Archive - Nov 2013
November 25th
Spoiler Alert: Godot Never Shows Up
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/25/2013 19:20 -0500
Here’s the crucial part of what Summers and Krugman are saying: this is not a temporary gig. This isn’t going to just “get better” on its own over time. This really is, as Mohamed El-Erian of PIMCO would call it, the New Normal. And if you’re Jeremy Grantham or anyone for whom a stock has meaning as a fractional ownership stake in a real-world company rather than as a casino chip that gives you “market exposure” … well, that’s really bad news... Just don’t kid yourself into thinking that your deep dive into the value fundamentals of some large-cap bank has any predictive value whatsoever for the bank’s stock price, or that a return to the happy days of yesteryear is just around the corner. It doesn’t and it’s not, and even if you’re making money you’re going to be miserable and ornery while you wait nostalgically for what you do and what you’re good at to matter again. Spoiler Alert: Godot never shows up.
Have We Reached 'Peak Gold'?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/25/2013 18:39 -0500
Led by countries such as Russia and China, central banks have recently become net buyers of gold. Meanwhile, ETF gold outflows have been a temporary source of supply this year, but obviously this cannot persist. It’s also unreasonable to assume that recycling will make up a significantly greater piece of supply without the price of gold increasing substantially. With the grade of current producing gold mines being 32.6% higher than undeveloped deposits, it makes the supply scenario even more clear. Not only is the current yearly mine supply difficult to sustain, but future mines coming online will be challenged by grade and margins to be economical at today’s prices. Mathematically, unless we have high-grade, high ounce deposits that are being fast tracked online, it will be very difficult to find a way to get supply to match demand. Have we reached peak gold?
10 Clues About 2013 Holiday Spending
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/25/2013 17:59 -0500
From consumer and retailer surveys to quantitative data such as household spending and private jet bookings, ConvergEx's Nick Colas has amassed a collection of 10 clues about this year's holiday shopping season. On the plus side, disposable personal income and consumer spending on discretionary items are rising, and travel to Palm Beach via private jet is quite popular this Christmas season. However, consumer confidence surveys are particularly weak, and consumer debt has ballooned to a 5-year high. Roughly equal parts good and bad, Colas' collection of holiday spending indicators points to a mediocre (at best) 2013 shopping season (as we noted earlier).
Fact Or Fiction: The Hunger Games
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/25/2013 17:24 -0500
One is a dystopian society of haves and have-nots (favored or disfavored) controlled from The Capitol by a totalitarian 'big' government and entertained by reality TV shows... the other is a fictional movie entitled "The Hunger Games"...
Silver (And Gold) Spike As Obama Speaks (Again)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/25/2013 16:48 -0500
Twice in the same day? Coincidence?
70% Of Brooklyn Home Sales Are To Hedge Funds, Investors And International Buyers
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/25/2013 16:34 -0500
It has been over a year since we listed the three "pillars" of the latest dead cat bounce in the housing market. Recall: "the REO-to-Rental subsidized investment program, which led to an epic surge in demand for multi-family housing, i.e., rental, units was, together with offshore investors parking their cash in the US for safekeeping (taking advantage of the NAR's anti-money laundering check exemptions) and the big banks Foreclosure Stuffing, the key reason for the recent, stimulus-fueled and quite transitory bounce in house prices in assorted markets." In other words, the latest artificial move higher in the housing market had nothing to do with an "improving" economy (and implicitly, everything to do with the epic injection of liquidity by all global central banks and chinese loan creation). Today we got confirmation that once again we were correct: to wit: "Douglas Elliman rep: 70% of Brooklyn home sales going to hedge funds, investors and international buyers."
Late-Day Let-Down Spoils NASDAQ Party As Bonds & Bullion Bid
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/25/2013 16:10 -0500
Energized by a lower crude oil price - and collapsing JPY - equity markets hit their highs shortly after 8pmET on Sunday night, trod water thorugh the Asian and European markets and started more aggressive selling once US cash markets opened. Coincidentally (or not) when Obama started speaking around 1445ET, US equities took a dramatic dive - catching down to an already weaker signaling VIX rally. EURJPY stayed in sync through all of this priming ignition pumps right into the close as NASDAQ 4,000 close was desperately needed (but the dot-com darlings were all hit). Gold and Silver's early monkey-hammering was met with buyers which lifted then up 0.5% and 0.8% respectively on the day (and 2% off their lows). WTI crude recovered more than half of its losses (-0.6% on the day) but Brent not so much as the spread broke to new 8 month highs. VIX closed higher and Treasury yields trended lower all day from the overnight open to close practically unchanged as the USD lost half its early gains to end +0.25%.
This Can't Be Good...
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/25/2013 15:46 -0500
Presented with no comment*...
Ron Paul Asks "Can Karzai Save Us?"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/25/2013 15:25 -0500
After a year of talks over the post-2014 US military presence in Afghanistan, the US administration announced last week that a new agreement had finally been reached. Under the deal worked out with Afghan President Hamid Karzai, the US would keep thousands of troops on nine military bases for at least the next ten years. In fact, much of the US government’s desire for an ongoing military presence in Afghanistan has to do with keeping money flowing to the military industrial complex. Addressing Afghan tribal elders last week, Karzai is reported to have expressed disappointment with US assistance thus far: “I demand tanks from them, and they give us pickup trucks, which I can get myself from Japan… I don’t trust the U.S., and the U.S. doesn’t trust me.” Let us hope that Karzai sticks to his game with Washington. Let the Obama administration have no choice but to walk away from this twelve-year nightmare. Then we can finally just march out.
Fresh From "Success" In Iran, President Obama Addresses Immigration Reform - Live Webcast
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/25/2013 14:37 -0500
A renewed confidence in the administration must be carried forward. We can't wait to hear how immigration reform will single-handedly fix the economy, joblessness, education, and healthcare... and if it's not passed, the failure of all those things is due to the Republican's unwillingness to negotiate... perhaps it is time for the Republicans to don their best Rouhani costumes?
Bill Ackman's "Seven Hallmarks Of A Pyramid Scheme" Herbalife Takedown
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/25/2013 14:23 -0500
We are used to hedge fund managers blindly making up "facts" to hide the reality that nothing else matters (most definitely not fundamentals) except the Fed's balance sheet (in order to defend his 2-and-20 sapping performance). So it is ironic that Pershing Square's Bill Ackman has added to his previous 342-slide PowerPoint presentation with the following 61 pages of his reality in the hope that market technicals (i.e. the weight of activist longs and shrinking float) and momentum will give way to his view that 'these' Herbalife's fundamentals will eventually win. Good luck with that...
Glutathione: Boost Your Health and Help Protect Yourself From Radiation
Submitted by George Washington on 11/25/2013 14:19 -0500Another Public Service Announcement ...
Guest Post: Madness... And Sanity
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/25/2013 13:57 -0500
Valuations still matter. Assuming that one is 'investing' as opposed to 'speculating', initial valuation (i.e. the price you pay for the investment) remains the single most important characteristic of whatever one elects to buy. And at the risk of sounding like a broken record, “initial valuation” in the US stock market is at a level consistent with very disappointing subsequent returns, if the history of the last 130 years is any guide. Without fail, every time the US market has traded on a cyclically-adjusted P/E (CAPE) ratio of 24 or higher over the past 130 years, it has been followed by a roughly 20 year bear market... but there are plenty of other fish to fry...
Returning 2706% In The Past 40 Years, The Best Performing "Yellow" Asset Is...
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/25/2013 13:33 -0500
Medallions – the yellow metal plates that essentially represent the right to operate a for-hail taxi in New York City – now trade for over $1.3 million, an all-time record. Part of this dynamic is fixed supply – there are just 13,336 medallions available for a city of 8.3 million people. There is also a macroeconomic point, with a stronger NYC economy for those inhabitants who can afford the service... is this the real impact of trickle-down economics? Or yet another distortion?
The Average American Ferrari Buyer Is 47 Years Old; In China - Only 32
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/25/2013 13:19 -0500
In China, 9 out of 10 billionaires are self-made, the highest percentage of any country (and by self-made we are unsure whether BusinessWeek's Christina Larson means via entrepreurial spirits or government connected handout) but there is another fact that makes the Chinese billionaire different from the rest of the average run-of-the-mill billionaires we discussed here. The average age of the country’s 157 billionaires is 53 years old - nine years younger than the world average. But perhaps the most shocking statistic among the luxury buyer is that the average Ferrari buyer in the U.S. is 47 years old; in China, he is 32.



