Archive - Nov 11, 2010 - Blog entry
Taxes, the Deficit, QE and the Long Bond
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 11/11/2010 20:45 -0500No increase in taxes sounds good. But nothing is free.
The Fed’s Got POMO Fever!
Submitted by ilene on 11/11/2010 20:06 -0500In fact, just yesterday we had a TERRIBLE 30-year note auction on just $16Bn worth of notes. Already Ben is pretty much the only buyer of Tim’s trash paper and, as that bid to cover ratio drops below 2:1, you’ll see rates begin to tick up dramatically, despite the Fed’s best efforts to contain them and that will put pressure on houses, corporate debt, government debt, municipal debt etc and suddenly we’re Greece.
Are We Underestimating Funding Shortfalls?
Submitted by Leo Kolivakis on 11/11/2010 19:51 -0500According to the C.D. Howe Institute, Canadian government pensions are grossly underestimating their pension shortfalls and so are European and US governments. Will pension shortfalls trigger the next sovereign debt crisis?
Of Missiles, Costa Rican Beaches and Silver Bars...
Submitted by williambanzai7 on 11/11/2010 14:28 -0500Pixilating the News...
Emerging Market Mania:CHINA, “Thanks for the Jobs Uncle Sam, But We’ll Pass On the Inflation”
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 11/11/2010 14:26 -0500So here were are in 2010 and the US and China are now butting heads in a major way. The US (debtor, consumer, declining empire) wants to devalue the Dollar and export inflation to China. China (creditor, producer, rising empire) doesn’t care for this arrangement as its hurts profit margins at Chinese companies, increases food inflation (food is a higher percentage of income for the average China compared to the average American), which in turn means civil unrest.
Hot Money, Gold, Foreign Exchange And The Fallout From QE
Submitted by Econophile on 11/11/2010 13:54 -0500What do "hot money," gold, sovereign debt, foreign trade, and Germany and China all have in common? Everything. They are all lined up against the U.S. and our new quantitative easing (QE2). There is fallout related to quantitative easing, and the markets are reacting, from the Fed's perspective, badly.
It's Not the "Great Recession". It's the Great BANK ROBBERY
Submitted by George Washington on 11/11/2010 12:30 -0500
Predictive Power of HSKAX
Submitted by derailedcapitalism on 11/11/2010 10:37 -0500Earlier in the week we posted that Market-Neutrals were deleveraging, we then further speculated that a market drop would soon follow as liquidity disappeared and small sell block trades would move the market. We received many emails from individuals asking for further explanation of this metric and why we feel it is a useful indicator to look at. While this is merely a theory with no empirical evidence, we would like to display the following chart 2-year with daily closes in which m/n's rapidly delevered days before a market drop. On all 5 occasions, the rapid decline in HSKAX was indicative of the S&P500 index experiencing further weakness.
The Fat Lady is Still Singing in the Treasury Market
Submitted by madhedgefundtrader on 11/11/2010 10:33 -0500Visiting the world’s most overpriced asset. The recent action in the markets suggests that the big turn may finally be behind us. Why have bond prices been falling for the past month, despite an assumed promise by the Fed to provide unlimited amounts of liquidity? (TBT).
Seventeen Metals: “The Middle East has oil, China has rare earth”
Submitted by asiablues on 11/11/2010 06:33 -0500China is decades ahead of the global curve when it comes to understanding the strategic importance of rare earths. But with demand set to double to 225,000 tons by 2015, not accounting for the burgeoning green energy industry, nobody's immune to the coming supply shortfall, including China.
Will Obama be Seoul Man Defending Fed at G20?
Submitted by MoneyMcbags on 11/11/2010 00:08 -0500Marginal macro news, the upcoming G20 meetings, rising commodity margins, and enough uncertainty to make even Heisenberg jealous had the market once again bobbing up and down like Shyla Stylez trying to make her rent.











