Archive - 2012
December 14th
The Queen Of England Asks Economists – ‘Why Did Nobody Notice?’
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/14/2012 07:51 -0500
Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Phillip visited the Bank of England’s gold vault and wonders like most people how the things got so bad. Back in 2008, when the monarch visited the London School of Economics she described the credit crunch as ‘awful.’ . Fast forward to 2012, the heart of Europe’s 4 year-old debt crisis while the Queen of England hears a financial expert compare the debt crisis to a flu epidemic or an earthquake, as hard to predict. This comparison is truly patronizing and an insult to the Queen’s intelligence. Although I am not English have some respect for your elders, especially your Queen, Britons! Pensioners in England can recall hard times during the World War when items like sugar were a luxury. In this new era of credit you have people complaining if they can’t borrow to have their new BMW financed to match their Cotswold’s country house or Spanish holiday home. The Queen was informed that since financial risk has been managed better (need we mention Libor?) than it was in the past, people became complacent. She smiled and said, ‘But people had got a bit...lax, had they?’ Her Royal Highness also suggested that the Financial Services Authority may not have been hard-line enough in its policing. She said: ‘The Financial Services – what do they call themselves, the regulators – Authority, which was really quite new … it didn’t have any teeth.’ It’s rather ironic that the tour showed the gold vault since a good portion of the UK gold reserves were sold off from 1999-2002, when gold prices were at their lowest in 20 years.
Good Cop Time: The Fed's Voting Voice Of Reason Explains His Objection To QE4EVA
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/14/2012 07:38 -0500
The Richmond Fed's Jeffrey Lacker, a 2012 voting member of the FOMC, who has so far been the sole objector to the Fed's policy of exiting a hole by continuing to dig deeper, has released his traditional "good cop" response to Bernanke's QE4EVA plan. The highlights: "I disagreed with the Committee’s decision to continue purchasing additional assets to stimulate the economy. With economic activity growing at a modest pace and inflation fluctuating close to 2 percent — the Committee’s inflation goal — further monetary stimulus runs the risk of raising inflation and destabilizing inflation expectations....Deliberately tilting the flow of credit to one particular economic sector is an inappropriate role for the Federal Reserve....I have dissented previously against the use of date-based forward guidance, and I supported the decision to drop such language at the December meeting....monetary policy has only a limited ability to reduce unemployment, and such effects are transitory and generally short-lived. Moreover, a single indicator cannot provide a complete picture of labor market conditions. Therefore, I do not believe that tying the federal funds rate to a specific numerical threshold for unemployment is an appropriate and balanced approach to the FOMC’s price stability and maximum employment mandates." Of course, his objection is duly noted, and summarily rejected and forgotten.
Frontrunning: December 14
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/14/2012 07:31 -0500- Apple
- Barack Obama
- Bond
- China
- Citigroup
- Credit Suisse
- Deutsche Bank
- DVA
- European Central Bank
- Evercore
- Exxon
- Federal Reserve
- Greece
- India
- Iran
- Japan
- JPMorgan Chase
- Keefe
- LIBOR
- Medicare
- Merrill
- NASDAQ
- Newspaper
- Nomura
- Pharmerica
- President Obama
- Quiksilver
- ratings
- Raymond James
- Reuters
- Shenzhen
- Six Flags
- Stress Test
- Transparency
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- White House
- Yuan
- Obama, Boehner hold "frank" meeting amid "fiscal cliff" frustration (Reuters)
- Rice Ends Bid Amid Criticism (WSJ)
- EU summit delays crucial decisions (FT)
- EU moves to cap bank bonuses at 2 times annual salary (CBC)
- Europe Wins a Battle, but Not Yet the War (WSJ)
- Banks Spurn Europe Bond Rush Amid Central Bank Loan Largesse (BBG)
- German-French Sparring Over Euro Caps 2012 Crisis Fight (BBG)
- Fed begins stress tests on bank liquidity (FT)
- Draghi’s rallying cry for new EU powers (FT)
- EU Seeks Plan to Handle Failing Banks Amid Cost Concerns (BBG)
- Berlusconi says Monti has strong EU backing (FT)
- Abe Set for Japan Victory Faces 7-Month Window to Keep Hold (BBG)
- Japan's Abe would try to keep China ties calm-lawmakers (Reuters)
RANsquawk EU Market Re-Cap - 14th December 2012
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 12/14/2012 07:19 -0500Overnight Summary: Some Trivial Non-Fiscal Cliff Developments
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/14/2012 07:03 -0500In a world in which the Fiscal Cliff, including headlines, rumors, leaks, and mere whispers thereof, is the main show, all other data points are at best supporting data actors. There was a lot of support overnight - for the futures, which once again closed the prior session at the lows - with a battery of PMIs released, starting with the December HSBC China Flash PMI which printed at a excel picture perfect 50.9 vs an expectation 50.8 and above 50 for the second straight month, which sent the Shanghai Composite up 4.32%, and wiped out the bitter aftertaste from the Japan December large manufacturer Tankan index which tumbled to -12 on expectation of a -10 print, confirming the Japanese recession is deteriorating at the worst possible time. Then after China, Markit released a bevy of European PMI data which came in mixed: Services PMI rose from 46.7 to 47.8 in December, beating expectations of a 47.0 print, while the Manufacturing PMI rose modestly from 46.2 to 46.3, missing expectations of a 46.6 result. The biggest wildcard once again was Germany, where the Service PMI, like in the US, posted a sizable rise, posting above 50 for the first time in months, or at 52.1 on expectations of 50.0, and up from 49.7 last, although more disturbing was the ongoing collapse in German manufacturing which dipped from 46.8 to 46.3, on expectations of a rise to 47.2. French manufacturing data did not help posting a tiny rise from 44.5 to 44.6, missing expectations of a 45.0 print. Economic data was further confounded when Spain released its quarterly home price update, which dipped 3.8%, accelerated last quarter's -3.3% drop, and sliding by a massive -15.2% in Q3, faster than the -14.4% drop in Q2, and confirming Spanish housing has a long way to go before it is fixed.
Four Drivers, Little Movement
Submitted by Marc To Market on 12/14/2012 06:40 -0500With few exceptions, the global capital markets which began the week with a bang, are finishing with a whimper. The US dollar is little changed against the major and emerging market currencies. Asia stocks were by and large flat, with the notable exception of Chinese stocks, where the major indices jumped a little more than 4%.
European bourses are mixed, with gains and losses mostly less than 0.25% near midday in London. Spanish and Italian bond yields are slightly lower, but activity is quiet.
Despite the subdued tone there are four developments to note
Central Banks Renew Currency Swap Lines
Submitted by CalibratedConfidence on 12/14/2012 01:26 -0500Global Central Banks agree to another year of access to FRBNY FX Swap Lines
December 13th
Germany’s Favorite Rabble-Rouser Economist Lashes Out
Submitted by testosteronepit on 12/13/2012 22:05 -0500The longer you delay needed “radical measures,” the more private investors will be able to sell “their toxic paper without haircut to governmental bailout funds, and then hightail.”
Marc Faber: "Paul Krugman Should Go And Live In North Korea"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/13/2012 21:18 -0500
If there is one thing better than Marc Faber providing a free, must-watch (and listen) 50 minute lecture on virtually everything that has transpired in the end days of modern capitalism, starting with who caused it, adjustable rate mortgages, leverage, why did the Fed let Lehman fail, why was AIG bailed out, quantitative easing, Operation Twist, where the interest on the debt is going, which bubbles he is most concerned about, a discussion of gold and silver, and culminating with his views on a world reserve currency, is him saying the following: "The views of the Keynesians like Mr. Krugman is that the fiscal deficits are far too small. One of the problems of the crisis is that it was caused by government intervention with fiscal and monetary measures. Now they tells us we didn't intervene enough. If they really believe that they should go and live in North Korea where you have a communist system. There the government intervenes into every aspect of the economy. And look at the economic performance of North Korea." Priceless.
Korean Kaption Kontest: Indoor Smoking Allowed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/13/2012 20:48 -0500
What is going on here, for those understandably confused, is North Korea's gregarious and gorgeous leader, Kim Jong-un, sitting in the Korean equivalent of Houston, watching the recent Korean rocket launch... and smoking a cigarette. Take it away.
Moore’s Law, Cheap Electronics and Homeland Security Money Combine to Create Big Brother
Submitted by George Washington on 12/13/2012 20:25 -05001984 Is HERE
Guest Post: Blue Shield Of California To Hike Insurance Rates Up To 20%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/13/2012 19:28 -0500Good thing there is no inflation, you know, except in every single thing every single American needs to buy to survive that is! The hits just keep coming for California, America’s very own Greece. Remember the article I posted a couple of days ago titled: Payday Loans in California: School Districts Owe $1 Billion on $100 Million Borrowed. Now we find out from the LA Times: "Health insurer Blue Shield of California wants to raise rates as much as 20% for some individual policyholders, prompting calls for the nonprofit to use some of its record-high reserve of $3.9 billion to hold down premiums. In filings with state regulators, Blue Shield is seeking an average rate increase of 12% for more than 300,000 customers, effective in March, with a maximum increase of 20%." That should be a real boon for California’s economy. Meanwhile…
A Totally Different Ballgame Soon / Crime In A Flash
Submitted by lemetropole on 12/13/2012 18:25 -0500A.M. Kitco Metals Roundup: Gold Drops Below $1,700 Following another Mysterious Price Drop in Asian Trading
Gold set for dramatic correction: hedge fund manager
Going Geriatricidal
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 12/13/2012 18:00 -0500Who knows? I might even become an EE'er. This joke is on me.
The Gulag Ameripelago: US Incarceration Surpasses Russia's
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/13/2012 17:59 -0500Remember when Americans used to mock Russia (f/k/a the USSR) for being one big Gulag prison colony? Those were the good days. One thing is sure: they no longer "hate us for our freedom." On the other hand, if instead of prison, one were to write in "minimum security, free room and board, out early for good behavior" (especially if the world's most famous hedge fund will fund all your cash needs for the rest of your life on the 'other side' just as we predicted three weeks ago), then they would certainly hate us for our benefits.










