Archive - Jan 2012
January 19th
On Mitt Romney's Millions In Cayman Island Offshore Tax Havens
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2012 10:09 -0500
While the news that Mitt Romney has joined Warren Buffet in the "my secretary makes more than me" 15% tax club has come and gone, even as America appears largely confused or dismissive that Romney, at least on paper appears to be precisely the puppet that Wall Street wants put in charge, we are not so sure how it will react to discovering that in addition to all of the above, Romney also holds a substantial of his assets deep offshore, in the much maligned recently Cayman Islands. As a reminder, it has long been Obama's "tax-policy" to force repatriation of virtually all individual tax holdings held abroad, both legally and illegally, much to the detrimental collapse in the UBS business model. Yet apparently when it comes to potential future presidents, loopholes are quite welcome. Especially when as ABC reports, "the offshore accounts have provided him -- and Bain -- with other potential financial benefits, such as higher management fees and greater foreign interest, all at the expense of the U.S. Treasury." As a reminder: "Rebecca J. Wilkins, a tax policy expert with Citizens for Tax Justice, said the federal government loses an estimated $100 billion a year because of tax havens." But who needs taxes when America can just print all the money it will need to fund its deficit in perpetuity. Just ask the Neo-Keynesians. Perhaps all these are questions that the candidate that so hard is trying to channel Ronald Reagan and so far failing, can finally address once and for all, before he moves into one of his patented Obama bashing subject changing routing.
Sliding Greek Bond Reality Challenges "Debt Deal" Hopium
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2012 09:35 -0500
We have been rather vociferous in our table-pounding that even if a Greek PSI deal is achieved (in reality as opposed to what is claimed by headlines only to fall apart a month later), then Greece remains mired in an unsustainable situation that will likely mean further restructuring in the future. JPMorgan's Michael Cembalest agrees and notes that Debt/GDP will remain well above 100% post-deal but is more concerned at the implications (just as we noted earlier in the week) of the process itself including ECB preferred credit status, retroactive CACs (law changes), and CDS trigger aversions. In his words, the debt exchange is a bit of a farce and we reiterate our note from a few days ago - if this deal is so close, why is the 1Y GGB (AUG 2012) price trading -8.75% at EUR 28.75 (or 466% yield) and while longer-dated prices are rallying (maybe bear flattener unwinds), the moves are de minimus (-17bps today on a yield of 3353bps?) as selling pressure is clearly in the short-end not being rolled into the long-end as some surmise.
Rick Perry Out
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2012 09:19 -0500And then there were four.
- RICK PERRY MAY DROP OUT OF PRESIDENTIAL RACE TODAY, CNN SAYS
It appears even Bank of America (which had a hilarious and brilliant $600 million Goodwill impairment today - on what? The fantastically prfoitable Countrywide acquisition) could not "help him out."
Of course, everyone is now expecting tonight's impromptu ABC "Career ending" interview with Mrs. ex-Gingrich, which may make it a trio. That may happen even despite Perry's imminent enrosement.
Economic Data Flood Summary: Claims, Housing Noisy, CPI May Return "Disinflation" Talk At FOMC Meeting
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2012 08:47 -0500First, Initial Claims - the new yoyo.Initial claims drop from revised 402K (as expected) in last week, to 352K this week, 50K swing in one week, on expectations of 384K. All in the seasonal adjustment, which tries to compensate for the 124K drop in Non Seasonally Adjusted claims. Fired bankers and everyone else no longer registers to the B(L)S. This number was below the lowest Wall Street estimate of 363K. Continuing claims: 3.432MM, below expectations of 3.590MM, previous revised naturally higher from 3.628MM to 3.647MM. The reason? People on EUC and Extended benefits in last week: +105,000. More and more people move away from 6 month support to extended 99 week cliff. Housing Starts and Permits: Largely irrelevant, as crawling at a bottom, but starts at 657K, below expectations of 680K, and down from 685K previously; Permits in line with expectations at 679K, down from 680K before. Fed “clearly concerned with the return of disinflation;” watch for “talk of further central bank action to support the economy” at next week’s FOMC meeting, says Brusuelas
Gold Rises for Fourth Day - IMF $500 Billion Hopes Create Concerns
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2012 08:22 -0500The duty hike in India has decreased gold prices by 1% in Mumbai as the rupee gained 0.5% against the dollar. Some jewellers think the recent duty may slow down demand and may result in a decrease in imports from the official channels of about thirty banks. The increased tax may also lead to a tertiary market where people trade amongst themselves and not through dealers. Traders still do not see the hike dampening the demand for the yellow metal. India is the world’s largest importer of gold and its households have the largest holdings of the metal, according to data from the World Gold Council, although Chinese households appear to be catching up in their purchases of gold.
Today's Economic Events: CPI, Jobless Claims, Housing Starts, Philly Fed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2012 08:20 -0500CPI, housing starts, jobless claims - last week will almost certainly to be revised to over 400k for the first time in months, and the Philadelphia Fed index.
Frontrunning: January 19
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2012 07:49 -0500- Bond
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Corruption
- Eurozone
- Fail
- General Motors
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Greece
- HFT
- India
- Insider Trading
- International Monetary Fund
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- Mexico
- MF Global
- Nicolas Sarkozy
- Obama Administration
- RBS
- Real estate
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Shaun Donovan
- Unemployment
- The Fed's HFT price manipulation code stolen? U.S. Charges Programmer With Stealing Code (Reuters)
- One million homeowners may get mortgage writedowns: U.S. (Reuters)
- In MF Global, JPMorgan again at center of a financial failure (Reuters)
- China's Money Rates Slump After PBOC Injects Money (Reuters)
- Athens closes in on bondholder pact (FT) - or not
- Hedge Funds May Sue Greece If Loss Forced (NYT)
- China Said to Weigh Easing Constraints on Banks as Growth Slows (Bloomberg) - But wasn't a rate cut already priced in on Monday?
- Obama Under Attack Over Keystone Rejection (FT)
- Chinese Economy Heads for Soft Landing in 2012 (China Daily) - don't really expect "China Daily" to tell you otherwise
- Brazil Cuts Interest Rates Further to 10.5% (FT)
- India to Launch $35bn of Public Investments (FT)
Bank Of America Beats EPS Estimates, Misses Net Of One Time Items, Reports Could Be Underaccrued By Up To $5 Billion
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2012 07:36 -0500The just reported Bank of America top and bottom line numbers were better than expected, coming in at $24.89 billion compared to estimates of $24.5 billion, and EPS of $0.18 vs $0.15. The actual Net Income number number was $2.0 billion and $2.7 billion pre tax. So far so good. But a quick skim through the presentation (attached below), indicates that the $0.18 number may be grossly inflated. Because when one excludes the various selected one time items highlighted in the quarter, which are as follows: Gain on sale of CCB shares-$2.9; Gains on exchanges of trust preferred securities - $1.2; Gains on sales of debt securities - $1.2; Representations and warranties provision - ($0.3); DVA on trading liabilities- ($0.5); Goodwill impairment - ($0.6); Fair value adjustment on structured liabilities - ($0.8); Mortgage-related litigation expense ($1.5), all of which it appears are part of the pretax number, the final EPS comes in at a much less impressive $1.3 billion pre tax, which at the company's indicated tax rate, would have been $1.0 billion after tax, or $0.10 EPS, a notable miss. Which likely means that the Revenue "beat" on an apples to apples basis would also have to be pro forma'ing a bunch of items, and likely would be a miss. But for that we will need to go through the several hundred page 10-Q, something which management is hoping the machines which will send its stock much higher in the pre-market session, will never do. Another notable item is that for the first time in a long time, the company's average deposit balances declined by 1.2% in Q4 from Q3, from $422.3 billion to $417.1 billion (as the rate on deposits fell from 0.25% to 0.23%). Not a good trend, but certainly to be expected following the snafu with the company's electronic banking website last quarter. Also troubling is that in Q4, the company's Home Equity Non-Performing Assets increase for the first time in years, from $2.4 billion to $2.5 billion: it seems the improvement in housing has plateaued. Finally, and most troubling, is that BAC reported that "Estimated range of possible loss related to non-GSE representations and warranties exposure could be up to $5B over existing accruals at December 31, 2011." The reason: a surge in New Claims in Q4 "primarily related to repurchase requests received from trustees on private-label securitization transactions not included in the BNY Mellon settlement." Which means another $5 billion out of Net Income due to underreserving. Because how much did BAC provision for Reps and Warranties in Q4? Why a 'whopping' $263 million. And how much is the potential full notional value of underreserved contingent liabilities? Why $755 billion only.
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 19/01/12
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 01/19/2012 06:06 -0500And Scene...Kodak Files For Chapter 11 Bankruptcy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2012 00:21 -0500Headlines for now but the inevitable has become well 'evitable' as EK goes BK...headlines via Bloomberg:
- *KODAK FILES FOR BANKRUPTCY IN NEW YORK
- *EASTMAN KODAK SECURES $950M IN DEBTOR-IN-POSSESSION FINANCING
- *KODAK TO MONETIZE NON-STRATEGIC INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY :EK US
- *EASTMAN KODAK SAYS NON-U.S. UNITS NOT INCLUDED IN U.S. FILING
- *KODAK SAYS CHAPTER 11 A `NECESSARY STEP', `RIGHT THING TO DO'
- *KODAK EXPECTS TO PAY EMPLOYEE WAGES-BENEFITS :EK US
We guess the 128% stock rally from 1/6 to 1/11 can be ignored now (and the Einhorn rumors)
January 18th
Penetrating Insights On Why The Market Feels Like A Colonoscopy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/18/2012 23:29 -0500
Amid the best start of the year for the S&P 500 since 1987, Nic Colas of ConvergEx offers some deep thoughts on how behavioral finance concepts can help us understand the dichotomy between last year's derisking and this year's rerisking in terms of market participant psychology. Between delving into whether a short-sharp or long-slow colonoscopy is 'preferable' Nic reflects (antithetically) on 10 bullish perspectives for the current rally and how the human mind (which still makes up maybe 50% of cross-asset class trading if less in stocks) processes discomfort in very different ways. Critically, while it sounds counter-intuitive to him (and us), focusing on the pain of recent volatility is actually more conducive to investors' ability to get back on the horse especially when the acute pain is ended so abruptly (intervention). As studeis have found, "subjects who actually focus on a painful experience while it is happening are more willing to immediately undergo further pain than those who performed some distracting task"
Update on Sopa and Pipa
Submitted by George Washington on 01/18/2012 22:56 -0500What's Happening with the web Censorship Bills?
Manufacturing Supercars in America
Submitted by testosteronepit on 01/18/2012 21:33 -0500To what banana-republic levels will real wages still have to sink?
Goldman Confirms Smart Money Is Now Offloading To Retail; Sees 1.2880 As A EURUSD Short Covering Threshold
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/18/2012 20:26 -0500Earlier today we got our first clue that the smart money has stopped "distribution" and is now offloading to retail after we saw the first equity fund inflow, however tiny, in months, and only the second one out of 37 outflows since April, as reported by ICI. The second and far more important one comes from today's Goldman sales roundup, which confirmed that following today's latest borderline ridiculous meltup, retail investors looking for the sucker at the poker table, wouldn't be able to find one. Here's why. Quote Goldman: "As has been the recent trend, our cash flow remains better to sell, both from long-only and hedge funds." And there you have it: smart money (well, relatively so) has "recently" been using every melt up chance it gets to dump the bags with the E*Trade baby. Third and final proof: "ETF flow however skewed toward better buying." At this point retail investors may want to ask themselves: what do they know that the others, who are actively selling to them, don't.







