Archive - Jan 14, 2015
The Looming "National Nervous Breakdown"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/14/2015 09:14 -0500When the citizenry cease to believe the lies, the nation suffers a nervous breakdown.
Dow Drops 600 Points In 24 Hours As 30Y Yield Crashes To Record Low
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/14/2015 08:50 -0500US equity prices and US Treasury yields are tumbling after the disappointingly narrative-destroying retail sales data for 'gas tax cut'-based December. The Dow is now down almost 600 points from yesterday's highs At 2.39%, 30Y Yields have never been lower...ever! US stock indices are down 3% year-to-date, testing the lows of the year. Crude is rolling back over, gold is surging, and the USDollar is fading...
LARGE RISK OFF TRADE IN THE S&P FUTURES
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 01/14/2015 08:46 -0500Are we beginning to see the true impact of lower OIL?
US Retail Sales Drop Most Since June 2012 (And Don't Blame Gas Prices)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/14/2015 08:35 -0500But but but... US retail advanced sales dropped a stunning 0.9% MoM (massively missing expectations of a 0.1% drop). The last time we saw a bigger monthly drop was June 2012. Want to blame lower gas prices - think again... Retail Sales ex Autos and Gas also fell 0.3% (missing an exuberantly hopeful expectation of +0.5% MoM) and the all-important 'Control Group' saw sales fall 0.4% (missing expectations of a 0.4% surge). Boom goes the narrative.
Greater Fool Theory, Cognitive Dissonance, & Financial Instability
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/14/2015 08:10 -0500"I am concerned that a sizable equity market correction looms. In order to justify general equity market over-weights, either risk premiums needs to fall further, or the economy and financial markets need to have reached a level of ‘escape velocity’ powerful enough to push them forward, even in the face of Fed rate hikes. I find such a ‘soft landing’ scenario improbable at best."
Frontrunning: January 14
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/14/2015 07:51 -0500- Apple
- Arch Capital
- B+
- Bank of England
- Barclays
- Beige Book
- Blackrock
- Bond
- China
- Citigroup
- Conference Board
- Councils
- CPI
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- Devon Energy
- Duke Realty
- European Central Bank
- Eurozone
- Evercore
- Fitch
- Global Economy
- Gundlach
- Hong Kong
- JetBlue
- Keefe
- Middle East
- Mortgage Loans
- Nationalism
- New York State
- Oaktree
- OPEC
- President Obama
- Private Equity
- ratings
- RBS
- Realty Income
- Recession
- Reuters
- Verizon
- Viacom
- Volatility
- Wells Fargo
- White House
- Whiting Petroleum
- World Bank
- U.S. Index Futures Decline on Commodities Slump, Growth Concerns (BBG)
- Al Qaeda claims French attack, derides Paris rally (Reuters)
- Charlie Hebdo With Muhammad Cover on Sale With Heavy Security Precautions (BBG)
- How an Obscure Tax Loophole Brought Down Obama's Treasury Nominee (BBG)
- ECB’s bond plan is legal ‘in principle’ (FT)
- Charlie Hebdo fallout: Specter of fascist past haunts European nationalism (Reuters)
- DRW to acquire smaller rival Chopper Trading (FT)
- Oil fall could lead to capex collapse: DoubleLine's Gundlach (Reuters)
JPM Misses Revenues And EPS Due To Another $1 Billion In Legal Costs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/14/2015 07:39 -0500Looks like the Jefferies earnings harbinger were right, because with another quarter down, and here is another painful report by JPM, which just launched the Q4 earnings season for financials with a miss on both the top and bottom line, reporting $1.19 in EPS, well below the $1.32 consensus, and just barely above the lower estimate of $1.16. This was a decline from both the previous quarter (by 17 cents) and from a year ago (by 11 cents). Revenues missed as well, with JPM reporting $23.552 billion in top line, a decline of $560 million from a year ago ($1.6 billion lower than Q3), and below the $24.0 billion consensus. And while JPM's latest recurring, non-one time "one-time, non-recurring" charge came as a surprise to most (although how over $30 billion in legal charges can be considered one-time is beyond us), at the same time JPM once again resorted to the oldest trick in the book, taking the benefit of some $704 million in loan loss reserve releases, nearly offsetting the entire negative impact of the legal charge.
Market Wrap: Copper Plummets; Euro Plunges To 9 Year Low On Euro-Court's OMT Ruling, Futures Down
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/14/2015 06:54 -0500'After two days of sharp intraday and vicious reversals, the BTFD algos are suspiciously missing overnight, when as reported earlier, a bout of margin calls and stop loss selling meant not crude but copper would crash in today's episode of "guess the crashing commodity", on what Goldman dubbed a Chinese demand collapse which for those confused is different than an OPEC supply glut, and is also the reason why the entire commodity complex is trading at a decade plus low. As a result copper plunged to a five and a half year low, in the process halting the market due to the severity of the plunge. But the big event overnight was the farcical announcement by the European top court, which as everyone expected, rejected the German rejection of the OMT as illegal, stating it was not only legal (with certain conditions) but greenlighting the way for the ECB's QE in one week, a move which sent the EURUSD crashing to a fresh 9 year low!
Italy's President Napolitano Resigns: What Happens Next
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/14/2015 05:32 -0500Giorgio Napolitano, Italy’s longest-serving president, resigned before the end of a second 7-year presidential term. Napolitano accepted 2nd term in 2013 after parliament failed to elect his successor for days, had signaled from start he wouldn’t have served another full mandate. Here, courtesy of Bloomberg, is what happens next.
A "Conditional Bazooka": European Top Court Finds ECB's OMT "May Be Legal" But Must Meet Conditions
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/14/2015 03:57 -0500Moments ago, the Advocate General Pedro Cruz Villalon of the EU Court of Justice in Luxembourg delivered the non-binding opinion on issue of Mario Draghi's "unconditional" OMT. Here are the details from Reuters and Bloomberg:
- EU COURT ADVISER SAYS OMT PROGRAMME IN LINE WITH EU LAW SO LONG AS CERTAIN CONDITIONS MET
- EU COURT ADVISER SAYS OMT LEGITIMATE SO LONG AS THERE IS NO DIRECT INVOLVEMENT IN FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAMME THAT APPLIES TO STATE IN QUESTION
- EU COURT ADVISER SAYS ECB MUST OUTLINE REASONS FOR ADOPTING UNCONVENTIONAL MEASURES SUCH AS OMT PROGRAMME
In other words, Draghi's "unconditional" bazooka just became conditional, but it is still a bazooka, albeit one that will never actually be used since well over two years after it was revealed following Draghi's famous "whatever it takes" speech, it still has no legal termsheet or basis, and no definition on its pari passu or burden-sharing status. And it never will: after all it was merely meant as a precautionary device designed to scare away the bond vigilantes, and never to be actually implemented.
Copper Halted After Crashing 8% On LME, Sends AUD Plunging, Futures Dip Under 2000
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/14/2015 03:34 -0500Today's prime time event hasn't even arrived, that would be the European Court of Justice (ECJ) delivering its final opinion on the legality of the ECB’s previously announced OMT program, in less than an hour, and already the fireworks have begun, most notably out of Asia where after yesterday's epic commodity drubbing many were caught with their pants down and margin calls up, and what followed was a classic liquidation puke, when Copper prices crashed over 8% on the LME, to fresh 5 year lows and below USD 5,500/T in London.
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