Archive - May 2014
May 10th
Donetsk Region May Shift To Rubles After 1.7 Million Vote In Referendum
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/10/2014 11:15 -0500
Despite denouncements from the West (how did that work out in Crimea?) and diplomatic calls for postponement from Putin, tomorrow appears to be setting up for the next crucial catalyst in the ever-escalating civil (and not so civil) war in Ukraine. As RIA reports, Referendum organizers printed about 1.7 million ballots and on the day of voting in the region there will be more than 1,600 polling stations. The referendum will ask voters to answer the simple question: "Do you support the act of state independence of the People's Republic of Luhansk." and will take place from 8am to 8pm local time. Organizers claim that "the willingness to vote is almost total," which makes the decision of the People's Mayor that "after the referendum... gradually, we will move to the Russian ruble," even more economically significant for the IMF-supported nation.
Did Money Center Bank Ignorance of CryptoCurrencies Allow A Start-up To Patent The Future of Global Finance?
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 05/10/2014 11:11 -0500How much is the future of Global Finance really worth? I fear we're soon about to find out!
FEC Chairman Warns Of Forthcoming Government Media Censorship
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/10/2014 10:30 -0500
"Government officials, reacting to the growing voice of conservative news outlets, especially on the internet, are angling to curtail the media’s exemption from federal election laws governing political organizations, a potentially chilling intervention that the chairman of the Federal Election Commission is vowing to fight." While the claims made by Federal Elections Committee (FEC) Chairman Lee E. Goodman are extraordinarily frightening, sometimes people with strong partisan leanings can exaggerate threats and so we have to be careful but- crucially - media, in particular the internet, must be kept free and open. The internet is what allows an individual like us, armed with only a computer and an internet connection, to reach thousands of people per day on a shoestring budget. This is a revolution in humankind and must be preserved at all costs.
Correction or Trend Reversal in FX?
Submitted by Marc To Market on 05/10/2014 05:40 -0500Here is the technical reasons why the euro, sterling and Swiss franc retreat is a likely a correction rather than a change of the underlying trend. US 10-year yields near lows and a recovery could lift the greenback vs JPY.
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May 9th
Gold Infographic: The Eclipsing Demand Of The East
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/09/2014 22:19 -0500
Lifted by a continued surge in Asian gold sales, consumer demand for gold reached an all-time high in 2013 at 3,893 tonnes. Amazingly, 54% of this demand came from two places: India and China. However, it is only recently that the East has dominated global demand for the yellow metal. In this infographic, we look at India and China specifically to see why demand keeps expanding in the East.
10 Ways That Birth Order Affects Your Life
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/09/2014 22:16 -0500
Where you exist in your family’s birth order can profoundly inform your path in life, whether because of genetics or simply the way that family members tend to treat firstborns vs. middle children vs. youngest children. Psychologists have been debating the “Why?” since the 1800s, but, as ConvergEx's Nick Colas notes, the outcome is certain regardless of the cause – the effects of birth order last for a lifetime... If you had to size up a stranger and you could only ask them one question, what would it be? For me, the answer is simple: "Where are you in the birth order of your siblings?" Are you a first/only child, or a later born? The answer is quite telling. By virtue of genetics or childrearing (the debate rages there), birth order matters a lot to the person you become.
The Death Of Hedge Funds?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/09/2014 20:43 -0500
With the very largest and most experienced of hedge fund managers vociferously commenting on the "Truman Show" mirage of the markets, the danger of currently policies (there is no way to tell exactly how it all will end. Badly, we guess), and the need for stock-picking prowess, we thought the following chart might highlight the dawning of the death of an entire substrata of so-called hedge-fund managers (and not just the $0 AUM newsletter publishers) who appear unable to "stockpick" their way out of a Fed-provided paper bag. Since Q4 2010, Long/Short funds are down 6% while the immutable low-cost levered wealth creation policy vehicle of choice for the Fed (the S&P 500) is up almost 50% (dividends aside).
Lessons From Wall Street’s First Crash... In 1792
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/09/2014 19:08 -0500
The New York Fed's historical appreciation society has looked back at what was likely the US' first crash and foud that Alexander Hamilton's actions in 1792 which they claim "appears to have effectively managed the crisis with little or no long-term spillover to the economy," has now become the blueprint for manipulative intervention until this day by the central planners who know far better than 'us' collectively... but there are some lessons that Bagehot has that are worth remembering...
Just How Rigged Is The Casino: An Average Week On The Las Vegas Strip
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/09/2014 18:45 -0500
The debate over just how rigged algos have made the market may be raging, but when it comes to riggedness, there is no debate that nothing beats Las Vegas where in the long (and not so long) run the house always wins. But how much does it win, and what games provide the house with the biggest profit? The following two charts answer these pertinent questions for anyone who may be planning a trip to the city of Lost Wages.
Saxobank Warns China Is Exporting Deflation (And It's Not Going To Stop Anytime Soon)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/09/2014 18:33 -0500
With global growth expectations for 2014 having just collapsed to new lows, and on the heels of mixed inflation data last night in China (and stubbornly low-flation in Europe), Saxobank's Steen Jakobsen explains in this brief clip how, thanks to massive over-building and now over-capacity, China is in fact exporting its deflation to the rest of the world - most problematically Europe. What is more worrying for all the optimists, Jakobsen argues that both the Eurozone and China are at the centre of a slowing world economy which will see stagnation for the immediate future and ECB action, or lack of it, can't do a thing to change the status quo.
The Miracle Of Modern-Day Keynesian Dreams (In 1 Insane Chart)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/09/2014 18:02 -0500
With various extremely well paid sell-side economist slashing Q1 expectations for growth even further, we though it would be worth a glance at the ever-rising estimates for Q2 (that Goldman started this morning). Consensus for Q2 has now spiked to +3.3% (its highest since tracking began) as the Keynesian hockey-stick-believers have gone full bounce-tard now...
Tim Geithner Admits "Too Big To Fail" Hasn't Gone Anywhere (And That's The Way He Likes It)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/09/2014 17:22 -0500- Andrew Ross Sorkin
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Never in a million years did we think we’d ever use an article by Andrew Ross Sorkin as the basis of a blog post, but here we are. While probably entirely unintentional, his article serves to further solidify as accurate the prevailing notion across America that former head of the New York Federal Reserve and Obama’s first Treasury Secretary, Timothy Geithner, is nothing more than an addled, crony, bureaucratic banker cabin boy. Simply put, "Geithner is so bad, he actually makes Larry Summers look good."
Warning: Weak Stock Market Closes Are On the Rise
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/09/2014 16:50 -0500
For weeks, months, and even years now, 330RAMP CAPITAL (the ironic phrase used to indicate the oh-so-visible hand of 'someone' that decides te last 30 minutes of the US trading day is the perfect liquidity time to slam VIX lower and panic-buy stocks). However, as Gavekal notes, recently we have seen an increasing number of weak-ish stock market closes.
Which US Cities Have The Highest Income Inequality?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/09/2014 16:19 -0500
Atlanta, Georgia suffers the greate income inequality of any city in the US - closely followed by New Orleans. According to Bloomberg, which ranked 300 U.S. cities with populations of at least 100,000 based on their level of income inequality and identified the 50 with the greatest inequality. What is stunning is that while top-down many are focused on the widening gap overall, in these 2 cities alone, over one-quarter are in poverty (earn less than $4,020), while 60% are in the nation's top quintile for household income. Interestingly, the median income does not correlate well with the inequality.
Latest Satellite Images Show No Russian Troop Withdrawals
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/09/2014 15:43 -0500
Surprise: Putin punked everyone again. But it's all good because the fake de-escalation allowed the rigged Dow Jones to close at a new all time high inspiring Americans full of "confidence" so they can go ahead and spend money they don't have to boost US Q2 GDP: after all it has a ways to go to hit Goldman's 3.9% quarterly target.




