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Archive - Jul 2011

July 29th

Tyler Durden's picture

Stocks Reverse Entire Overnight Dump On One Headline





Update 2: Cantor says has votes to pass bill

Update: Sure enough: Boehner tells reported "I am smiling"

As expected earlier, the news of America's economic tumble are completely ignored now and the S&P is well above the levels before the GDP announcement. In fact, following a headline earlier that the GOP is preparing to amend its bill the computers went out in full rampage mode as the quote stuffing chart below demonstrates so vividly, the headline scanners did their job and robot after robot rushed to outrun each other for every available offer. We give this rally a few minutes before some republican says that the Boehner plan will in fact pass in current form, and the robotic buying spree turn into a dumpathon.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: Whack-A-Mole





Bernanke and the Fed have to re-evaluate the grade they gave to QE2. How we have such a massive revision in Q1 GDP is hard for me to understand. Seriously, we need to find a way to get better data, but with a 0.4% quarter right in the heart of QE2, it is clear it did nothing to help the real economy. And yes, it is getting old, but I will say it again, the market is not the economy. I am now cutting all my short. I had cut some coming into this week, as I was scared of the rally, but kept enough on that I can't complain too much. I am flat and tempted to go long. We've had a big move, and government resolution is likely to come, but it feels like that is a crowded trade. No one seems really afraid, and everyone seems to expect a bounce. Just because everyone expects it, doesn't make it wrong, but I'm concerned that all the longs will pop out of their holes the second a deal is announced. They will look around for someone to panic and take them out of their positions on the debt ceiling news. Then they will look some more, and then realize that no one is caught short or surprised and they will scurry to get out of their positions. Well, I just convinced myself to go back to putting on a small short.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Watch Obama Debt Ceiling Address Live





It's time for your daily teleprompted brainwashing. Frontal lobes: out.

 

thetrader's picture

Charts Update before you consider selling the panic





Some Charts before you panic by www.thetrader.se

 

Leo Kolivakis's picture

Oklahoma's AG Launches Pensions Investigation





Oklahoma's AG, Scott Pruitt, launched an investigation on Thursday into whether financial institutions are properly handling state pension funds...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Both Chicago PMI And Consumer Confidence Disappoint





The adverse data onslaught continues with both the Chicago PMI and the UMichigan Consumer Confidence numbers coming in weaker than expected. Chicago printed at 58.8 on expectations of 60.0, down from 61.1, while consumer confidence was quantified with laser-like precision by UMichigan at 63.7, below expectations of 64.0, and the lowest since March 2009. The data behind the headlines was even uglier, as the Employment index in the PMI printed far lower, from 58.7 to 51.5, even as priced paid increased (yes, inflation) from 70.5 to 71.7, while new orders declined from 61.2 to 59.4. At the same time long-term inflation expectations are getting anchored ever higher, as the 5 year inflation rose from 2.8% to 2.9%, while the condition index plunged to 75.8, the lowest since November 2009. At least people's outlook on the future was unchanged at 56.0. Then again, all economic data is now irrelevant as everyone is preparing to listen to the republicans, the teleprompter and the democrats in that order imminently.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Shit Just Got Real: Primary Dealers Called To New York Fed For Emergency Noon Meeting





From an email just sent out by Morgan Stanley's David Greenlaw:

The NY Fed just asked primary dealers to come downtown today at noon to meet with Fed and Treasury Dept officials. We expect to hear them outline a contingency plan for next week. Details to follow.   

 

 

Tyler Durden's picture

And Wall Street Does Its Traditional "Nobody-Could-Have-Foreseen-This....Nobody" Dance





Here are some of the first sell-side and media perspectives on the abysmal Q2 GDP. And of course, nobody could have foreseen this huge collapse in the US economy. Nobody.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Charting Q1 GDP Pre And Post The 80% Downward Revision





It's a good thing the BEA has two revisions to its GDP data or else someone would think that the government is purposefully fudging data. Below is a comparison between the Final Q1 GDP, which was released on June 24, and today's epic Q1 re-revision. From 1.9% to 0.4% in one easy Qe3 enabling step.

 

Bruce Krasting's picture

On UBS and the FHFA Lawsuit





Watch this suit. The big USA financials are going to get hit on the head.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

And Scene: Q2 GDP 1.3%, Gold Surging On Imminent QE3 Resumption





A simply unprecedented miss in Q2 GDP well below the consensus range, with the official number printing at 1.3%, giving it upside room for revisions in case QE3 does not pass, although at this point it is more than obvious that this number is goalseeked to give Bernanke the carte blanche to start more easing any second. This number follows an epic revision to prior data, with Q1 plunging from 1.9% to 0.4%. The GDP internals were simply appalling: Personal Consumption tumbled from 2.1% to 0.1%, on expectations of 0.8%! The US consumer is dead despite not paying mortgage payments. Lastly, US PCE Core printed at 2.1% on expectations of 2.3%. As we have been expecting since December, the US is on the verge of a triple dip recession within the bigger depression. With a deadlocked Congress, the Fed has no option but to do another monetary stimulus as seen by the surge of gold to near record highs on the data in the $1.625 range and the implosion in the USDCHF to fresh all time lows.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: July 29





Amid Debt Battle, More Americans Say Economy Getting Worse (Gallup)
Treasury Faces Pressure to Detail Backup Plan (WSJ)
Debt-Increase Dispute Tests Boehner’s Power (Bloomberg)
U.S. Economic Growth Probably Slowed (Bloomberg)
IMF Board Holds Informal Board Meeting On EU's Greek Financing Deal (WSJ)
Why are we in this debt fix? It’s the elderly, stupid (WaPo)
France Seeks Rapid Adoption of Greek Bail-Out (FT)

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Today's Economic Data Docket - Q2 GDP





Several important releases today, including the advance report for Q2 GDP, which consensus sees at 1.8% and Goldman is materially lower at 1.5%. A QE Lite POMO closes at 11:00 am. Chicago PMI and UMich consumer confidence round out the data, which will again be vastly inferior in market movery to headlines out of Europe and the US.

 

rcwhalen's picture

Black Friday and the end of risk free returns





As we learned working in Mexico in the 1980s and 1990s, the world of debt defaults and fiscal crises inevitably results in strong inflation, but a big part of the inflationary process is perception.  Think of this week as the point in the learning curve when Washington started getting the attention of the entire nation and world -- a year before the next election

 

Tyler Durden's picture

IMF Chief Warns America on “Exorbitant Privilege”, Brings Back Flashbacks To de Gaulle And The London Gold Pool





New IMF Chief Christine Lagarde has warned overnight that the global reserve currency status of the dollar is at risk due to the “worrisome” US debt debate. Failure by the United States to raise the debt ceiling would likely lead to a decline in the U.S. dollar and raise "doubts" among those using it as a reserve currency, Lagarde said. "One of the consequences could be a decline of the dollar as a reserve currency and a dent in people's confidence in the dollar." The U.S. currency has had an “exorbitant privilege because it was the reserve currency that most central banks had,” Lagarde said in an interview on PBS’s “Newshour” yesterday. “If there was a dent in this exorbitant privilege and the confidence that most people have towards the dollar, it would probably entail a decline of the dollar relative to other currencies.” The use of the “exorbitant privilege” phrase by the former French finance minister is important and not an accident. It echoes the former French President, Charles de Gaulle’s comment regarding the dollar being “America’s exorbitant privilege” at a landmark press conference in 1965 that led to the end of the London gold pool or government cartel which attempted to keep the gold price fixed at $35 per ounce.

 
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