Archive - Oct 2009 - Story
October 13th
Egypt Suspends Trading In Numerous Stocks On Concerns Of Market Manipulation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/13/2009 12:15 -0500Currency devaluation in Latvia, government overthrow in Romania, and now blatant market manipulation in Egypt. Surely this all will somehow result in record bonuses on Wall Street. Bloomberg reports that Egypt's EGX70 index fell the most in two months after the "stock exchange suspended trading in 26 small and medium-sized companies on concern that some share prices may have been manipulated." At least the US stock market, the paragon of virtue that it is, is sure to never have to suffer the same indignity.
Guest Post: How The Printing Press Is Leading To The Demise Of The U.S.A.
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/13/2009 11:38 -0500Having the reserve currency comes with a great deal of responsibility. Over the course of the last 15 years the United States has abused this power with reckless spending, wars abroad and a printing press that just won’t quit. As I mentioned many times during the financial crisis last fall, the dollar as a reserve currency likely saved our skin. Being the reserve currency made the dollar the obvious safehaven currency. The world was too dependent on the well-being of the dollar for it to implode. If it hadn’t been the reserve currency we probably would have faced a much more harmful crisis. But now the world is tired of seeing us abuse this privilege just as they grew tired of Britain’s abuse of the reserve currency.
Fed Throws $3 Billion At Market Via Second-To-Last POMO
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/13/2009 11:16 -0500Today the Fed repurchased $2.949 billion of 7 year bonds via its second to last POMO. There is $2.7 billion of dry powder left: one last arrow in the QE quiver, best used on yet another down day.
Mid Day Market Visualization
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/13/2009 11:02 -0500
It is noon, and everything (equities, VIX, USTs) follows the dollar's decline tick for tick.
Meet The Latest Gold Bull: David Rosenberg?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/13/2009 10:49 -0500We have recently stated that it is our belief that at this point any excess liquidity pumped into the system (see the prior report from Goldman on the debt ceiling, in which the investment bank presents some ideas on how the Treasury (never mind the Fed) can increase liquidity in the market by reducingobligations until such time as (if) the Congress votes to raise the debt cap) will likely go to chase n ot so much returns in credit or equity markets, but directly to appreciate the price of gold. Reading through Rosie's Breakfast with Dave piece from earlier, leads us to believe that the strategist may have jumped on the dollar bull bandwagon.
Goldman Ruminates On The Facility On Further Entrenching America With An Untenable Debt Load
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/13/2009 10:06 -0500"One should not read too much into the rhetoric that is likely to come out of the upcoming debate over the debt limit, since much of it will be meant for public consumption but will have little bearing on other policy debates that follow." - Goldman Sachs
Cleary's Revised Letter To The Attorney General
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/13/2009 09:27 -0500The tone change in Mr. Lewis Liman's missives seems to correlate 0.999 with BofA/ML's desire to (not) cooperate with however many investigations the firm is mired in at any given moment.
"Because Bank of America has decided to reconsider its position with respect to your investigation, it will also produce privileged information to federal regulators and to the Congress... We are proceeding as quickly as possible so that we can waive the privilege in connection with your investigation and also promptly be in a position to produce privileged information to the others who have requested it. We presently hope and expect to be able to effect the waiver, both with respect to your Office and others, no later than Friday, October 16, 2009. While we regret the brief delay, the need for a fair and orderly process in connection with the waiver of the privilege with respect to multiple parties in unavoidable." - Lewis Liman, Cleary Gottlieb
October High Yield Issuance Declines After Torrid September
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/13/2009 08:46 -0500The place where the real big boys play, high yield cash bonds and CDS in IG, has seen unprecedented activity over the past year. Overall, more than $1 trillion in corporate issues were sold in 2009, although in fairness $192 billion of this amount is courtesy of taxpayer subsidized TLGP sponsored financial issuance (Mr. Blankfein, speaking of transparency, when do you plan on paying back your portion of TLGP debt?). Yet real speculative mania has never been as evident as what has transpired in the junk bond domain: YTD more than $103 billion of BB- and below rater paper has been issued, compared to just $48.8 billion for all of 2008.
Frontrunning: October 13
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/13/2009 08:05 -0500- Goldman cut to "neutral" by Whitney (Bloomberg)
- Excess liquidity, plunging dollar now swiftly taking Gold into stratosphere - AU at new record (Bloomberg) - is the currency crisis finally upon us?
- Lloyd Blankfein redefines irony: To avoid crises, we need transparency (FT)
- John Crudele digs through more Goldman phone conversations: Somebody in Congress need to look into this (Post)
- CIT's CEO Peek to resign at year end, as company likely prepares for bankruptcy filing (AP)
- CIT debt swap struggles, bankruptcy looms (Reuters)
Daily Highlights: 10.13.09
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/13/2009 07:34 -0500- Asian stocks were mixed Tuesday, with caution ahead of U.S. earnings.
- Bank of England likely to expand its bond-purchase program to $316B next month.
- China Vice PM: 3Q,4Q GDP to each grow higher on year vs. 7.1% in 1H 2009.
- China September passenger vehicle sales up 83.6% on year
- Contractors expect cuts in big weapon sales; Congress to vote on 2010 defense budget by month's end.
- Crude oil futures trade above $73/barrel, helped by a weak dollar, early strength in equities.
- German investor confidence unexpectedly drops as economy remains `fragile'
RSS Feeds
Submitted by Zero Hedge on 10/13/2009 04:13 -0500We're in the process of a series of upgrades to hardware at Zero Hedge in conjunction with several new features we will be adding in the coming weeks. Actually, we've grown so fast that it is quite difficult to keep up with the hardware demands of the site. We owe that to you, of course. Thank you. (We think)
One effect of the changes we are making is that we have had to temporarily move RSS feeds off of Zero Hedge's servers and onto Feedburner. If you've been using RSS feeds, point your RSS client here:
http://feeds.feedburner.com/zerohedge/feed
Yes, change is annoying, but we are convinced you will quickly make our many new features essential daily reading.
October 12th
Continuing Up The HFT Flagpole, Sponsored Access Next In The Regulatory And Public Spotlight
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/12/2009 20:10 -0500Three months ago Zero Hedge, amidst a whole lot of hyperventilating, schizo-paranoid ramblings, managed to discuss sponsored, or naked access, as a key concern in the ongoing debate against HFT. Once again, we feel humbled that the WSJ (SEC) has decided to read between our disjointed commentary and make a prominent article (regulatory issue) of this critical topic.
New Suitors For NBC Universal And Its Botoxed Anchors Revealed; Myopic Men Of Mistaste Include Malone And Murdoch
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/12/2009 19:14 -0500Did Comcast think it can poach the crack Power Lunch (no pun intended) CNBC team all on its own? Turns out the answer is a flat out no. According to Reuters not only will GE likely exit its Comcast venture within 4 years (apparently the Comcast deal is virtually a certainty now, much to the chagrin of the Squawk Box team et al), but others media conglomerates are also considering getting involved in what could soon become a heated bidding war for the ample assets partially hidden by variousgrotesquely stretched sweaters.
Dear Wachtell Lipton: Meet Oncoming Freight Train; Bank Of America Waives Attorney-Client Privilege
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/12/2009 18:44 -0500A month ago Zero Hedge speculated that the SEC was preparing to throw Wachtell Lipton and Ed Herlihy at the wolves, in case its planned settlement to indemnify Ken Lewis of all sins failed. Well, it failed, now that a jury trial is in the works to determine just how guilty Ken Lewis et al have been of shareholder fraud. And, as expected, Wachtell Lipton is about to be run over by a 200 ton freight train.
End The Fed, Soon At A Night Club Near You
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/12/2009 17:54 -0500While it is improbable that Eminem will be battling to this song any time soon, digesting the anti-Central Bank message for broader consumption is likely not something that will hurt Ron Paul's cause.


