Archive - Nov 20, 2013
Goldman's FOMC Post-Mortem: "Relatively Neutral" But "December Taper Possible"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2013 15:45 -0500Considering Jan Hatzius and NY Fed's Bill Dudley are close Pound & Pence drinking buddies, when it comes to assessing what the Fed "meant" to say, one should just throw the embargo-minutes penned Hilstanalysis in the garbage and just focus on what the Goldman chief economist thinks. His summary assessment: the minutes were relatively neutral, March is the most likely first taper date although "December is still possible."
Guest Post: Have A Merry DeGrowth Christmas--Boycott Black Friday
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2013 15:34 -0500
The "aggregate demand is God" Keynesian Cargo Cult fetish of focusing on holiday sales is worse than meaningless--it is profoundly misleading. Counting on strong holiday retail sales to "boost the economy" is like eating triple-paddy cheeseburgers and fries to lose weight. The last thing a debt-dependent economy needs is more borrowing to buy excess consumption, and the last thing an economy that imports most of the junk being purchased needs is empty-headed economists declaring that the purchase of more low-quality, mostly needless junk is anything other than a waste of money and resources.
BofAML Warns "It's Time To Be Bearish On US Treasuries"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2013 15:06 -0500
It's time to turn bearish on US Treasuries, is the clarion call from BofAML's Macneil Curry. The impulsive advance in US 10yr yields from 2.669%/2.630% and Tuesday Bearish Engulfing Candles in many of the futures contracts (WN, US & FV), Curry says, means the larger bear trend has resumed. In 10yr yields Curry targets 2.950%/2.992% (the high end of the 4m 2.47%/3.00% area range trade). Pullbacks should be seen as temporary, corrective and an opportunity to go short. This bearish view, he warns, is invalidated on a 10yr yield move below the 2.659% lows of Nov-18. From a trading perspective they express this view by selling USZ3. Downside targets are seen to 128-22/128-12, with a stop above 133-10.
30 Minutes Later - Markets Tapering (Gold Limit Down)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2013 14:42 -0500
The initial knee-jerk taper-on move was met with reactive buying (as per trading guru Steve Liesman's wisdom) but that hope bounce (really only seen in stocks) has faded now and assets are pressing their extremes. USD pushing higher, Treasury yields higher, stocks and gold lower... Of course, all it takes is for one algo to get the idea of pricing in the inevitable subsequent un-taper and to send the entire risk complex soaring. Silver is now below $20 and Gold is Limit Down
Gold Market Halted For 2nd Time Today Following FOMC Minutes Monkey-Hammering
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2013 14:23 -0500
For the second time today (and 4th in the last 3 months) - at least this time on some actual news - Nanex notes that gold futures have been halted for 20-seconds following the release of the FOMC minutes. 1,500 contracts took us down at 6:26ET this morning, this time it was even more...
Hilsenrath's 1057 Word FOMC Digest In +/- 1 Minute
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2013 14:23 -0500It took Hilsenrath just under a minute to pump out his 1057 (excluding the title) word thesis on the FOMC minutes. As usual, this is indicative of a comfortable embargo cushion which one can be assured was unbreached, as anything else would be very illegal. "Federal Reserve officials had a wide-ranging discussion about the outlook for monetary policy at their Oct. 29-30 policy meeting. The bottom line was that they stuck to the view that they might begin winding down their $85 billion-per-month bond-buying program in the “coming months” but are looking for ways to reinforce their plans to keep short-term interest rates low for a long-time after the program ends. They struggled to build a consensus on how they would respond to a variety of different scenarios. One example: What to do if the economy didn’t improve as expected and the costs of continuing bond-buying outweighed the benefits? Another example: How to convince the public that even after bond buying ends, short-term interest rates will remain low."
FOMC Minutes Reveal Taper Likely In "Coming Months"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2013 14:03 -0500With the schizophrenia that seems to have availed across the FOMC members (hawks are doves, doves are hawks, tapering is not tightening, etc.) it is not surprising that the minutes reflect some confusion:
- *FOMC SAW `SEVERAL SIGNIFICANT RISKS' REMAINING FOR ECONOMY
- *FED TAPER LIKELY IN COMING MONTHS ON BETTER DATA, MINUTES SHOW
- *METLIFE FOUNDATION, SESAME WORKSHOP PARTNER TO PROVIDE FINL
- *FOMC SAW DOWNSIDE RISKS TO ECONOMY, LABOR MARKET `DIMINISHED'
- *FOMC SAW CONSUMER SENTIMENT REMAINING `UNUSUALLY LOW'
- *FOMC SAW RECOVERY IN HOUSING AS HAVING `SLOWED SOMEWHAT'
So summing up - when we get to an unknown point in the future with an unknown state of parameters, we may do an unknown amount of tapering - maybe possibly. Pre-Minutes: SPX 1791, 10Y 2.75, EUR 1.3444, Gold $1262
McDonalds Advice To Employees: "Quit Complaining" And "Sing A Song"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2013 13:44 -0500
Back in July, we highlighted a ridiculous and insulting campaign that McDonalds ran with Visa in which the company tried to help its impoverished employees plan a budget. The only thing the campaign did was embarrass the company by proving that you can’t survive working there. Well the company is right back at it in time for the holidays, with several pieces of advice for its legions of serf employees through its ”McResource” website. Three of the more insulting pieces of wisdom include...
An ECB Negative Deposit Rate? Don't Hold Your Breath, Says Citi
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2013 13:18 -0500While the FOMC Minutes due out in less than an hour is what everyone is looking forward to, the big surprise announcement of the day was the repeat of a rumor released initially 6 months ago, namely that the ECB is considering negative deposit rates - a concept we first speculated about back in June of 2012. Alas, just like last time, the latest incarnation of the NIRP rumor appears to be merely more hot air (and certainly will be exposed as such once the non-compliant mostly German ECB members hit the tape). One person who says not to hold your breath for an ECB negative rate, is Citi's Valentin Marino, who says not only is a negative deposit rate unlikely before the results of the AQR and stress tests as it would accelerate bank deleveraging, but that it "could worsen the pervasive credit crunch and add to the growth headwinds and deflation risks in in the currency block. It would erode investors’ confidence in Eurozone’s financial institutions and accentuate their relative underperformance."
Too BiG To JaiL...
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 11/20/2013 12:56 -0500The Law demands that we atone;
When we take things that we don't own;
But leaves the lords and ladies fine;
Who take things that are yours and mine... (Anon.)
The "Obamacare Shock" - One California Employer's Terrifying True Story
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2013 12:54 -0500
The cheapest plan now has a deductible of $6350! Before it was $150. Employees making $9 to $10/hr, have to pay $30/wk and have a $6350 deductible!!! What!!!! They can't afford that to be sure. Obamacare will kill their propensity to seek medical care. More money for less care? How does that help them? Here is the craziest part. Employees who qualify for mediCAL (the California version of Medicare), which is most of my employees, will automatically be enrolled in the Federal SNAP program. They cannot opt out. They cannot decline. They will be automatically enrolled in the Federal food stamp program based upon their level of Obamacare qualification. Remember, these people work full time, living in a small town in California. They are not seeking assistance. It all seems like a joke. How can this be the new system? Pelosi, pass the bill to find out what's in it? Surprise! You've annihilated the working class.
"It's Going To End Ugly Unless The PBoC Changes Its Attitude To Liquidity"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2013 12:30 -0500
The big trouble in massive China that we discussed here is weighing heavily on the liquidity in the debt-fueled nation. As The FT reports, several banks have had to delay or dramatically reduce Chinese bond issues as the impact of a tight onshore credit market begins to be felt. "China is much more funding dependent than in the past," warns one analyst, as issuers are dealing with a string of problems stemming from the drying up of interbank market liquidity and fierce competition from wealth management and trust products for investors’ funds. "Government and policy banks have suffered the most. Now pressure is coming to corporates," one trader pointed out, adding, ominously, "it's going to end pretty ugly unless PBOC changes its attitude to liquidity;" which, of course, is exactly the situation the 3rd Plenum outline is looking to change.
Dennis Gartman Compare And Contrast
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2013 12:15 -0500
Gartman from November 19: "... the simple things of economic growth, I don't think there's froth whatsoever."
Gartman from just ten days earlier, November 8: "Now with the S&P forging a massive reversal to the downside, we not only must abandon being bullish we must become bearish... and very so.... Our bearish friends, having been wrong for so long, are now right; it is time to be bearish of stocks, while the time for having been bullish is now past... We trust we are clear. The game’s changed and when the game changes, we change.... We had heretofore consistently erred bullishly of simple things… of coal; of steel; of railroads; of ships and shipping… but we are not now."
Guess The Profit Margin
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/20/2013 11:51 -0500
In today's finance lesson, JCPenney demonstrates what happens when one takes the X in TR=P*X a little too far. As for that "Old Normal" concept of of actually generating a profit on TR... well, just ask Amazon.
The QE Experiment is Failing... Will Stocks Crash?
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 11/20/2013 11:37 -0500
The Fed’s economic models, and 99% of the economic models employed by Central Banks in general, believe that monetary easing can bring about an economic recovery. The primary argument for this crowd if QE has thus far failed to produce a recovery is that the QE efforts have not been big enough. And then there’s Japan...




