Archive - May 15, 2012
Frontrunning: May 15
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/15/2012 06:40 -0500- JPMorgan Said to Weigh Bonus Clawbacks After Loss (Bloomberg)
- Obama Says JPMorgan Loss Shows Need for Tighter Rules (Bloomberg)
- Greeks Try New Tack, Seeking Technocrat Slate (WSJ)
- Euro zone finance ministers dismiss Greek exit "propaganda" (Reuters)
- Romney’s business record under fire (FT)
- Tide Turning in Japan Deflation Fight, BOJ’s Top Economist Says (BBG)
- Euro Chiefs May Offer Leniency to Greece (Bloomberg)
- Portugal's Progress Won't Guarantee Funding (WSJ)
- EU Bank-Liquidity Bill Proceeds; U.K. May Protest (WSJ)
- Cameron pressed to boost enterprise (FT)
How To Make A 135% Annualized Return In 4 Months
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/15/2012 06:36 -0500
Update: the expected next step: "GREEK 2023 BOND PRICE FALLS TO 14.51 PERCENT OF FACE VALUE" - but it was a "no brainer" trade... a "trade of the year" trade... Tough break for Greylock. As we said "Um, distressed bond expert guys - the bonds you should have bought are the old UK-law bonds which may return par...at least you had some covenant cover." Oh well - at least it is "other people's money."
Back on January 22, (Subordination 101), we advised readers that the one virtually sure way to make a killing in the bond market is to i) buy up a fulcrum Greek piece of debt, i.e., international/UK-law bond with strong covenant protection ahead of the country's restructuring, ii) refuse participation in the cramming down PSI, which was nothing but a GM-type exercise in covenant stripping, and iii) sit back and enjoy the money trickle in. Back than the €450 million bond of May 15, 2012 traded at ~75. Today, that same bond is about to generate a 31.26% cash on cash return, or 135% annualized, as it is Greece that has blinked, and according to the FT, has decided to make a full bond payment on this issue to avoid an out of control sovereign default, even though by doing so, it reduces its cash holdings by a third to just over €1 billion as discussed yesterday, and risks pushing both the PSI participants and its citizens into a murderous rage, as instead of complying with its mouthing off during and after the PSI, that not one bondholder would get a par repayment (nor apparently use the cash for public proceeds such as paying salaries), the one entity who ended up having all the leverage was those bondholders, who went against the grain, and held to their covenant rights. Just as we suggested. End result...
RANsquawk US Morning Call - Advance Retail Sales Preview - 15/05/12
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 05/15/2012 06:35 -0500Overnight Sentiment: "No Horrible News Out Of Europe Is Great News"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/15/2012 06:22 -0500As already noted, one piece of good news out of Europe - German GDP (ignore the huge ZEW miss) - was enough to make everyone forget the Italian bank downgrade, and that Greece is one election away from unwinding the EMU. Yet perhaps it is good to have a modest bounce from a market, which however not even Goldman says is oversold: after all the central planners need a day or two to regroup, and consider what currency to crush next to buy the global nominal stock market a few months of breathing room.
German GDP Beat Saves The Day
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/15/2012 05:59 -0500
There was little good news out of Europe overnight, when several key countries (Germany, France, Greece and Portugal) reported their Q1 GDP, but what good news did come, namely that Germany avoided a double dip, with Q1 GDP printing at 0.5% on expectations of a 0.1% move, has for now saved the EURUSD and the futures. Why the growth: according to the German statistics office, net trade drove 1Q growth (thank you weaker EUR); domestic consumption rose in 1Q while investment declined in 1Q. The sellside community was quick: "Germany’s 1Q numbers show how EMU’s biggest economy is weathering debt crisis", Newedge said in a note. Then there was everyone else: Italian GDP contracted by 0.8%, more than consensus of 0.7%, the most in 3 years. Broadly, the Eurozone GDP avoided a technical recession with GDP printing at 0.0% on estimates of -0.2%. But as the PMI vs GDP chart below shows, this razor thin escape will hardly be repeated in Q2. Greek GDP declined by 6.2%, Portugal down by 0.1%, Holland down -0.2%, and so on. The well known split in Europe between Germany and everyone else continues, and just as we pointed out yesterday for the US: any "decoupling" is always temporary, and eventually catches up with the decouplee. Finally, proving that not all is well even in Germany, the ZEW Investor Confidence for May printed at nearly half expectations of 19, or 10.8, and down from 23.4.
RANsquawk EU Morning Briefing - What's Happened So Far - 15/05/12
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 05/15/2012 05:47 -0500RANsquawk EU Morning Call - European GDP Preview - 15/05/12
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 05/15/2012 02:00 -0500- « first
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