Archive - Jun 2015
June 23rd
WiSDuMB oF Hu FLuNG DuNG...
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 06/23/2015 12:05 -0500The Dow that can be spoken is not the great Dow...
Blacks are 13% of US population 37.6% of prisoners and 71% of shooters in Chicago
Submitted by hedgeless_horseman on 06/23/2015 11:30 -0500The kids and wife have asked me, "Why do you think it is, dad, that the murderers and robbers are usually black?" How is a dad supposed to answer this question?
Facing "Full Blown Crisis", Bank Of Greece Enlists Security Firm To Ensure ATMs Stay Stocked
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/23/2015 11:20 -0500The Bank of Greece has been hard at work with securities services firm G4S over the past two weeks coordinating an unprecedented effort to keep the country's ATMs stocked amid billions in withdrawals. Although the situation has become "critical", G4S notes that it hasn't had to enlist military assistance -- yet.
Collapse, Part 2: The Nine Dynamics Of Decay
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/23/2015 10:58 -0500Rome didn't fall so much as erode away. That's the template for collapse. While collapse may be sudden, the decay that generated the collapse had been rotting away the foundation for years or decades.
IMF Spoils The Party Again: Throws Up On Latest Greek Proposal
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/23/2015 10:28 -0500But it was all looking so great based on the market's all-knowing discounting mechanism of idiot algos. Despite Merkel's comments on "no discussion of restructuring" and Schaeuble's dysphoria over the proposals, a Greek Minister's overconfident "Greece is rescued" comment is about to be crushed by Lagarde's heavy hand:
IMF DISAGREES WITH GREECE ON CORPORATE TAX, VAT AND PENSIONS - EU SOURCES
Yeah - but as they say - apart from that The IMF loved the Greek Proposal!?
"The End Of The Road" - Debt-Funded Buyback Boosts Are Finite
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/23/2015 10:11 -0500The problem for investors is that inorganic measures to boost profitability, like cost-cutting, wage suppression, layoffs, and stock buybacks, are finite in nature. Eventually, these options are exhausted. There are only so many employees that can be terminated, wages can only be suppressed for so long, and there is a finite number of shares that can ultimately be repurchased from shareholders. The question that investors need to be asking is what happens when companies inevitabilty reach "the end of road." Importantly, with the Fed determined to begin hiking interest rates, despite weak economic data, the end may be nearer than most are currently expecting.
Greece Soars 16% In 2 Days (Just Like It Did Before Collapsing In December, February, & May)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/23/2015 09:53 -0500Because hope is a strategy after all...
Doubts Over City of London's "Ageing Tech Systems” in Age of Cyber War
Submitted by GoldCore on 06/23/2015 09:52 -0500- Doubts over City of London’s “fintech” in age of cyber war - Thousands left in “financial limbo” after tech “error” - 600,000 RBS customer payments go "missing" in "system failure”
- GoldCore's blog
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Michael Whalen: Why the Streaming Music Business is Broken
Submitted by rcwhalen on 06/23/2015 09:46 -0500Time for the musicians to learn the lessons that the video guys in Hollywood learned from them...
Why New Home Sales Remain At Recession Levels, In One Chart
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/23/2015 09:40 -0500What is the reason for the non-existant rebound? Simple: the following chart comparing total new home sales and the median new home sales price explains it.
Alexis Tsipras - Angel Of Mercy Or "Trusty" Of The Central Bankers' Debt Prison?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/23/2015 09:18 -0500Greece, Europe and the world are being crucified on a cross of Keynesian central banking. The latter’s two-decade long deluge of money printing and ZIRP has generated a fantastic worldwide financial bubble, and one which has accrued to just a tiny slice of mankind. That much is blindingly evident, but there’s more and it’s worse. The present replay of high noon on Greece’s impossible mountain of debt clarifies an even greater evil. Namely, that the central bank printing presses have also utterly destroyed the fundamental requisite of fiscal democracy. To wit, in the modern world of massive, interventionist welfare states, fiscal governance desperately needs an honest bond market.
New Home Sales Surges To Highest Since Feb 2008 As Northeast Spikes 87%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/23/2015 09:06 -0500On the heels of yesterday's explosive (but not a bubble) Existing Home Sales, May New Home Sales printed 546k - up 2.2% MoM - (against expectation of 523k). This is the highest SAAR new home sales since Feb 2008. By region, the NorthEast soared 87.5% MoM (as historical outlier fabrications remain buried in the data) and The West rose but The Midwest and South dropped 5.7% and 4.3% respectively.
US Manufacturing PMI Slumps To Weakest Since Oct 2013
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/23/2015 08:53 -0500Having hovered at its lowest level since January 2014, Markit's US Manufacturing PMI slipped even further to 53.4 (against expectations of 54.1). This is the weakest since October 2013 and the biggest miss since August 2013. Stunned, Markit notes, "while the survey data points to the economy rebounding in the second quarter, the weak PMI number for June raises the possibility that we are seeing a loss of momentum heading into the third quarter;" which is odd because every talking head has been proclaiming everything is awesome, "while a September rise still looks likely, given the ongoing strength of the service sector, any further deterioration in the data are likely to push the first hike into next year."
The Single Most Important Chart For Stocks
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 06/23/2015 08:29 -0500The completion of this pattern will take time to unfold. But it predicts a MASSIVE collapse in stocks.
- Phoenix Capital Research's blog
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A New Problem For Greece Emerges: How To Do the Russian "Unpivot" After Capitulating To The Troika
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/23/2015 08:25 -0500While Greece is collectively scratching its head why Tsipras et al were at loggerheads with Europe for 4 months, during which time the Greek economy entered a recession and saw its banks not only depleted of all cash but become de facto wards of the ECB, just to reach an "agreement" that could have taken place back in February, and attention shifts to just how Tsipras will pass last night's impromptu capitulation through hard-line leftist parliamentarians, Greece now has another problem: how to unpivot the aggressive pivot toward Russia in the past few months, which culminated with the signing of an energy deal last week in St. Petersburg.







