Archive - Nov 2014

November 10th

Tyler Durden's picture

Saxobank CIO Warns We're About To See A Full-Scale Currency War





There's increasing risk we'll soon see a "significant paradigm shift" from China in its attitude to the strength of its currency, warns Saxobank CIO and Chief Economist Steen Jakobsen. He says we're about to see a full-scale currency war, notably between China and Japan, two of the world's greatest exporting countries.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Alibaba Closing In On 6th Largest Company In The US





Alibaba is now the 6th largest company of all US-traded entities... and is the biggest non-US-domiciled corporation in the world (having added $80 billion in market cap in the last 3 weeks alone)

 

Tyler Durden's picture

October Was A "Trailer" For Real Market Turmoil, Don't Hold Your Breath For Policymakers





"When the next period [of real market turmoil] appears... there is a very real possibility that the (central banks and major governments) cavalry’s thundering hooves will cause investors to get even more frightened and run away, perhaps having lost confidence in the effectiveness of the central bankers’ toolkit..."

 

Sprott Money's picture

China/India Gold Demand: 2013 Déja Vu





In 2013; a chain of events led to what was (at the time) the greatest stampede into gold in human history. It began with the Cyprus Steal, the West’s first “bail-in”. This led to the realization (by the Smart Money) that no paper assets were safe any longer, within any Western financial institution or market.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Stocks Surge Back To "Prove" Friday's Jobs Data Was "Good" After All





No news, no catalyst... just a friendly VIX-crushing to lift stocks across the board back into the green from pre-non-fram-payrolls... which 'proves' the jobs data was great (despite the Fed's LMCI saying otherwise). With Europe now closed, let's see if it holds...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

John Williams' Take On The October Unemployment Report: "The Economy Remains In Terrible Shape"





When it comes to inflation data, there are two parallel sources: the BLS, and ShadowStats' John Williams, who continues to plough through the underlying "data" using pre-pre-pre-revision protocols, and every month reveals a parallel universe in which something shocking is revealed: the truth. Here is his take on the October "weaker but really stronger than expected" jobs numbers. Here is what really happened.

 

Tim Knight from Slope of Hope's picture

Shifting Sands





Just as "orange is the new black", I think that "oil producers are the new gold miners." It doesn't sound quite as good, but here's my point:

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The US Is Crossing The Frontier Of Criticality





Don’t expect this national mood of paralysis and surrender to last indefinitely. What troubles us at the moment is that when that mood snaps, it will be for a bad reason in the wrong way. In a way, it will be the true beginning of the end. The end of what? Of pretending that the people in authority know what they are doing. When it is really too late to fix any of these things, they’ll beg someone to tell them what to do, and the job-description for that position is dictator.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Natives Getting Restless: Protesters Set Fire To Door Of Mexican President's Ceremonial Palace





Following the massacre of 43 students who were allegedly abducted by corrupt police in southwestern Mexico in September, violent anti-establishment protests have broken out across the nation. As Reuters reports, demonstrators set fire to the door of Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto's ceremonial palace in Mexico City as the Mexican people are angered at Nieto's visit to China (at a time when he should, in their eyes, be focused on domestic issues). The violence has been condemned, "You can't demand justice while acting with violence," said Nieto but it seems the people's restlessness is growing - not helped by the cancellation of a high-speed rail contract last week as opposition lawmakers accused the government of rigging the bidding.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

"Turn Those Machines Back On" - The Day The Bond Market Died (If Only For A Few Minutes)





while the algos would have been delighted to let October 15 slide into the collective memory made obsolete by a constantly rising market (because investors are only truly angry when the market plunges not when it surges) just as the regulators made a mockery of their fiduciary responsibilities in the aftermath of May 6, and now markets are more fragile than ever as HFTs comprise the vast majority of all trades, some appear to be complaining and even, gasp, asking questions how it is possible that the $12 trillion US Treasury market traded like an illiquid Pink Sheets pennystock, or worse, the Nikkei.Here is the WSJ with some of the complaints: “It starts moving faster and faster, and you can’t point to anything."Actually, yes you can.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Despite "Great" Jobs Data, Fed's Labor Market Conditions Index Unchanged In October





At 4.0, the Fed's goal-seeked 19-factor Labor Market Conditions Index (LMCI) is unchanged in October (but everyone said Friday that jobs were great?). This is marginally below the average level of the last 4 years and provides the perfect ammunition for the Fed to be lower-for-longer... even as initial jobless claims near 40 year lows.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

US Equity Market Open Sparks USDollar Surge; Oil, Gold, & Silver Purge





The moment the US equity market opened, the USDollar surged (driven by JPY and EUR weakness) and oil, gold, and silver mirrored the surge, tumbling from the open. Interestingly, while WTI is remaining near the lows of the day, gold and silver are bouncing back despite continued USD strength.

 

Phoenix Capital Research's picture

We Will All Pick Up the Tab For These Ego-Maniacs' Actions





The Central Bankers bet the financial system that their theories were correct. They were wrong. Horribly wrong. And we will all pay the consequences for it. 

 

Tyler Durden's picture

"If You Like Your Internet"... Obama Calls For Regulation To Keep "Internet Open"





"An open Internet is essential to the American economy, and increasingly to our very way of life," begins the President as he explains why the FCC should regulate the internet for Americans' own good:

*OBAMA CALLS FOR REGULATING INTERNET LIKE PHONE COMPANIES
*OBAMA ASKS FOR 'STRONGEST POSSIBLE RULES' FOR OPEN INTERNET

"The Internet has been one of the greatest gifts our economy — and our society — has ever known," and that's why Obama feels the need to regulate it to "protect an open, accessible, and free Internet."

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The Last Nail In The Millennials' Coffin: A Negative 2% Savings Rate





The bottom line, or rather, negative line, is the Millennials' savings, because "after a flirtation with thrift after the recession, young Americans have stopped saving. Adults under age 35—the so-called millennial generation—currently have a savings rate of negative 2%, meaning they are burning through their assets or going into debt, according to Moody’s Analytics. That compares with a positive savings rate of about 3% for those age 35 to 44, 6% for those 45 to 54, and 13% for those 55 and older."

 
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