Archive - Jul 25, 2015
The Junk Bond Heatmap Has Not Been This Red In A Long Time
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/25/2015 15:05 -0500But for those equity investors caught in the artificial glare of the goalseeked stock market to appreciate how truly ugly it has gotten in the junk bond space, here is a heat map showing the YTD change in junk bond prices (relative box size indicates total outstanding debt amount) when seen in terms of either the 31 subsectors or the 805 issuer companies that make up Citi's junk bond tracking universe.
BRICS Bank, AIIB Pledge Partnership, Loans To Be Issued In Yuan
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/25/2015 14:35 -0500Now that the AIIB and the BRICS bank have officially launched and are expected to begin operations soon, it appears that not only will the yuan play a key role for both institutions, but in fact, the two development banks will collaborate on their lending activities.
Venezuela's Hyperinflation Crack-Up Boom On Its Way To Outer Space
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/25/2015 14:00 -0500Venezuela’s hyperinflation is reaching its final stages. It is probably already far too late for the government to stop the complete collapse of its currency. The bolivar is in the process of transforming from a medium of exchange to tinder for wood-stoves. Venezuelans who had the presence of mind to convert their savings into gold or foreign currency in good time are likely to survive the conflagration intact. Governments never seem to learn. They all believe they can somehow overrule economic laws by diktat. This is not only true of Venezuela’s government, but of practically every government in today’s world. Central planning of money has been adopted everywhere. Venezuela merely shows us what the end game for every fiat money system looks like.
Hillary Agrees To Testify Publicly Over Benghazi Deaths
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/25/2015 13:20 -0500With the FBI and DoJ now involved in yet another Hillary Clinton scandal - that she sent confidential emails from her personal email server - it seems the 'presidential' former Secretary of State has felt pressured to come somewhat clean. While some might argue "what difference does it make?" The Washington Post reports that Hillary Rodham Clinton will testify on Oct. 22 before the House select committee investigating her role in connection with the deaths of four Americans in Benghazi, Libya. The testimony - before the committee formed last year - will be in a open setting (apparently against the wishes for privacy that committee chairman, Rep. Trey Gowdy initially requested).
Bubble, Bubble, Toil, & Trouble: When Authorities Buy Assets To Prop Up Markets
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/25/2015 12:40 -0500The Central Planners who thought that buying shares to prop up the stock bubble was an excellent fix are about to find out the true meaning of toil and trouble.
Nothing To See Here: German Regulator Decides Deutsche Bank CEO Didn't Know About LIBOR After All
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/25/2015 12:05 -0500"German banking regulator Bafin cleared former Deutsche Bank AG co-Chief Executive Officer Anshu Jain of misleading the Bundesbank about his knowledge of the company’s role in attempts to manipulate benchmark interest rates," Bloomberg reports. This comes just three months after the very same regulator said that "Mr. Jain has been proven to have learned about discussion in the market concerning the susceptibility of the LIBOR to manipulation in 2008."
Jim Grant: Financial Prices Should Be Discovered, Not Administered
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/25/2015 11:30 -0500"The modern financial animal is wont to assume that he or she lives in an age of science. The truth is we live in an age of pseudoscience. Far from dealing in science, central bankers, and, to a degree, investment bankers and security analysts, employ magical thinking... For an individual to fix Libor is a crime. For a central bank to suppress European bond yields is an act of financial statesmanship..."
The Three Cs Keeping CFOs Up At Night: China, Commodities, Currencies
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/25/2015 10:24 -0500With two-thirds of companies still set to report, and as the second quarter earnings season continues and assures the first revenue and EPS recession since 2009, the question on everyone's lips is just how bad will/can it get. The answer will be determined largely by any/all of the following three "C"s which continue to define the ugly face of non-GAAP corporate earnings for the past 3 quarters which appear set to persist for the foreseeable future.
This Time Around, Entire Countries Will be Going Bust
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 07/25/2015 09:33 -0500You do not start confiscating deposits at banks until the government itself is bankrupt and cannot foot the bill for a bailout.
Has The US Finished The Trap Assad Had Begun To Set For Turkey?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/25/2015 08:42 -0500The US Syrian policy forces Ankara to walk a fine line between ISIS, Assad’s regime, Kurds, the US and its own interest. We will not rule out that Erdo?an could declare a state of emergency and postpone new elections. Whatever the result of the power struggle in Ankara may be, Turkey’s military will not accept the YPG and PKK armed to the teeth by the US.
Dollar Correction may not Be Complete, but Fed Expectations to Limit the Pullback
Submitted by Marc To Market on 07/25/2015 08:34 -0500The dollar's pause may be short-lived. Divergence still the key driver.
Bail-Ins Of "Big Deposits" In Greece Would Be "Extraordinarily Counter-Productive"
Submitted by GoldCore on 07/25/2015 07:28 -0500The risk that bail-ins pose to companies, trade, commerce, employment and entire economies is something at which we have looked frequently in recent months. Indeed, we think we are largely alone in focussing in detail on the risk that bail-ins pose not just to individual savers but also to millions of small and medium size enterprises throughout the world.





