Archive - Oct 2013
October 9th
Meet the New Boss. Same as the Old Boss.
Submitted by Tim Knight from Slope of Hope on 10/09/2013 18:07 -0500It was a pretty interesting day in the market, of course, since two Fed-related items were happening. First, as was initially reported last night, "Damn It" Janet Yellen was nominated by Obama to be the Chairhuman, once bearded-wonder Bernanke splits in January. It's a little odd that in the midst of all this rancor Obama decided to address this bit of not-at-all-urgent business, but maybe he wanted to remind the market that all that matters is QE-infinity.
Peter Schiff Warns Yellen's Nomination Means Any QE Taper Expectations Are "Delusional"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/09/2013 17:52 -0500
Unlike her predecessors, Janet Yellen has never had a youthful dalliance with hawkish monetary ideas. Before taking charge of the Fed both Alan Greenspan, and to a lesser extent Ben Bernanke, had advocated for the benefits of a strong currency and low inflation and had warned of the dangers of overly accommodative policy and unnecessary stimulus. (Both largely abandoned these ideals once they took the reins of power, but their urge to stimulate may have been restrained by a vestigial bias against the excesses of Keynesianism). Janet Yellen, who has been on the liberal/dovish end of the monetary spectrum for her entire professional career, has no such baggage. As a result, we can expect her to never waver in her belief that stimulus is the answer to every economic question.
House Democrats Emerge From Obama Meeting
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/09/2013 17:24 -0500House Dems emerge from meeting with Pres Obama reaffiming determination to bring Govt shutdown to an end.
— Mark Knoller (@markknoller) October 9, 2013
BofAML Warns VIX-Inversion "Does Not Mean The S&P Correction Is Over"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/09/2013 16:56 -0500
As we noted last night, yesterday's move in US equity markets showed signs of investor panic and capitulation. BofAML points out that the inversion of the VIX to levels that have coincided with market lows for much of this year, the significant underperformance of recent outperformers (the NASDAQ Comp fell 2% and the Russell 2000 fell 1.72% vs an S&P500 decline of 1.23%), and pop in the ARMS Index all point to signs of capitulation. While this is encouraging from a technical perspective, as it says we are one step closer to completing the multi-week correction, they warn - it does not mean the correction is finished.
US Treasury Default Risk Hits 2011 Highs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/09/2013 16:28 -0500
Not much comment necessary on a topic we have beaten to horse pulp in the past 2 weeks aside to note that this time is ironically different from 2011 as the inversion in the CDS curve is considerably more biased to a piling up of short-term default risk than in 2011.
It Is A Coup After All: State Department Suspending Bulk of Funding To Egypt
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/09/2013 16:09 -0500
It would appear the US government, in all its shutdown might, has made a decision. The State Department has issued a statement that the US "wants to see Egypt succeed," via an "inclusive, democratically elected civilian government," but in the meantime will be "recalibrating assistance to Egypt to best advance US interests." A translation of the political double-speak - it's a coup and we won't be sending any military aid or cash directly to the country anymore...
Dow Dead-Cat Bounces Off 200DMA; Nasdaq Ends Below 50DMA
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/09/2013 15:12 -0500
As headline after headline was regurgitated and used a momentum igniting ammo in stocks, the S&P managed to get back to post-Yellen-news highs before dumping into the close on the back the Fidelity "Sell" news. S&P futures closed perfectly at VWAP (and green) but the Russell and Nasdaq closed red. The Dow bounced off its 200DMA and set the lows for the day. USD strength across the board was not rotating into stocks or bonds or PMs as we suspect cash is the friend of the repo-angst deleveraging ahead. Copper and Oil are -2.3% on the week, Gold -0.4% and Silver remains positive +0.5% on the week. Treasury yields limped higher to +2bps or so on the week. VIX fell back on the day from spike high levels of 2013.
Meanwhile, in Europe...
Submitted by Sprout Money on 10/09/2013 15:07 -0500While all eyes are on 'pretty woman' at the head of the Fed, things are taking a turn for the worse on the European continent.
Meet The 28 Other Money Market Funds That Broke The Buck After (And Before) Lehman
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/09/2013 14:53 -0500
Everyone knows that one of the immediate catalysts of the near systemic collapse in the aftermath of the Lehman bankruptcy, one which set in motion the sequence of events that led to Bernanke increasing the Fed's balance sheet fourfold, was when the Reserve Primary Money Market Fund announced on September 16 that the value of its shares had dropped to 97, sparking an epic run on money market funds, and requiring an immediate bailout first from its sponsor, and then the Federal Reserve and US government. What is far less known is that the Reserve Primary Fund was just one of many money market funds that got locked out and was in danger of collapse following the decision to let Dick Fuld hang. How many? According to a research note released by the NY Fed itself, at least 28 more!
Fidelity Sells All Debt-Ceiling Maturing Treasuries Despite Blogosphere's "All Clear" Call
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/09/2013 14:33 -0500
Many market-watching prognosticators have dismissed the spike in T-Bill rates on the basis of "well it's only a few pennies, why worry..." missing entirely the 50-100x leverage in TRS and the almost inifinite rehypothecation risk implicit in a missed payment (even if temporary). It seems, despite these views, Fidelity Investments - the largest manager of money-market mutual funds - said, according to AP, that it no longer holds any US government debt maturing around the time of the nation could hit ist borrowing limit. Action - it would seem - speaks louder than words.
Congress Is Less Popular than Dog Poop, Toenail Fungus, Hemorrhoids, Cockroaches, Lice, Root Canals, Colonoscopies ...
Submitted by George Washington on 10/09/2013 14:06 -0500President Obama Unveils The Bernanke Mark II - Live Webcast
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/09/2013 14:02 -0500
As the old Mark I Bernanke rusts and loses power, President Obama has been working on the new improved Mark II version of the Fed Chair. It's older, more female, less facial hair (from what we can see), but critically more dovish in all the places the US investing public demands... Behold, Yellenomics...
Stocks Just Took Out THE Line
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 10/09/2013 13:57 -0500Remember, every single Treasury and T-bill out there is utilized as collateral for millions of Dollars worth of trades. So if the big financial institutions begin to refuse to accept some US debt as collateral based on the perceived risk of a deb ceiling debacle there could quickly be capital call in the market similar to what happened when Lehman failed.
Hilsenrath Sets New World Record For Annotating FOMC Minutes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/09/2013 13:53 -0500
In 4 minutes (and really under 1 minute when the summary headlines hit), WSJ's Jon Hilsenrath managed to parse the 25-page and considerably more diverse of opinion FOMC Minutes into a bite-sized 535 words summarizing the key sections. His conclusion, as we noted previously, despite the various members' angst, they still want to start winding down QE this year and end it next year. It would appear that his 'translation' of the minutes for the investing public offers little hope for moar QE anytime soon - even if fiscal drags are sustained. We are confident neither Hilsenrath, nor anyone else in the legacy media, ever breache[s|d] s the FOMC embargo when they receive the minutes ahead of general release for broader preparation: after all, in a time when everyone is suddenly concerned with the Fed leaking data in advance, that would just be uncivilized.







