Archive - Oct 16, 2013
Liftoff: Debt Ceiling Resolution Rumor Sends Russell To New Record Highs, ES Soaring
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2013 09:06 -0500
The USD is bid; Treasury Bonds are being abandoned; the 10/24/13 Bill remains lost though; but stocks are entering escape velocity. S&P 500 has screamed 15 points higher (no surprise given Nanex noted that S&P 500 futures had the lowest liquidity of the year for this time of day prior to the rumor) and the Russell 2000 has broken back to new all-time highs (why not). Of course JPY-crosses are largely responsible for the knee-jerk move and we wait to see if this becomes a sell the news moment (or for Boehner's denial)... Commodities are not moving much for now.
Boehner Caves: Said To Agree To Senate Plan
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2013 08:52 -0500Per Sen sources, Boehner has agreed to take up the Senate's plan and allow it to pass with Dem votes.
— Robert Costa (@robertcostaNRO) October 16, 2013
House May Vote On Senate Bill First To Expedite Debt Ceiling Resolution
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2013 08:47 -0500Equity investors can't buy enough this morning. The latest rumor - that the House Republicans are willing to consider voting first on an emerging Senate proposal - provided some fillip to an opening selloff. As Politico reports, this move could expedite bipartisan legislation developed by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. If the House passes the bill first and sends it to the upper chamber, it would eliminate some burdensome procedural hurdles in the Senate and require just one procedural roll call with a 60-vote threshold needed to advance the bill toward final passage in the Senate. Of course, the big question here is "If" the House passes the bill...
Repo Soars To 2013 Highs On Default Fears, Bifurcated Collateral Market
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2013 08:34 -0500While stuff like soaring Bill yields, the threat of Money Market funds breaking the buck, and the gradual phase out of near-term money equivalent collateral thanks to the complete dysfunction in Congress which has managed to breach the repo market into "good" and "bad" Bills, may be too arcane to the various JPY-correlating, ES-ramping algos, those who care about real signals, now that the US flirtation with the X-Date is hours ago may be interested to know that according to ICAP, as reported by Stone McCarthy, overnight General Collateral, the key rate in the determination of collateral pricing for trillions worth of assets, just exploded once again and in following the surge in Bill cash rates, hit 0.32%, the highest since December 7. Indicatively, at 0.32%, GC is now well above both overnight LIBOR (10.69 bps) and the Fed Funds rate (10 bps).
Dreamliner, "Cabriolet" Edition: Panel Falls Off Air India 787 Fuselage Mid-Flight
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2013 08:02 -0500
While everyone knows by now that the best place to cook eggs at 40,000 feet is on the Dreamliner battery compartment, little did anyone know that Boeing (which was just caught selling used parts as new to the Pentagon) has now put into circulation a new and improved version of the Dreamliner: the Cabriolet. This is what Air India discovered, much to its surprise, yesterday when an 8 by 4 foot panel on a Boeing 787 fuselage "flew off" on a routine Delhi to Bangalore flight."The Dreamliner 'miraculously' landed safely in Bangalore without the pilots realizing a thing. The gaping hole caused by the missing part — measuring 8 by 4 feet — was discovered when the plane was being prepared for the return flight to Delhi. The aviation safety regulator is investigating this incident." But as usual, we have saved the best news for last: the Dreamliner Cabriolet "option" from Boeing does not cost one penny extra.
Treasury Bills Are Collapsing As Stocks Surge Once Again
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2013 07:40 -0500
Having given back all of Charlie Dent's optimism rally overnight (and half of Harry Reid's), US equities are rallying once more on the back of another JPY induced momentum ignition. This utter farce is becoming whimsical as the Treasury Bill market is literally collapsing. 10/31/13 Bills are 16bps higher in yield overnight at 62.5bps as the whole front-end has lifted dramatically from just yesterday. GC Repo is higher again and as we noted last night fails-to-deliver are on the rise again. Something is very broken here and one can only hope that the heavy bid for Dec VIX futures is enough to protect the machines buying stocks if Reid's hope turns to its normal disappointment. Note that the USD and US Treasuries are alse being sold aggressively.
What The Third Greek Bailout Will Look Like
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2013 07:30 -0500
Mere weeks after the Merkel re-election, it will come as no surprise to anyone that Greece is to be bailed out for the third time. Germany's Die Zeit newspaper notes the government is assembling a Greek bailout plan which essentially has four gimmicks to fill the "high-single-digit-billion" budget shortfall. Despite having been told time and again that the worst is over, Greek Bailout III will entail shifting cash from the bank recap fund, Bill sales to specific banks which can be instantly collateralized with the ECB, possible extensions of credit by existing creditors, and reduction in interest rates on existing debt. Of course, we will be told that this is the last time and that Greece will emerge victorious in just 1 or 2 more years...but after a few weeks of epic strength, the Athens stock index is giving some back in the last 2 days.
VPRO/Backlight and The Wall Street Code
Submitted by CalibratedConfidence on 10/16/2013 07:30 -0500The documentary will air Novemeber 4th at Battle of The Quants in Shanghai and from there will hopefully make its way around the world
Retail Sales Slow As Shopping Season Heats Up
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2013 07:12 -0500
While the specter of the debt ceiling debate continues to haunt the halls of Washington D.C. it is the state of retail sales that investors should be potentially focusing on. While the latest retail sales figures from the Bureau of Economic Analysis are unavailable due to the government shutdown; we can look at other data sources to derive the trend and direction of consumer spending as we head into the beginning of the biggest shopping periods of the year - Halloween, Thanks Giving (Black Friday) and Christmas. The recent downturns in consumer confidence and spending are likely being exacerbated by the controversy in Washington; but it is clear that the consumer was already feeling the pressure of the surge in interest rates, higher energy and food costs and stagnant wages. As we have warned in the past - these divergences do not last forever and tend to end very badly.
Bank Of America Misses Despite Surge In Reserve Releases Amounting To Over Quarter Of Q3 "Earnings"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2013 06:54 -0500
On the surface, the latest Q3 bank numbers to come out of Bank of America today, were not quite as bad as those previously reported by the other TBTFs, namely JPM, Wells and Citi. At a (massively adjuste4d) EPS of $0.20, this was just 1 cent below the expected $0.21, even as net revenue of $21.74 billion missed expectations of $21.95 billion. So far so good. At least so good until one realizes that of the $5.1 billion in pretax income, some 1.4 billion, or over a quarter, was from the usual accounting magic well of gimmicks: loan loss reserve releases! In fact, the $1.391 billion in reserve reduction driven by $1.7 billion in charge offs offset by a tiny $0.3 billion in provisions, was the highest reserve release in the past year, only lower than last Q3's $2.3 billion, when the bank - just like today - was in desperate need of any source of fake earnings. Why? Because the bank's loan origination group, just like all other banks', cratered, and saw non-interest income in its real estate services division implode by $1.5 billion to just $844 million. So much for whatever housing recovery the rose-colored glasses ones had envisioned...
With Less Than A Day Until The X-Date, Hope And Optimism Remain If Not Much Else
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2013 06:05 -0500- American Express
- Apple
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank of New York
- Beige Book
- Blackrock
- Borrowing Costs
- China
- Citigroup
- Claimant Count
- CPI
- Debt Ceiling
- default
- Equity Markets
- EuroDollar
- Fisher
- Fitch
- fixed
- headlines
- Housing Market
- Jim Reid
- Monetary Policy
- NAHB
- New York Times
- None
- Obamacare
- OTC
- POMO
- POMO
- President Obama
- RANSquawk
- Reality
- Trade Balance
- Unemployment
It's gotten beyond silly: with less than a day to go until the first X-Date, beyond which if Jack Lew is correct (he isn't) all hell will break loose if the US doesn't have a debt deal in place, stocks couldn't care less, Bills continue to sell off, carry traders only care how big the central banks' balance sheets are, all news are generally shunned and yet stocks have soared 600 DJIA points on Harry Reid's relentless optimism a deal will get done, even though so far none has. Today, as we observed on Monday, we expect more of the same: stocks and futures will ignore the reality that the midnight hour will come and go with no deal in place, but will continue to explode higher as Harry Reid's latest set of "optimism" headlines hits the tape in low volume trading. We expect the first big hope rally around POMO time, then shortly after Senate comes back in Session, around noon. Then for good measure, another one just before market close. Why not: it's not like the "market" even pretend to be one anymore. Keep an eye on today's 4-Week bill auction before noon. It should be a far bigger doozy than yesterday's longer-dated bills.
Another Data Leak: Citi Edition
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2013 05:41 -0500
Think data leaks, in which the FOMC sends minutes to its banker supervisors a day in advance, where HFT algos pay millions to get key data to their collocated servers 10 milliseconds early, where journalists freely breach embargos and/or "secure" government lock-rooms are bypassed with a simple text message, are purely a US phenomenon? Think again. As Citi explains, today we saw just this taking place in the City.
Revolution Costs
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 10/16/2013 04:35 -0500It’s obvious that we might sometimes have the impression the freedom has no price on it. But, think again.
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