Archive - Dec 12, 2012
This Is What A Billion Dollar Patent Lawsuit Does For You!
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/12/2012 10:00 -0500
The much-heralded $1.05 billion patent lawsuit win on August 24th appears to have marked "Peak AAPL-ness" as investors look through the first-round win for Apple to Samsung's potential second- and third-round wins on margins and revenues as a supplier to their rival. As Bloomberg's Chart of the Day notes, since that analyst-exuberance-inspiring date, Samsung is +16.8% (or 23% in USD terms) and Apple is -18.4%.
Berkshire Seeks To Avoid 2013 Tax Hike, Buys Back BRK Shares
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/12/2012 09:45 -0500Define irony: when the most vocal supporter of a dramatic change to the existing tax policy takes advantage of the last few days of the old one...
- BERKSHIRE HAS PURCHASED 9,200 OF CLASS A SHRS AT $131,000-SHR
- BERKSHIRE RAISED PRICE LIMIT FOR BUYBACKS TO 120% BOOK VALUE
- BERKSHIRE MAY BUY ADDED SHRS AT NO MORE THAN 120% BOOK VALUE
- BERKSHIRE BOOSTS BUYBACK PRICE LIMIT TO 120% BOOK VALUE VS 110%
A total $1.2 billion spent to avoid a few hundred million in new taxes. And now back to the hypocrticy of the "Buffett tax", and "Patriotic Millionaires for America." In other news, total donations to pay down the debt in Fiscal 2013 (starting October 1): $290,195.03.
How A Handful Of Unsupervised MIT Economists Run The World
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/12/2012 09:05 -0500
Ever get the feeling that the entire global economy is one big experiment conducted by several former Keynesian economists from MIT with a bent for central planning, who sit down in conspiratorial dark rooms in tiny Swiss cities and bet it all on green until they double down so much nobody even pays attention to the game? No? You should. Jon Hilsenrath, of all people, explains why.
Sweden's Riksbank to Increase Reserves
Submitted by Marc To Market on 12/12/2012 08:57 -0500The accumulation of reserves is primarily limited to developing countries. There are two notable exceptions among the high income countries. Japan, which is traditionally willing to intervene in the foreign exchange market to curb the yen's strength. The last intervention took place in Oct-Nov 2011, when the BOJ bought over $100 bln.
The other exception is the Switzerland, where the SNB has capped the franc against the euro, leading to something on the magnitude of tripling their reserve holdings.
The announcement that Sweden's Riksbank will boost its reserves drew our attention. The Riksbank currently holds about $40 bln worth of currency reserves. It will boost it by about 37% or around $15 bln (SEK100 bln). The reasons behind its decision is interesting and reflective of more modern thinking about currency reserves.
Baltic Dry Plunges By Over 8% Overnight, Most Since 2008
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/12/2012 08:34 -0500
It has been a while since we looked at the Baltic Dry Index, which when normalizing for the excess glut in dry container ship supply (such as right now - 5 years after all the excess supply in the industry - has long been normalized), continues to be one of the best concurrent indicators of global shipping and trade. We look at it today, moments ago it just posted an epic 8.2% plunge, crashing from 900 to 826, or the biggest drop since 2008! Of course, conisdering the collapse in global trade confirmed in past days by both Chinese and US data, this should not come as a surprise, although we are certain it will merely bring out the BDIY apologists who tell us that supply and demand here (like in every other Fed-supported market) are completely uncorrelated.
Obama Likely To Approve Gold Sanctions on Iran As Currency Wars Escalate
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/12/2012 07:57 -0500Turkey’s trade balance may turn on whether President Barack Obama vetoes more stringent sanctions against Iran after the U.S. Senate passed a measure targeting loopholes in gold exports to the Islamic Republic. Turkey’s gold trade with neighbouring Iran has helped shrink its trade deficit over the past year according to Bloomberg. Incredibly, precious metals accounted for about half of the almost $21 billion decline. That’s calmed investor concern over its current-account gap, and helped persuade Fitch Ratings to give Turkey its first investment-grade rating since 1994. The U.S. Senate voted 94-0 on Nov. 30 to approve new sanctions against Iran, closing gaps from previous measures, including trade in precious metals. Obama, who opposes the move on the grounds it may undercut existing efforts to rein in the nation’s nuclear ambitions, signed an executive order in July restricting gold payments to Iranian state institutions. Turkey exported $11.9 billion of gold in the first 10 months of the year, according to the Ankara-based statistics agency’s website. A very large 85% of the shipments went to Iran and the United Arab Emirates. Iran is buying the gold with payments Turkey makes for natural gas it purchases in liras, Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Ali Babacan told a parliamentary committee in Ankara on Nov. 23.
Frontrunning: December 12
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/12/2012 07:48 -0500- AIG
- Apple
- BAC
- Bank of England
- Barack Obama
- Barclays
- Bond
- China
- Citigroup
- Copper
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- CSC
- Deutsche Bank
- European Union
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- Greece
- Jaguar
- Kilroy
- LIBOR
- Market Share
- Mary Schapiro
- Michigan
- Middle East
- North Korea
- NRF
- Recession
- recovery
- Reuters
- Saudi Arabia
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Shenzhen
- Treasury Department
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- White House
- Yuan
- Here come the low margin products: Apple Tests Designs for TV (WSJ)
- Obama and Republicans Trade Offers to Avert Fiscal Crisis (BBG)
- Carney broaches dumping inflation target (FT)
- Bernanke Critics Can’t Fight Bonds Showing No Inflation (BBG)
- Corporate Taxes on Table in Cliff Talks (WSJ)
- US business chiefs back tax rise (FT)
- Greece Confident Bond Buyback Needed for Aid Succeeded (BBG)
- New Faith in Europe's Banks (WSJ)
- European Bank Sees Little Room for Rate Cuts (WSJ)
- North Korea Claims Success in Rocket Launch (WSJ)
RANsquawk EU Market Re-Cap - 12th December 2012
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 12/12/2012 07:21 -0500Overnight Sentiment: All About QE4EVA
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/12/2012 07:13 -0500Today is probably the first day in a while in which minute-by-minute rumors on the Fiscal Cliff will not be on the frontburner (with yet another late day rumor yesterday of an imminent deal turning out to be a dud, when it was reported that Obama's latest grand compromise was to lower his initial tax hike demand from $1.6 to $1.4 trillion, or still $600 billion more than last summer's negotiated number), with Ben Bernanke and QE4 taking center stage instead. By now it is a foregone conclusion that Ben will proceed with extending Twist as first predicted here, into an unsterilized bond buying operation, in effect confirming that there has been zero improvement in the economy, as another $1 trillion is about to be injected until the end of 2013, and more trillions after that. The good thing is that all pretense that the Fed cares about anything but the market is now gone. The bad thing is that the Fed will continue to take over the capital markets until it and the other central banks are the only traders remaining. The only question is whether the market, now well into massively overbought territory, will fizzle and snap back after Bernanke's news announcement, and will QE4EVA (as we believe QE3+1, aka QEternity-er, should be called) have been fully priced in by the time it was announced?
Dollar and Yen Remain Soft
Submitted by Marc To Market on 12/12/2012 06:41 -0500The US dollar and yen remain soft. The news stream has encouraged the so-called risk-on trade. The Greek debt buyback appears to have gone well enough that it will get dollop of aid. Spain reportedly received 40 bln euros of bank aid. There seems to be a potential compromise banking supervision in Europe. On top of that, of course, the market expects the Federal Reserve to announce an expansion of its quantitative easing later today and keep the door open to further steps if necessary.
The dollar made new eight month highs against the yen, just shy of the JPY83 level. These dollar gains ahead of the FOMC meeting underscores one of our interpretative points that the old drivers of dollar-yen, like interest rate differentials and general risk appetite, have broken down, trumped by Mr Abe and his aggressive monetary and fiscal rhetoric.
Silver Rally Due - Seasonally Strong Mid December To End of April
Submitted by GoldCore on 12/12/2012 05:17 -0500Gold and silver are up 9.3% and 19% respectively so far this year – thereby outperforming many asset classes again in 2012.
In time, 2012 may be seen as a year of correction and consolidation for the precious metals after the sharp gains and record nominal highs seen in 2011.
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