Archive - Oct 4, 2009 - Story

Tyler Durden's picture

A Parable On Gold From Jim Grant





Something truly memorable to consider on a late Sunday night.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Overview Of Goldman Sachs Electronic Trading: Part 1





Zero Hedge is starting a multi-part overview of Goldman Sachs' Electronic Trading client-focused product suite, to demonstrate just how extensively embedded in modern market architecture are Goldman's various DMA and "liquidity" facilitation schemes, and the depths of dark pool domination via Goldman's global order router, and other specific topical offerings.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Material, Non-Public Information? Why JPMorgan Does Not Care; And Why If You Are A Corporate Insider Client, Neither Should You





A recurring theme on Zero Hedge over the past few months has been the inordinate (and seemingly inexplicable if one takes at face value the arguments for an improving economy) amount of insider selling of corporate shares, which has reached a staggering ratio of 30-1 of sales to buys (if not much more). A back of the envelope calculation indicates that insiders may have sold well over $10 billion worth of their own company's shares in the last quarter alone. Aside from what implications this activity has for claims of the recession being over, as those best familiar with their businesses can not wait to offload their holdings, a larger question is one of propriety, and whether insiders are abusing inside information loopholes, particularly if they are aware of material, non-public information when selling their stock. In this environment of unprecedented insider selling, it makes sense to refamiliarize readers with JP Morgan's confidential presentation, "Hedging and Monetization" from February 2007, first presented by Wikileaks, which focuses exclusively on providing company insiders with mechanisms to circumvent not just regulatory curbs on insider selling, but to obfuscate market signals typically associated (but definitely not in this market environment) with an insider dumping boatloads of his or her own stock.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Weekend Reading





  • All you ever wanted to know about Paolo Pellegrini, and didn't realize you should ask (Bloomberg)
  • Nakagawa, Japan's former finance minister, who resigned after drunk incident at G7, found dead (FT)
  • Simon Johnson: A short question for senior officials of the New York Fed (Baseline Scenario, h/t Pete)
  • Is the mortgage REIT IPO/follow on bubble finally over? (Bloomberg)
  • Roubini says stocks have risen "too much, too soon, too fast" (Bloomberg and RGE)
  • Stiglitz deflation threat pushes Fed to stay at zero (Bloomberg)
  • From Black Scholes to Black Holes (Dharma Joint)
 

Travis's picture

The 2010 Panamera- Porsche's Second Ever Four-Door Sedan





It's Sunday, and time to diversify. Have a read about the all-new four-door Porsche, the Panamera. Times are getting good again, right? We haven't seen something this exciting from Porsche since the 928. Will history repeat itself? You be the judge. It's Porsche's second, ever, sports sedan.

 

naufalsanaullah's picture

Reversal vs. Pullback





Declining long Tsy yields, credit market disruptions, drying up monetization POMO liquidity, worsening consumer credit and unemployment, and the dreaded fall season mean this correction in equities is the beginning of a reversal, not a pullback. And the reversal won't be pretty.

 
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