Archive - May 11, 2012
And Cue Pain
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/11/2012 07:20 -0500
The one print everyone is looking for this morning:
IG9 10Y 135/137.5... +9.5bps
Assuming ~$200MM DV01 and.... oh boy. Largest jump in IG9 10Y in over six months and widest spread in 4 months.
Overnight Sentiment: And In Non-JPM News...
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/11/2012 07:09 -0500Yes, believe it or not, there is a world outside of JPM in the past 12 hours, and it was very ugly: weak Chinese CPI, big miss in Chinese industrial output (+9.3%, Est. +12.2%), even bigger miss, actually make it a decline, in Indian factory Outupt (down -3.5%, est. +1.7%), a collapse in China’s new local-currency loans plunging by 32% m/m in April, making a new money infusion paramount (yet inflation still abounds, and the threat of NEW QE keeping the PBOC mum - oh what to do?) and of course... Greece, where things are heading for a second election at breakneck speed, and where Syriza is gaining about a percent in new support each day, guaranteeing life for Europe will be a living hell in one month. What else happened overnight to send futures down 0.5% (and JPM down 8%). Below is a full recap from Bank of America.
And Now For Something Special: "The J.P.Morgan Guide To Credit Derivatives" By Blythe Masters
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/11/2012 06:47 -0500Lelaina: Can you define "irony"?
Troy Dyer: It's when the actual meaning is the complete opposite from the literal meaning.- Reality Bites
Gold ‘Will Go To 3,000 Dollars Per Ounce’ - Rosenberg
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/11/2012 06:40 -0500Highly respected economist and strategist David Rosenberg has told that Financial Times in a video interview (see below) that gold “will go to $3,000 per ounce before this cycle is over.” Markets are repeating the downturns of 2010 and 2011 and it is time to search for safety, David Rosenberg of Gluskin Sheff tells James Mackintosh, the FT Investment Editor. Rosenberg sees a “very good opportunity in gold” as it has corrected and seems to be “off the radar screen right now”. He sees gold as a currency and says the best way to value gold is in terms of money supply and “currency in circulation.” As the “volume of dollars is going up as we get more quantitative easing” he sees gold at $3,000 per ounce. Mackintosh says that Rosenberg’s view is a “pretty bearish view”. To which Rosenberg responds that it is “bullish view on gold and gold mining stocks.” Mackintosh says that it is “bearish on everything else”. Rosenberg says that it is not about being “bullish or bearish,” it is about “stating how you view the world” and he warns that the major central banks are all going to print more money and keep real interest rates negative “as far as the eye can see.”
RANsquawk: US Morning Call - Uni. of Michigan Consumer Confidence Preview: 11/05/12
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 05/11/2012 06:36 -0500Frontrunning: May 11
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/11/2012 06:21 -0500- China Industrial Output Growth Slows Sharply In April (WSJ)
- Indian industrial output shrinks unexpectedly (AFP)
- China’s Inflation Moderates, Adding Room for Easing (Bloomberg)... a nickel for every "imminent RRR-cut" prediction
- Drew Built 30-Year JPMorgan Career Embracing Risk (Bloomberg)
- Spain Offered Time to Curb Deficit (FT)
- France Entrepreneurs Flee From Hollande Wealth Rejection (BBG)
- Venizelos Eyes Unity Deal After Agreement With Democratic Left (Ekathimerini)
- Berlin Reaches Out to the Periphery (FT)
- Bernanke Speaks About Risks From End of Pro-Growth Plans (Bloomberg)
Previewing Europe's Heavy Sovereign Issuance Flow
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/11/2012 06:07 -0500JP Morgan may suddenly be finding itself in deep doodoo, with wide-ranging implications for what this huge prop trading loss means for other less than "fortress balance sheet" banks, all of whose trading blotters are surely riddled with comparable attempts at picking pennies in front of steamrollers, but at least "Europe is fine" and its banks are "solvent". So as a reminder, here is what Europe can look forward to next week: in a word - one of the heaviest bond issuance weeks so far in 2012. And no, these are not slam dunk Bills maturing inside the LTRO. Good luck Europe.
Deutsche Bank Takes A Jab At JPM's "Fail Whale"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/11/2012 06:00 -0500We have presented our opinion on the JPM prop trading desk repeatedly, in fact starting about a month ago. Last night, Senator Carl "Shitty Deal" Levin also decided to join the fray, which is to be expected: the man needs air time. And now, in a surprising twist, competing banks, all of whom have more than enough skeletons in their own prop desk trading closet, are starting to speak up against the bank that should not be named. Enter Deutsche Bank's Jim Reid and his take on the Fail Whale.
Guest Post: Does Jamie Dimon Even Know What Heging Risk Is?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/11/2012 05:45 -0500
Having listened to the conference call (I was roaring with laughter), Jamie Dimon sounded very defensive especially about one detail: that the CIO’s activities were solely in risk management, and that its bets were designed to hedge risk. Now, we all know very well that banks have been capable of turning “risk management” into a hugely risky business — that was the whole problem with the mid-00s securitisation bubble, which made a sport out of packaging up bad debt and spreading it around balance sheets via shadow banking intermediation, thus turning a small localised risk (of mortgage default) into a huge systemic risk (of a default cascade). But wait a minute? If you’re hedging risk then the bets you make will be cancelled against your existing balance sheet. In other words, if your hedges turn out to be worthless then your initial portfolio should have gained, and if your initial portfolio falls, then your hedges will activate, limiting your losses. That is how hedging risk works. If the loss on your hedges is not being cancelled-out by gains in your initial portfolio then by definition you are not hedging risk. You are speculating.
Long and the Short of JPMorgan
Submitted by rcwhalen on 05/11/2012 05:43 -0500Jamie Dimon seems to have handed his head to Chairman Vocker and the advocates of regulation with this error.
RANsquawk EU Morning Briefing - What's Happened So Far - 11/05/12
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 05/11/2012 05:29 -0500RANsquawk EU Morning Call - UK PPI Preview - 11/05/12
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 05/11/2012 02:44 -0500Listen Carefully and You Can Hear the Crumbling Of The Sovereign Nation Formerly Known As JP Morgan
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 05/11/2012 02:36 -0500You know I saw this one coming 3 years ago, didn't you??? This ain't the end of the story either. You heard it hear first, again!
JP MoRoNS: SaVe THe WHaLe...
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 05/11/2012 02:22 -0500The pundits will have a field day with this...
EUROPICIDE! They've Pointed The Liquidity Pistol At Their Collective Heads, Cocked It, Now Hear The Trigger Pull...
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 05/11/2012 02:22 -0500You don't need to be an economist to understand the utter foolishness, the circular logic supported folly of "But after buying 325 billion pounds of government debt with newly created money, 50 billion pounds of which has been purchased in the last three months"
- « first
- ‹ previous
- 1
- 2
- 3






