Archive - Sep 2013
September 17th
Despite US Shale Oil Boom, The World Is More Dependent Than Ever On The Gulf
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/17/2013 17:51 -0500
Saudi Arabia is pumping out more crude that at any time since the 1970s and in Kuwait and The UAE, oil production levels have hit record highs. As The FT reports, the US might be 'drowning' in oil, but the world is still dependent on Saudi Arabia for the marginal barrel. This is crucial since, "whatever is happening in the US, the Gulf states remain critical to the global oil trade,” says Credit Suisse's Jan Stuart, "the fact they are producing so much shows that the global oil balance is far more stretched than consensus would have you believe." The trigger for the jump in Gulf production has been huge disruption to supplies from Libya; and with the three large Gulf producers meeting 17.1% of global demand (it has never topped 18%), the dependence on the Gulf appears to be growing. The concern remains, despite apparent nonchalance, that consuming nations like the US, China, and India will be stifled should production disruptions last.
Afghanistan: Cannabis and Opium Business
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 09/17/2013 17:42 -0500Production of cannabis in Afghanistan has increased again according to estimates that have been published for 2012 and the business is now worth $65 million a year
Ahead Of Tomorrow's FOMC Meeting, A Reminder About The Fed's Predictive Powers
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/17/2013 17:22 -0500
"Faith..."
US Government Confiscates Midtown Manhattan Skyscraper, One Time Ivan Boesky HQ, From Iran
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/17/2013 16:47 -0500
A week ago when we presented the missing link in the "all cash" housing recovery, namely laundered, embezzled or simply stolen off-shore sourced cash parked in the US real estate market which takes advantage of the NAR's generous anti-money laundering provision exemption, we asked what we thought would be a rhetorical question: "just how far will Preet Bharara take this, and comparable such future actions?" Turns out the answer is quite a bit farther, and higher. And not only that, but instead of just targeting residential real estate, the US attorney in Manhattan, is now focusing on commercial real estate as well. As CNN reported moments ago, the US government has seized an iconic midtown Manhattan skyscraper, one where none other than Ivan Boesky plotted his insider trading schemes in the 1980s, that prosecutors claim is secretly owned and controlled by the Iranian government. The skyscraper in question is 650 Fifth Avenue, also known as the Piaget building.
The Fed Taper Playbook In 2 Simple Charts
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/17/2013 16:21 -0500
As we previously noted, it would appear - unlike the exuberance in the market - the 'taper downside risk' is very much in equity markets rather than bonds. Today's aggressive equity and credit hedging and bond stability perhaps signal more apprehension than a rallying volumeless equity market might suggest but if the following 2 charts are anything to go by, a shift to removing the punchbowl (no matter how biased to longer, lower, forward rate guidance - of course stymied by 2016 economic projection dilemmas) has seen bonds surge and stocks purge...
Following Your Moral Compass
Submitted by Capitalist Exploits on 09/17/2013 15:56 -0500Those aged 18-34 are overwhelmingly in support of the whistle-blowers and hacktivists that are exposing the corruption, illegal activities and cover ups that are rocking our perceptions of "good" and "evil" within our society.
Guest Post: Look Who's Winning
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/17/2013 15:54 -0500
The chart below tells a story. Do you think the fiscal and monetary policies implemented by Bernanke and Obama since 2008 were designed to benefit you? If you believe in regression to the mean and a world based on reality, then you should be prepared for corporate profits to decline by 14% to 20% over the next four years. What do you think that will do to a stock market where the PE ratio is already at valuation levels of 1929, 2000, and 2007?
Fee Fi Fo Fed
Submitted by Marc To Market on 09/17/2013 15:35 -0500Why Treasuries will likely rally and the dollar sell-off in response to the FOMC.
Largest LBO Ever Prepares For Largest Non-Financial Bankruptcy In 30 Years
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/17/2013 15:25 -0500
If there was one deal that epitomized the last credit bubble, aside from the Blackstone IPO of course, it was the ginormous, $45 billion 2007 LBO of TXU, now Energy Future Holdings. And while the tide for the New Abnormal credit bubble has yet to expose its megalevered monoliths swimming fully naked, as for now corporations have opted for graduated semi-MBOs in the form of ever larger stock buybacks (although as rates rise this too day of reckoning is coming), the time to pay the piper for the last credit-fuelled binge has arrived and inevitable bankruptcy of this landmark deal is now just days away. From the WSJ: "Energy Future Holdings Corp. has begun sounding out banks for financing to help it operate during expected bankruptcy proceedings, which could come as soon as November for the Texas power producer."
USD & Gold Down, Bonds Frown, Stocks Wear The Crown
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/17/2013 15:10 -0500
While stocks were a one-way street higher today, with the S&P pulling back to yesterday's cash opening levels; the rest of markets did not seem so excited about the prospects for tomorrow. The USD was down (no-Taper), Gold, silver, and oil were all down notably (Taper), Bonds flatlined with the long-end modestly lower in yield (Taper/no-Taper), and stocks rallied (on dismally low volume) in Taper-is-good-news mode. It was all pandas and kittens though as VIX was heavily bid relative to stocks as at least some 'investors' sought protection ahead of tomorrow's big day. This is the 12th up-day of the last 14 days for the S&P 500 - sure, why not?
What Time Would You Leave The Party?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/17/2013 14:42 -0500
In mathematics, the term ‘linearity’ describes a relationship in which the rate of change for a variable is constant. However, just like the erosion of civil liberties, the destruction of financial privacy, the growth in world population, the expansion of the money supply, and the demand/depletion of natural resources, debt is an exponential challenge. The danger with exponential problems is that they can really sneak up on you. The numbers do not lie. Debt grows exponentially. Tax revenue grows linearly. So the only question is – what time would you leave?
Another Government Subsidized "Green" Car Battery Maker Files For Bankruptcy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/17/2013 14:14 -0500
In a long and proud tradition started by Solyndra and A123, and going through such Tesla ancestors as the Fisker Karma and Coda, the US government continues to demonstrate that when it comes to misallocating capital, albeit in (or due to) the pursuit of noble "green" causes, it has no peer. Fast forward to today, when we find that the latest casualty of a world in which ridiculous business models and lack of cash flows does not result in an Amazon-esque happy ending, is Eco(fa)tality, a maker of batteries and Blink charging stations for electric cars, which overnight filed for bankruptcy. If fact, do not pass go, do not pretend to have anything even remotely close to a sustainable business mode, and go straight to a liquidation auction.
BaNZaI7 ReVieWS TaPeR BaSiCS...
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 09/17/2013 14:14 -0500BANZAI7 FOOD AND BEVERAGE WARNING LEVEL 8
Chart Of The Day: Where The World's Fattest People Are
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/17/2013 13:57 -0500
"Exceptional..."
Guest Post: The Fed's Double-Bind
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/17/2013 13:24 -0500
The Federal Reserve is in a classic double-bind: as its policies to boost growth bear fruit, interest rates rise, threatening the very recovery the Fed has lavished trillions of dollars of quantitative easing (QE) to generate. Put another way: if growth is needed to boost corporate sales and profits, but growth leads to higher interest rates and reduced central-bank suppport of markets, this is a double-bind with no exit.






