Archive - Oct 2013
October 27th
OBoZoCaRe BoNaNZa!
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 10/27/2013 17:47 -0500What Obama cares about most...other than his mirror.
BofAML Warns "US 10Y Yields Have Reached Massive Resistance"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/27/2013 16:35 -0500
Since mid-October the US$ has been under siege. However, As BofAML's MacNeill Curry notes, that decline is showing signs of exhaustion from which a base and correction higher is likely. Curry's "basing" view is further supported by the US Treasury market, where yields (particularly 5yrs and 10yrs) are poised to bottom and turn higher over the coming sessions...
Guest Post: The Plan Is Not Working
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/27/2013 15:13 -0500
You didn’t want to be the guy chosen to tell Stalin that the wheat crop failed or the production quotas on trucks and cars were not met. Why? Because despots always blame people, not systems. In the same way, you don’t want to be the guy chosen to tell Obama that his health care websites are a disaster. But that’s what they are, and he’s managed to blame everyone but himself. The problem is that government is not the best means to do anything well. The problem is the absence of two crucial things: the knowledge to assemble the resources properly and the means to make the economic assessment of the value of competitive resources.
The Entire US Fiscal And Monetary Policy Gambit (In One Cartoon)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/27/2013 14:23 -0500
It's like deja vu all over again...
Mark Faber Fears "Stocks Could Be Dead Money For A While" But "Gold Has Bottomed"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/27/2013 12:54 -0500
"Since September 2011's $1921 peak, gold has been in correction mode," Mark Faber tells Barrons in this brief clip, but the overhwleminly bearish sentiment combined with the major accumulation (most notably by China) means "gold prices have probably bottomed," and some gold mining stocks are well positioned. While Faber has recently expressed concern at the potential for a major correction in stocks, he notes that there are pockets of value worth investigating including European Telcos and Indo-China travel-related stocks. However, the Gloom, Boom & Doom report writer warns that "stocks could be dead money for a while."
An Audacious Plan To Fix The QE Non-Taper And Fiscal Non-Action in One Swift Move
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/27/2013 11:48 -0500If you’re anything like us, you may have reached the conclusions that:
- Our elected officials are charting a course to a fiscal disaster.
- The Fed is repeating past mistakes by setting us up for another bust.
After the drama of the debt ceiling debate and the Fed’s non-tapering surprise, we see no reason to doubt these views. But the latest developments got us thinking, and we have an unusual proposal.
How To Play The Next Tech Disruption Wave
Submitted by Asia Confidential on 10/27/2013 11:30 -0500Supermarkets, healthcare and education are next in line for technological upheaval. We look at the best ways to profit from upcoming changes.
Detroit Pensioners Face Miserable 16 Cent On The Dollar Recovery
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/27/2013 10:12 -0500As Citi's Matt King recent showed, when it comes to stepwise, quantum leap repricings of widely held credits, the revelation is usually a very painful, sudden and very dramatic one. This can be seen nowhere better than in the default of Lehman brothers, where while the firm's equity was slow to admit defeat it was nothing in comparison to the abject case study in denial that the Lehman bonds put in. However, as can be seen in the chart below, when it finally came, and when bondholders realized they are screwed the morning of Monday, Septembr 15 when the Lehman bankruptcy filing was fact, the move from 80 cents on the dollar to under 10 cents took place in a heartbeat.It is the same kind of violent and anguished repricing that all unsecrued creditors in the coming wave of heretofore "denialed" municipal bankruptcy filings will have to undergo. Starting with Detroit, where as Reuters reports, the recovery to pensioners, retirees and all other unsecured creditors will be.... 16 cents on the dollar!... or less than what Greek bondholders got in the country's latest (and certainly not final) bankruptcy.
"A Market Likely To Suck Everyone In To Its Last Updraft "
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/27/2013 08:46 -0500
Ye Gods! Even that discredited old hack, Alan Greenspan ? the man who bears as much responsibility as anyone for the hypertrophy of state- supported finance and thus for the havoc it continues to wreak ? is at it, trying to tell us that because of a low ‘equity premium’ (read: ludicrously intervention?depressed bond yields), the ‘momentum’ of stocks ‘is still relativel. Such a market is therefore likely to suck everyone in to its last, Plinian updraft no matter how stretched everything becomes and no matter how great the risk of being cast into perdition in the pyroclastic collapse to come.
Fire And Brimstone: John Mauldin Edition
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/27/2013 06:36 -0500
Now that the prevailing mainstream media consensus has finally caught up with our "tinfoil" view, which for years was mocked by the same media, usually on an ad hominem basis, and even the Fed has realized (confirmed by the latest Jackson Hole symposium) it is in a trap as it understands it has to end the market's dependency on monetary heroin but has no idea how to do it without in the process undoing five years of central planning, we have seen some spectacular opinion flip flops take place. Which aside from the occasional headscratcher such as David Rosenberg going bull-retard (we once again wonder: just what does Ray Dalio serve in his cafeteria?) have been almost exclusively from optimistic to pessimistic, or as we call it, realistic. And as the case may be, such as with John Mauldin and his latest missive to potential clients, A Code Red World, a very deep and red shade of pessimistic.
The REAL Reason U.S. Targets Whistleblowers
Submitted by George Washington on 10/27/2013 01:57 -0500Hypocrisy as a Weapon
QE and Cheap Debt Benefit the Top of the Capital Food Chain and Few Others
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 10/27/2013 00:00 -0500
Bernanke couldn’t stomach this kind of deleveraging. The reason is simple: those who have accumulated great wealth as a result of this system are highly incentivized to keep it going. Bernanke doesn’t talk to you or me about these things. He calls Goldman Sachs or JP Morgan.
October 26th
THeRe'S SoMETHiNG ABouT MuTTi...
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 10/26/2013 21:27 -0500Blazing Scheisse!
Legal Glitch "Has The Potential To Sink Obamacare"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/26/2013 20:38 -0500
As if the technological problems facing Obamacare were not enough, a potentially major "legal glitch" could cause the healthcare law to unravel in 36 states. As the LA Times reports, The Affordable Care Act proposes to make health insurance affordable to millions of low-income Americans by offering them tax credits to help cover the cost. To receive the credit, the law twice says they must buy insurance "through an exchange established by the state." But 36 states have decided against opening exchanges for now. Critics of the law have seized on the glitch. They have filed four lawsuits that urge judges to rule the Obama administration must abide by the strict wording of the law, even if doing so dismantles it in nearly two-thirds of the states. And the Obama administration has no hope of repairing the glitch by legislation as long as the Republicans control the House..."This has the potential to sink Obamacare. It could make the current website problems seem minor by comparison," noted on policy expert.
A Closer Look At The Decrepit World Of Wall Street Rental Homes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/26/2013 19:42 -0500"This new incursion by hedge funds and private equity groups into the American single-family home rental market is unprecedented, and is proving disastrous for many of the tens of thousands of families who are moving into these newly converted rental homes... Though it’s not uncommon for tenants to complain about their landlords, many who had rented before described their current experience as the worst they’ve ever had. A former inspector ...said he routinely examined homes just prior to rental that were not habitable. Though it wasn’t his job to answer complaints, he said he fielded “hundreds of calls” from irate tenants."
We knew from the start that this whole 'buy-to-rent' thing would be a disaster. Over the last decade or so, everything that Wall Street touched has turned into a scheme primarily focused on parasitically funneling wealth and resources away from society at large to itself. This is no different. They call it a “new asset class.” We call it Wall Street serfdom.






