Archive - Jun 5, 2014
"Stress Test" Reviewed: Tim Geithner Is "A Grifter, A Petty Con Artist"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/05/2014 21:35 -0500- AIG
- Alan Greenspan
- Barney Frank
- Citigroup
- Counterparties
- Dean Baker
- Dick Fuld
- Exchange Stabilization Fund
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- Ford
- Foreclosures
- France
- General Electric
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Gretchen Morgenson
- International Monetary Fund
- Jamie Dimon
- Jeff Immelt
- JPMorgan Chase
- Larry Summers
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- Lloyd Blankfein
- Meltdown
- Mexico
- national security
- New York Fed
- Nomination
- None
- Paul Volcker
- Private Equity
- Robert Rubin
- Shadow Banking
- Sheila Bair
- Simon Johnson
- Steve Friedman
- Stress Test
- TARP
- Tim Geithner
- Timothy Geithner
- Too Big To Fail
Timothy Geithner is likely to go down in American history as one of the most dangerous, destructive cronies to have ever wielded government power. The man is so completely and totally full of shit it’s almost impossible not to notice. The last thing we’d ever want to do in our free time is read a lengthy book filled with Geithner lies and propaganda, so we owe a large debt of gratitude to former Congressional staffer Matt Stoller for doing it for us. Stoller simply tears Geither apart limb from limb, detailing obvious lies about the financial crisis, and even more interestingly, Geithner’s bizarre bio, replete with mysterious and inexplicable promotions into positions of power..."Geithner is at heart a grifter, a petty con artist with the right manners and breeding to lie at the top echelons of American finance..."
Abenomics' Legacy: Japan's Greatest "Misery" In 33 Years
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/05/2014 20:54 -0500
Meet Mieko Tatsunami, a 70 year old retired kimono dresser from Tokyo. Unlike the scores of paid actors ordered to pitch Abenomics and to spread the gospel of rising asset prices, Mieko shares a most rare commodity in this day of pervasive propaganda: the truth. “The price of everything we eat on a daily basis is going up,” Tatsunami, 70, a retired kimono dresser, said while shopping in Tokyo’s Sugamo area. “I’m making do by halving the amount of meat I serve and adding more vegetables.” Ironically, that's what Americans are doing too. Only here the "halving" of the food is done by the food producers, while the consumers rarely if ever notices that they are paying the same amount for ever lesser amounts of food. At least in Japan they are honest about the food inflation. As Bloomberg shows, Tatsunami’s concerns stem from the price of food soaring at the fastest pace in 23 years after April’s sales-tax increase. Rising prices helped push the nation’s misery index to the highest level since 1981, while wages adjusted for inflation fell the most in more than four years.
Half The Country Makes Less Than $27,520 A Year And 15 Other Signs The Middle Class Is Dying
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/05/2014 20:24 -0500
If you make more than $27,520 a year at your job, you are doing better than half the country is. But of course $27,520 a year will not allow you to live "the American Dream" in this day and age. After taxes, that breaks down to a good bit less than $2,000 a month. You can't realistically pay a mortgage, make a car payment, afford health insurance and provide food, clothing and everything else your family needs for that much money. That is one of the reasons why both parents are working in most families today. The American Dream is becoming a mirage for most people. No matter how hard they try, they just can't seem to achieve it. And here are some hard numbers to back that assertion up. The following are 15 more signs that the middle class is dying...
NIRP Has Arrived: Europe Officially Enters The "Monetary Twilight Zone"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/05/2014 19:57 -0500
Goodbye ZIRP, hello NIRP. Today's decision by the ECB to officially lower the deposit facility rate to negative (as in you pay the bank to hold your deposits) is shocking, but not surprising: we previewed just this outcome precisely two years ago in "Europe's "Monetary Twilight Zone" Neutron Bomb: NIRP." Here is what we wrote in June 2012 about Europe's unprecedented NIRP monetary experiment.
The Gold Conspiracy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/05/2014 19:54 -0500
As increasingly more conspiracy 'theories' become conspiracy 'facts', The History Channel discusses "The Gold Conspiracy" in this brief documentary. Gold is one of the most precious metals in the world. A glittering commodity so rare that people will go to great lengths to obtain it. But who sets the price? And what are the secret methods to control its value? History uncovers the clandestine world surrounding the highly prized precious metal. How much gold does the United States really have – and where is it locked away? Is the American government overstating the amount of gold in its reserves to create the mystique of financial superiority?
Previewing Tomorrow's Payroll Number
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/05/2014 19:53 -0500![]()
With a 9 standard deviation range between the highest and lowest excuse for a forecast from the 81 "qualified" economists on Bloomberg's survey, there is plenty of room for noise to dominate signal with tomorrow's payrolls data. Goldman forecasts a softer-than-consensus 210k increase in non-farm-payrolls as May employment data flow looks more mixed, and they expect that the unemployment rate rose two-tenths to 6.5% in May (vs. consensus 6.4%). Average hourly earnings (AHE) are likely to be in focus again following several months of heightened attention to wage growth and labor market slack; Goldman expects an increase of 0.2% in May (vs. consensus 0.2%).
The Purchase Of Our Republic
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/05/2014 19:40 -0500
The massive consolidation of wealth, combined with the removal of any limits on money in campaigns, has allowed for the purchase of our government. Americans know that something is wrong, deeply wrong. They see signs of the problem everywhere: income inequality, growing concentration and power of mega corporations, political donations/corruption, the absence of jobs with decent salaries, the explosion of the US prison population, healthcare costs, student loan debt, homelessness, etc. etc. However, the true causes and benefactors behind these problems are purposely hidden from view. What Americans see is Kabuki Theater of a functioning form of capitalism and democracy, but beyond this veneer our country has devolved into the exact opposite.
What Mario Draghi Did Today: Goldman Sachs Explains
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/05/2014 19:22 -0500
Since Mario Draghi is merely a frontman for (and former employee of) Goldman Sachs in yet another central bank, and since his policy mandate is implemented only after extensive drafting and pre-clearance with 200 West, the best "most-mortem" of what happened today comes from the firm that was responsible for today's announcement in the first place: Goldman Sachs itself.
Fed President Defends Blowing Bubbles: It's In The Best Interest Of "Irrational Investors"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/05/2014 18:58 -0500
It would appear the Fed, after being angry at itself for creating the "complacency" evident in the markets globally has reached the pinnacle of critically circular logic in its defense of policies that are aimed at financial stability (i.e. prices flat or rising but absolutely not falling). Fed's Williams, a la Greenspan's "a-ha" moment, appears to have realized that investors are not always 'rational' and "bull markets may cause investors to get ‘carried away’ over time and confuse what is a one-time, perhaps transitory, shift in fundamentals for a new paradigm of rising asset prices."
A Decade Of Jobs - How The Recession Reshaped The US Economy (In 8 Charts)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/05/2014 18:41 -0500
Five year after the Great Recession ended and the percentage of the pouplation employed continues to languish near its crash lows - despite seasonally-adjusted jobs data signaling the re-creation of 9 million jobs. However, as The NY Times illustrates in this massively impressive chart series, not all industries have 'recovered' equally.
Peak Oil Revisited...
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/05/2014 18:07 -0500
Over the last few years central banks have had a policy of quantitative easing to try to keep interest rates low – the economy cannot pay high energy prices AND high interest rates so, in effect, the policy has been to try to bring down interest rates as low as possible to counter the stagnation. The severity of the recessions may be variable in different countries because competitive strength in this model goes to those countries where energy is used most efficiently and which can afford to pay somewhat higher prices for energy. Whatever the variability this is still a dead end model and at some point people will see that entirely different ways of thinking about economy and ecology are needed – unless they get drawn into conflicts and wars over energy by psychopathic policy idiots. There is no way out of the Catch 22 within the growth economy model. That’s why de-growth is needed.
North Korea: Is Perception Different from Reality?
Submitted by Capitalist Exploits on 06/05/2014 17:59 -0500Nothing lasts forever: Why the perceptions of North Korea may be different from reality
Who's Afraid Of The Big Bad Tepper?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/05/2014 17:41 -0500
Most market participants know that "you don't fight the Fed" or ECB or BoJ etc... (unless they tell you markets are complacent or frothy or "to sell"). But what really scares market participants... based on today's horrifying short squeeze... is the word of the follicularly-challenged master of the universe...
SocGen 10-Year Outlook: 100% Chance Of Recession; S&P To 4,000 Or... 500
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/05/2014 17:29 -0500
No matter what, SocGen sees US equity performance over the next 10 years as modest at best. They note that US equities face three headwinds: cyclically-adjusted valuations (CAPE, starting date 1881) have returned to very expensive territory, corporate margins stand at historically high levels, and after already five years of growth from the 2009 trough, we estimate that the probability of another recession kicking in is close to 100% within the forecast timeframe (the longest cycle ever was 120 months, or 10 years). While their central case is 'moderate growth and inflation', they project a possible high growth surge to 4000 for the S&P 500 and a deflation scenario which would put the S&P 500 at 500 (-12% per annum).




