• GoldCore
    01/13/2016 - 12:23
    John Hathaway, respected authority on the gold market and senior portfolio manager with Tocqueville Asset Management has written an excellent research paper on the fundamentals driving...

Archive - Aug 2013

August 2nd

GoldCore's picture

LBMA Data: Beyond The Smoke And Mirrors





The LBMA clearing statistics therefore essentially represent huge daily trading through unallocated accounts, most of which is classified as spot delivery, but which is backed by very small physical metal foundations. The clearing statistics while interesting, need to be made more transparent and granular beyond the headline data. Otherwise they tend to obscure rather than illuminate.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: August 2





  • Low Wages Work Against Jobs Optimism (WSJ)
  • Tourre’s Junior Staff Defense Seen Leading to Trial Loss (BBG)
  • Russia gives Snowden asylum, Obama-Putin summit in doubt (Reuters)
  • Fortress to Blackstone Say Now Is Time to Sell on Surge (BBG)
  • Brazil backs IMF aid for Greece and recalls representative (FT), previously Brazil refused to back new IMF aid for Greece, says billions at risk (Reuters)
  • Google unveils latest challenger to iPhone (FT)
  • Swaps Probe Finds Banks Manipulated Rate at Expense of Retirees (BBG)
  • Academics square up in fight for Fed (FT)
  • Potash Turmoil Threatens England’s First Mine in Forty Years (BBG)
  • Dell Deal Close but Not Final (WSJ)
 

Tyler Durden's picture

Acronym Week Closes With All Important NFP





A week that has been all about acronyms - GDP, PMIs, FOMC, ECB, BOE, ADP, ISM, DOL, the now daily record highs in the S&P and DJIA - is about to get its final and most important one: the NFP from the BLS, and specifically an expectation of a July 185K print, down from the 195K in the June, as well as an unemployment rate of 7.5% down from 7.6%. The number itself is irrelevant: anything 230 and above will be definitive proof Bernanke's policies are working, that the virtuous circle has begun and that one can rotate out of everything and into stocks; anything 150 or below will be definitive proof the Fed will be here to stay for a long time, that Bernanke and his successor will monetize everything in sight, and that one can rotate out of everything and into stocks, which by now are so disconnected from any underlying reality, one really only mentions the newsflow in passing as the upward record momentum in risk no longer reflects pretty much anything.

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk - US Non-Farm Payrolls Preview - 2nd August 2013





 

August 1st

williambanzai7's picture

FaBLaNKFeiN





Presented without justice...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The Jobs-GDP Divide And Policymaker Pollyannas





The optics of the GDP report were 'positive' at first blush, but not upon closer inspection. Growth in the second quarter was better than expected. Recovery period growth was revised up slightly. And the Great Recession, while still catastrophic, now shows a modestly smaller decline in output than it did in the pre-revised data. But underlying GDP growth is frustratingly slow. And growth rates in the very recent past were revised lower. But as Credit Suisse notes, this only deepens one of the unsolved mysteries in US data: buoyant payroll job gains of about 200K per month on average in 2013, juxtaposed against consistently tepid increases in real GDP. This is not a typical pattern. It seems our concerns over Obamacare's impact (and the delayed impact of the sequester) are being ignored by the Pollyanna policymakers for now (though they are well aware of the 'born-again jobs scam').

 

Tyler Durden's picture

How the NSA Manipulates Language To Mislead The Public





When we as a species use language to communicate and engage with one another, we have a certain understanding that certain words mean certain things. That is the entire purpose of language, effective communication between human beings that can be easily understood. As a result, we should be able to assume that when government bureaucrats utilize words that are commonplace within society, that these words represent specific commonly understood meanings. That would be a huge mistake. Jameel Jaffer and Brett Max Kaufman of the ACLU have compiled an excellent list of some commonplace words used by the NSA to mislead us into thinking they aren’t doing the bad things that they are actually doing. Words such as “surveillance,” “collect,” and “relevant.”

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Booze (Like Stocks) Is In Great Demand As Prices Rise





It seems that just like US equities, a rising price for the booze in American's local bar has done nothing to stymie demand. As Bloomberg Businessweek notes, Americans are increasingly ordering the 'good stuff', buying more from the top-shelf than drinkers elsewhere. Among the biggest alcoholic brands, the US is making up a far greater proportion of profits than revenues (e.g. for Smirnoff Vodka, North America was 40% of profits and 33% of sales) as it seems one should never underestimate the consumer confidence of a 'classy' drunk. Beer sales may have fallen 2% but revenues for InBev (for example) rose 1.5% and profits almost 3% - so it seems, at a time of great uncertainty in the US and middle-class 'better bargains', alcohol providers are 'preying' on that stress relief demand.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

You Don’t Need An Index To Know Which Way The Wind Blows





If there is an investment theme shaping up for Q3 2013, it would appear to be "Go big or go home."  As ConvergEx's Nick Colas notes, that means being maxed out long U.S. stocks, but how broad a net do you cast?  If you only go with the S&P 500, then your July 2013 return was 5.0%.  Not bad, Colas scoffs, until you consider that the small cap universe of U.S. stocks, as measured by the Russell 2000, was up 6.9% this month.  Before you load up on four letter symbols and/or small cap ETFs though, Nick warns that investors should consider that there are several important differences between these alternative universes.  Among the most important (discussed below) are sector weights are very different, with Russell short Energy and Consumer Non-Cyclicals versus S&P; and, the S&P 500 is heavily overweight its top five names (APPL, XOM, JNJ, GE and CVX), which represent 10.7% of the index.  The corresponding weight of the top 5 names in the Russell 2000 (CGSP, ATHN, CVLT, FMER and AYI) is 1.3%. Be sure you know what all-time high you are buying...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

What Google Knows About You





In short, pretty much everything.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: 10 Reasons Why Obamacare Is Going To Ruin Your Medical Care... And Your Life





The bottom line is that Americans are losing more and more of their medical freedom.  By 2015, so many workers will be trapped in the government-run health insurance exchanges that there will be no going back to the private plans we have today. At this rate, single-payer proponents will drive private insurance companies out of business, which has been their intention all along. Obamacare is a hodgepodge of new regulations, requirements, and penalties. Here are the ten most important points that doctors should tell their patients.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

A Perfect Symmetry?





With rates rising amid the glorious faith that recovery is upon us, tapering is a storm in a teacup, and nothing can stop us now, we present the dreadful symmetry of the US leverage situation (Federal Debt-to-GDP) relative to rates. We suggest investors be careful what they wish for on 'rotational' fantasies as GDP growth won't save us this time and the deleveraging effect of any serious retrenchment in debt will feedback into the 'credit-is-growth' drain-circling that has been evident for the last 30 years... So, if we do indeed have perfect historic symmetry, what will be the 'event' that takes total US debt from well over 100% of GDP to less than half of that?

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Correlation Collapse Cause For Corrective Concern





Intra-stock correlation of the top 50 market cap names has plunged in the past month. As Citi's Tobias Levkocich warns that suggests that investors might be overly focused on stock picking and have begun to ignore broader influences such as Fed policy, market valuation, European growth trends, economic surprise indices and the like. As performance issues have forced some investors into higher beta areas in order to boost outcomes, one would think that a more precarious correlative environment such as this would imply taking down more aggressive portfolio risk. Given today's ramp in builders and transports, that appears a far flung idea for now...

 

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: Pressure Cookers, Backpacks And Quinoa, Oh My!





It was a confluence of magnificent proportions that led six agents from the joint terrorism task force to knock on my door Wednesday morning. Little did we know our seemingly innocent, if curious to a fault, Googling of certain things was creating a perfect storm of terrorism profiling. Because somewhere out there, someone was watching. Someone whose job it is to piece together the things people do on the internet raised the red flag when they saw our search history. All I know is if I’m going to buy a pressure cooker in the near future, I’m not doing it online. I’m scared. And not of the right things.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Those Hard(ly) Working French





Just four months ago, the CEO of Titan International laid down some ugly truthiness on the dismal realities in the united socialist states of France. It was not well-received by the French. But it seems we have been too hasty with our prognostications on the hard-working (or hardly working) French. As Reuters reports, despite France's move to a 35-hour week (a flagship of the socialist government) a decade ago, French workers put in an 'astounding' 39.5 hours a week in 2011. While management complain that these policies have bloated labor costs and hurt their ability to compete globally (as Taylor argued), "this is the problem of France. It's cut in half. Half the French are working like madmen to make up for the other half who stick to their hours." But just for some context, this rise in French (average) working hours, leaves them ranked 21st in terms of hours worked per week out of the 27 states that comprised European Union in 2011.

 
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