Archive - Feb 20, 2013
The Stock Market is a Giant Ponzi Scheme
Submitted by EconMatters on 02/20/2013 08:39 -0500Hence the cost basis of their investments is much higher with each artificial liquidity injection. This is great for current retirees, but at the expense of future retirees who now have inflated assets that will deflate once the Fed takes away the proverbial punch bowl.
FoxConn Freezes Hiring On iPhone Production Slowdown
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/20/2013 07:57 -0500
First it was Walmart letting the truth finally slip last Friday when a leaked memo showed recent sales are a "total disaster." Today, as anyone who has looked at AAPL premarket quotes will surmise, it's Apple's turn, following a report in the FT that FoxConn, the world's largest contract electronics manufacturer, "has imposed a recruitment freeze across almost all of its factories in China 5th as it slows production of Apple's iPhone." It is not an internal memo, but in this particular case actions speak even louder than leaked words: 'The suspension in hiring by China's largest private sector employer, and the biggest assembler of Apple products, is the first search countrywide move since the 2009 downturn, prompted by the financial crisis. It underscores the weakening demand for some Apple products, Which has put pressure on the American company's battered share price. "Currently, none of the plants in mainland China have hiring plans," said Liu Kun, a company spokesman at Foxconn's largest manufacturing facility in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen." So first Walmart, the world's largest private sector employer with over 2 million workers, and now FoxConn, the world's largest tech-focused employer with 1.2 million workers, is also realizing what a cashless, consumerless "recovery" means, regardless whether it is due to Apple or not. And the markets still continues to wave it off as one off events.
Frontrunning: February 20
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/20/2013 07:42 -0500- Apple
- B+
- BAC
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Barclays
- Boeing
- Bond
- China
- Citigroup
- Clear Channel
- Commodity Futures Trading Commission
- Corruption
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- Daimler
- Dell
- Deutsche Bank
- Dreamliner
- Fail
- FBI
- Indiana
- Ireland
- Italy
- KIM
- Lazard
- Loan-To-Deposit Ratio
- Medicare
- Mexico
- Morgan Stanley
- Natural Gas
- NRF
- President Obama
- recovery
- Reuters
- Starwood
- Starwood Hotels
- Swiss Franc
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- Yuan
- Office Depot Agrees to Buy Officemax for $13.50/Shr in Stock
- Bulgarian Government Resigns Amid Protests (WSJ)
- Rome will burn, regardless of Italian election result (Reuters)
- Abe Says No Need for Foreign Bond Buys Under New BOJ Chief (BBG)
- Rhetoric Turns Harsh as Budget Cuts Loom (WSJ)
- Muddy Waters Secret China Weapon Is on SEC Website (BBG)
- Business Loans Flood the Market (WSJ)
- Staples May Be Winner in Office Depot-OfficeMax Merger (BBG)
- Fortescue Won't Pay Dividend, Profit Falls (WSJ)
- Key Euribor rate on hold after rate cut talk tempered (Reuters)
- FBI Probes Trading in Heinz Options (WSJ)
- Spain Said to Impose Yield Ceiling on Bond Sales by Regions (BBG)
- BOK’s Kim Signals No Rate Cut Needed Now as Outlook Improves (BBG)
Rajoy Summarizes Overnight (And Recurring) Sentiment: "There Are No Green Shoots, There Is No Spring"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/20/2013 07:12 -0500In the aftermath of yesterday's surge in German hopium measured by the ZEW Economic Survey which took out all expectations to the upside, it was inevitable that the other double-dipping country, France, telegraphed some optimism despite a contracting economy and would follow suit with a big confidence beat, and sure enough the French INSEE reported that February business sentiment rose from 87 to 90, on expectations of an unchanged number. And the subsequent prompt smash of investor expectations in Switzerland, where the ZEW soared from -6.9 to +10.0 tells us that something is very wrong in the Alpine country if it too is trying so hard to distract from the here and now. And while one can manipulate future optimism metrics to infinity, it is reality that is proving far more troublesome for Europe, as could be seen by the Italian Industrial Orders print which crashed -15.3% Y/Y on expectations of a smooth -9.5% drop, down from -6.7% previously. Since industrial orders are a proxy for future demand, a critical issue as Italy enters 2013 after six consecutive quarters of economic contraction and with no relief on the horizon, it is only fitting that Italy should shock the world with an off the chart confidence beat next.
RANsquawk EU Market Re-Cap - 20th February 2013
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 02/20/2013 07:07 -0500Sterling is Pounded by Dovish BOE Minutes
Submitted by Marc To Market on 02/20/2013 06:33 -0500Sterling is has eclipsed the yen as the main focus in the foreign exchange market. The surprising news that has kicked it to fresh multi-month low was that the BOE is closer to easing policy than has been suspected. While it was a unanimous decision to leave rates on hold as expected, it was a tighter 6-3 vote on new asset purchases.
The market had expected a 8-1 vote. Of particular interest, it is the fourth time Governor King has been outvoted.
The Curious Case of Falling Gold and Silver Prices
Submitted by Monetary Metals on 02/20/2013 02:14 -0500A curious thing happened last week: the prices of gold and silver fell while open interest in futures rose. This is not how the market has been behaving in recent years.
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