Archive - Nov 4, 2013
JPM Warns The Biggest Risk To The "Bull Market" Is... Growth?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2013 12:07 -0500
'Another week, another high for equities' is the resigned way JPMorgan's Jan Loeys begins his discussion of "bubbles" this week - the massive gains in equity markets, in a month and a year of lower economic growth and earnings expectations, are raising a warning flag for many investors that easy money and liquidity are creating serious asset bubbles that threaten future growth and investment returns. Simply put, "a bubble view is a view that the Fed will stay easy for too long" and will then have to stamp on the brakes when growth and inflation suddenly react to easy money; and "a sudden spurt in growth is the biggest risk to asset reflation."
Is 4,616 On The S&P 500 The Fed's Ultimate Goal?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2013 11:49 -0500It is only fitting that promptly following the third worst bear market of all time resulting from the bursting of the biggest, until that point, credit bubble that as a result of over $10 trillion in global fungible central bank balance sheet expansion, and a new and improve and bigger than ever credit bubble, one which includes the sovereigns too, the S&P is now 162% higher from its March 9 2009 lows of 676.53, making this the fourth biggest bull market in US history. The next logical question: what would make this relentless Fed balance sheet tracking "bull market" become the 3rd biggest bull market in history, or 2nd biggest... or biggest of all time. Here are the S&P500 breakevens for those particular thresholds...
World Ready to Jump into Bed with China
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 11/04/2013 11:23 -0500President Obama, the US federal government shutdown, the omnipotence of the National Security Agency and the anger of the world at just how much the USA flouts the laws that we thought we might have lived by.
Pimco's Total Return Fund Loses World's Largest Mutual Fund Title To Vanguard
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2013 11:16 -0500In what is the biggest black eye for Bill Gross and the largest bond manager in the world, moments ago Bloomberg reported that the title of the world's largest mutual fund has just changed hands:
- PIMCO TOTAL RETURN LOSES LARGEST MUTUAL FUND TITLE TO VANGUARD
- GROSS'S PIMCO TOTAL RETURN BECAME LARGEST MUTUAL FUND IN 2008
- PIMCO TOTAL RETURN HAD $247.9 BILLION IN ASSETS AS OF OCT. 31
This comes on the heels of what Reuters reports is the sixth consecutive month of outflows for the TRF, with $4.4 billion withdrawn in October, while on the other side Vanguard, now at $251 billion, has more than tripled in size since the end of 2008 as the scramble for equities in Bernanke's new normal has become the only game in town.
SAC Capital To Plead Guilty To All Counts
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2013 10:53 -0500While we are sure many will proclamin 'this is just a witch-hunt' - and all the hangers-on will be defending Stevie's decision... the fact is that:
- *SAC AGREES TO PLEAD GUILTY TO END U.S. INSIDER-TRADING CASE
- *SAC WILL PLEAD GUILTY TO EVERY COUNT IN INDICTMENT, U.S. SAYS
- *U.S. SAYS SAC AGREEMENT PROVIDES `NO IMMUNITY' FOR INDIVIDUALS
Seems pretty cut-and-dried to us... As part of the deal, Reuters notes that SAC will terminate its investment advisory business.
Dylan Grice: "There Is A Widespread Perception That Something Is Very Wrong"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2013 10:25 -0500
One increasingly reads of capital stewards complaining that things seem more difficult today. We think it’s because they are. We are also increasingly mindful of conversations with friends, family and colleagues that reveal a widespread perception that something is very wrong, though people can’t quite put their finger on what it is. As we have just argued, we think the answer is that the inflation of credit has driven an inflation of asset prices, which has driven an inflation of future expectations, which has driven an inflation of time preference… and that while the consequences of these various inflations are profound, the new language of ininflation which it has spawned is shallow.
Factory Orders Ex-Transports Decline For Second Month, Core CapEx Orders Drop 7.2% Annualized In Q3
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2013 10:17 -0500
Following the disappointing delayed durable goods print from last week, it was expected that today's Factory orders number would disappoint as well, and sure enough, it did not disappoint... in that expectation. With consensus looking for a 1.8% increase in September for the headline number, the delayed September number came out at 1.7% for the headline, the 6th miss in the past 9 months, while the ex-transport factory goods print dropped -0.2% following the August ex transports falling -0.4%. In other words, it was all transports once again, reflecting the rebound in orders for civilian aircraft as China's excess capacity bubble now seems to include all Boeing aircraft from 737 to 787.
...And Markets Break Again
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2013 10:02 -0500UPDATE: 10 minutes later - *BATS EXCHANGES REVOKE SELF-HELP AGAINST NYSE EXCHANGES
It's Monday morning and stock "markets" are open for trading... well some of them...
- *BATS EXCHANGES DECLARE SELF-HELP AGAINST NYSE
- *NYSE AND NYSE MKT REVIEWING TRADES MARKED AS SOLD
Of course, as CNBC once said, we are all getting used to this now (and stocks are going higher) - so it doesn't matter.
Bubble Watch: Twitter Raises IPO Price By 25%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2013 09:51 -0500Just days ahead of the most-anticipated IPO of the year, and despite the constant calming language from the mainstream media, as the WSJ notes, investors are stampeding into initial public offerings at the fastest clip since the financial crisis, fueling a frenzy in the shares of newly listed companies that echoes the technology-stock craze of the late 1990s. October was the busiest month for U.S.-listed IPOs since 2007, and while 'everyone' is convinced that the Twitter IPO will be different from Facebook, the early exuberant demand suggests otherwise:
- *TWITTER SEES IPO PRICE $23-$25, HAD SEEN $17-$20
So a 25% rise in the offering price perhas best contextualizes the comments of one broker: "When I hear intelligent investors asking me not which companies are good to invest in, but which IPOs can I get into, it scares the heck of me."
America's Income - Who Has It?
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 11/04/2013 09:46 -0500America is not the ‘rich’ country that people think it is. And there ain’t a hell of lot that can be done about that.
Fed's Bullard: Bubbles Are "Blindingly Obvious"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2013 09:29 -0500
In a stunning series of lies, damned lies, and twisted statistics, the Fed's Jim Bullard unleashed a torrent of self-agrandizing comfort-speak on CNBC this morning. From his comment that "bubbles, such as housing and dot-com, were blindingly obvious at the time," despite Bernanke's (and Greenspan's) insistence at the time that they were not to his comments about the size of Fed Treasury holdings (and monetization) as being "average" based on some statistic, the Fed president gave himself one more out as he admonished:
*BULLARD SAYS FED DOESN'T WANT TO SUPPORT 'FISCAL RECKLESSNESS'
Oh no, you'd never want to do that... With an administration lying to the American people's face over Obamacare and now the even more powerful Fed incapable of the truth, what hope is there that anyone gets out of this debacle in tact.
GeTTiNG BaCK To ReaMiNG...
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 11/04/2013 09:21 -0500By the Iron Shill himself...
THe NSA aND THe THE MeaNiNG OF LiFe!
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 11/04/2013 09:14 -0500The trouble with Merkels!
Cramer On Blackberry: Buy At $12, "It's A Coiled Spring"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2013 09:08 -0500Holiday Spending "Hopes" Crumble As Income Gains Stagnate
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2013 08:52 -0500
But this year was supposed to be different... Early-year prospects for a revival in consumer spending quickly faded in the wake of the lagged impact of the $148 billion tax hike that began the year. As Bloomberg's Joe Brusuelas notes in the following brief interview, combined with a slower pace of hiring and sluggish wage growth, the result will probably be another in a string of disappointing holiday shopping seasons. It is increasingly doubtful that consumers have the wherewithal to meet the ambitious National Retail Federation forecast for a 3.9% increase in holiday spending to $602.1 billion. Brusuelas believes a 2 to 2.5% increases appears closer to the mark given the economic and policy challenges in place this year.







