Archive - May 2014
May 30th
Frontrunning: May 30
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/30/2014 06:38 -0500- B+
- Bank of England
- Barclays
- Boeing
- Chicago PMI
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Deutsche Bank
- Evercore
- Florida
- Ford
- GOOG
- Housing Bubble
- Israel
- Italy
- Keycorp
- Michigan
- Morgan Stanley
- National Health Service
- Personal Income
- Quantitative Easing
- ratings
- Raymond James
- Real estate
- Recession
- recovery
- Repo Market
- Reuters
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Ukraine
- University Of Michigan
- Wells Fargo
- Ukraine Rebels Outfox Army to Dent Poroshenko Troop Goal (BBG)
- Russia Withdraws Most of Forces From Ukraine Border: U.S. (BBG)
- Super-Size Me! China’s ’Mini’ Stimulus Starts Expanding (BBG)
- Option B: The blueprint for Thailand's coup (Reuters)
- Big investors replace banks in $4.2tn repo market (FT)
- Draghi Shields Catalan Independence Bid From Market (BBG)
- U.S. companies seek cyber experts for top jobs, board seats (Reuters)
- Parsley CEO Emerges as One of Youngest U.S. Billionaires (BBG)
Equity Blow Off Top Takes Brief Overnight Rest, Prepares For Another Session Of Low Volume Levitation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/30/2014 06:03 -0500- Barclays
- Bond
- CDS
- Chicago PMI
- China
- Citigroup
- Copper
- Core CPI
- CPI
- Creditors
- Crude
- Equity Markets
- fixed
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- headlines
- Jeff Lacker
- Jim Reid
- John Williams
- Michigan
- Natural Gas
- Nikkei
- Nominal GDP
- Personal Income
- POMO
- POMO
- RANSquawk
- Reality
- SocGen
- Ukraine
- Unemployment
- University Of Michigan
- Volatility
- Yen
Last night's docket of atrocious Japanese economic data inexplicably managed to push the Nikkei lower, not because the data was ugly but because the scorching inflation - the highest since 1991 - mostly driven by import costs, food and energy as a result of a weak yen, and certainly not in wages, has pushed back most banks' estimates of additional QE to late 2014 if not 2015 which is as we predicted would happen over a year ago. As a result the market, addicted to central bank liquidity, has had to make a modest reassessment of just how much disconnected from reality it is willing to push equities relative to expectations of central bank balance sheet growth. However, now that the night crew trading the USDJPY is replaced with the US session algo shift which does a great job of re-levitating the pair, and with it bringing the S&P 500 higher, we expect this brief flicker of red futures currently observable on trading terminals to be promptly replaced with the friendly, well-known and "confidence-boosting" green. The same goes for Treasurys which lately have been tracking every directional move in stocks not in yield but in price.
Americans Fighting Back in Alternative Unions
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 05/30/2014 05:00 -0500With the advent of unions in the USA in the 19th century, they were once synonymous with downing tools and walking out to hold the management and the company they were working for to ransom. Collective bargaining and across-the-board pay rises were high on the agenda back then.
May 29th
Meet Directive 3025.18 Granting Obama Authority To Use Military Force Against Civilians
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/29/2014 22:50 -0500
While the "use of armed [unmanned aircraft systems] is not authorized," The Washington Times uncovering of a 2010 Pentagon directive on military support to civilian authorities details what critics say is a troubling policy that envisions the Obama administration’s potential use of military force against Americans. As one defense official proclaimed, "this appears to be the latest step in the administration’s decision to use force within the United States against its citizens." Meet Directive 3025.18 and all its "quelling civil disturbances" totalitarianism...
Mainstream Media Meteoronomics
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/29/2014 21:56 -0500
When the weather channel of USA today discusses economics it may be time to officially replace Joe LaVorgna with groundhog Phil...
Embracing Inequality
Submitted by Tim Knight from Slope of Hope on 05/29/2014 21:56 -0500Denying someone an opportunity based on anything other than their skills is immoral. And equally immoral is actively seeking out and hiring the "disadvantaged" or "under-represented" simply to meet some kind of quota or corporate goal. It's an injustice to any other candidates that are better-qualified for the task at hand.
Abenomics Suffers Crippling Blow: Economy Sputters As Inflation Soars, BOJ QE Delayed Indefinitely
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/29/2014 21:28 -0500
Following last night's record plunge in Japanese retail sales, tonight was another slew of crushingly bad data for Abe and his motley crew of money printers to reflect on. First Household Spending cratered 4.6% YoY - its biggest drop since the Tsunami (and markedly worse than expectations which were bad enough due to the tax hike repurcussions). Then, Industrial Production tumbled 2.5% MoM - its biggest drop since the Tsunami (considerably worse than the 2.0% drop expected and the slowest YoY growth in 8 months). While this would typically be the kind of bad news that is great news for QQE-hopers, it was disastrously capped by a surge in Japanese CPI (well above BoJ target 2% levels) crushing moar-easing hopes as Barclays see no further easing in 2014 (and even Goldman pushes any hope off til October at the earliest).
China's Housing Bubble Desperation In Six Words: "Buy One Floor, Get One Free"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/29/2014 21:00 -0500
Having gone from the sublime (zero-money-down mortgages for Chinese homes) to the ridiculous (when China's largst property developer says "the period in which everybody makes money out of property is gone,") the latest desperate act of a dying Chinese property bubble is stunning. As WSJ reports, Season Joy City (a remote suburb of Beijing) offers not only a party bag of bonuses to lure potential buyers; but the development's big selling point is "buy one floor, get one free." The government's reluctance to bail the nation out may soon be tested as Barclays notes "this downturn is more serious than in 2008."
Dear Japanese Pensioners: You Are The New Proud Owners Of Global Junk Bonds
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/29/2014 20:31 -0500
With leverage rapidly rising while credit spreads approach record lows, high-yield bond markets have long since lost any sense of sanity with regard to forward-discounting... but that hasn't stopped the world's biggest bond managers (and now Japan's pension fund GPIF because as they say "now they have a chance to chase higher returns without taking on much risk") from diving in while the water is warm. With the smell of risk essentially removed from any and every market, why not pile into the riskiest credits, gain some extra yield (for free) - what could go wrong?
How Britain Calculates Its Hooker "GDP Boost": 60,879 Prostitutes x 25 Clients Per Week x £67.16 Per Visit
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/29/2014 20:02 -0500
First it was Italy which, as we reported last week, had decided to "boost" its GDP by adding the estimated impact of cocaine and hookers. And now, riding on the coattails of this economics gimmick designed solely to make the economy appear more solvent, it is Britain's turn, whose Office for National Statistics will also add add up the "contribution" made by prostitutes and drug dealers. According to the Guardian "for the first time official statisticians are measuring the value to the UK economy of sex work and drug dealing – and they have discovered these unsavoury hidden-economy trades make roughly the same contribution as farming – and only slightly less than book and newspaper publishers added together."
A Quarter Of Europeans Are At Risk Of Poverty
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/29/2014 19:37 -0500
Wondering why the extreme left (we are not happy and need moar bailouts) and extreme right (this European 'union' thing is not working out so well for us) have become so euro-skeptic? Perhaps the following chart from Bloomberg Brief's Niraj Shah will clear up any questions. The ratio of people at risk of poverty or social exclusion in the EU increased by 0.5 percentage points in 2012 to 24.8% or 124.2 million people, according to figures updated this week. The risk increased most in bailed-out nations Greece and Cyprus, where the rate rose by 3.6 and 2.5 percentage points, respectively. The Netherlands had the lowest risk at 15%.
Scotiabank Asks "Are Treasuries The Only Adult In The Room?"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/29/2014 19:04 -0500
Treasuries continue to do nothing wrong. Bullish views on bonds over the past several months have been met with stern opposition; however, several are now beginning to question their defiance. With such in mind, it is worth reviewing once again some possible explanations behind the bid. There are many reasons to expect their strong performance to continue (particularly over the next week).
I Want My Children to Go Cold and Hungry
Submitted by Capitalist Exploits on 05/29/2014 18:40 -0500Exposing your children to real world experiences provides an education not easily achieved elsewhere. They will learn to think outside of the box and question everything.
Ballmer Baller: Former Microsoft CEO To Buy Clippers For $2 Billion: 2nd Highest Price Paid For Any US Sport Team Ever
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/29/2014 18:32 -0500
Former MSFT CEO, Steve Ballmer, who earlier was said to have put in a $1.8 billion bid for the LA Clippers, is reported to have won the bidding war for the troubled sports team, and will shelve out a massive $2 billion: a record price for any NBA team, and four times the $550 million that was paid earlier this month for the Milwaukee Bucks. It is also the second highest price ever paid for any US sports team, only behind the $2.1 billion paid for the Dodgers in 2012.
Thursday Humor: GDP - Grossly Dubious Projections
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/29/2014 17:45 -0500
In the middle of the last great financial crisis, the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) proclaimed that Q1 2008 was the US economy grow at a modest 0.6%. This was met with hockey-stick prognosticators looking to the heavens for the next few quarters and bleeting about transitory factors affecting the economy. However, as the following chart shows, five years later (and after numerous adjustments) the +0.6% growth for Q1 2008 had somehow morphed into a clench-worthy 2.7% collapse in the economy...





