Archive - May 2011
May 13th
Today's Economic Data Docket - CPI And UMich
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/13/2011 06:12 -0500Just two reports today: CPI and Confidence, both expected to paint worse picture and thus should be favorable to stocks.
Market Data Sheets May 13th
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 05/13/2011 05:29 -0500S&P 500, Dow Jones, Nasdaq, Russell 2000, Nymex Crude Oil, Comex Gold, EURUSD, GBPUSD, USDJPY
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 13/05/11
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 05/13/2011 05:20 -0500A snapshot of the European Morning Briefing covering Stocks, Bonds, FX, etc.
Market Recaps to help improve your Trading and Global knowledge
THis Is FRiDaY THe 13TH! (RELOADED WiTH BiN LaDeN PORN, KHaLiD SHeiK JeReMY, LoRD BLaNKFeiN and MoRe)
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 05/13/2011 02:45 -0500Tonight we dine at McDonald's! (Yes, Khalid Sheik Jeremy!)
May 12th
Alan Blinder Fires First Shot Across QE3 Bow: Says We Need More Stimulus To Boost Employment
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/12/2011 19:47 -0500
A little under a year ago Moody's Mark Zandi and Princeton economist and former Fed vice chairman Alan Blinder penned a paper titled "How we Ended the Great Recession" which did nothing but extoll the virtues of spending trillions in both fiscal and monetary stimuli and preventing U3 from hitting 16% (of course how one proves a counterfactual is irrelevant: just remember - if the Fed disclosed its top secret bailout plans the world would end. Same thing here - accept it - after all the guy is a professor at Princeton). In a nutshell Blinder is nothing but Paul Krugman on steroids: a man who believes that there is nothing worse in this world than establishing fiscal (and monetary) discipline now. Well, in an interview with Tom Keene earlier, Blinder fired the first shot across the QE3 bow, telling his Bloomberg host that the US needs "somewhat more" fiscal stimulus once again in order to boost employment (hold on: didn't we end the Great Recession, and certainly the normal one in the summer of 2009 according to the NBER?). How this would be accomplished in the current climate is not explained. Instead what Blinder says makes one wonder just who is on the tenure committee at Princeton - when asked how we bring the deficit in without austerity, the Princetonian responds: "Unfortunately I think it is very subtle for most political processes especially for the political process in the US. What we should be doing is somewhat more fiscal expansion but at the same time legislating into law fiscal consolidation for the future. Starting 2 years from now, 3 years from now, 18 months from now. But not now." Of course never now: why bite the bullet now when it can be kicked to some other administration in the indefinite future? Especially when tenure money and/or Wall Street bribes are at stake...
Fed Securities Holdings Pass $2.5 Trillion As MBS Prepays Grind To Halt, "Other Assets" Hit Record
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/12/2011 19:04 -0500
For the first time (and when it comes to the Fed's balance sheet that phrase will be heard many times) the total notional value of Treasurys, MBS and agencies held by the Fed surpasses $2.5 trillion. $2.518 trillion as of May 11 to be precise, of which Treasurys amounted to $1.466 trillion (excluding today's POMO), $927 billion in MBS (unchanged for the third week in a row), and $125 billion in Agency paper. The total is an increase of $24.4 billion from a week prior. Following the last schedule and a half of POMO, it appears the Fed will hold approximately $1.6 trillion in total debt. On the liabilities side, to go with all this debt, the Fed also had a total of $1.544 trillion in total bank reserves (including excess and required), also a record. As the chart below shows, reserve growth has slowed down substantially after it overshot materially following the unwind of the SFP program designed to provide the Treasury with debt space. As noted above, and as we discussed previously, the level of prepayment of the Fed's agency portfolio has slowed substantially (as confirmed by this month's forecast of only $13 billion in monetizations via QE Lite), which means the natural roll off of and remonetization of the Balance sheet will be far slower than some expected. Total Fed paper maturing in under a year continues to be just under $150 billion: a number we don't expect will change substantially. Elsewhere, total other assets continue to climb, and have now hit another record of $130 billion. Lastly, the Fed's lead on the second largest holder of US debt, China, continues to increase.
Perception, Inception and the Trojan Horse Money Meme - Part Four of Four
Submitted by Cognitive Dissonance on 05/12/2011 18:11 -0500If we are going to once again become sovereign entities and autonomous individuals we must begin the process by thinking and perceiving as one who is sovereign. A slave or captured mind does not see the world through his or her own eyes, but rather through those of his master.
You're FIRED! | Erin Collins Cullaro, Pam Bondi's Assistant Attorney Gerneral FIRED for "Moonlighting" at Foreclosure Mill, Florida Default Law Group
Submitted by 4closureFraud on 05/12/2011 18:07 -0500It's about damn time... "The best way to stop an investigation is to become one of the investigators" 4closureFraud 2010
NHK Reports Fukushima Reactor 1 Is Melting Down
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/12/2011 17:04 -0500Following up on earlier reports that the fuel rods in reactor 1 were truly exposed, NHK now reports another speculation from long ago, finally confirmed by official sources, namely that the reactor is now melting down. NHK reports that "Tokyo Electric Power Company says the No.1 reactor at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant is believed to be in a state of "meltdown". The utility company said on Thursday that most of the fuel rods are likely to have melted and fallen to the bottom of the reactor. Earlier in the day, it found that the coolant water in the reactor is at a level which would completely expose nuclear fuel rods if they were in their normal position." And from Reuters: "The finding makes it likely that at one point in the immediate wake of the disaster the 4-meter-high stack of uranium-rich rods at the core of the reactor had been entirely exposed to the air." Had been, or are? At this rate of admissions (we claimed precisely this happened in March) the next thing we might get a confirmation of from official sources is that there is actual recriticality going on. Which, of course, will be used by the market as another excuse to BTFD, as under central planning everyone lives happily ever after. Oh, and in the meantime, if we recall correctly, the cores of reactors 2 and 3 have also melted down. But Bernanke will just kiss them and make them better.
The Other Side Of The Story: CME On "Understanding Margin Hikes" And Why "They Are Not A Means To Move A Market"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/12/2011 16:02 -0500It is not surprising that following a relentless barrage of margin calls, many have speculated, jokingly or not, that the CME has recently set out on a path of outright warfare with commodities investors and speculators, which was further escalated after the exchange decided to hike WTI margins on a day when priced broadly declined and not in a violent manner either. As the article author herself notes, much to the incredulity of some of her readers: "margins are set as part of the neutral risk management services we
provide. They aren’t a means to move a market one way or another, or to
encourage or discourage participation from one kind of market
participant or another." The response was in question to when the CME will reduce margins now that the price of silver has tumbled by 30%. We would actually love to get an answer to that as well...
Stock Clearer Penson Tumbles On Disclosure Of Busted Racetrack Loan, Director Resignation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/12/2011 15:49 -0500The stock of clearing and settlements firms Penson tumbled and was halted today after it was disclosed that the firm had $42.6 million in receivables collateralized by bonds issued by Retama Development Authority - a Texas racetrack. The problem is that the receivable had moved to a non-accrual category, in other words the collateral is most likely now worthless. What is odd is that the first mention of this appeared three days ago in the risk factors of the company's 10-Q: "With respect to the Nonaccrual Receivables, at March 31, 2011, approximately $42.6 million were collateralized by bonds issued by the Retama Development Corporation (“RDC”) and certain other interests in the horse racing track and real estate project “(Project”) financed by the RDC’s bonds. In each case these are owned by customers and pledged to the Company and/or its affiliates. Certain related parties to the Company own approximately $14.7 million of RDC bonds that are pledged to the Company and/or its affiliates." Since this goes directly to the company's liquidity, it is no surprise that investors decided to shoot first, and not even ask questions.
RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 12/05/11
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 05/12/2011 15:38 -0500RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 12/05/11
RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 12/05/11
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 05/12/2011 15:27 -0500RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 12/05/11
David Rosenberg Has Gone Bullish... Or Has He?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/12/2011 14:53 -0500It has been a while since the non-paid media saw much from Rosie, who recently decided to go premium. It is ironic then that one of his most controversial pieces came out while he was behind a paywall, namely that he has gone bullish. Today, he takes the time to explain his real position, and share the report that started it all.
Simulation Shows High Levels of Radiation Hitting the West in May
Submitted by George Washington on 05/12/2011 14:41 -0500Bad news ... or some Norwegian scientist's video game?








