Archive - Jun 2011
June 7th
Goldman: "QE 3 Optimism Is Excessive"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/07/2011 16:15 -0500As has been repeated on Zero Hedge many times, with the stock market just 15% off its post-Jackson Hole surge highs, the market continues to be irrationally exuberant that QE3 will come come hell or high water. No. That will not happen until all the mutual funds who have been holding for 2+ years realize that in order to get another heroin hit, some will have to be wiped out (thank near-record margin debt and record low cash holdings) before QE3 does arrive. The latest to confirm this is Goldman Sachs, which via a note just released by Dominic Wilson confirms our speculation that "QE3 optimism is excessive." Ironically, the only thing that will guarantee QE3 is a fresh round of significant pains which retraces the entire QE2 move higher. Nobody in the long-only community wants to hear it. Alas, it is the truth. As usual: he who sells first, will have a job tomorrow...
Guest Post: Our Economic Future - From Best to Worst Case
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/07/2011 15:50 -0500There is a great deal of uncertainty among investors about what the future of the U.S. economy may look like – so I decided to take a stab at what’s likely to happen over the next 20 years. That's enough time for a child to grow up and mature, and it's long enough for major trends to develop and make themselves felt. I’ll confine myself to areas that are, as the benighted Rumsfeld might have observed, “known unknowns.” I don’t want to deal with possibilities of the deus ex machina sort. So we’ll rule out natural events like a super-volcano eruption, an asteroid strike, a new ice age, global warming, and the like. Although all these things absolutely will occur sometime in the future, the timing is very uncertain – at least from the perspective of one human lifespan. It’s pointless dealing with geological time and astronomical probability here. And, more important, there’s absolutely nothing we can do about such things. So let’s limit ourselves to the possibilities presented by human action. They're plenty weird and scary, and unpredictable enough.
AnGeLa ViSiT's ReaLiSTiC POTUS aND BuTTHeaD
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 06/07/2011 15:40 -0500The adventures begin...
RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 07/06/11
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 06/07/2011 15:27 -0500RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 07/06/11
Markets Know QE2 Is “Transitory” - What's Next?
Submitted by ilene on 06/07/2011 15:24 -0500Not only are the PDs treating Treasury paper like last week’s garbage, banks in general are also dumping the stuff.
Market Reaction To Bernanke Speech: Disappointment
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/07/2011 15:08 -0500
Alas, the market still refuses to acknowledge that the S&P will need to drop below 1000 (and whatever the appropriate level for the RUT is) for Bernanke to greenlight QE 3 which will in turn send everything to the moon (better have those collocated algos ready and steady). Judging by the post-speech reaction, markets may finally be getting it, just as Bernanke is also getting that he is dealing with a heroin addict who will not settle with methadone (aka "extraordinary" and "extended").
Guest Post: How Goldman Dissembled In The Wall Street Journal
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/07/2011 14:42 -0500You have read Dealbook's superficial (and practically dictated) defense of Goldman's subprime bet. Below we present David Fiderer's a vastly different perspective than the one shared by straight-to-HBO expert A.R.S., which provides a far more realistic perspective of what really happened with Goldman and its "big short."
The Big Banks Have Sold Us Out. Democrats And Republicans Have Sold Us Out. No One Is Defending Our Interests. Our Future Is Going Up In Flames. It’s Time For Us To Stand Up And Defend Ourselves
Submitted by George Washington on 06/07/2011 14:38 -0500Are we Men (and Women) ... or are we mice?
The Animated Weiner
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/07/2011 13:50 -0500
With an hour of boredom to kill until the Bernanke announcement, and nobody trading anything until then, here is some afternoon amusement courtesy of the NMA which has taken Weiner's career suicide and made a, what else, cartoon out of it.
QE 3 "Protection"?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/07/2011 13:29 -0500With less than an hour and a half left until the release of Bernanke's 3:45 pm prepared remarks out of embargo, one wonders if someone may have just purely by accident, and totally inadvertently broken the embargo, in advance of a speech that some see just as important as the Jackson Hole QE 2 announcement. And while the earlier announcement out Fed 8K distributor Jon Hilsenrath made it seem that there would be nothing QE 3-related at all out of Bernanke's Atlanta remarks, perhaps the Fed has finally remembered that the best monetary policy works when it actually surprising. Which incidentally may explain why there is a rather substantial amount of XLF July $16 call buying going on, to the tune of $1.4 million: the option-based bet for a run up versus down in financial stocks (which would be the primary beneficiary in any even remote QE 3 announcement) is substantially tilted to the upside, with a 4 to 1 bias in favor of the calls. Will these calls pay off massively, or will they all expire worthless very shortly: find out at 3:45 pm Eastern.
Is France's Banque Postale Cutting Its ATM Withdrawal Limit By Up To 50%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/07/2011 13:14 -0500There is a curious email floating around (allegedly sourced here), which is supposed to represent a communication from France's La Banque Postale to its clients, notifying that beginning August 1, 2011, the bank will lower the weekly ATM withdrawal limit by anywhere between 33% and 50%. In brief, according to the terms of the of the bank's statement, the top tier of credit card holders, the Visa Premier, will see their weekly withdrawal limit reduced from €3000 to €1,500, while the next two tiers, MasterCard and Bleue Visa, will see their weekly withdrawal allowance lowered from €1,500 to €1,000. Lastly, the lowest tier will see its cash withdrawal drop from €1,000 to €800. Naturally if confirmed, this would not be a good sign as pertains to the bank's current liquidity situation: traditionally cutting the withdrawal cap is an indication of a substantial cash on hand scarcity. We hope some of our French readers can confirm or deny this peculiar development out of a country that has so far rarely made the "financial woes" headlines.
REJECTED | Massachusetts Register of Deeds John O’Brien is First in the Nation to Say NO to Recording Robo-signed Documents
Submitted by 4closureFraud on 06/07/2011 12:48 -0500“My Registry will not be a knowing participant in this fraud against homeowners. From today forward, lenders be on notice, the Southern Essex District Registry of Deeds will not record robo-signed documents.” John O'Brien
Dealers Bid Up $32 Billion 3 Year Auction In Advance Of Flipping It Back To The Fed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/07/2011 12:23 -0500
The Treasury just priced $32 billion in 3 Year bonds (CUSIP QS2) in another "strong" auction which was dominated by Dealers who took down 55.2% of the total amount, as they prepare to flip the bulk of its right back to the Fed, just as in last month's 3 year "strong" auction which as we noted yesterday, saw half of the Dealer takedown flipped to Brian Sack in 3 weeks. The yield dropped to 0.765%, just wide of the When Issued, and the lowest since November 2010, even as the Bid To Cover came at 3.279, a touch weaker than May's 3.289, and the 4th strongest BTC in the history of the auction. Indirects came precisely in line with the LTM average of 35.6%, with the balance, or 9.2%, going to Directs. The Indirect bid was actually weaker than the take down number indicated. As Stone McCarthy points out: "the Indirect bid declined to $17.8 billion this month from $18.9 billion last month That accounted for 17.0% of the overall bid, compared to a 17.8% average over the prior year. The Indirect hit ratio was close to average, but the smaller bid still left Indirect bidders with a slightly below average 35.6% of the auction." Overall another irrelevant auction as there will be at least 3 Year targeting POMOs before the end of QE2 in 3 weeks, meaning PDs will be able to flip the full amount of the OTR they don't want back to the Fed. When it will get interesting it toward the end of June when the distribution of POMOs across the curve starts getting sparse and then ends on June 30. As usual, look for CUSIP QS3 to be the most monetized CUSIP in the next two 2014-targetting POMOs.
Deconstructing Revenue Growth Assumptions Implied by Hot China Internet Stock Prices: Youku.com Edition
Submitted by Stone Street Advisors on 06/07/2011 12:00 -0500The high-flying price of hot China internet stocks is driven largely by enormous estimated revenue growth, but if we take a closer look, the growth rates implied by stock prices are totally out of line with reality.









