Archive - Oct 16, 2015
Frontrunning: October 16
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2015 06:35 -0500- McDonald’s Close to Deciding Whether to Change Structure of U.S. Real Estate (WSJ)
- Stocks Rise as Stimulus Bets Spur $4.1 Trillion Gain; Oil Climbs (BBG)
- Wall Street bonuses likely to plunge as trading revenue drops (Reuters)
- Syrian army launches Aleppo offensive with Iranian support (Reuters)
- Malaysia’s Najib Razak Played Key Role at Troubled 1MDB Investment Fund (WSJ)
- VW Loses Market Share in Europe as Diesel-Motor Recalls Loom (BBG)
Buying Panic Fizzles As Option Expiration Looms
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2015 05:54 -0500- Bond
- Carry Trade
- China
- Citigroup
- Cleveland Fed
- Consumer Sentiment
- Copper
- Core CPI
- CPI
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Eurozone
- fixed
- General Electric
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- headlines
- High Yield
- Honeywell
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Market Share
- Michigan
- Middle East
- Monetary Policy
- NASDAQ
- New Zealand
- Nikkei
- NYMEX
- OpEx
- Philly Fed
- Turkey
- University Of Michigan
- Yen
- Yuan
In the absence of any key economic developments in the Asian trading session, Asian stocks traded mostly under the influence of the late, pre-opex US ramp momentum courtesy of another day of ugly economic data in the US (bad econ news is good news for liquidity addicts), closing solidly in the green across the board, led by China (+1.6%) and Japan (+1.1%) thanks in no small part to the latest tumble in the Yen carry trade, which mirrored a bout of USD overnight weakness. And since a major part of the risk on move yesterday was due to Ewald Nowotny's comments welcoming more QE, news from Eurostat that Eurozone CPI in September dropped -0.1% confirming Europe's deflation continues, should only be greeted with even more buying as it suggests further easing by the ECB is inevitable.
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