Archive - Sep 2013
September 7th
The Fed's Birthday Party Trick: A Market Of Monetary-Punch-Drunk Liquidityholics
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2013 12:44 -0500
If ever there was an investor reaction that summed up just how much the Federal Reserve has broken the markets it was yesterday morning's post-dismal-jobs-report surge. As John Phelan notes, we now appear to be in a position where the interests of financial markets are precisely at odds with the interests of the rest of the economy; where the good news for us is bad news for them and bad news for us is good news for them. The one way bet of the Greenspan Put maintained, so far, by Ben Bernanke, has created a market of monetary-punch-drunk liquidityholics. On its 100th birthday the Federal Reserve has the tricky task of sneaking the punch bowl out of the party, a task it seems they’ll struggle to manage without starting a riot. They may have printed themselves into a corner.
Obama's Missing Link: No Direct Connection Between Assad And Gas Attack
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2013 11:43 -0500
While one can speculate if the sarin gas attack on August 22 was ordered and orchestrated by Saudi/Qatari petrodollar interests, with the assistance of the CIA and the funding of al Qaeda, and executed by the Syrian "rebels" (there is much circumstantial evidence pointing in the false flag direction: here, here, here and here), the reality is that since the narrative behind Obama's offensive Syrian air strikes has been staged as punishment for Assad, the onus is on the affirmative proof, namely clear and unequivocal evidence that it was Assad who ordered the attack. So far, despite repeated vows and promises that such proof exists, none has been presented, aside from numerous YouTube clips which show an attack did take place (and even that is in question). When it comes to the actual perpetrator, John Kerry and company are reduced to emotional pleadings to the audience to look at pictures of dead children redirecting from the most important question of all: did Assad actually do it. The reason for such Copperfieldian tactics is that there simply is no link - Reuters reports that "No direct link to President Bashar al-Assad or his inner circle has been publicly demonstrated, and some U.S. sources say intelligence experts are not sure whether the Syrian leader knew of the attack before it was launched or was only informed about it afterward." And yet Obama's entire publicly stated motive is to punish Assad... for something there is zero evidence he did.
Is The U.S. Dollar Set To Spike?
Submitted by Asia Confidential on 09/07/2013 11:15 -0500There's a growing view that America's energy boom will result in a higher U.S. dollar in coming years. There are some key holes in the argument though.
What Do You Know About The News? Take The Quiz
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2013 10:42 -0500
The Pew Research Center has released a comprehensive 13 question quiz which does a surprisingly good, and broad, job of testing readers' knowledge about "prominent people and major events in the news", and comparing the results to a sample of 1052 people. See how well you fare in comparison to everyone else on topics that are considered mainstream.
Goldman's Quick Answers To Tough EM Questions
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2013 10:20 -0500
As most know by now, over the past month or so, pressure on the currencies of EM deficit countries has intensified again. Goldman's EM research group, however, remains negative on EM FX, bonds, and even stocks suggesting using any strength, like this week's exuberance to add protection or cover any remaining longs. Central banks in most of these countries have become more active in attempting to stem pressure in the last two weeks. But with a Fed decision on ‘tapering’ looming, investors have also become more cautious and are now focused on the parallels with prior crisis periods. In what follows, Goldman provides some concise answers to the questions on the EM landscape that we encounter most often, confirming their longer-held bearish bias.
Fear Increases Productivity and the Old
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 09/07/2013 09:04 -0500We live in a throw-away world where we don’t repair and as soon as things start looking a bit shabby round the edges and curled up as if they were sandwiches left over from the night before, with the hangover thrown in for good measure, we just bin them.
Syria: The Latest Developments
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2013 08:54 -0500- Arab press pans Obama on Syria
- EU Backs 'Clear and Strong' Response to Syria Attack
- Putin Says Russia Will Continue to Help Syria’s Assad
- Hollande Says He’ll Wait for UN Inspectors’ Report
- 10 Nations Join U.S. in Condemning Syria Chemical Weapons Use
- 9 G-20 Nations Don’t Join Statement
Exactly As I Warned, "Cyprusization" Goes Mainstream! Ireland On Tap, Next Up For Citizen Fund Confiscation (Again)
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 09/07/2013 08:40 -0500This is at least the 3rd country to take citizen and private corporation's money in order to make themselves whole after profligate spending. How many times must I warn before the message is taken seriously? Interest rates should be spike through the stratosphere, Bernanke or not!!!
Price Action Clouds Near-Term Dollar Outlook
Submitted by Marc To Market on 09/07/2013 06:34 -0500Price action in the foreign exchange market in the context of fundamental developments. Disappointing US jobs data clouds the near-term outlook for the greenback,
High-Level U.S. Intelligence Officers: Syrian Government Didn’t Launch Chemical Weapons
Submitted by George Washington on 09/07/2013 01:09 -0500Numerous Intelligence Officials Question Administration’s Claims
September 6th
Guest Post: Why We Think The NSA Is Lying
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/06/2013 20:41 -0500
"At what point do we just start calling these guys the Stasi,” asked a friend over coffee today. He was, of course, referring to the latest news out of the Guardian that the NSA and its British counterpart GCHQ have ‘cracked codes’ across the Internet that were once thought uncrackable. We're deeply suspicious some of the NSA’s assertions. They seem to be claiming that they have cracked nearly everything, and that they have backdoor access to privacy software. But this is practically impossible. Our assessment is that this is an intimidation campaign. The NSA wants people to think that they have this capability. If everyone thinks that the NSA is Big Brother’s Big Brother, all-seeing and all-knowing, then not only will everyone be terrified, but everyone will simply stop using encryption. After all, why bother going through the hassle of encrypting/decrypting if the NSA can still read the contents of your email?
Loans: Facebook Friends Mean You’re Creditworthy?
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 09/06/2013 19:52 -0500It’s science-fiction but it’s true. The next time you need a loan, it’ll be your friends that will be analyzed to see if you arebone fide enough to borrow the money that the bank is considering lending you and above all if you are able to pay that money back to them.
220 Years Of Jobs Jobs Jobs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/06/2013 19:51 -0500
With the labor force participation rate at 35 year lows still being shrugged off as some 'cyclical' (definitely not structural) issue that will correct just around the corner, we thought it perhaps worth taking the long view, the really long view, of jobs in America. As the following two charts show, all was apparently 'sustainable' until the mid 1970s and then things changed...
Mark Spitznagel Explains How To Prevent A Market Crisis
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/06/2013 19:01 -0500
"When it comes to market events, there have been no impactful black swans - the so-called unexpected 'tail events," Mark Spitznagel notes in his excellent new book, The Dao Of Capital: Austrian Investing in a Distorted World, explaining that, "what were unseen by most, were indeed highly foreseeable" by others. The Fed planted the seeds for the last financial crisis and "when you prevent the natural balancing act, you get growth that shouldn't be happening."
The financial crisis of 2008 could have been the wake-up tall that, like the Yellowstone fires of 1988, alerted so-called managers to the dangers of trying to override the natural governors of the system. Instead, the Federal Reserve, with its head "ranger," Ben Bernanke, has deluded itself into thinldng ft has tamped down every little smolder from becoming a destructive blaze, but instead all it has done is poured the unnatural fertilizer of liquidity onto a morass of overgrown malinvestment making a even more highly flammable. One day - likely sooner than later, it will burn, and when that happens, the Fed will be sorely lackng in buckets and shovels and must succumb to the flames.








