Archive - Nov 2013
November 5th
Goldman Forecasts Fed Will Lower Rate-Hike Threshold In December To Counter Taper Tantrum
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2013 08:34 -0500
The extreme experiment of current US monetary policy has evolved (as we noted yesterday), from explicit end-dates, to unlimited end-dates, to threshold-based end-dates. Of course, this 'threshold' was no problem for the liquidty whores when unemployment rates were extremely high themselves, but as the world awoke to what we have been pointing out - that it's all a mirage of collapsing participation rates - the FOMC (and sell-side strategists) realized that the endgame may be 'too close'. Cue Goldman's Jan Hatzius, who in today's note, citing two influential Fed staff economists, shifts the base case and forecasts that the Fed will lower its threshold for rate hikes to 6.0% (and perhaps as low as 5.5%) as early as December (as a dovish forward-guidance balance to an expected Taper announcement).
The Next Obamacare Debacle: A Massive Doctor Shortage
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2013 08:03 -0500
While the Obamacare website rollout may be a huge slap in the face of government (in)efficiency and (dis)organization (healthcare.gov has now joined the ranks of all other New Normal "full-time" workers by working part-time following a daily maintenance shutdown from 1 am to 5 am), the reality is that sooner (unlikely) or much later it will be fixed. And while the realization that the Unaffordable Care Act is just that, and will soak up far more cash from the majority of the population will be a slap in the face of all who never understood that socialist Ponzi schemes always cost far more in the bitter end, it is nothing that America's favorite pastime can't resolve - paying on credit. Which means that the biggest threat to Americans as a result of Obamacare is neither the website, nor really who foots the bill (ask future generations), but the actual impact on services, and as CBS reports the next shock to brace for is the sudden drop off in healthcare providers as an imminent "explosion of demand for doctors and services" mean a looming doctor shortage is just around the corner.
Frontrunning: November 5
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2013 07:36 -0500- AIG
- Barclays
- Barrick Gold
- Bond
- Carlyle
- Chemtura
- China
- Citigroup
- Cohen
- Crude
- Deutsche Bank
- Eurozone
- Evercore
- Federal Reserve
- Ford
- Gannett
- Hertz
- India
- ISI Group
- Italy
- Keefe
- Mars
- Merrill
- Middle East
- Monsanto
- Morgan Stanley
- national security
- Natural Gas
- New York Times
- News Corp
- Newspaper
- Nomination
- NYSE Euronext
- RBS
- Reuters
- SAC
- Starwood
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- China premier warns against loose money policies (Reuters)
- Brussels forecasts tepid Eurozone growth (FT)
- SAC Case Began With Informant’s Tips on Cohen, Rajaratnam (BBG)
- Dirty Munich Home’s Nazi Loot Estimated at $1.35 Billion (BBG)
- Mortar hits Vatican embassy in Damascus, no casualties (Reuters)
- India Launches Mars Mission (WSJ)
- Lael Brainard to leave Treasury, heading to Fed (FT)
- U.S. Takes Aim at 'Forced' Insurance (WSJ)
- Wife of Jeff Bezos attacks book about Amazon (FT)
- Fall of Brazil’s Batista embarrasses President Dilma Rousseff (FT)
- The One Thing People Still Really Like About BlackBerry (BusinessWeek)
Internet or Splinternet
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 11/05/2013 07:35 -0500The US and the National Security Agency may well have just dug their own grave where the internet is concerned.
Garden State Plaza Mall Shooting Ends With Gunman Taking His Life
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2013 07:09 -0500
Last's night latest mass shooting event, just three days after a comparable situation at LAX airport, and this time just minutes away from New York City, is over with the alleged gunman, Richard Shoop, 20, taking his life.
Futures An Unamiliar Shade Of Green On Chinese Taper Fears As Li Hints At Stimulus Curbs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2013 06:50 -0500- Aussie
- Australia
- B+
- Bank of Japan
- BOE
- Bond
- CDS
- Chicago PMI
- China
- Copper
- CPI
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- fixed
- France
- Gilts
- Gross Domestic Product
- headlines
- Iran
- Jan Hatzius
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- M2
- Monetary Policy
- Money Supply
- Nikkei
- Non-manufacturing ISM
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- recovery
- Reuters
- TrimTabs
- Unemployment
- Yuan
This morning US futures are an unfamiliar shade of green, as the market is poised for its first red open in recent memory (then again the traditional EURJPY pre-open ramp is still to come). One of the reasons blamed for the lack of generic monetary euphoria is that China looked likely to buck the trend for more monetary policy support. New Premier Li Keqiang said in a speech published in full late on Monday that adding extra stimulus would be more difficult since printing new money would cause inflation. "His comments are different from what people were expecting. This is a shift from what he said earlier this year about bottom-line growth," said Hong Hao, chief strategist at Bank of Communications International. Asian shares struggled as a result slipping about 0.2 percent, though Japan's Nikkei stock average bounced off its lows and managed a 0.2 percent gain. However, in a world in which the monetary tsunami torch has to be passed every few months, this will hardly be seen as supportive of the "bad news is good news" paradigm we have seen for the past 5 years.
November 4th
Armored Gunman Loose In New Jersey Mall; Shots Fired, Injuries Reported - Live Stream
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2013 22:16 -0500
UPDATE: First images from inside the mall...
Shots were fired Monday night at the 2.1 million square feet Garden State Plaza mall in Paramus, New Jersey. Local TV network PIX11 reports, "according to a police source: the shooting began near the Nordstrom’s department store on the second level of the mall; At least eight shots have been fired; The gunman is believed to be wearing body armor; Stores are on lockdown;
CNN reports from mall insider:"There was just people running like crazy so I quickly just closed my doors, ran to the back, turned off all the lights, music and everything, just to stay hidden,"
Finally, several hours after it started, the situation ends with the suspected gunman allegedly shooting himself.
Tracing The Great Chinese Gold Rush
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2013 22:16 -0500
As we recently noted, China is taking over the world on gold bar at a time. This growing world super-power has, it would appear (by words and deeds) grown tired of being on the receiving end of the USDollar and Fed money printing. The Real Asset Company illustrates how, in the space of a few decades, China has opened up her huge gold market which is now hungrily devouring the world's physical gold.
The (D)evolution Of Central Bank Communications
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2013 21:42 -0500
The goal of forward guidance is to steer market, as well as public, expectations about the future path of monetary policy. It would appear, to those without PhD.s that central banks are drifting from actions to words and the following chart shows the devolution over the past 20 years of central-banker-speak. We have come quite a way from the "never explain, never excuse" view of Montagu Norman in the early 20th century to the hope-laden promises of increasingly wordy statements today...
Ron Paul Reveals What Was Not Said About Iraq
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2013 21:10 -0500
October was Iraq’s deadliest month since April, 2008. In those five and a half years, not only has there been no improvement in Iraq’s security situation, but things have gotten much worse. As post-“liberation” Iraq spirals steadily downward, Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki was in Washington last week to plead for more assistance from the United States to help restore order to a society demolished by the 2003 US invasion. Obama pledged to work together with Iraq to address al-Qaeda’s growing presence, but what was not said was that before the US attack there was no al-Qaeda in Iraq.
Are You A Member Of The "1%" - In 2012 A Record 166 Americans Made Over $50 Million
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2013 20:31 -0500
Never in US history have so many individuals earned over $50 million per year. Never before has the divide between the wealthy and the poor been so wide (never). The source of this catalyst for unrest in society, as Mark Spitznagel warned, is not runaway entrepreneurial capitalism, which rewards those who best serve the consumer in product and price. (Would we really want it any other way?) There is another force that has turned a natural divide into a chasm: the Federal Reserve. The relentless expansion of credit by the Fed creates artificial disparities based on political privilege and economic power.
Greek Companies Unable To Pay Taxes Explode From 182K To Over Half A Million In One Month
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2013 20:20 -0500
The US bug, whereby the worse the economy, the higher the stock market and bond prices must have shifted to Greece, because while the Greek stock market was the best performing "asset" class in October, and Greek bond yields are plunging just because the greater fool stock posse has now moved to the insolvent nation if only for a few months, the economic reality just gets worse by the minute. Case in point - Greek corporations, or what's left of them, and what Greece needs more than anything - taxes. Kathimerini reports, in what is now nail overkill on the Greek economic coffin, that "hundreds of thousands of enterprises are unable to fulfill their tax obligations, according to the data published on Monday by the Finance Ministry. Within just one month, from the end of August to end-September, the number of corporations that have fallen behind on their taxes soared from 182,785 to 526,477." No, you read that right: the number of companies that went in arrears on their tax obligations has tripled to over one half million in one month. The same month in which the Grecovery was rumored to be in full swing and when John Paulson was buying every Greek stock he could find.
Why Is An Epidemic Of Thievery Sweeping America?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2013 20:05 -0500
Desperate people do desperate things, and it appears that Americans are rapidly becoming a lot more desperate. An epidemic of thievery is sweeping across America, and authorities are not quite sure what to make of it. So why is all of this happening? Well, as we have written about previously, crime is on the rise in the United States, and poverty is absolutely exploding. In fact, according to the latest numbers from the U.S. Census Bureau, 49.2 percent of all Americans are receiving benefits from at least one government program each month. Over the past five years, we have seen an unprecedented rise in the number of people that cannot take care of themselves without help from the government. Millions upon millions of Americans that have been forced into poverty are becoming increasingly angry, frustrated and desperate. And what we are watching right now is only just the beginning - all of this is going to get a whole lot worse.




Obamacare goes dark.