Archive - Jan 2012
January 12th
Guest Post: Dear U.S.A.: Your Account Is Overdrawn
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2012 13:54 -0500Dear U.S.A.--your overdraft protection is about to be pulled.
Dear United States of America: We regret to inform you that your withdrawals exceeded your deposits last year by $1,600,000,000,000 ($1.6 trillion), including your "supplemental appropriations" spending.
Your account does have an overdraft protection, and so bonds were sold to cover your $1.6 trillion overdraft. While we value your business, we feel obligated to remind you that this is the third year that your overdraft protection exceeded 10% of your gross national product (GDP), and it seems your account is on course to register yet another $1.6 trillion overdraft in fiscal year 2012.
Currently, your overdraft account exceeds your GDP of $15 trillion.
Wait... Wasn't the Greek Issue Solved Already?
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 01/12/2012 13:49 -0500In plain terms, both the IMF and Germany have stated they will help Greece if and only if Greece agrees to various measures… which they KNOW Greece cannot agree to. And so the Greek issue has become a kind of “hot potato” that no one wants to keep holding. Meanwhile, every day that this issues doesn’t get solved, the EU as a whole moves closer to systemic failure.
Accident at Second Japanese Nuclear Complex
Submitted by George Washington on 01/12/2012 13:47 -0500Cover up? What cover up?
Bill Gross Vomits All Over "Putrid" 30 Year Bond Auction
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2012 13:17 -0500Just like in yesterday's weakish 10 Year auction, the thunder from Tuesday's strong 3 Year has all but gone. In today's issuance of $13 billion in 30 year reopening, the results were anything but strong, with the bond pricing at 2.985%, a a 3 bps tail compared to the 2.955% When Issued. Furthermore, the BTC was a big drop compared to last auction's record 2.98, coming at 2.60, compared to 2.68 in the last 12 auctions. And with Indirects taking down just 31.9%, and Directs sliding to a one year low of 7.2%, it means that it was the Fed, via the Primary Dealer repo mechanism that once again took down a whopping 60.9% of the entire auction. Needless to say, the bond market response was not pleasant, but was to be expected as the Fed continues to artificially massage the curve in any and every way possible. Most hilarious, however, was the tweet sent out by Bill Gross in the minutes after the auction which we present below: it speaks for itself.
Market Implies Greek Devaluation To 1530 Drachma Versus Euro
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2012 13:09 -0500
On the day when Greek 1Y yields broke above 400% for the first time, a consideration of just what Greece would look like post-exit is perhaps fruitful. Looking at hypothetical forward rates (generated from covered interest rate parity between EURUSD FX and EMU sovereign interest rates), MSCI has an interesting analysis of what a decoupled Drachma (and for that matter Lira, Escudo, and Irish Pound) would look like. Given the Greeks entered the EMU in January 2001 at 340.75 Drachma to the Euro, the current market is pricing in a massive devaluation to around 1530 Drachma to the Euro. Perhaps as further evidence of the market's perspective that a devaluation is likely, from extremely high correlations just over a year ago, the implied new Greek Drachma vs Euro has dropped to almost negligible correlation against an implicit Deutschmark vs Euro. As the PSI discussions go from bad to worse (as we expected and discussed yesterday), it seems the market is increasingly expecting at best a coercive agreement (if not outright exit).
Egan-Jones Downgrades Sears To Lowest Rating Above Default
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2012 12:42 -0500Following today's increasingly more adverse news for Sears, which saw primary vendor funder CIT cut ties with the Eddie Lampert mega investment, it was only a matter of time before the market realized that the jig for the once bankrupt retailer may be up, and a Chapter 22 is the only possible option. Sure enough, the first to respond to this is the rating agency that not only is capable of forward looking activity, unlike all the other NRSROs, and also managed to get Jefferies to admit it had a far greater European exposure than the market was comfortable with (resulting in a major cut in gross and net, and a far greater transparency into its balance sheet). As of minutes ago, Egan Jones just downgraded Sears Holdings to the lowest rating just above default: C, from CC.
Plunge In NYSE Short Interest Explains Recent Market Rally
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2012 12:03 -0500
UPDATE: As an observation, QQQ Short-Interest is at 11 year lows (January 2001), down 43% into year-end
Curious what has provoked a vicious year end (and 2012 year beginning) Santa Rally, which until today had seen the S&P trade higher on 12 out of 15 consecutive days? Wonder no more: the reason is the same it has always been - year end short covering, which in turn has spilt over into the new year's momentum chasing HFT brigade and the occasional retail momo who still has some cash left after covering commission costs. According to the latest NYSE biweekly update, the short interest as of the end of 2011 was a modest 12.8 billion shares, a sharp drop from the 13.4 billion and 14.2 billion 2 and 4 weeks prior, and certainly a very far cry from the over 16 billion shares short which market the market bottom in late September. Also, for anyone wondering why so far 2012 is an identical replica of 2011, decoupling and all, look no further than the SI data as of early 2011 - SSDD. Short covered, and only as the year unwound did they dare to challenge the central banks and to increase their shorting activity.
RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 12/01/12
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 01/12/2012 12:01 -0500The Biggest Threat To The 2012 Economy Is??? Not What Wall Street Is Telling You...
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 01/12/2012 11:13 -0500- Bank Run
- Bear Stearns
- Bond
- Central Banks
- China
- Commercial Real Estate
- Crude
- European Central Bank
- Fail
- fixed
- Fox News
- France
- Germany
- Global Economy
- Greece
- Group Think
- Iran
- Italy
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- MF Global
- national security
- Newspaper
- OPEC
- PIMCO
- Real estate
- Reality
- Recession
- recovery
- Reggie Middleton
- Repo Market
- SocGen
- Sovereign Debt
- Volatility
- WaMu
Imagine pensions not paying retiree funds, insurers not paying claims, and banks collapsing everywhere. Sounds like fun? I will be discussing this live on RT's Capital Account with the lusciously locquacious Lauryn Lyster at 4:30pm.
Want To Trade FX On Inside Information? Here Is How To Do It, Straight From Kashya Hildebrand
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2012 10:51 -0500
Wondering how wives of (ex) central bankers would engage in insider trading if that was their intent (forgetting for a second that if one is the wife of a central banker one probably should not be engaging in any FX transaction to begin with)? Now we know, courtesy of this first interview with the wife of the former SNB head following his departure in which she tell us how a former Moore Capital currency trader would engage in FX insider trading "if one wanted to..."
UK Debt Infographic: All You Need To Know
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2012 10:05 -0500
Confused by the untenable UK debt (and as the country is the latest to re-jump on the QE bandwagon, it is only going higher)? The following inforgraphic from Borrow money online should explain it all.
Art Cashin Explains Why The One Key Indicator That Matters For Italy Is Flashing Red
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2012 09:41 -0500While economic data may be manipulated daily, and markets can be pumped in any of many different ways (such as the ongoing preparation by the ECB to accept any collateral for the upcoming LTRO which will bring the ECB's deposit facility usage to $1 trillion), there is one true indicator of economic prospects: immigration. Long a target for immigrants from all over the world, something has changed very drastically for Italy in recent days. Art Cashin explains why the one indicator that matters - Italy's desirability for immigrants from countries such as Afghanistan and Bangladesh, means everything has changed now.
News That Matters
Submitted by thetrader on 01/12/2012 09:35 -0500- Albert Edwards
- Australian Dollar
- B+
- Bank of England
- Baseline Scenario
- Beige Book
- Bill Gross
- Bloomberg News
- Bond
- Brazil
- Central Banks
- China
- Citigroup
- Consumer Credit
- Consumer Prices
- CPI
- CRB
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- default
- European Central Bank
- European Union
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Fitch
- Gilts
- Global Economy
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Greece
- Hong Kong
- India
- International Monetary Fund
- Iran
- Italy
- Japan
- John Williams
- KIM
- Lazard
- Mervyn King
- Monetary Policy
- New York Fed
- Nicolas Sarkozy
- PIMCO
- ratings
- RBS
- Reserve Currency
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Swiss National Bank
- Ukraine
- Unemployment
- United Kingdom
- Wall Street Journal
- William Dudley
- Yen
All you need to read.
Houston, We Have Recoupling - Initial Claims Back Over 400,000 (Post Next Week's Revision), Retail Sales Ex Autos Worst Since Early 2010
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2012 09:04 -0500Remember that whole "US is decoupling" theme so pathologically spread around by two-bit propaganda media outfits staffed by journalism B.A. majors? Time to put it in the trash where it belongs. As long expected, the temp hire surge, so effectively used by retailers to dump inventory below cost (just ask Sears), is over, and in the first week of 2012, Seasonally Adjusted claims soared to 399,000, the highest since November and a number which next week will be revised over 400,000, a decimation of expectations of 375,000 (naturally last week's number was revised upward from 372K to 375K - a long-lasting BLS tradition of fudging data that everyone knows about now). The Non-Seasonally adjusted number was +102,314 claims in the first week of the year. And the real question is how many of these real departures were of the banker type, where the impact on lost withholding taxes going forward, and thus government revenues, will be quite dire. Continuing claims also missed expectations, rising to 3628K from a revised 3609K (expectation was for an unchanged print, pre revision, of 3595K). And the worst news is that the 99-week cliff continues to grab more and more, with 48k people dropping off all rolls, and thus from the labor force completely, meaning the labor force participation rate in January will likely drop to another fresh 30 year low. But the horrendous jobs update was only one part. The other one focuses on actual consumer spending, as confirmed by the major miss in retail sales which were up 0.1% on expectations of 0.3%, but the entire gain was due to car purchases primarily driven by cheap govt-funded subprime credit for GM vehicles. Sales ex-autos actually declined by 0.2%, on an expectation of 0.3% rise: this was the first decline and worst print since early 2010. So much for the consumer-led recovery. And so much for the unemployment pick up. And so much for the decoupling. The chart below shows what will happen as the world finally reconverges, as was posted yesterday.
Draghi Sees Substantial Downside Risks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2012 08:47 -0500UPDATE: EURUSD at highs of day now 1.2790, sovereigns and corps/fins tightening back modestly
The ECB press conference has begun and immediately the headlines are flying and driving EUR weaker (ironically not helped by the dismal US macro data that just printed). European sovereign spreads are leaking wider, stocks are underperforming, treasuries outperforming bunds, and corporate and financial spreads are widening rapidly on his comments, via Bloomberg:
- *DRAGHI SAYS ECONOMIC OUTLOOK FACING SUBSTANTIAL DOWNSIDE RISKS
- *DRAGHI SAYS FISCAL COMPACT MUST HAVE UNAMBIGUOUS WORDING
- *DRAGHI SAYS FISCAL CONSOLIDATIONS ARE UNAVOIDABLE
- *DRAGHI SAYS ECB WILL ACT AS AGENT FOR EFSF
- *DRAGHI SAYS HARD DATA DON'T YET SHOW STABILIZATION
- *DRAGHI SAYS HILDEBRAND WAS `VERY, VERY GOOD' GOVERNOR
- *DRAGHI SAYS ECB DIDN'T DISCUSS CUTTING DEPOSIT, MARGINAL RATES
- *DRAGHI SAYS ONGOING TENSIONS KEEP DAMPING ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
- *DRAGHI SAYS ECB `VERY CONCERNED' ON HUNGARY
- *DRAGHI SAYS ANY WAY TO INCREASE THE 'FIREWALL' FIREPOWER WELCOME
- *DRAGHI: NATIONS SHOULD HAVE HAD CAPITAL READY ON STRESS TESTS
- *DRAGHI SAYS NEW COLLATERAL RULES EXPANDED POTENTIAL RISK
- *DRAGHI SAYS PSI WAS RESPONSE TO `SELFISH' BEHAVIOR
- *DRAGHI SAYS ECB EXPECTS SUBSTANTIAL DEMAND FOR SECOND LTRO
- *DRAGHI SAYS GREEK CASE IS `UNIQUE'









