Archive - Dec 8, 2012
It’s Official: The Consumer (And The Economy) Is Alive and Dead
Submitted by testosteronepit on 12/08/2012 20:57 -0500
Guest Post: The Icelandic Success Story
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/08/2012 20:08 -0500
Iceland went after the people who caused the crisis — the bankers who created and sold the junk products — and tried to shield the general population. But what Iceland did is not just emotionally satisfying. Iceland is recovering, while the rest of the Western world — which bailed out the bankers and left the general population to pay for the bankers’ excess — is not. Iceland’s approach is very much akin to what I have been advocating — write down the unsustainable debt, liquidate the junk corporations and banks that failed, disincentivise the behaviour that caused the crisis, and provide help to the ordinary individuals in the real economy (as opposed to phoney “stimulus” cash to campaign donors and big finance). And Iceland has snapped out of its depression. The rest of the West, where banks continue to behave exactly as they did prior to the crisis, not so much.
Chart Of The Day: The Real Household Net Worth As A % Of Debt Chart
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/08/2012 19:24 -0500
In the hours following the release of the latest Flow of Funds statement on Thursday, some of the glorified powerpoint-cum-statist tabloid media outlets released a very disingenuous and flat out wrong comparison of household net worth to total US debt (even though technically total US GDP was showed, although the two are now interchangeable with total US Debt having surpassed total US GDP). Supposedly this was intended to demonstrate the "net worth of America is massively positive" and that America is "not even close to being broke." Of course, by doing so they merely confirmed once more their complete cluelessness when it comes to the debt market, as US household net worth (source) is the direct beneficiary not just of sovereign debt, but certainly all on-balance sheet debt verticals in existence which include, again from the Flow of Funds report tab L.1, household, non-financial corporate, non-financial non-corporate, financial and rest of world debt. The grand total is also conveniently tracked by the Fed in the Total Credit Market Debt Owed category (source) which in the last quarter was $55.3 trillion: just "modestly" above the $16.3 trillion strawman of merely US Federal debt. Comparing this to the $65 trillion in household net worth certainly gives a far less rosy picture of just how "massively positive" net worth of America is.
Egypt's Morsi Rescinds "Dictatorial" Decree
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/08/2012 17:30 -0500Update: As expected, there is a "but"
While this still has to be confirmed by official Egyptian sources, both Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya are reporting that in what may be a first time in history, a "temporary" dictator - Egypt's Mohamed Morsi - has decided to end his temporary status and become one of the ordinary people again, having rescinded the much maligned decree giving him sweeping powers that brought the country to the edge of civil war and martial law less than two years after the Arab Spring removed Hosni Mubarak from decades of Egyptian rule.
Anything to see here?
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 12/08/2012 17:14 -0500Obamacare - There was a significant “drafting” mistake in the original legislation.
Italy's Technocratic Government Coming To An End: Goldman's Mark-To-Mario Gambit
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/08/2012 17:12 -0500In what is the day's most overhyped piece of non-news, we go to Italy to learn what many already knew on Thursday, namely that with the loss of support of Berlusconi's PDL party, Mario Monti's technocratic government, which correctly "feels" it lost its parliamentary support, is coming to an end and after a two hour meeting between the former Goldman advisor and Italian president Napolitano, Monti announced he "intends to resign after checking to see if parliament can pass next year's budget law, President Giorgio Napolitano's office said on Saturday... If the budget law can be passed "quickly", Monti said he would immediately confirm his resignation. Monti's announcement came after a two-hour meeting with Napolitano, who has the power to dissolve parliament." The reason this is non-news is that Monti government's tenure is ending in a few months anyway, and general elections are coming in Q1 regardless. In other words, it may take weeks or months for the budget law to pass, or not, at which point it will be time for new elections anyway.
Who Is In And Who Is Out In Obama's Second Term Cabinet
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/08/2012 15:41 -0500- Afghanistan
- Barack Obama
- China
- Congressional Budget Office
- Debt Ceiling
- Department of Justice
- Department of the Treasury
- Detroit
- Elizabeth Warren
- Federal Reserve
- Gary Locke
- Illinois
- Insider Trading
- Joe Biden
- national security
- New York City
- Obama Administration
- Paul Weiss
- Reuters
- SPY
- Timothy Geithner
- Tom Daschle
- Treasury Department
- White House
- World Trade
Tim Geithner's time is almost done, but the former NY Fed head is only one of very many whose position is expected to be replaced in Obama's second term (just so there is a non-continuous chain of command if and when the time comes for the people to demand an explanation for the state of the US economy from the talented Mr. Geithner). Who else is out and who is expected to be in? The following list attempts to cover all upcoming rotations at the top of the US cabinet. What is not attempted is a prediction of where in the private sector people such as Geithner will end up: that is considered largely self-explanatory.
MeRRY BuNGa CHRiSTMaS!
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 12/08/2012 14:23 -0500The return of Divine Bungasconi...
Egypt's "Temporary " Dictator To Deploy Army Against Protesters
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/08/2012 12:57 -0500
Update: The devolution is complete as Egypt declares martial law.
It was only a matter of time before Egypt's US-endorsed temporary dictator resolved to what will be spun as temporary military intervention against what is increasingly looking like a permanent counterrevolution by deploying the army to crush local protesters who have besieged the Egyptian presidential palace for almost a week, and have put the country's new "democratic" regime increasingly under threat of collapse. RT reports that "Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi will authorize the deployment of the country's armed forces to quash protests in Cairo, al-Ahram reported. The military said prolonging the crisis would be "disastrous,” and that they would not tolerate violence. At least six people died and hundreds were reported injured over the last few days in the unrest that has gripped the Egyptian capital since late November. Al-Ahram reported that the armed forces will be given powers of arrest, previously an exclusive right of the police."
Guest Post: Complacency Everywhere You Look
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/08/2012 11:27 -0500
When trying to get a handle on investor sentiment, the benchmark of choice for many market-watchers is the CBOE S&P 500 Volatility Index, or VIX. However, this popular “fear gauge” only offers a snapshot of implied volatility, or relative pricing levels, for equity index options, which might not necessarily tell us all we need to know about the mood on The Street.
What Fed Exit?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/08/2012 11:03 -0500Bloomberg's Joshua Zumbrun has released a much overdue, MSM apocryphal, somewhat realistic outlook on the endspiel of Bernanke's central planning: i.e., the unwind of the Fed's balance sheet that from just under $3 trillion will reach $5 trillion by the end of 2014. We say "somewhat" because the conclusion in the article is that there is some hope still for an orderly wind down of the Fed's assets without a complete market collapse. The reality is that there is no such hope.
SAC Probed By The FBI
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/08/2012 10:16 -0500It is no secret that for many years the SEC has been looking into ways of taking down the most infamous of all "information arbitrage" abusing hedge funds: Steve Cohen's SAC Capital, a quest that has finally accelerated to its inevitable terminal point weeks ago. Of course, had the SEC been reading Zero Hedge, the time to get to that critical civilian conviction would have been far shorter. But where the SEC was demonstrating ongoing incompetence, its peer organization - one with all-important criminal enforcement powers - the FBI, was actually several steps ahead, and as Bloomberg reports, is now probing specific trades by SAC, a process which very likely will culminate with criminal charges against one or more people not at CR Intrinsic, but SAC itself. Of course, by several steps ahead, we do mean two years behind Zero Hedge.
Shuffle Rewind 03-07 Dec " Only When I Sleep " (The Corrs, 1997)
Submitted by AVFMS on 12/08/2012 08:22 -0500Shuffle Rewind 03-07 Dec " Only When I Sleep " (The Corrs, 1997)
This week in review (compared to Fri 30 Nov COB):
Click on day for related post, on title for song.
Currency Positioning and Technical Outlook: Stirred by not Shaken
Submitted by Marc To Market on 12/08/2012 08:07 -0500
We have been tracking the deterioration of the US dollar's technical tone over the past three weeks. That ended abruptly. Weak euro area data, a more dovish than expected ECB, and heightened political uncertainty in Italy, saw the euro reverse lower after briefly moving above an eighteen month-old downtrend.
The UK also cut its growth outlook, and poor data increases the likelihood that the BOE may have to resume its gilt purchases in the new year, though consumer inflation expectations have ticked up recently.
At the same time, there appears to be little progress on the US fiscal talks. Whenever a top official signals this, the dollar seems to tick up on risk-off considerations, though with diminishing impact. The stronger than expected November employment data is not sufficient to stay the Fed's hand and the FOMC will most likely expand the long-term assets purchased under QE3+ at its meeting that concludes on December 12.








