Archive - Dec 3, 2013
House Hearing On Obama's Unilateral Action To Cease Enforcing Laws - Live Webcast
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/03/2013 11:02 -0500
The House Judiciary Committee is about to discuss what it calls “The President’s Constitutional Duty to Faithfully Execute the Laws,” focusing on the Obamacare delays, enforcement of immigration laws, and more. As Mediaite notes, the question of whether the president can take unilateral action to cease enforcing laws stretches back at least to last summer, when President Barack Obama said he would stop deporting young undocumented immigrants, an end-run around congressional refusal to pass the DREAM Act. Executive orders have played a part in everything from the non-enforcement of the Defense of Marriage Act to the administration’s “fix” two weeks ago allowing insurance providers to renew policies cancelled after the implementation of the Affordable Care Act. It seems the constitutional lawyers want to have their say in the "most transparent" administration ever.
Detroit Eligible To File Chapter 9; Pension Haircuts Allowed Bankruptcy Judge Rules
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/03/2013 10:53 -0500
Update, and it's official: JUDGE: DETROIT ELIGIBLE FOR IMMEDIATE BANKRUPTCY PROTECTION, DETROIT TO REMAIN UNDER BANKRUPTCY COURT PROTECTION, JUDGE SAYS
As somewhat expected - though hoped against by many Detroit union workers - Judge Steven Rhodes appears to have confirmed Detroit is eligible for bankruptcy protection (after pointing out that the city's accounting was accurate and it is indeed insolvent) making this the largest ever muni bankruptcy.
JUDGE RHODES SAYS HE WILL ALLOW PENSION CUTS IN DETROIT'S BANKRUPTCY, DETROIT JUDGE: NOTHING SEPARATES PENSIONS FROM OTHER DEBT
The city will now begin working toward its next major move - the submission of a plan to re-adjust its more than $18 billion in debt - including significant haircuts for pension funds (possibly 16c on the dollar recovery) and bondholders. With Detroit as precedent, we can only imagine the torrent of other cities in trouble that will be willing to fold.
Bail-Ins And Deposit Confiscation Confirmed At ‘Future of Banking in Europe’ Conference
Submitted by GoldCore on 12/03/2013 10:44 -0500Michael Noonan, Irish Finance Minister confirmed yesterday that bail-ins or deposit confiscation will be used in the EU. The era of bondholder bailouts is ending and that of depositor bail-ins is coming.
Preparations have been or are being put in place by the international monetary and financial authorities for bail-ins. The majority of the public are unaware of these developments, the risks and the ramifications.
Brits Draw Down Record Amounts Of Savings To Cover Rising Cost of Living
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/03/2013 10:42 -0500
In the most dramatic evidence yet that Britons are paying for the rising cost of living by raiding savings, Yahoo UK reports that households are pulling money out of their savings accounts at the fastest rate in modern record, according to Bank of England figures. Since the recent recession began, millions of workers have suffered repeated effective pay cuts as inflation has outstripped pay rises, and while consumer spending was one of the main contributors to the sharp rise in gross domestic product in the third quarter, "consumer strength usually reflects increased borrowing but this hasn't been the key factor recently."
A Different Assessment of Risk
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 12/03/2013 10:27 -0500If you want to make a killing in the markets, you need to be willing to see the world the way it really is, NOT how you THINK it is. Most investors think the VIX measures the market’s risk, but really, it’s almost the opposite: a spike in the VIX almost always picks market bottoms!
Richemont Chairman Warns Global Economy Is "Very Precarious... There Will Be Tears"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/03/2013 10:11 -0500While most of the world's elites are bathing in a sea of liquidity and propagandizing the status quo to keep the dream alive, Richemont Chairman Johann Rupert has unleashed a torrent of uncomfortable truthiness this morning:
- *REMGRO CHAIRMAN RUPERT 'VERY CONCERNED' ABOUT GLOBAL ECONOMY
- *GLOBAL ECONOMY 'VERY, VERY PRECARIOUS,' RUPERT SAYS
- *WORLD HEADING FOR 'BIG INFLATION' OR `BIG DEPRESSION': RUPERT
- *GLOBAL ECONOMY HEADED FOR 'TEARS': REMGRO, RICHEMONT CHAIRMAN
- *RUPERT SAYS HIS BIGGEST CONCERN IS JOBLESS GROWTH
And while things are good now, the owner of the Cartier brand warned if the global economy doesn’t do well, Richemont is not well positioned.
With Top 4 US Banks Holding $217 Trillion In Derivatives, Total Number Of US Banks Drops To Record Low
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/03/2013 09:49 -0500Overnight, the WSJ reported a financial factoid well-known to regular readers: namely that as a result of a broken system that ever since the LTCM bailout has encouraged banks to become take on so much risk they become systematically important (as in their failure would "end capitalism as we know it"), and thus Too Big To Fail, there has been an unprecedented roll-up of existing financial institutions especially among the top, while the smaller, less "relevant", if far more prudent banks have been forced out of business. "The decline in bank numbers, from a peak of more than 18,000, has come almost entirely in the form of exits by banks with less than $100 million in assets, with the bulk occurring between 1984 and 2011. More than 10,000 banks left the industry during that period as a result of mergers, consolidations or failures, FDIC data show. About 17% of the banks collapsed."
Silver Slumps To $19 As Precious Metal Smackdown Continues
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/03/2013 09:30 -0500
The overnight session was relatively quiet as precious metals trod water while equity markets tumbled. However, as the US equity cash session looms, silver and gold are coming under renewed selling pressure (and the USD bid) in a seeming effort to provide some rotational bid to stocks into the open (just like yesterday). This is the lowest for Gold ($1218) and Silver ($19.01) since July.
Black "Weekend" Shopper Traffic Down 4% Led By Plunge In Electronics
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/03/2013 09:22 -0500
Over the Thursday-Sunday Black "Weekend", Shoppertrak reports that traffic fell a notable 4% from last year with sales up a measly 1% - very much in line with our expectations of a weak holiday spending season. Total in-store shopper traffic increased by 9.4% in the apparel sector, while traffic in the electronics sector decreased by 6.5% for that same time period. Regionally, traffic fell the most in the Northeast (-9.8%) and the Midwest saw the largest drop in sales (-2.9%) with only the West increasing notably (+5.5%).
Abe-No-Mucs: Regular Japanese Wages Decline For 17th Consecutive Month
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/03/2013 08:54 -0500
While on the surface total cash earnings posted the smallest possible monthly increase, or 0.1%, in October - the first rise in 4 months - the reality is that this was driven by overtime pay, which increased by 5.4%. However, the far more important component of worker compensation, regular pay, declined by 0.4% in the month. This was the 17th consecutive decline in core pay and is a glowing testament to just how flawed Abenomics has been since its inception due to its staunch inability to shift employer eagerness to boost pay even in an economy where unemployment is supposedly so much less than in the US and thus worker slack is far less prominent. Turns out that is not the case.
Another Central Bank Warns Of Bitcoin Risks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/03/2013 08:31 -0500
First the ECB, then the Fed, and now the Dutch central bank have come out and explicitly warned of the dangers of virtual currencies like Bitcoin and Litecoin. Their explicit statement this morning, raising questions about deposit guarantees, central issuer responsibility, and volatility do their best to inform potential users (or traders) of the alternative currency that it is the devil incarnate. It seems, despite the mainstream media's guffawing at the swings and outrageous fortune in the market's early days, that the powers that be see these crypto-currencies as anything but benign.
Bill Gross Explains What "Keeps Him Up At Night"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/03/2013 08:14 -0500"What keeps us up at night? Well I can’t speak for the others, having spoken too much already to please PIMCO’s marketing specialists, but I will give you some thoughts about what keeps Mohamed and me up at night. Mohamed, the creator of the “New Normal” characterization of our post-Lehman global economy, now focuses on the possibility of a” T junction” investment future where markets approach a time-uncertain inflection point, and then head either bubbly right or bubble-popping left due to the negative aspects of fiscal and monetary policies in a highly levered world. ... investors are all playing the same dangerous game that depends on a near perpetual policy of cheap financing and artificially low interest rates in a desperate gamble to promote growth. The Fed, the BOJ (certainly), the ECB and the BOE are setting the example for global markets, basically telling investors that they have no alternative than to invest in riskier assets or to lever high quality assets. “You have no other choice,” their policies insinuate.... Deep in the bowels of central banks research staffs must lay the unmodelable fear that zero-bound interest rates supporting Dow 16,000 stock prices will slowly lose momentum after the real economy fails to reach orbit, even with zero-bound yields and QE." - Bill Gross
Frontrunning: December 3
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/03/2013 07:52 -0500- Apple
- B+
- Bain
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank of England
- Barclays
- Bernard Madoff
- Black Friday
- Bond
- China
- Comptroller of the Currency
- Credit Suisse
- default
- Dell
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Ford
- Freddie Mac
- Germany
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Great Depression
- Hong Kong
- India
- Japan
- Joe Biden
- JPMorgan Chase
- Medallion
- Meltdown
- Merrill
- Mexico
- Morgan Stanley
- Mortgage Loans
- News Corp
- Nomura
- Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
- Peter Chernin
- President Obama
- ratings
- Raymond James
- RBS
- Real estate
- Reuters
- SAC
- Shenzhen
- Switzerland
- Term Sheet
- Testimony
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- Yuan
- With website improved, Obama to pitch health plan (Reuters)
- Joe Biden condemns China over air defence zone (FT)
- Tally of U.S. Banks Sinks to Record Low (WSJ)
- Black Friday Weekend Spending Drop Pressures U.S. Stores (BBG)
- Cyber Monday Sales Hit Record as Amazon to EBay Win Shoppers (BBG)
- Ukraine's Pivot to Moscow Leaves West Out in the Cold (WSJ)
- Investment banks set to cut pay again despite rise in profits (FT)
- Worst Raw-Material Slump Since ’08 Seen Deepening (BBG)
- Democrats Face Battles in South to Hold the Senate (WSJ)
- Hong Kong reports 1st case of H7N9 bird flu (AP)
- In Fracking, Sand Is the New Gold (WSJ)
Goldman Reveals "Top Trade" Reco #5 For 2014: Sell Protection On 7-Year CDX IG21 Junior Mezzanine Tranche
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/03/2013 07:22 -0500If the London Whale trade was JPM selling CDS in tranches and in whole on IG9 and then more, and then even more in an attempt to corner the entire illiquid IG9 market and then crashing and burning spectacularly due to virtually unlimited downside, Goldman's top trade #5 for 2014 is somewhat the opposite (if only for Goldman): the firm is inviting clients to sell CDS on the junior Mezz tranche (3%-7%) of IG21 at 464 bps currently, where Goldman "would apply an initial spread target and stop loss of 395bp and 585bp, respectively. Assuming a one-year investment horizon, the breakeven spread on this trade is roughly 554bp (that is, 90bp wider than where it currently trades)." In other words, Goldman is going long said tranche which in an environment of record credit bubble conditions and all time tights across credit land is once again, the right trade. Do what Goldman does and all that...
Futures Slide As A Result Of Yen Carry Unwind On Double POMO Day
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/03/2013 07:06 -0500- Agency MBS
- Auto Sales
- B+
- Black Friday
- BOE
- Bond
- China
- Copper
- CPI
- Credit Default Swaps
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- default
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- France
- Germany
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- headlines
- Housing Market
- Investment Grade
- Iraq
- Italy
- Jim Reid
- LatAm
- M2
- Markit
- Meltup
- Monetary Policy
- Nikkei
- OPEC
- POMO
- POMO
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- Recession
- Reuters
- Reverse Repo
- SPY
- Unemployment
- Volatility
- White House
- Yen
- Yuan
Something snapped overnight, moments after the EURJPY breached 140.00 for the first time since October 2008 - starting then, the dramatic weakening that the JPY had been undergoing for days ended as if by magic, and the so critical for the E-Mini EURJPY tumbled nearly 100 pips and was trading just over 139.2 at last check, in turn dragging futures materially lower with it. Considering various TV commentators described yesterday's 0.27% decline as a "sharp selloff" we can only imagine the sirens that must be going off across the land as the now generic and unsurprising overnight carry currency meltup is missing. Still, while it is easy to proclaim that today will follow yesterday's trend, and stocks will "selloff sharply", we remind readers that today is yet another infamous double POMO today when the NY Fed will monetize up to a total of $5 billion once at 11am and once at 2 pm.





