Archive - Dec 4, 2013
"Bad" News Send Stocks Soaring
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/04/2013 10:42 -0500
We had the good news (ADP beat sends stocks down) and now the bad news (ISM Services) which spikes stocks instantly up 1%. It seems increasingly clear from the last hour of trading that, as we proved here, the bulls are hoping for moar and moar bad news to keep the retirement dream alive... Notably nothing else is reacting in this manner to provide cover for stocks.
October New Home Sales Surge By Most Since 1980 As Median Price Drops To One Year Low
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/04/2013 10:21 -0500
With the government shutdown which apparently had zero impact on the economy, moments ago the Census Bureau released not one but two New Home Sales reports together due to the delay in data reporting. The data showed that while in September new home sales declined from 379K to 354K annualized, or the lowest since early 2012, the subsequent rebound sent New Home Sales to 444K, or a 90K increase, +25.4%, in one month was the biggest month over month jump since May 1980! What was less noted is the prior revisions, with June revised 0.9% lower, July down 4.4%, and August revised by a whopping 10% lower. So what caused the October surge? Possibly it was pent up demand, because as the first chart below shows, an unbroken trendline suggests a modest decline in sales data net of the prior downward revisions. However, what was most likely the reason for the increase is that the Median new home sales price tumbled to $245,800, down from $257,400 and well below the recent highs of $279,300. In fact, this was the lost median new price in one year. Supply - meet demand, and equilibrium price.
ISM Services Miss (Lowest Since June) As Employment Plunges To 6-Month Lows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/04/2013 10:15 -0500
Being the major part of the US 'economy' the disappointing performance of the ISM Services (soft data) - printing at 53.9 missing expectations of 55.0 - should be a concern. Under the covers, the data is a little more worrying than the stil-in-expansion mode headline data miss. New orders, business activity, and perhaps most worrisome, the employment sub-index all slid with the latter at its lowest since May. Combined with the manufacturing PMI, the composite ISM index fell from 55.1 to 54.3 in November. Despite the data, respondents remain optimistic...though tempered by its slow pace. This is the lowest November print for ISM Services since 2006. The last 4 times ISM Manufacturing was so far above Services it marked the turning point in manufacturing and a market correction.
Is Bob Shiller Right? Mortgage Applications Collapse Back To 5 Year Lows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/04/2013 09:35 -0500
After the initial post-Taper-talk rate-rise-driven marginal-buyer-crushing collapse in mortgage applications in the US, the un-Taper provided a brief period of hope for the NAR and market apologists that all-cash buyers are all we need and mortgage applications dead-cat-bounced on the rate drop. However, all that hope ended in early November and as of this morning's print, mortgage applications have plunged back to the almost record lows of October 2008 (levels not seen since December 2000). As Bob Shiller recently explained, "we can't trust momentum anymore," in housing and the speculators are leaving the buildings.
Part 1 - Era Of Depositor Bail-In Cometh
Submitted by GoldCore on 12/04/2013 09:20 -0500The era of bondholder bailouts is ending and that of depositor bail-ins is coming.
In that context a move to increased allocation of savings including a prudent allocation of some 5% to 10% to precious metals, is a sensible policy.
US Retailer Hell In One Chart
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/04/2013 09:18 -0500
The chart below from the WSJ, summarizes perfectly the hell that US retailers find themselves in. In brief: sales down and inventories soaring, means liquidation sales have to surge, while profits and cash flows crater.
"Good News" Spikes USD & Bond Yields (But Bullion Bid?)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/04/2013 09:05 -0500
Treasury yields are surging on the ADP's Good news this morning with 10Y topping 2.84% - its highest yield in almost 3 months. The USD is surging, stocks are fading; but despite an initial dip... gold is rallying.
US Deficit Shrinks To $40.6 Billion As October Petroleum Exports Rise To New Record
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/04/2013 08:53 -0500Moments ago, the Census Bureau announced that in October the US trade gap narrowed to $40.6 billion (which still missed expectations of "only" a $40 billion deficit) from an upward revised September deficit of $43 billion, as oil sales boosted exports to record level. Total exports rose to a record $192.7 billion up $3.4 billion from last month's $189.3 billion, while imports rose just $1 billion to $233.3 billion resulting in a $40.6 billion gap. Among the report highlights: October exports of goods and services ($192.7 billion), exports of goods ($135.3 billion), and exports of services ($57.4 billion) were the highest on record; October imports of goods and services ($233.3 billion) were the highest since March 2012 ($234.3 billion); and perhaps the best news for shale fans: October petroleum exports ($12.5 billion) were the highest on record.
ADP Soars To 215K Smashing Expectations, Prior Months Revised Higher Reviving Tapering Fears
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/04/2013 08:26 -0500
Judging by massive revision in the October print, from 130K to 184K, or nearly a 50% error, one would think that instead of actually tabulating specific private jobs as it by definition does, using the data entering the ADP private payrolls system, the ADP makes its estimate of jobs based on high inaccurate surveys just like the BLS. Either that, or it was desperate to catch up on the upside to the BLS' own propaganda numbers, which are just as "realistic." That said, the November ADP print soared from 130K to an upward revised 184K in October blowing through expectations of 170K and printing at a whopping 215K. And so the Taper dance is back on as everyone will now expected Friday's NFP to come in scorching hot, and force the Fed to cut its monthly flow by a whopping $10 billion to $75 billion.
Goldman Reveals "Top Trade" Reco #6 For 2014: Buy US, Japanese And European Banks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/04/2013 08:07 -0500It is only fitting that on the morning in which Europe levied the largest cartel fine in history against the criminal syndicate known as "banks", that Goldman Sachs would issue its #6 "Top Trade Recommendation" for 2014 which just happens to be, wait for it, a "long position in large-cap bank indices in the US, Europe and Japan." Supposedly, in a reflexive back and forth that should make one's head spin, this also includes Goldman Sachs (unless they specifically excluded FDIC-insured hedge funds, which we don't think was the case). So is Goldman recommending... itself? Joking aside, this means Goldman is now dumping its bank exposure to muppets.
Europe Fines 8 Banks €1.7 Billion For Rate Rigging In Largest Ever Cartel Penalty In History
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/04/2013 08:03 -0500- Deutsche Bank gets biggest combined penalty of €725.4mln.
- SocGen fined €445.9mln for Euribor manipulation.
- RBS agrees to pay €391mln in cartels
- JPMorgan fined €79.9mln in JPY LIBOR case.
- R.P. Martin Holdings Ltd fined €247,000
- UBS and Barclays escape fines as EU whistle-blowers.
Frontrunning: December 4
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/04/2013 07:38 -0500- Auto Sales
- Bank of England
- Barclays
- Barrick Gold
- BBY
- Black Friday
- Brazil
- China
- Citigroup
- Credit Conditions
- Credit Suisse
- Detroit
- Deutsche Bank
- Evercore
- Fitch
- Ford
- France
- Germany
- Illinois
- Insider Trading
- Iran
- Japan
- Keefe
- Lennar
- LIBOR
- Lloyds
- Markit
- Merrill
- Morgan Stanley
- Raymond James
- Real estate
- Recession
- Reuters
- SAC
- Sears
- Testimony
- Ukraine
- United Kingdom
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- Yen
- EU Fines Financial Institutions Over Fixing Key Benchmarks (Reuters)
- Euro-Area Economic Growth Slows as Exports, Consumption Cool (BBG) - someone has a very loose definition of growth
- Ukraine Officials Scour Globe for Cash as Protests Build (BBG)
- Oops: Franklin Boosted Ukraine Bet to $6 Billion as Selloff Began (BBG)
- Japan Plans 18.6 Trillion Yen Economic Package to Support Growth (BBG) - or about 2 months of POMO
- How Peugeot and France ran out of gas (Reuters)
- Iran threatens to trigger oil price war (FT)
- Abe Vows to Pass Secrecy Law That Hurts Cabinet’s Popularity (BBG)
- Brazil economy turns in worst quarter for 5 years (FT)
- Australia’s Slowdown Suggests RBA May Need to Do More (BBG)
- Biden calls for trust with China amid airspace dispute (Reuters)
Futures Fail To Ramp On Lack Of Yen Carry Excitement
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/04/2013 07:08 -0500- ABC News
- Australia
- B+
- Barclays
- Beige Book
- Bond
- CDS
- China
- Copper
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Deutsche Bank
- Eurozone
- Fail
- fixed
- Germany
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- headlines
- Iran
- Iraq
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- LIBOR
- New Home Sales
- Nikkei
- Non-manufacturing ISM
- Obamacare
- OPEC
- POMO
- POMO
- RANSquawk
- RBS
- Saudi Arabia
- SocGen
- Standard Chartered
- Ukraine
- Unemployment
- Yen

While there was a plethora of macro data (starting with some ugly numbers out of Australia which clobbered AUD pairs overnight), China HSBC Services PMI dipping slighlty from 52.6 to 52.5, Final Eurozone PMI Services (printing at 51.2 up from 50.9 and beating expectations of the same on an increase in German PMI numbers from 54.5 to 55.7 and a decline in French PMI from 48.8 to 48.0), Eurozone retail sales declining by 0.2%, on expectations of an unchanged print, and much more (see below), perhaps the most important news of the day came from Japan which many expect will be the source of much more easing in the coming months and thus serve as marginal lever to push global fungible markets higher. However, not only did various BOJ officials for the first time in a while talk down expectations of a QE boost, but the head of the Japan GPIF said that it doesn't need to sell JGBs right now as it would "rock markets" and that instead can achieve its targeted 52% weighing as bonds mature, that it may buy foreign bonds instead to raise weighting to core target (as the Fed buys Japan bonds?), and that it will be very difficult for Japan to hit the BOJ's inflation target in 2 years. Is Japan already getting cold feet on rumors of more QE and did it realize there are only so many assets it can monetize. If so, watch out below on the EURJPY which has now priced in about 700 pips of expected BOJ QE boosting in early 2014.
Getting Ready for the Big One: February 2014
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 12/04/2013 06:48 -0500Getting ready for Christmas? What’s Santa got in his sack for you this year? Well, if there’s one thing you should be preparing for, then it can only be the big crash of February 2014.
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