Archive - Apr 9, 2014
Consumer Spending "Recovery" Stalls As Pent-Up Demand Fails To Appear
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2014 11:01 -0500
For the first time since the 'recovery' began, Gallup reports that consumer's average daily spending flatlined year-over-year. As Gallup concludes, at a daily rate of $87, Americans' average daily spending in March looks positive by comparison to spending over the past five years. But the stall in spending, both month-over-month and compared with a year ago, most likely signals a continuation of the lackluster retail sales seen so far in 2014. While government data suggested that retail sales rebounded in February (though still the weakest YoY since Nov 2009), the Gallup data appears to confirm the post-weather pent-up-demand has failed to arrive.
Fed To The Sharks, Part 2: Housing And The Death Of The Middle Class
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2014 10:34 -0500
The Fed sacrificed the foundation of middle class wealth - stable housing values - to boost bank profits. Middle class wealth was Fed to the sharks. As the current housing bubble deflates, the investor-buyers who fueled the rally are exiting en masse: what's the value of an asset when the bid vanishes, i.e. there's nobody left who's willing to pay today's prices? The Fed has failed to restore middle class wealth with its latest housing bubble, and the costs of the bubble's collapse will fall not on the Fed but on those who believed the recovery was more than Fed manipulation.
Ban Knives? High School Student Goes On Stabbing Rampage In Pennsylvania School
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2014 10:15 -0500
Another day another dismal headline of some killing spree and while the American people is becoming almost numb to these dreadful occurrences, this one was different. As Reuters reports, twenty people were injured, at least nine seriously, when a student at a Pittsburgh-area high school went on a stabbing rampage early on Wednesday. We are sure the administration is closely watching the events and considering what actions to take to ensure this does not happen again. The good news, for now, is that no one has died but indications are that these are very serious injuries.
Baltic Dry Collapses To Worst Start To A Year On Record
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2014 09:46 -0500
If you listen very carefully, you will still hear absolutely nothing from any talking-heads of the utter collapse that the last few weeks have witnessed in the Baltic Dry shipping index. The Baltic Dry has dropped 12 days in a row and plunged back to $1061 - its lowest since August 2013. This is the worst start to a year on record... must be the weather.
No One Will Ring The Bell At The Top
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2014 09:26 -0500
The market has had a rough start of the year flipping between positive and negative year-to-date returns. However, despite all of the recent turmoil from an emerging markets scare, concerns over how soon the Fed will start to hike interest rates and signs of deterioration in the underlying technical foundations of the market, investors remain extremely optimistic about their investments. It is, of course, at these times that investors should start to become more cautious about the risk they undertake. Unfortunately, the "greed factor," combined with the ever bullish Wall Street "buy and hold so I can charge you a fee" advice, often deafens the voice of common sense. "Not surprisingly, lessons learned in 2008 were only learned temporarily. These are the inevitable cycles of greed and fear, of peaks and troughs."
Wholesale Inventory Build Slows As Sales Miss 3rd Month In A Row
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2014 09:07 -0500
Wholesale inventory growth slowed to 0.5% (for Feb) from a revised 0.8% pick up in January but met expectations as it seems the much-hoped for weather recovery remains missing in action. This is the 2nd slowest rate of inventory increase in 7 months. Wholesale Sales did bounce back from the utter collapse last month but not as much as expected - rising 0.7% vs 1.0% expectations - missing for the 3rd month in a row. The combination leaves inventory/sales overall at its highest in 16 months.
La Quindy Crush
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2014 08:58 -0500
Oops. Another day, another failed IPO. Private equity group Blackstone's darling La Quinta IPO'd at $17 last night raising $650 million (at a multiple of 47 times last year's earnings). This was already below the low end of the range ($18 to $21) but this morning's open shows it seems the 'public' is not buying the hyper-growth story anymore....
Russia And China About To Sign "Holy Grail" Gas Deal
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2014 08:50 -0500
Russia's Gazprom and China are poised to conclude a gas supply contract in coming weeks, the first in a series of energy projects planned between the two countries. "We’re working now to sign a gas contract in May," said Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich. "Consultations are continuing and Gazprom's leaders are holding talks with Chinese partners on the contract terms. We hope to conclude the contract in May and believe it should come into effect by the year end.
Greece To Issue First 5Y Bond Since Bailout At Lowest Yields Since 2009
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2014 08:41 -0500
For the first time since the bailout/restructuring, Greece will issue long-term debt to the public markets. These 5 year-term English Law bonds (which is entirely unsurprising given the total lack of protection local-law bonds suffered during the last restructuring) are expected to yield between 5 and 5.25%. That is modestly higher than Russia, below Mexico, and one-sixth of the yield investors demanded when the crisis was exploding. The secondary market has rallied to this entirely liquidity-fueled level leaving onlookers stunned (and likely Draghi et al. also). Greece must be 'fixed' right? Just don't look at the chart below...
1% Of US Doctors Account For Over $10 Billion Of Medicare Billings
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2014 08:14 -0500
The top 1% of 825,000 individual medical providers accounted for 14% of the $77 billion in medicare billing in 2012, according to new federal data reported by the WSJ. The data shows a very small number of doctors and medical providers account for a huge amount of the costs for treating the elderly and, as WSJ notes, suggest in some cases, may be enriching themselves in the process. As Bloomberg notes, one doctor, who treats degenerative eye disease in seniors, was paid $21 million (twice the 2nd highest paid doctor on the list) with some top earners making 100 times the average for their respective fields. One researcher summed it up, "There's all sorts of services that are low-value for patients, high-revenue to providers," and leaves us wondering, once again, how the government will manage as Obamacare's "success" washes ashore.
The Morning Precious Metals Dump, Stock Pump Is Back
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2014 07:52 -0500
With the pending release of the FOMC minutes today, whet else is there but to lift JPY a little (just enough to break 102), spark a momentum run in US equity futures and dump precious metals like the status-quo-hating barbarous relics they are.
Gold and Oil Rise As U.S. Russia Relations Deteriorate Sharply
Submitted by GoldCore on 04/09/2014 07:51 -0500Symbolism is important and Putin may be sending the U.S. a message, in the aftermath of JP Morgan unilaterally deciding to block an official Russian wire transfer, regarding how they might use gold as a geopolitical weapon should economic and currency wars deepen ...
The Japanese Sales Tax Hike Verdict Is In: It's A Disaster As Sales Plunge 25%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2014 07:28 -0500On April 1, as was widely known, Japan raised its sales tax from 5% to 8% - a move many dread could unleash a recession as happened the last time Japan hiked a consumption tax in 1997. A week later the verdict on just how much consumption was frontloaded ahead of the hike is in, as we get the first sales data on the ground. The result is, in short, a disaster: overnight the Nikkei reported that Japanese department store Takashimaya’s revenue in April 1-7 period crashed 25%!
Another Chinese High Yield Bond Issuer Declares Bankruptcy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2014 06:51 -0500Another week, another Chinese default. A month after Chaori Solar's default turned on its head a long-held assumption that even high-yielding debt carried an implicit state guarantee, yet another Chinese firm has succumbed to the inevitable logic of lack of cash flows. As a reminder, a technical default late last month by a small construction materials firm, Xuzhou Zhongsen Tonghao New Board Co Ltd, was the first in China's high-yield bond market. However, in that case the guarantor of that bond eventually agreed to fund the required interest payment, resulting in the first bailout of the first high yield default. Still if Xuzhou doesn't want the distinction of the first Chinese HY default, many are lining up for that particular prize - such as a small manufacturer of polyester yarn based in China's wealthy Zhejiang province has declared bankruptcy, threatening its ability to meet an interest payment on a high-yield bond due in July.
Frontrunning: April 9
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2014 06:33 -0500- Apple
- Aviv REIT
- BAC
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Barclays
- Bob Diamond
- Bond
- Carlyle
- CBOE
- China
- Clifford Chance
- Cohen
- Comcast
- Credit Suisse
- Daimler
- Deutsche Bank
- Exxon
- Ford
- General Motors
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Greece
- Hershey
- Iran
- Keefe
- Medicare
- Merrill
- Morgan Stanley
- NASDAQ
- National Debt
- NHTSA
- Nominal GDP
- Nomura
- Private Equity
- Raymond James
- Recession
- Reuters
- SAC
- Sigma X
- Sigma X
- Time Warner
- Toyota
- Ukraine
- Wells Fargo
- Wholesale Inventories
- Top Medicare Doctor Paid $21 Million in 2012, Data Shows (BBG)
- Separatists build barricades in east Ukraine, Kiev warns of force (Reuters)
- Greece launches sale of five-year bond (FT)
- High-Frequency Trader Malyshev Mulls Accepting Outside Investors (BBG)
- U.S. defense chief gets earful as China visit exposes tensions (Reuters)
- GM Workers Who Built Defective Cars Fret About Recall (BBG)
- Kerry, Congress Agree: Superpower Status Not What It Was (BBG)
- Crimeans Homeless in Ukraine Seek Solace in Kiev Asylums (BBG)
- JPMorgan's Dimon says U.S. banks healthy, Europe lagging (Reuters)




