Archive - Jun 10, 2013
Guest Post: The Perfect Real Estate Investment
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/10/2013 09:28 -0500
You want to invest $100,000 in agency paper but find the yield to be too low. How can you increase your yield without assuming additional risk? Easy, here is how...
Ron Paul On Government Spying: "Should We Be Shocked?"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/10/2013 09:01 -0500
What most undermines the claims of the Administration and its defenders about this surveillance program is the process itself. First the government listens in on all of our telephone calls without a warrant and then if it finds something it goes to a FISA court and get an illegal approval for what it has already done! This turns the rule of law and due process on its head. The government does not need to know more about what we are doing. We need to know more about what the government is doing. We need to turn the cameras on the police and on the government, not the other way around... We should be thankful for writers like Glenn Greenwald, who broke last week’s story, for taking risks to let us know what the government is doing. There are calls for the persecution of Greenwald and the other whistle-blowers and reporters. They should be defended, as their work defends our freedom.
“Somebody” Bought Stocks on Thursday Because “Somebody” is Terrified
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 06/10/2013 08:41 -0500Given that the Fed is openly citing the stock market as an indication that QE is working… and given that every other metric shows QE is a total failure…
If You're An Unemployed European Man, Become A Woman
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/10/2013 08:35 -0500
While the focus of most of the dreadful employment data in Europe is on the surging youth joblessness, there is another growing shift. The jobless crisis is affecting men more than women, according to the EU labor force survey. As Bloomberg's Niraj Shah notes, the employment rate for men fell 0.3 percentage point to 69.8 percent in 2012, while rising 0.1 percentage point for women to 58.6 percent. What is perhaps even more concerning is the growing divergence between employment rates across the union (remembering all these nations are driven by the same monetary policy) from Holland's 75.1% employment rate to only 51.3% of employable citizens working in Greece. It is perhaps no wonder that Germany is having second thoughts over aiding the 'fourth world' nation.
S&P Upgrades US Outlook From Negative To Stable On "Receding Fiscal Risks"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/10/2013 08:05 -0500
In a confirmation that the S&P is starting to get worried about the drones surrounding the McGraw Hill building resulting from the ongoing litigation with Eric Holder's Department of Injustice, not to mention a reminder that US downgrades always happen after hours, while upgrades must hit before the market opens, Standard & Poors just upgraded the Standard & Poors 500 the US outlook from Negative to Stable. On what "receding fiscal risks" did the S&P raise its assessment of the US - the fact that the US is now at its debt limit, that there is no imminent resolution to the credit issue, or the 105% and rising debt/GDP - read on to find out. And of course, the countdown until the S&P wristslap settlement with the DOJ is announced begins now, as does the upgrade watch by Buffett's controlled Moody's of the US to AAAA++++.
Pentagon Papers' Ellsberg Says Snowden Saves Us From The "United Stasi Of America"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/10/2013 07:45 -0500
It is perhaps too early to judge the impact of Edward Snowden's confirmation of conspiracy fact, but in Pentagon Papers' Daniel Ellsberg opinion in today's Guardian, there has not been a more important leak in American history. The "executive coup" against the US constitution that has, at first sercretly but increasingly openly, been under way since 9/11 could finally be stalled by the Whistleblower's efforts. Ellsberg notes Senator Frank Church's 1975 comments on the NSA warning of the dangerous prospect that America's intelligence gathering capability "at any time could be turned around on the American people and no American would have any privacy left," noting 'that has now happened'. That is what Snowden has exposed, with official, secret documents. The NSA, FBI and CIA have, with the new digital technology, surveillance powers over our own citizens that the Stasi – the secret police in the former "democratic republic" of East Germany – could scarcely have dreamed of.
May Hedge Fund Performance Update: Ben Bernanke Keeps Crushing it
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/10/2013 07:29 -0500Yet another month in which the Ben Bernanke risk managed S&P500 Onshore Fund outperforms 93% of all other actively managed brand name hedge funds, and is on pace for the fifth year in a row in which the 2/20 world will underperform the S&P500. And the best news: PM Ben does not charge 2 and 20. Of course, there is no free lunch, and his dues will come when the world one day realizes just what the cost of reflating the biggest asset bubble in history is, but for now the music is playing and the dancing continues. As for the best funds out there? Those focusing on Japan, if only for a little longer.
France Telecom CEO In Custody Over Corruption Probe
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/10/2013 07:02 -0500
The last time we encountered the name Stephane Richard, CEO of France Telecom Orange, he was deflecting poor iPhone sales on frugal customers. While we don't know if French customers have become less frugal in the past two months, we do know that Mr. Richard has bigger problems on his hands than declining top and bottom lines: such as suddenly being embroiled in the Bernard Tapie corruption scandal that previously focused on Christine Lagarde, and which this morning led to the CEO being held for questioning over his role in a 2008 arbitration process that resulted in a large pay-out to businessman Bernard Tapie, a judicial source said. "Richard was at the time head of cabinet to Christine Lagarde, who was finance minister to conservative former president Nicolas Sarkozy before she became head of the International Monetary Fund."
Key Events And Market Issues In The Coming Week
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/10/2013 06:46 -0500Currency markets are anticipating the conclusion of the BOJ meeting on Tuesday. No changes are expected to the current policy scheme and asset purchase targets, but it is likely that the committee will introduce measures to try to stem JGB volatility. Based on their recent record, it is unlikely they will succeed. Later in the week, the focal point will shift to the US where the monthly Treasury statement on Wednesday and retail sales data on Thursday will shed more light on how automatic federal spending cuts are affecting the broader economy.
Frontrunning: June 10
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/10/2013 06:23 -0500- Apple
- B+
- Barclays
- China
- Citigroup
- Corporate Finance
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- CSCO
- Deutsche Bank
- Evercore
- Glenn Beck
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Hong Kong
- Iceland
- Insurance Companies
- Ireland
- ISI Group
- Japan
- Lloyds
- Monsanto
- Morgan Stanley
- national security
- Natural Gas
- Newspaper
- Obama Administration
- PrISM
- Private Equity
- Raymond James
- Real estate
- recovery
- Regency Centers
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Time Warner
- VeRA
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- In Hong Kong, ex-CIA man may not escape U.S. reach (Reuters)
- Backlash over US snooping intensifies (FT)
- Apple to Revamp IPhone Software, Ending Product Funk (BBG)
- Nothing like revising history: Japan revises up Q1 growth to annual 4.1% (FT), just don't look at the trade deficit
- Coffee Exports From Indonesia Seen Slumping to Two-Year Low (BBG)
- Euro bailout Troika nears end of road with patchy record (Reuters)
- Treasuries Little Changed Before Bullard Speaks Amid QE Debate (BBG)
- Schwab Topping Goldman Sachs Presages Return to Stocks (BBG)
- Hedge funds take over another city: London’s Forced Renters Fuel Apartment Investing Boom (BBG)
India Involuntarily Enters Currency Wars Alongside Usual PenNikkeiStock Acrobatics Out Of Japan
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/10/2013 06:01 -0500Japan goes to bed with another absolutely ridiculously volatile session in the books following a 5%, or 637 point move higher in the PenNIKKEIstock Market closing at over 13514, which if taking the futures action going heading to Sunday night into account was nearly 1000 points. With volatility like this who needs a central bank with price stability as its primary mandate. The driver, as usual, was the USDJPY, which moved several hundred pips on delayed reaction from Friday's NFP data as well as on a variety of upward historical revisions to Japanece economic data, but not the trade deficit, which came at the third highest and which continues to elude Abenomics. Fear not: one day soon consumers will just say no to Samsung TVs and buy Sony, or so the thinking goes. erhaps the most interesting news out of Asia was the spreading of FX vol tremors to a new participant India, which is the latest entrant into the currency wars, even if involuntarily, where the Rupee plunged to 58, the lowest ever against the dollar.
Osborne: Privatization Program for TSB (Lloyds Group)
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 06/10/2013 03:28 -0500Privatization is back on the political stroke economic agenda this morning after a report commissioned by Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne in the UK looks like he will be set to return bailed out banks to the private sector.
Is This How Obama Is Checking Your Email?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/10/2013 00:39 -0500
Think it's all a right-wing conspiracy... think again.
Japanese Stocks Surge By Most In 27 Months; JPY & JGBs Shrug
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/10/2013 00:38 -0500
A miss for the trade balance (extending the slide into bigger and bigger deficits), positive 'revisions' to rear-view mirror data on nominal GDP, a world of carry traders looking for a better exit point (or staring at margin calls), and more PR coverage of Abe's third arrow have created the perfect short-squeeze storm in Japanese stocks. While USDJPY managed to creep back above 98 (trading in a relatively modest 100 pip range), and JGBs rapidly recovered from early negative-correlated-to-equity-based losses to trade 1-2bps lower in yield, the broad Japanese equity market - TOPIX - is up almost 5%. This is it's best day since March 2011 and second-best day since Lehman. S&P futures are up a mere 2 points, Treasury futures are unchanged, and Gold is modestly higher. So simply put, Japanese stocks are on their own tonight in a land of Abe(g)nomics as every other asset (risk-on or risk-off) sits idly by.
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