Archive - Feb 26, 2013
Alternative Currency Goes Mainstream As Bitcoin ATMs Emerge
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/26/2013 15:27 -0500
Bitcoin represents another way to fight back against the current repressive and immoral monetary system that has a strangle hold on the planet. Ever since WordPress.com (the extremely popular blogging platform and 22nd most popular site on the internet), decided to accept Bitcoin as payment last November the value of Bitcoins versus the U.S. dollar has more than doubled. The esoteric crypto-currency continues to gain popularity and technologies to make it even more user friendly are popping up all over the place. The latest is the Bitcoin ATM, which could be a serious game changer for adoption.
Today's Volume Surge In Context
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/26/2013 15:03 -0500
Sorry to steal the jam out of the media pundit's donut but the better-than-average volume that is supposedly representative of something today in fact is solely due to the surge that occurred when we sold off into the European close and when Bernanke was dancing around Senatorial questions about stock market bubbles. It appears once again this afternoon that US equity algos have forgotten that Europe will open once again in 8 hours.
Zombie Love, True Sales and Why “Too Big To Fail” is Really Dead
Submitted by rcwhalen on 02/26/2013 14:42 -0500- Advanta
- Bear Stearns
- Bond
- Citigroup
- Comptroller of the Currency
- Fail
- Financial Accounting Standards Board
- GAAP
- Indiana
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- Mortgage Backed Securities
- Mortgage Industry
- None
- Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
- Rating Agencies
- Rating Agency
- ratings
- Ratings Agencies
- Real estate
- Reality
- Securities Fraud
- Shadow Banking
- Zombie Girls
The 2011 changes by the FDIC to the safe harbor for "true sales" may have been the end of "Too Big To Fail."
InBev Sued For Overstating Budweiser Alcohol Content
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/26/2013 14:29 -0500
Maker's Mark recent foray into "diluting" reality by keeping prices flat while reducing the alcohol content - a painful reminder that stealth inflation comes in the most unexpected of shapes - came and went, with the outcry limited to a select group of Bourbon lovers. However, when the realization hits that every other alcohol producer may have been engaging in the same less than ethical behavior, including America's precious Budweiser, we expect the response to be faster and furiouser. We also expect the answer to the question of how it is that food inflation is not far greater, will be made even clearer. It will, however, certainly bring new meaning to the phrase the beer glass is half full. Of course, since the lawsuit was filed by two men who "routinely purchased as many as four cases of Bud per month for the past four years" one can see why it may not be taken very seriously.
Two Cows: The Infographic
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/26/2013 14:01 -0500
There are many complexities in the socio-economic structures that the nations (and corporations) of the world have used (and abused) over the years. Volumes have been written to explain the intricacies of Capitalism, Fascism, Communism, and Socialism; and how these impact various corporations from Iran to Greece to Australia. However, in the interest of brevity, the following infographic - utilizing nothing more than two cows (which perhaps should now be horses, considering their inflationary displacement capacity for firms like IKEA and Nestle) to provide everything you need to know about ecomoomics.
February's Strange Divergence In Precious Metals
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/26/2013 13:38 -0500
February has been an odd month for precious metals to say the least. On-again, off-again fears of Bernanke removing the punchbowl (and endless sell-side strategists discussing Great Rotations and the end of the gold cycle) have led to prices for gold and silver sliding notably. However, while all this price deterioration has been going on, demand for physical gold and silver has surged - entirely disconnecting from January's apparent demand-to-price correlation - and Silver set to break all-time record demand highs for a February. We know who was buying in January, as Reuters reports Russia and Turkey were significantly adding to their bullion reserves; and while the divergence between demand and price coincided with Chinese New Year - leaving a large marginal buying nation on the sidelines - we suspect the drop is more to do with hedge fund reflexive selling - now caught offside. It seems at least one smart player was using lower prices to build their stack; manipulation or no manipulation.
Treasury Sells $35 Billion In 5 Year Paper In Boring Auction As Yield Drops
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/26/2013 13:12 -0500
There was nothing notable about today's just concluded $35 billion 5 year auction, with the possible exception of the fact that at a high yield of 0.777% (of which just 12.5% was allotted at the high), just inside the When Issued 0.778% at 1 pm, this was the first yield drop in three months, breaking the sequence of rising yields since December 2012 when Bernanke announced his $1 trillion balance sheet expansion program for 2013. Aside from that, the Bid to Cover of 2.85 was just shy of January's 2.88, and on top of the TTM average of 2.86. The Direct takedown was a weakish 14.3%, the lowest since September 2012, Indirects saw a 41.7% allocation, the highest since November, and the remainder was given to the Dealers, who will as usual promptly flip their quota back to the Fed while picking up several point in margin spread at the upcoming POMOs. Overall a snoozer, which however with tomorrow's last auction for this week, will take total record US debt which was $16.61 trillion higher by $53 billion to $16.7 trillion, or a 105% debt/GDP rounded up.
The Huge Shift In Market Structure That Occurred Yesterday
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/26/2013 12:47 -0500
Equity markets relatively collapsed intraday yesterday given the recent lack of volatility with the range around four times larger than the three-month average and volume at its highest in that period. While that is significant of itself, as the S&P broke its uptrend, Nanex has found a much more serious shift in the market structure that occurred yesterday. Soon after the open on the US day session, market-making HFTs surged their quote-stuffing efforts to the highest level in months. Whether this was intended to artificially inflate orders to enable institutional sell-orders to be crossed with falsely hopeful retail orders is unclear but given the order flow and direction of trade, it seems something significant changed yesterday.
Not Done Rising
Submitted by ilene on 02/26/2013 12:43 -0500Monday's selloff gives us opportunities pick up stocks for less and to write additional puts at better prices.
H-P's Big Investors Finally Can’t Take It Anymore
Submitted by testosteronepit on 02/26/2013 12:39 -0500Someone ended up holding the bag
Guest Post: The Unsafe Foundation of Our Housing 'Recovery'
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/26/2013 12:24 -0500
What could go wrong with the housing 'recovery' in 2013? To answer this question, we need to understand that housing is the key component a middle class squeezed by historically high debt loads, stagnant incomes, and a net worth largely dependent on their home. In response, Central Planners have pulled out all the stops to reflate housing as the only available means to spark a broad-based “wealth effect” that would support higher spending and an expansion of household debt. This returns us to the key question: Are all these Central Planning interventions sustainable, or might they falter in 2013? Once markets become dependent on intervention and support to price risk and assets, they are intrinsically vulnerable to any reduction in that support. Should these supports diminish or lose their effectiveness, it will be sink-or-swim for housing. Either organic demand rises without subsidies and lenders originate mortgages without agency guarantees, or the market could resume the fall in valuations Central Planning halted in 2009.
Europe Closes With Italy's Worst Day In 19 Months
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/26/2013 11:46 -0500
While all eyes were on Italy today - and we will get to that below - Swiss 2Y rates turned negative once again for the first time in a month; EURUSD relatively flatlined around 1.3050 (250 pips lower than pre-Italy); Europe's VIX exploded to almost 26% (from under 19% yesterday); and 3-month EUR-USD basis swaps plunged to their most liquidity-demanding level since 12/28. Spain and Italy (and Portugal) were the most hurt in bonds today as 2Y Italian spreads broke back above 200bps (surging over 50bps casting doubt on OMT support) and 3Y Spain yields broke above 3% once again. The Italian equity market suffered its equal biggest drop in 6 months falling back to 10 week lows (and down 14% from its end-Jan highs). Italian bond yields (and spreads) smashed higher - the biggest jump in 19 months as BTP futures volume exploded in the last two days. Something dramatic has changed as the fast money is running with bonds and stocks going out at their lows of the day. In CDS-land, Italy is now 'riskier' than Spain for the first time in a year.
Bernanke - Spend More, I'll Buy The Bonds!
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 02/26/2013 11:46 -0500I heard Ben say, "Buy gold and short bonds".
Post-Mortem Of Bernanke's Prepared Remarks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/26/2013 11:33 -0500Here's Bernanke's list of the costs/risks associated with further asset purchases, and his assessment about the severity of those risks:







