Archive - Jul 2010 - Blog entry
July 26th
Pivotfarm Daily News Harvest 26th July 2010
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 07/26/2010 08:06 -0500Markets in a Flash
· Asian equity markets made gains over night. The Nikkei 225 closed up 0.77% while the Hang Seng closed up 0.12%.
· European equity markets are flat today and are fluctuating between gains and losses. The Stress test results of Friday do not seem to have brought much direction to the markets.
· Commodities are mixed and Oil has fallen 0.84% today. Natural gas is also down on news of gas production in China.
July 25th
Matthew Simmons: Lightning Rod for Gulf Oil Controversy
Submitted by George Washington on 07/25/2010 20:32 -0500Let's refocus the discussion away from Simmons and towards the Gulf itself...
A Bearish Predisposition?
Submitted by Leo Kolivakis on 07/25/2010 20:19 -0500Stay tuned, we might not need QE 2.0 after all...
Investor Sentiment: I Am a Squirrel
Submitted by thetechnicaltake on 07/25/2010 18:25 -0500Charting this market is similar to tracking the moves of a squirrel crossing a busy street.
Onshore Rush by Offshore Moratorium
Submitted by asiablues on 07/25/2010 15:59 -0500The de facto reinstated drilling ban in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico resulted from the BP oil spill has created an onshore rush. The presentation discussed this onshore boom, profiled the prolific Bakken formation, and observations of the markets and the oil services sector.
The Week Ahead for the USD and US Markets
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 07/25/2010 13:30 -0500The USD started the past week strongly, making good headway against most of its counterparts. However it dropped sharply on Thursday, from 83.3 to 82.6 according to US Dollar Index. The depreciation was mainly caused by Bernanke’s comments and a slew of European data showing signs of a recovery.
Anecdotal Evidence That Banks Are Hiding Depressed High End Real Estate
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 07/25/2010 05:35 -0500Where has my mid-tier non-performing real estate gone???
July 24th
The Bondsman's "Fear of Death"?
Submitted by Leo Kolivakis on 07/24/2010 20:59 -0500Occasionally, though, there arises a very different and far deeper type of fear: the terrifying thought that the entity of profit – and, worse still, the very institution of capitalization on which the entire capitalist megamachine stands – might cease to exist. This latter fear is associated with systemic crisis – that is, with periods during which the very future of capitalism is put into question. It is what Hegel meant when he spoke of the bondsman’s “fear of death”.
July 23rd
If Everything Is So Good, Why Am I Feeling So Bad?
Submitted by Econophile on 07/23/2010 23:06 -0500This week the S&P 500 was up 7.3% for the month, corporate earnings have been looking good, retail sales inched up last week, the CPI is low, interest rates are low, Dr. Bernanke is ready to pump money into the economy if things go awry, most European banks passed their stress test, and we've got a new financial markets regulation bill which will save us from economic collapse. What's to worry?
Comparing CPPIB and PSPIB FY 2010 Results
Submitted by Leo Kolivakis on 07/23/2010 22:13 -0500For all you pension buffs, a comparison of CPPIB and PSPIB FY 2010 results...
China Calls Our Bluff: "The US is Insolvent and Faces Bankruptcy as a Pure Debtor Nation but [U.S.] Rating Agencies Still Give it High Rankings"
Submitted by George Washington on 07/23/2010 19:13 -0500Here's the scary part ...
Musings on Kids and Asia
Submitted by Vitaliy Katsenelson on 07/23/2010 15:35 -0500China is not a black swan, because a black swan is a rare, significant, and unpredictable event. However, the consequences of what is transpiring in China and Japan are for the most part predictable (especially if I am writing about it). We don’t know when they will play out, but they are predictable.
European Bank Stess Test Joke: This Insolvent Euro-Bank and Group of Central Bankers Met at a Bar and…
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 07/23/2010 12:19 -0500So, a bank that is insolvent nearly two times over is found to have passed the European bank stress tests. Exactly what does it take to fail!!! Let's dig in and find out, shall we.
European Bank Investors, Don’t Look Now – You’ve Been Hoodwinked, BamBoozled…
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 07/23/2010 11:13 -0500Yes. You're being hoodwinked, Bamboozled, and Lied to. Let's take a common sense look at the parameters and criteria published concerning these (no) stress tests...
The “Frontier” Markets are Beckoning
Submitted by madhedgefundtrader on 07/23/2010 10:29 -0500This is turning into a year when the world’s least liquid, most untradeable countries offering minimal amounts of public information and disclosure, are bringing in the best returns, shutting most of us out. The mainstream BRIC countries are becoming increasingly crowded. “Frontier” or “pre-emerging” markets are the place to be.










