Archive - Aug 2013

August 7th

Tyler Durden's picture

Tesla "Earnings" Word Cloud





Because who really needs Generally Accepted Accounting Principles anyway...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Markets In Turmoil; 3rd Red Day In A Row For Stocks





"You can't go up forever," noted Bob Pisani before piling on a series of excuses for the recent 'weakness' that quite frankly could have been used at any 1.1% drop in stocks of the last 3 years... While stocks bounced off lows today and are making the headlines for a third down day for the first time in 2 months, the real story that most are ignoring is the surge in the JPY. The USD is legging lower confusing the 'Taper' chatter but it is the JPY strength that is dominating (up 3.6% against the USD in the last 4 days (and the Nikkei futures -800 from Friday's highs). Treasuries rallied 3-4bps (and the curve flattened) as it seems the modest weakness in stocks is being met with some safe-haven demand. Despite bonds' bid, Homebuilders were battered (-4.5% on the week). Gold and silver strengthened off pre-open lows as WTI fell back to around $104. VIX spiked to 13.9% at the open but ended around 13% at the close. Back to CNBC for the close: "off the lows," but not in credit Maria...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

US-Supported Free Syrian Army Downs Iranian Cargo Plane At Damascus Airport





Has the long-awaited "kinetic strike" catalyst finally arrived?

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: Real Personal Income Points To Recession





Every time real personal income goes negative, a recession occurs. Now that personal income is falling, a recession is baked in. The Big Lie of the "recovery" is that it is self-sustaining. Minus government transfers, the reality that the Fed and Federal government are simply enriching the top 1/10th of 1% with access to unlimited credit at zero interest is revealed.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Someone Just Bet Big On A Spike In September "Taper" Volatility





In early May, when the first of the Hilsenrath "taper" leaks hit, we made a prediction that the correct time frame for the actual taper announcement by the Fed would be September. As a reminder back then this was a heretical suggestion with prevailing consensus expecting a 2014 taper or a December 2013 move at the earliest. Fast forward to today, when the September FOMC is the consensus date for a taper announcement. However, what is still debated is whether or not the taper is actually "priced in" to risk assets: some say this is what the bond swoon of June was for, even though equities have largely digested the bond move 100 bps wider,  and are just a fraction off their all time highs. Well, a few hours ago someone just decided that not only is the taper not priced in, but that there will be a substantial shock surrounding the September VIX bucket. And they put their money where their mouth is.

 

williambanzai7's picture

THe TaPeR EFFeCT DeMoNSTRaTeD...





By well known PhDs...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

June Consumer Credit Rises Less Than Expected; Entire Increase Driven By Car And Studen Loans





So much for hopes that US consumers were loosening the purse strings and starting to "charge it." Moments ago we got the latest, June, consumer credit which was expected to increase $15 billion following the May revised $17.6 billion. More importantly, there was an expectation that following the surge in May revolving credit which rose by $6.4 billion or the second most in the past three years (only matched by the comparable pre-summer surge in 2012). Sadly, neither expectation was met: total consumer credit rose by "only" $13.8 billion, but more importantly, the revolving component posted a $2.7 billion decline. This also matched last year's pattern when June saw a major reduction of $2.8 billion. In other words, the only credit creation in the month of June was, once again, entirely for student and car loans, which rose by a whopping $16.5 billion - the most since February and the second highest increase since July 2011. So much for US consumers seeking to relever for discretionary purchases.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Wednesday Humor: Bob Woodward Gets A New Job





Following yesterday’s announcement that Amazon.com founder Jeffrey Bezos would be purchasing daily newspaper The Washington Post, sources confirmed today that Post associate editor and legendary investigative journalist Bob Woodward had already been repositioned at a new staff position in one of Amazon’s main warehouses just outside of Seattle... “The one thing I’ll give him is that he does seem very curious,” Griffin added. “I mean, he’s always asking questions and he has a little notepad and a tape recorder out at all times, so hopefully he picks something up from all that.”

 

Tyler Durden's picture

On Economic Illiteracy, And Bulls' "Stopped-Clock" Fallacies





For many years before 2007-9 a few analysts have warned that rising consumer credit in the US and peripheral Europe was unsustainable. They warned that rising debt to support misallocated investment in China was also unsustainable. They warned that soaring US mortgages backed by little more than the hope that land prices could only rise would lead to a real estate crisis. They warned that commodity-exporting countries that did not hedge their bets would find themselves in serious trouble when commodity prices collapsed. Of course you could not have had a bubble unless the majority of analysts disagreed with these warnings, and most analysts did indeed disagree. So what happened when the warnings turned out to be right? The former bulls immediately trotted out the stopped-clock analogy. The reason the worriers turned out to be right, they earnestly explained, is that they are perma-bears, and as everyone knows a stopped clock will always be right twice a day... As China’s growth continues to slow and as its debt problems become obvious to even the most bullish, the stopped clock analogy is working overtime.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

US Boasts About "Eliminating Al-Qaeda" Threat While It Evacuates Half The Muslim World





Just when you thought it was safe to travel the world and spend time in a consulate overseas...

  • U.S. HAS ELIMINATED 'ALMOST ALL' AL-QAEDA LEADERS IN PAKISTAN

... the State Department spokesperson Jen Psaki reminds us:

  • 'WE DO THINK A THREAT STILL REMAINS' FROM AL-QAEDA: PSAKI

So be afraid, maybe slightly less afraid, "but keep funding us too"...

  • U.S. STILL CONCERNED ABOUT AL-QAEDA AFFILIATES

because, after all there are many other countries in the world where Al-Qaeda brass is hiding and where US drones haven't murdered thousands of women and children in their quest to "eliminate" whatever threat du jour the US makes up.

 

Pivotfarm's picture

Obama: Do Svidaniya Putin!





If we can judge by the announcement from the Obama administration, the relations between the US and Russia are at their lowest ebb for decades and they couldn’t get much colder.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: Is Water The New Oil?





The sharpening international geopolitical competition over natural resources has turned some strategic resources into engines of power struggle. Transnational water resources have become an especially active source of competition and conflict, triggering a dam-building race and prompting growing calls for the United Nations to recognize water as a key security concern. With the era of cheap, bountiful water having been replaced by increasing supply and quality constraints, many investors are beginning to view water as the new oil. Political and economic water wars are already being waged in several regions, reflected in dam construction on international rivers and coercive diplomacy or other means to prevent such works. The World Bank estimates that such constraints are costing China 2.3% of GDP. In short, we must focus on addressing our water-supply problems as if our lives depended on it. In fact, they do.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

10 Year Treasurys Sold At Lowest Bid-To-Cover Since March 2009





If it was the Treasury's intent to make auctioning of Treasury paper increasingly more fraught with risk, it has succeeded. Moments ago, in the second auction of the week and month, another $24 billion were added to the gross US debt, when the Treasury sold 10 year paper at a yield of 2.620%, pricing through the When Issued yield of 2.623% So far so good. However, as was shown last week, the trouble is in the internals. Recall that as Zero hedge first demonstrated in January and as the TBAC reconfirmed in their refunding presentation, the Bid to Covers have been declining across the curve. It should perhaps come as no surprise then that the just completed 10 Year auction was completed at the lowest Bid To Cover, or 2.44, going all the way back to March 2009.

 

testosteronepit's picture

NSA Pricked The “Cloud” Bubble For US Tech Companies





Foreign companies react; at the expense of already revenue-challenged US tech companies

 
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