Archive - Mar 2012
March 6th
Frontrunning: March 6
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/06/2012 07:59 -0500- Cotton prices jump as India bans exports (FT)
- Goldman’s Asia Unit Lost Money First Time Since 2008 on Soured Stock Bets (Bloomberg)
- Meet Mark Spitznagel, Ron Paul's L.A. hedge-fund guy (SPCR)
- U.S., Israel Pull Closer on Iran (WSJ)
- IBM’s Watson Gets Wall Street Job After ‘Jeopardy’ Win (Bloomberg)
- US Senate OKs Bill Aimed at China Subsidies (Reuters)
- Czech Banks May Need More Funds in Crisis (Bloomberg)
- Banker Bonus Limits Sought by EU Lawmakers (Bloomberg)
- Volcker Rule Needs Extensive Revisions Amid Feedback, SEC’s Gallagher Says (Bloomberg)
Spain-Europe’s pink elephant in the room about to implode
Submitted by thetrader on 03/06/2012 07:59 -0500Spain is next...
Faber: "Middle East Will Go Up In Flames" ... "Have To Be In Precious Metals And Equities"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/06/2012 07:37 -0500Swiss money manager and long term bear Marc Faber, aka "Dr Doom", says political risk in the Middle East has increased significantly with war between Iran and Israel “almost inevitable”, and precious metals and equities investments offer some safety. "Political risk was high six months ago and is higher now. I think sooner or later, the U.S. or Israel will strike Iran - it's almost inevitable," Faber, who publishes the widely read Gloom Boom and Doom Report, told Reuters on the sidelines of an investment conference. Brent crude traded near $123 per barrel in volatile trade on Tuesday on fears of a disruption in Iranian supplies. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu showed no signs of backing away from possible military action against Iran following a Monday meeting with U.S. President Barack Obama. "Say war breaks out in the Middle East or anywhere else, (U.S. Federal Reserve chairman) Mr Bernanke will just print even more money -- they have no option...they haven't got the money to finance a war," said Faber. "You have to be in precious metals and equities ... most wars and most social unrest haven't destroyed corporations - they usually survive," he said. He said that Middle East markets had largely bottomed out, though regime changes from the Arab Spring revolutions were unlikely to be investor-friendly.
Risk Off
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/06/2012 07:30 -0500Asian equities too a hit, posting their biggest two-day loss this year. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index dropped 1.2%. The losses were situated in the Hang Seng, which fell 2.2% and China’s Shanghai Composite, which declined 1.4%. Meanwhile, Europe is off 1.6% in the aggregate after the second take on Q4 GDP confirmed the 0.3% drop from the initial estimate. And, after yesterday’s sell-off, equity futures are pointing to a weaker open at home across the major indices driven in part by concerns that the Greek PSI will not get the required 75% participation as reported here yesterday. In the US, government bonds are in rally mode with the 10-year Treasury note yield down 4bps, to 1.97%; the long bond is rallying 5bps, to 3.10%. Across the pond, government bonds are performing as one would expect. Benchmark German bunds are rallying 4bps, to 1.78% while France, Italy, and Spain are selling off anywhere from 5 to 9bps. In the FX market, the US dollar is enjoying a flight to safety bid against major currencies. The DXY index is up 0.5%. Not surprisingly, with risk being taken off the table, commodities are taking a hit. WTI crude oil is down 60 cents, to $106.10 per barrel. Industrial metals are taking a hit too; copper is off 1.6% to its lowest level since mid February. In Europe, the LTRO continues to not work at all as the ECB deposit facility rose to a new all time record of €827 billion as cash parked with the ECB is not being used for any other purpose, and the net money from LTRO 1 and 2 is now less than the cash added to the ECB from Europe's banks.
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX – 06/03/12
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 03/06/2012 06:40 -0500News That Matters
Submitted by thetrader on 03/06/2012 06:17 -0500- Australia
- Bank of England
- Barack Obama
- Belgium
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- BOE
- Bond
- China
- Copper
- Corruption
- Creditors
- Crude
- Czech
- Dallas Fed
- Dow Jones Industrial Average
- European Central Bank
- European Union
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Fisher
- Glencore
- Global Economy
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Greece
- India
- Iran
- Iraq
- Israel
- Italy
- John McCain
- LBO
- M2
- Markit
- Mervyn King
- Monetary Policy
- Netherlands
- Nikkei
- OPEC
- Portugal
- Quantitative Easing
- Recession
- recovery
- Renaissance
- Reuters
- Richard Fisher
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Standard Chartered
- Transaction Tax
- Unemployment
- White House
All you need to read.
News from the Netherlands
Submitted by undertheradar on 03/06/2012 00:31 -0500Today's news focuses on UI benefits and the PVV's euro exit report
March 5th
Volatility, Fear, Stocks and Gold
Submitted by ilene on 03/05/2012 23:06 -0500When the VIX is low it’s time to GO.
Mystery Trader Revealed...And His Name Is 'Hope'
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/05/2012 21:40 -0500
The UK's Daily Mirror newspaper has uncovered the FX trader who dropped over $300k in a Scouse club. It is a 23-year old 'self-taught' barrow-boy named (somewhat ironically in our view) Alex Hope. Self-described as "talented (three years in and a six-figure salary, hhmm), charismatic (its amazing how much 'charisma' a GBP125k bottle of bubbly will buy), and thoroughly likeable (ditto) man. Alex Hope exudes knowledge..." and is willing to share it with you according to his website. How did he become this B.S.D. of the FX markets? "I took two months off my job at Wembley, got really obsessed with reading charts and got the guts to start trading properly." This self-made rosy-cheeked young chap with a penchant for mind-numbingly-arrogant-looking photos on his website may have just become the poster boy for all that is 'great' about the free market - or perhaps a skim through his blog and media exposure will reassure us all that anything is possible as we note he does have some good taste (not just in Champagne) in RTing our posts on Twitter. We can only HOPE that the next time he decides to go down the rub-a-dub-dub for a Leo Sayer, maybe he'll take some of us Septic Tanks with him on the frog-and-toad...as the days of the ship-it-in-large-on-the-left John, done-a-yard by-breakfast spot FX trader are clearly back with us.
Can't Even Urinate In His Own Yard Anymore
Submitted by testosteronepit on 03/05/2012 19:56 -0500Privacy, a quaint concept of the past.
Welcome To Sub-Nanosecond Markets
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/05/2012 19:56 -0500Just as market regulators were finally getting wise to the fact that they have no clue how how modern market works, what modern market topology is, or how High Frequency Trading impacts the stock market (think Flash Crash), here comes Certichron, the supplier of a time service center at a Savvis market center in Weehakwen, which says it has now mastered sub-nanosecond readouts which are now "compliant with the FINRA Order Audit Trail System and is likely to be compliant with any Consolidated Audit Trail that might be specified by the Securities and Exchange Commission." In other words, here come sub-nanosecond markets.
Color Gets Dumber
Submitted by Tim Knight from Slope of Hope on 03/05/2012 19:25 -0500
This is my third post I've done about Color.com, the "company" into which mentally-challenged venture capitalists poured $41 million. Good luck on seeing any of that back, fellas.
In my first post, written eleven months ago, I introduced you to the firm and its, errr, product. In a follow-up post, I wrote about how the company - - which I guess found that no one wanted to use their crappy creation, $41 million in the bank notwithstanding - - repositioned themselves with a product that struck me as even less useful.
Morgan Stanley's Latest 'Commodity Thermometer'
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/05/2012 18:50 -0500
Two weeks ago we presented the latest and greatest "commodity thermometer" courtesy of Morgan Stanley's commodities team. Below is the latest just released iteration. Not much of a change, with gold still the most loved, and inc the most hated (this could well be one of those "endorsed by John Paulson" moments), and the only notable change being that silver has pushed above Live Cattle and entered the Top 5.
On Contagion: How The Rest Of The World Will Suffer
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/05/2012 17:20 -0500
Insolvency will keep dragging the Euro-Area economy down until sovereign and bank balance sheets are repaired, but as Lombard Street Research points out: eliminating the Ponzi debt without fracturing the entire credit system is impossible. The Lehman default occurred 13 months after the US TED spread crossed 100 basis points. The European equivalent crossed 100 basis points in September 2011, so its banking crisis would occur this autumn if a year or so is a normal incubation period. A Greek or any other significant default will precipitate a European banking crisis in the foreseeable future. Markets are already speculating on Portuguese negotiations for haircuts and Ireland can’t be far behind and the contagion to US (and global) banking systems is inevitable given counterparty risks, debt loads (and refi needs), and capital requirements (no matter how well hidden by MtM math). The contagion will likely show up as a risk premium in the credit markets initially as we suggest the recent underperformance of both US and European bank credit relative to stocks is a canary to keep an eye on.
Apple Encounters Gravity As 3rd Biggest Drop In 3 Months Drags Market Down
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/05/2012 16:35 -0500
While not quite as impressive as the 02/15 sell-off in terms of volume or size, today's weakness in Apple's stock price was the 3rd largest drop in 3 months as we note implied vol pushed up once again mimicking the pattern from mid-Feb as the stock lost over $21.5 from high to low in a very flash-crash style around 1110ET. As both realized volatility and implied volatility increase, perhaps some of the 200+ hedge funds will allocate some risk budget away from the Apple or change mandates so that their bogeys are AAPL. Apple's weakness weighed on most other high-beta assets with High yield credit lower and only Utilities and Staples managing a positive close among S&P sectors (financials were mixed in stocks but CDS were wider). Somewhat interestingly, Treasuries sold off all day and modestly steepened and while FX markets drifted very modestly higher for the USD after the European close (despite some overnight JPY strength - risk-off), ES (the e-mini S&P futures contract) synced back with an underperforming CONTEXT (broad risk asset proxy) into the close as WTI regained $107 (along with strength in commodities) and AUDJPY improvement.










