Archive - Dec 13, 2012 - Blog entry

testosteronepit's picture

Germany’s Favorite Rabble-Rouser Economist Lashes Out





The longer you delay needed “radical measures,” the more private investors will be able to sell “their toxic paper without haircut to governmental bailout funds, and then hightail.”

 

lemetropole's picture

A Totally Different Ballgame Soon / Crime In A Flash





A.M. Kitco Metals Roundup: Gold Drops Below $1,700 Following another Mysterious Price Drop in Asian Trading

Gold set for dramatic correction: hedge fund manager

 

Bruce Krasting's picture

Going Geriatricidal





Who knows? I might even become an EE'er. This joke is on me.

 

RickAckerman's picture

Fed Losing Its Grip on Our Expectations





The institutional crazies, village idiots and knee-jerk opportunists who bought shares yesterday following a Fed announcement of yet more monetization seem not to have been paying attention, at least initially, to the nasty sell-off in T-Bonds.  Well before yesterday, any sentient being would have surmised that easing’s impact on the economy had reached the point of diminishing returns. With administered rates pegged at zero and mortgage loans near historical lows, how much more boost are we to expect from yet another gaseous effusion of bank-system credit? 

 

AVFMS's picture

13 Dec 2012 – “ When It's Sleepy Time Down South ” (Louis Armstrong, 1931)





Markets getting back to some normality with the Periphery still recovering, although less today after the auctions, Bunds 5 wider on the week, Italy 10, but Spain 7 tighter across the curve from last Friday. Equities and Risk oblivious to that anyway and synching with the US. Getting difficult to find something crisp out there with reduced news flow and volatility. Excitement to be found in the US on FC developments, now that Greece, Spain and Italy are seemingly off the table and that the FED has moved to QE4.

"When It's Sleepy Time Down South" (Bunds 1,35% +1; Spain 5,38% +4; Stoxx 2622 -0,2%; EUR 1,308 +40)

 

williambanzai7's picture

QE BaSiC PRoCeSSeS: THe RoLE oF "PRiMaRY DeaLeRs"





We are sorry to interupt regularly scheduled Banzai7 Holiday Programming with this consummate farce...

 

Marc To Market's picture

Foreign Exchange Frustrates





The US dollar saw its post-FOMC losses extended only against the euro as the perhaps the passable success of the Greek bond buy-back and bank supervision deal lent support to the single currency.  

 

Yet, even it succumbed to selling pressure in the European morning and returned to pre-FOMC levels near $1.3040.  Against most of the other majors, the dollar has been confined to yesterday's ranges.  This is somewhat reminiscent of the price action after QE3+ was announced on Sept 13, with the dollar bottoming either that day or the following day. 

Of course, we recognize that monetary policy is one of the factors the influence foreign exchange prices.  There are factors as well.  It seems that most investors and observers look at the same variables in their formal or informal models of currency determination, but differ on the coefficients, or weights that are given to the variables, which seem to change over time. 

 

smartknowledgeu's picture

Why the Gold Standard Can Return the World to Global Economic Prosperity





The most commonly forwarded arguments against the implementation of a true 100% gold-backed sound money system can easily be disproven and thoroughly debunked with a small dose of history and another dose of logic.

 

CalibratedConfidence's picture

Margin Debt Continues To Climb





Borrowed money keeping stocks afloat

 
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