Archive - Jun 3, 2014
US Equities Rediscover Risk As Ukraine Choppers Downed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2014 10:26 -0500
Broad US equity markets stumbled out of the gate this morning but it's Tuesday so the BTFT traders rescued it. However, when news of 2 downed helicopters in Ukraine hit, stocks tumbled once again with Russell 2000 (small caps) and Dow Transports (the highest hig beta recently) getting slammed... USDJPy ramp efforts continue to save us from terrible Tuesday. Bonds and FX are not reacting so far...
Did the Regulators Just Ring the Bell on the Deal making Spree of 2009-2014
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 06/03/2014 10:03 -0500The markets are not recognizing the clear signals that things are changing behind the scenes. This is precisley how 2007 lead to 2008.
Is This The Top? First Quarter Corporate Profits Tumble Most Since Lehman
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2014 09:51 -0500
As SocGen's Albert Edwards conveniently points out, during the excitement of the downward revision of Q1 US GDP from +0.1% to -1.0% investors seem not to have noticed a $213bn, 10% annualized slump in the US Bureau of Economic Analysis's (BEA) favored measure of whole economy profits, defined as profits from current production. Also known as economic profits, the BEA makes adjustments to remove inventory profits (IVA) and to put depreciation on an economic instead of a tax basis (CCAdj). Edwards shows the stark difference between the BEA's calculation for post-tax headline profits (up 5.3% yoy) and economic profits (down 6.8% yoy) in the chart below. In short: the plunge in actual corporate profits in Q1 was the biggest since Lehman!
J.M. Smucker Boosts Prices On Most Coffee Products By 9%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2014 09:27 -0500
It took the Fed long enough but finally even it succumbed to the reality of surging food prices when, as we reported previously, it hiked cafeteria prices at ground zero: the cafeteria of the Chicago Fed, stating that "prices continue to rise between 3% and 33%." So with input costs rising across the board not just for the Fed, but certainly for food manufacturers everywhere, it was only a matter of time before the latter also oo threw in the towel and followed in the Fed's footsteps. Which is what happened earlier today when J.M. Smucker Co. said it raised the prices on most of its coffee products by an average of 9% to reflect higher green-coffee costs.
'Two Weeks' To Prepare For Cyber Attack On Bank Accounts - UK Government
Submitted by GoldCore on 06/03/2014 09:18 -0500We have long warned of the vulnerability of having all your investments and savings in electronic format. The nature of our modern financial and banking system exposes investors and savers to new risks that were not there a generation ago. Prudent diversification today, involves owning some actual physical gold and silver coins and bars in your possession or in allocated, segregated accounts that can be taken delivery of with a phone call.
US Factory Order Beat Thanks To Defense Orders; Decline Ex-Defense
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2014 09:09 -0500
Factory Orders beast expectations with a 0.7% rise (against expectations of a 0.5% rise) but this marks the 2nd month in a row after the February spike bounce back that growth has slowed and in fact shows the post-weather-slump recovery is anything but being sustained. Ex-defense, new orders for April actually fell 0.1% (after rising 1.1% in March)... simply put, the entire beat was driven by defense (does that sound sustainable? or like organic growth?) Non-defense factory orders were the weakest since January (in the middle of the catastrophic weather)
Former Bundesbank Head Explains The Lull Before The VIX Storm
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2014 08:49 -0500
Monetary policy is diverging in the two largest economies, a trend that is set to shape funding markets for years to come. Before long, these divergent fortunes are bound to lead to large differences in policy. One might expect that movements in financial markets would reflect these expectations. However, so far, by and large, they have not. To my mind, investors should prepare for more volatility this year. A tightening in US monetary policy always causes fallout. This time will be no different. In fact, it may be worse, since the tightening starts from extremely expansionary territory.
Clients Are The Most Net Short Treasuries Since 2006, JPMorgan Warns
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2014 08:23 -0500
We have shown the surge in short positioning that CFTC exposes via its Commitment of Traders data that has begun to see some covering; but despite Citi's protestation that the recent rally in bonds 'must' have cleared out the short base and squared positions, the truth is - the Treasury market is dominated by more than just futures and institutional clients have not been this short Treasuries since 2006. As JPMorgan's Client Survey exposes, as of the end of last week, active clients were adding to shorts... which could be a problem as the last time all clients were this net short, bond yields collapsed in the next few months...
Japan Base Wages Decline 23 Months In A Row
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2014 07:20 -0500
Proving once again that you can't print your way to general economic prosperity, Abenomics took another shot to the chest last night as Japan's base wages failed to rise month-over-month for the 24th month in a row (the longest streak in history). Even after all the promises and hope of the spring wage negotiations, Abe's 'plan' to guilt employers into raising wages is not working; which is especialy problematic given the surge in inflation (as the 'real' wage slumped 3.1% in April) As Goldman warns, we caution against excessive expectations for sustained wage growth.
European Sub-zero Deposit Rates Imminent As Eurozone Inflation Tumbles To March 2009 Levels
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2014 06:55 -0500
If Mario Draghi was waiting for the latest Eurozone inflation data to cement his decision to unleash negative deposit rates, if not more, in the Eurozone, he got it earlier today when Eurostat reported that May inflation tumbled to 0.5% - matching the cycle lows and the lowest since March 2009 - down from April's 0.7%, below the 0.6% expected, and less than half the ECB's target. In other words, despite everything tried in Europe nothing is working, and the most important chart - that showing the collapse in lending to private companies - not due to lack of supply but due to no demand, continues to be the most relevant one. Sadly, it is the one Draghi has shown over the past three years he has virtually zero control over.
Frontrunning: June 3
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2014 06:31 -0500- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Barclays
- Botox
- Carbon Emissions
- Carlyle
- China
- Citigroup
- Credit Suisse
- Devon Energy
- Eastern Europe
- European Union
- Evercore
- Federal Reserve
- France
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- India
- International Energy Agency
- Israel
- Japan
- Keefe
- KKR
- Lazard
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- Mexico
- Middle East
- Monetary Policy
- Natural Gas
- Newspaper
- Nielsen
- Nomura
- Norway
- Private Equity
- Quiksilver
- Real estate
- Reuters
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Ukraine
- Wells Fargo
- Yuan
- At least 74 dead in crashes similar to those GM linked to faulty switches (Reuters)
- Obama Calls for $1 Billion Europe Security Fund; Will Increase U.S. Military Presence in Eastern Europe (WSJ)
- Euro Inflation Slowing More Than Forecast Pressures ECB (BBG)
- China accelerates as euro zone stumbles (Reuters)
- Russia says Ukraine situation worsening, submits U.N. resolution (Reuters)
- Secondary Sales Squeeze Investors (WSJ)
- Barclays Said to Start Cutting Jobs in Investment Banking Unit (Bloomberg)
- Backlash Grows on Release of Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl in Taliban Prisoner Swap (WSJ)
- For fallen soldiers' families, Bergdahl release stirs resentment (Reuters)
- PIMCO's Gross stares at record outflow (Reuters)
Futures Fail To Rally Despite Weak Overnight Data
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/03/2014 06:00 -0500Considering that both key overnight news reports: the Chinese HSBC PMI (printing at 49.4, vs 49.7 expected) and the Eurozone CPI print from a few hours ago (print of 0.5%, down from 0.7% and below the 0.6% expected), we find it odd that futures are red: after all this is precisely that kind of negative data that has pushed the market to record highs over the past five years. And speaking of odd, considering the ongoing non-dis-deflation in Europe, the fact that Bunds and TSYs are being sold off today makes perfect sense in a New Normal bizarro world.
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