, and actually one of the few solvent and non-basket case European countries saying let the chips fall where they may, it is just the first. Look for every other country currently on the sidelines vis-a-vis Greece (and just as insolvent) to follow suit as the European experiment falls apart.

 

madhedgefundtrader's picture

It’s Full Speed Ahead for China’s Nuclear Program





Is the disaster creating a buying opportunity? China has far and away the world’s most ambitious nuclear program, with 100 plants on order over the next decade. Any cut back in the nuclear program would have to be met with stepped supplies from other sources, which are unavailable. The place to go when “RISK OFF” is over? (NLR), (CCJ).

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Complete Q1 Hedge Fund Holdings Summary: Is The HF Love Affair With Apple Ending - Microsoft Is Now Biggest Hedge Fund Hotel "Groupthink" Stock





Something interesting appeared in today's Release of David Kostin's Hedge Fund Trend Monitor. Actually make that shocking: as of the end of Q1, Apple is no longer the most hedge fund-held stock in the world. After 195 hedge funds held AAPL at the end of 2010, the most of any stock, with Citigroup and JPM in 2nd and 3rd position, over the next 3 months 22 fund or over 10% of the HF holder base have dumped their entire stake. And with a YTD return of just 4% who can blame them... for jumping out of the frying pan and into the "value investor" fire: as of Q1 the most widely held Hedge Fund stock is now Microsoft with 181 holders, up from 161 in the previous quarter. Which unfortunately means that 181 hedge funds have generated a -11% return on this holding. And with few if any funds left who have yet to enter, the only way for MSFT from here on out is down. Not surprisingly, both Citi and Bank of America saw their fans depart, with 12 fund closing out their C positions, and 9 doing the same for BAC.

 

Reggie Middleton's picture

No! Microsoft Didn’t Overpay for Skype – They Need to Bulk Up To Compete With Google: Where Does This Leave Apple, RIM???





Several BoomBustBloggers inquired as to my opinion of what apparently was an overpriced acquisition of Skype by Microsoft. At first blush, it appears as if the management of Microsoft has lost their mind. A second look reveals a more interesting perspective. To make a long story short, Microsoft is trying to replicate Google’s cloud services.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Goldman Warns That Spanish Bonds, EUR Poised For Technical Breakdown





As if Spain did not have enough to worry about with now daily protests gripping the main cities (the live webcam for the daily festivities in Madrid can be found here), next according to Goldman's John Noyce not only are Spanish bonds on the verge of a technical breakdown (and yields about to breakout), but due to the very high correlation between the Bund-Spain spread and the inverse EUR, it likely means that should the market start pricing in the Spanish domino, then the EUR, already lagging the move, is about to take out 1.40 rapidly. And with Spanish spreads flying as is over concerns what the Spanish elections on Sunday could mean for the country and the region, we can see something snap in advance of the weekend any minute.

 
Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!