Archive - May 2013

May 23rd

Reggie Middleton's picture

Replace Your Home Office With A Cellphone: Deadbeat Carrier Creative Destruction In The Ongoing Mobile Computing Wars





The Mobile Computing Wars! There'll be a few big winners, and some horrendously damaged losers brought about mostly by undue greed and price gouging in lieu of creativity and innovation!

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The Bronze Swan Arrives: Is The End Of Copper Financing China's "Lehman Event"?





In all the hoopla over Japan's stock market crash and China's PMI miss last night, the biggest news of the day was largely ignored: copper, and the fact that copper's ubiquitous arbitrage and rehypothecation role in China's economy through the use of Chinese Copper Financing Deals (CCFD) is coming to an end.

 

Sprott Group's picture

The Dire State of the Platinum-Palladium Miners





During the third week of May each year, representatives of the platinum industry gather in London, for an event that has become known as ‘Platinum Week’. Platinum Week centers on an industry dinner sponsored by the London Platinum and Palladium Market (LPPM) which marks the anniversary of the inauguration of the London Platinum Quotation (the forerunner of the present London Fixings) in 1973.

 

williambanzai7's picture

BReaKiNG NiKKei...





Please do not worry...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Pinpointing Europe's Social Unrest Hot-Spots





Following the ongoing rioting in until-now-calm Sweden, we thought it interesting to revisit the increasing chance of more broad-based social unrest in Europe. With the summer rapidly approaching, austerity still heavy in the air (well fauxsterity at least), there is a massive and growing divide not only between core and peripheral nations' youth unemployment but also within a nation. For instance, while Greece tops the overall youth unemployment level in Europe, 4 of the Top 5 regions (some with youth unemployment levels of over 70%) are from Spain. As lip-service is paid to addressing this pressing issue by the French and Germans (who themselves are increasingly at loggerheads over policy), as Bloomberg's Niraj Shah notes, the chasm between the rich and poor in Europe continues to gap ever wider.

 

Marc To Market's picture

Japanese Corporates Are Not Yen Bears (any more)





The globalization of production makes corporate fx interests less clear. A Reuters survey finds Japanese corporates bearish the yen. Japanese investors also have not behaved as if they expect yen weakness to be sustained.

 

GoldCore's picture

Gold Up 1.5% As Stocks Globally Fall After Nikkei Crashes 7.3%





Today’s AM fix was USD 1,386.00, EUR 1,074.92 and GBP 919.16 per ounce.  
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,385.25, EUR 1,071.43 and GBP 917.75 per ounce. 

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Did Corporate Buybacks Just Jump The Shark?





While it should be no surprise to anyone that buybacks have been a major support of the market for the last few years (as we explicitly showed here and here in terms of earnings manipulation and here in terms of ill-timing), the following chart may give some pause for thought as to whether that is now a good thing or not. Not only is the credit market 'atlas' starting to shrug at its own 'frothiness', as it is used-and-abused by every poor-performing company to borrow-and-lever give-backs to shareholders, but the amount of 'outperformance' of the Buyback 'achievers' index (A gauge of companies that repurchased at least 5% of their shares in the previous 12 months) over the market is eerily similar now to the size of the outperformance at the top in 2007...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Europe's Quantitative Easing





Most people do not think that Europe engages in Quantitative Easing. They know that the United States engages in it, that Britain engages in it and now that Japan engages in it but they think that Europe has so far refused to be involved. They think this because this is what they have been told. Unfortunately this is inaccurate. The European Quantitative Easing takes place every day just not in the manner utilized by America and others. However, it takes place all the same and it is done in a manner to circumvent the rules of the European Union. This is also why the ECB has such a massive balance sheet. What Europe has done is gotten around their own regulations which forbid the ECB from lending money directly to nations.

 

Pivotfarm's picture

USA: Unemployment Down





Last week (May 11th) there was a peak of 32, 000 new claims being made taking the US to 360, 000 new unemployed claims being filed, which is the biggest increase since March. 

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Initial Claims In Line With Expectations, Not Nearly As Bad As Needed To Send Stocks Higher





One of the consequences of yesterday's endless Fed PR campaign was making it very clear that any good news going forward will be bad news for the market as it brings the T-word that shall not be named (wink wink Hilsenrath) that much closer. Which is why today's initial claims print, which just came in line with expectations at 340K, on consensus was looking for 345K, will hardly be a good thing for the market which now needs horrible economic data to assume that the taper will be delayed indefinitely. The last month's data was as always revised higher from 360K to 363K just so the media can claim an improvement of 23K for the week. Sure enough, futures not only did not ramp on the news, but are continuing to trade at the weak levels seen before the print. Continuing claims also came in better than the expected 3 million at 2.912 million, the first sub-3MM print since 2008. Hardly the bad enough news the market was looking for. And while the report in general was a big snooze, of note was the surge in California initial claims last week when the headline number soared, jumping to 15,060 due to "layoffs in the service industry." Will the weakness persist?

 

Tyler Durden's picture

SocGen: "Hedge Funds Have Already Started To Unload Nikkei"





Was this it for the index that until last night was up a pennystockesque 85% in 6 months? According to the supposedly smartest money, hedge funds, who had already started offloading NKY225 exposure, the answer is yes.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Japan's Words Of Advice To Doomsayers: "Please Do Not Worry" And "Maintain Fiscal Discipline"





Q. If Japan has a financial collapse, what will happen to its government bonds?

A. Please do not worry.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: May 23





  • Global shares sink, following 7.3 percent drop in Japan's Nikkei (Reuters)
  • When all fails, pull a Kevin Bacon: Japan Economy Chief Warns Against Panic Over Stock Sell-Off (BBG)
  • White House Feeds IRS Frenzy by Revising Accounts (BBG)
  • In any scandal, lying to Congress is tough to prove (Reuters)
  • Debt limit resets at higher level, budget impasse grinds on (Reuters)
  • China factory data to test political calculations (FT)
  • European Leaders Saying No to Austerity (BBG)
  • And yet, nobody wants in anymore: Iceland’s new coalition government suspends EU accession talks (FT)
  • Oil Manipulation Inquiry Shows EU’s Hammer After Libor (BBG)
  • The Fed Squeezes the Shadow-Banking System (WSJ)
  • Diamond Said to Weigh Backing Barclays Alumni in Venture (BBG)
  • Spain’s Private Jets Disappearing as Tycoons Cut Flights (BBG)
 

Tyler Durden's picture

What Has Happened So Far





Once again: The FOMC minutes had nothing to do with overnight's events, especially since both Ben Bernanke and Bill Dudley made it very clear previously that for any tapering to occur (and which is supposedly bullish according to David Tepper, who may finally be done selling to momentum chasers) if ever, the economy would have to be be stronger (which is of course a paradox because it is the Fed's QE that is making the economy weaker). If anything, the minutes reminded us that there is a mutiny in the FOMC with finally someone having the guts to say on the record that Bernanke is blowing a bubble - something never seen before on the official FOMC record. And after all, the Nikkei opened way up, not down. It was only after the realization of what soaring bond yields mean for, wait for it, stocks (despite central planner promises that it is soaring bond yields that are a good thing - turns out, they aren't) that the sell-off really started. That, and of course copper, and the end of the Chinese Copper Financing Deals arrangement that has been China's illicit cross-asset rehypothecation scheme for years (more shortly). So in a nutshell, here is what has transpired so far, courtesy of Bloomberg.

 
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