Archive - Jan 25, 2013
Frontrunning: January 25
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/25/2013 07:44 -0500- 8.5%
- Apple
- Barack Obama
- Barclays
- Bond
- Boston Properties
- China
- Citigroup
- Commodity Futures Trading Commission
- Credit Suisse
- CSCO
- Dell
- Deutsche Bank
- E-Trade
- Evercore
- fixed
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- Yen
- Yuan
- Fed Pushes Into ‘Uncharted Territory’ With Record Assets (BBG)
- Next up in the currency wars: Korea - Samsung Drops on $2.8 Billion Won Profit-Cut Prediction (BBG)
- China Warns ‘Hot Money’ Inflows Possible on Easing From Abroad (Bloomberg)
- BOJ Shirakawa affirms easy policy pledge but warns of costs (Reuters)
- Merkel Takes a Swipe at Japan Over Yen (WSJ)
- Wages in way of Abe’s war on deflation (FT)
- Italian PM under fire over bank crisis (FT)
- Senior officials urge calm over islands dispute (China Daily)
- Spain tries to peel back business rules (FT)
- Rifts Over Cyprus Bailout Feed Broader Fears (WSJ)
- Soros Says the Euro Is Here to Stay as Currency War Looms (BBG)
RANsquawk EU Market Re-Cap - 25th January 2013
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 01/25/2013 07:26 -0500Overnight Futures Ramp Right On Schedule
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/25/2013 07:15 -0500At this point it has gotten painfully tedious, and the one phrase to describe trading is - Same Pattern Different Day. With equity futures closing decidedly weak on earnings reality after US market close, the slowly, steady overnight ramp seen every single day for the past month has returned as always, this time on yet another largely expected German confidence indicator beat (following the just as irrationally exuberant ZEW some time ago, and yesterday's far better than expected PMI), this time the IFO Business Climate, which printed at 104.2, on expectations of 103 and up from 102.4. This was driven by both the current assessment rising from 107.1 to 108 and the Expectations rising from 97.9 to 100.5. Naturally, all confidence indicators will be skewed in a way to prevent the market from doubting for a second that Germany may actually succumb to the same recession that has gripped all other European countries (which Germany is an inch away from after its negative Q4 GDP). In other words: there is hope. As for reality, UK Q4 GDP came in at -0.3% on expectations of a far lower drop to -0.1%, and down from the olympics-boosted 0.9% in Q3. The UK certainly can't wait for Mark Carney to come and show them how cable devaluation is really done, cause this time it will be different, if only it wasn't different for everyone else.
Banks Return €137 Billion In LTRO Funds To ECB: Goldman's Take
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/25/2013 06:49 -0500
As expected, moments ago the ECB announced the results of the first LTRO repayment option. According to media reports, a total of €137.2 billion will be repaid as 278 banks participate in the repayment. The consensus expectation was for a repayment figure of €84 billion, so a figure substantially more than both the expected, as well as the whispered goldilocks number of €100 billion. The banks that will free themselves of the LTRO stigma will be disclosed in time - there is no public list, however as a reminder some 523 banks participated in the first LTRO. Since Europe is currently in the risk on phase, don't expect an immediate retaliation against the primarily non-core banks that opt to keep the LTRO funds. The market response so far has been one of risk on, due to the perceived implication that the interbank market is healhtier than expected, coupled with a push up in the EURUSD as the repayment is, as noted previously, a gross deleveraging of the ECB balance sheet coming at a time when every other bank is explicitly devaluaing their currency. Indeed, moments after the announcement the EURUSD ramped up to 1.3460 despite some ugly UK GDP news earlier.
DaVoS 2013: BaNZaI7 INSTiTuTe STaTe OF THe PoNZi PReSeNTaTioN
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 01/25/2013 06:44 -0500The ultimate Davos slide show...
Three Impulses Drive FX into the Weekend
Submitted by Marc To Market on 01/25/2013 06:32 -0500Three main forces are at work today: 1) The continued decline in the yen--driven by more evidence of deflation and more jawboning. 2) Poor UK data and weak underlying technicals extend sterling's losses. 3) Stronger German ZEW survey and the repayment fo 137.2 bln euros from 278 banks.
Is Fed Monetary Policy Really Marxist?
Submitted by rcwhalen on 01/25/2013 06:13 -0500
“Those are my principles,” Marx said. “And if you don't like them... well, I have others.”
How Can We Reconcile Freedom-Loving Libertarianism with Tough Prosecution of Fraud?
Submitted by George Washington on 01/25/2013 02:27 -0500Reconciling Opposites ...
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