Archive - Apr 16, 2012
Liquidity Isn't Capital
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/16/2012 09:51 -0500
At the start of April, ECB's Draghi noted, "let's keep in mind that it [the LTRO] is not capital", adding that "if a bank does not have capital, it would be better to raise it now". Given the rapidly fading glow of LTRO's liquidity flush, the seemingly 'wasted' ammunition that Spanish and Italian banks have fired at the sovereign bond bears and the complete and utter lack of capital raising that has occurred, perhaps it is no wonder that credit spreads on the major European financials have exploded back to near their wides once again (LTRO-encumbrance aside). As Barclays notes today, the major financials alone look set to need over EUR120 billion in capital to bring their credit risks down to acceptable levels to be able to openly access capital markets once again. This means a median 30% of current equity market capitalization has to be raised. Just as we pointed out again and again, not only is the LTRO an encumbrance of bank balance sheets (and therefore increasingly subordinates all existing bond-holders implicitly reducing recoveries in a worst case scenario) but it delayed much-needed decision-making by giving the banks an 'out' for a few months.
Guest Post: When Does This Travesty Of A Mockery Of A Sham Finally End?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/16/2012 09:47 -0500
We all know the Status Quo's response to the global financial meltdown of 2008 has been a travesty of a mockery of a sham--smoke and mirrors, flimsy facades of "recovery," simulacrum "reforms," and serial can-kicking, all based on borrowing and printing trillions of dollars, yen, euros and yuan, quatloos, etc. So when will the travesty of a mockery of a sham finally come to an end? Probably around 2021-22, with a few global crises and "saves" along the way to break up the monotony of devolution.
Housing Repenetrates Alleged Bottom As NAHB Index Misses By Most In 22 Months
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/16/2012 09:14 -0500
It seems all that confident over-extrapolating of warm-weather-based foot-traffic into closed sales and a recovery in housing was, as we vociferously warned, simply wrong. There's no schadenfreude here as this was too obvious for anyone except the blinkered hopium peddlers as even the NAHB is forced to admit things aren't so rosy in home-sales-land "interest expressed by buyers in the past few months has yet to translate into expected sales activity". The NAHB Index fell for the first time in 7 months, dropped the most in 10 months and missed those glorious expectations by the most in 22 months - quite an impressive set of statistics.
Foreigners Bought Most Stocks Since May 2011 In February, As Foreign Flows Become Manic Depressive
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/16/2012 09:12 -0500The February TIC data is out and here are the notable items. Total long-term purchases across all securities classes came in at an underwhelming $10.1 billion on expectations of a $42.5 billion increase, although when combined with Short-Term transactions, the total rose to $107.7 billion, greater than expected. However, since this series includes extensive irrelevant noise, tracking just LT data on a sequential basis, shows that in February foreign purchases of the 4 key security classes (TSYs, Stocks, Agencies and Corporate bonds) came in at a relatively weak $24.8 billion, down from $95.7 billion in February, of which $15.4 billion was US Treasurys. What is notable is that equities accounted for $7.6 billion of this total, the largest foreign purchase of US equities since May of 2011. Well, if US consumers will not buy stocks at least foreigners stepped up, and it also explains where at least some demand came from. It also means that the 6 month moving average of foreign stock dumping has finally reversed from all time lows. However, what chart 1 vividly shows, is that over the past several months foreign flows into US securities, previously stable regardless of global events, has also become Risk On - Risk Off, with ever increasing a monthly amplitude. In other words everyone now has a 30 day attention span tops. Finally, now that the UK has been "disambiguated" from Chinese data, and thus saw its holdings drop to a realistic $103 and about to slide into double digit territory for the first time in years, Chinese holdings in turn tose to $1178.9, the highest since the big selloff in December, while Japan continues to find better bargains in US paper, with its holdings soaring to a record $1.095.9 billion.
Graham Summers’ Week Market Forecast (Words Are No Longer Enough Edition)
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 04/16/2012 09:01 -0500
All of these factors, combined with the end of the strongest seasonal period for stocks (November-April) as well as the end of Operation Twist 2 (June) have the making of a truly horrific period for the markets. Indeed, the mere fact that verbal interventions from the Fed are no longer working should tell investors point blank that things are about to get VERY ugly in the markets.
AAPL Breaks $600 The Wrong Way
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/16/2012 08:52 -0500
UPDATE: AAPL $585 -3% at one-month lows
Volume picking up rapidly as the hedge fun horde starts to find exit doors are smaller than they hoped for...
Art Cashin On The Forgotten Geopolitical Risk
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/16/2012 08:33 -0500No, not Italy, and certainly not Spain. Egypt.
European Credit Weak As Stocks Near Friday Highs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/16/2012 08:20 -0500
European equity prices are pushing up towards Friday's highs, as Spanish and Italian sovereign bonds mysteriously surge back to unchanged on the day - but European corporate and financial credit markets are notably wider. Financials, most notably, remain underperformers and significantly worse than Friday's worse levels - seemingly treating with disdain yet another false hope in equity markets.
"Pied Piper Always Gets Paid And Hamelin Still Rests On German Soil"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/16/2012 07:59 -0500Each day then that passes, as the cash river runs dry, will change the dynamics of the investment world. The biggest change that I see forthcoming on the landscape, beyond those which I have noted, I believe will take place in Germany. China is heading towards some sort of landing and most of Europe is now officially in a recession. The bite of the austerity measures will deepen the process and between the two I think we will begin to see a decline in the finances of Germany which will bring all manner of howls and screams. Germany cannot keep heading in one direction while the rest of its partners founder all around them. The demands of Berlin are self-defeating eventually as demand falls off and I think we are just at the cusp of deterioration in Germany. The problem, all along, has been that Eurobonds or other measures representing a transfer union will cause the averaging of all of the economies in Europe so that the periphery countries benefit with a higher standard of living while the wealthier nations have standards of living that decline as the result of accumulated debts for the troubled nations. This will bring out nationalism again in force as the grand dream succumbs to the grim reality of the costs for nations that have lived beyond their means. The Pied Piper always gets paid and Hamelin still rests upon German soil.
News That Matters
Submitted by thetrader on 04/16/2012 07:52 -0500- Apple
- Australia
- B+
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Barack Obama
- Bloomberg News
- Bond
- Borrowing Costs
- Brazil
- China
- Citigroup
- Consumer Confidence
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Daniel Tarullo
- David Viniar
- Dow Jones Industrial Average
- European Central Bank
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Foreclosures
- France
- Global Economy
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Great Depression
- Gross Domestic Product
- Hong Kong
- Housing Bubble
- Housing Market
- India
- Institutional Investors
- International Monetary Fund
- Iran
- Japan
- JPMorgan Chase
- KIM
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- LTRO
- Monetary Policy
- Morgan Stanley
- New Zealand
- Newspaper
- NG
- Nicolas Sarkozy
- Nikkei
- Obama Administration
- Rating Agency
- ratings
- Real estate
- Recession
- recovery
- Reuters
- Sovereign Debt
- Tim Geithner
- Treasury Department
- United Kingdom
- Wen Jiabao
- World Bank
- Yuan
All you need to read and some more.
Schrodinger Economy Chugs Along As Empire Manufacturing Misses; Retail Sales Beat
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/16/2012 07:46 -0500When in doubt: baffle them with an economy that is both alive and dead (as has been the case for the past 4 months). While on one hand we saw a big miss in the Empire State Manufacturing Index, which slid from 20.21 to 6.56, on expectations of a +18.00 print, and the lowest since November, March retail sales in turn beat expectations, coming in at +0.8% on both headline and ex-autos, with the expectation for retail sales ex-autos at 0.6%, slightly less than the +1.1% retail sale change reported for February. Why are retail sales still strong? Goldman explained it earlier: "We expect that warm winter weather boosted retail sales over the last several months, but it is probably too soon to expect a negative payback in today's report, given that temperatures were still higher than normal in March (and to a greater degree than in February)." Translation: consumers use credit cards to buy things in March they would otherwise have bought in May.
The Two Charts That Matter From Citi's Earnings Presentation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/16/2012 07:30 -0500Earlier today Citi reported earnings that missed expectations of $1.02 on an unadjusted basis ($0.95) but beat adjusted ($1.11). Same with revenue. And while one can go through the bank's 10-Q and earnings presentation, there are just two charts worth pointing out which show the same trend exhibited by JPM last week: loan loss reserve release was $1.2 billion or 40% of the $2.931 billion in after tax net income. Which is to be expected: the traditional primary driver of "earnings" continues to be an accounting fudge. Where things get dicier is when considering that in Q1 2012 mortgage credit trends are not exactly good, because just like in the case of JPM, net credit losses rose for the first time in, well, years. So: loan loss reserves are released even as the inflection point in credit losses is reached. Brilliant.
BIS FX/Gold "Intervention" Profiles - Before And After
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/16/2012 07:09 -0500Ten days ago, somewhat tongue in cheekly, we presented the "people bringing you currency manipulation on a daily basis" or in other words the BIS execution team for Europe's central banks, which is most directly engaged in FX and precious metals 'interventions' when needed. The execution chain we presented was headed by one Richard Austin Jones, head of central bank services at BIS, Basel, yet more importantly the actual trader at the bottom of the totem pole was a Mikaël Charozé, whose various tasks included the "management of the liquidity for big amounts" primarily interventions and portfolio diversification, as well as "holding and managing proprietary positions on all currencies including gold." We posted this on April 5. Funny then that just 10 days later, one would never know that Mikaël no longer counts "holding and managing proprietary positions on all currencies including gold" among his duties as well as task of "management of liquidity for big amounts including interventions". In fact his entire profile, since our little humorous exposes, appears to have been rather completely altered. Inquiring minds would love to know: why?
Daily US Opening News And Market Re-Cap: April 16
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/16/2012 07:00 -0500Eurozone periphery concerns continue to loom as Italian and Spanish spreads against the German 10yr remain elevated, but have come off their widest levels in recent trade amid some unconfirmed market talk of real money accounts buying Spanish paper. Despite the concerns in Europe, the major European bourses are trading higher with individual stocks news from over the weekend propping up indices with reports of intra-European M&A and a string of good news for mining stocks pushing up markets today. Some stock stories of note include the agreement of an offer between France’s GDF Suez and UK’s International Power for GBP 4.18 per share, and a speculated merger of BHP Billiton’s and Rio Tinto’s diamond units by private equity firm KKR. The financials sector, however, is showing the strain, as the 3m EUR basis swap moves sharply lower to -53.87 from approximately -50 on Friday, with particular underperformance noted in the French banking sector. The session so far has been very data-light, with Eurozone trade balance coming in slightly lower than expectations but markets remained unreactive to the release.
Yellen Vs. Geithner - Two Views
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 04/16/2012 06:58 -0500These people will say anything!







