Archive - Dec 18, 2009 - Story
DXY Passes 78, 135% Annualized Move In Past Two Weeks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/18/2009 10:56 -0500
Was it a mere two weeks ago that the dollar was at the year's lows? This is what a (moderate) squeeze looks like: a 135.8% annualized move. Last time the DXY was here was on September 8. And yet stocks are still confusing a higher dollar with strength. Look for a snapback.
Janet Tavakoli Writes In
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/18/2009 10:48 -0500Views on upcoming, yet unannounced testimonies from Blankfein, Dimon et al from Janet Tavakoli, as well as the maddening inefficiency and government when it comes to all things financial. And some stern condemnations: "Credit derivatives have been criticized for information asymmetry, so why not criticize how these committees operate? I am happy to publicly state that they are rigged."
The European AIG: How Moody's Downgrade Of Greece Can Start The Avalanche
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/18/2009 10:12 -0500As one so vividly remembers, probably the key catalyst that set off the chain of events last fall following the collapse of Lehman were the closed loop (and much delayed) downgrades of AIG, which in a span of hours went from AAA to much lower, thus springing various collateral requirements which the company could not satisfy, and in turn forcing even more downgrades, until ultimately it became clear that the firm (like most others on Wall Street) is merely a lot of hot air and unjustified valuations. Ironically, the rating agencies, and more specifically Moody's, could once again be the catalyst for the much anticipated collapse of the European house of cards, which as all now know, has Greece as its weakest link. The threat: a Greek downgrade by Moody's from its current rating of A1 to anything with a B handle would make the country's sovereign debt ineligible for ECB collateral in 2011, sparking a sovereign liquidity crisis. Recall that both Fitch and S&P recently downgraded Greece to BBB+, implying that the fate of Greece, and specifically its ability to access cheap and quick capital via the ECB, could be cut off on the whim of the rating agency that Warren Buffett himself can't stop selling enough of.
Goldman Conviction Buy And Cessna Maker Textron Announces $1.7 Billion Loss In Backlog
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/18/2009 09:39 -0500On September 2 Goldman upgraded Textron to Conviction Buy ($23 PT) and provided the following catalysts as key items to keep an eye on:
A
year ago, each of Textron’s businesses were going the wrong way:
Corporate profits and the Industrial economy were rolling over, which
had negative implications for Cessna and Industrial, Financials were
facing severe challenges which had negative implications for TFC, and a
leadership change was about to take place in Washington with negative
implications for Defense and therefore Bell and Systems. Today,
we see the exact opposite occurring.
Unfortunately for Goldman's pie in the sky/conviction buy thesis what we really are seeing today is the opposite of the opposite, which comes to us via the following press release from Textron:
The company has
been in discussions with a large customer concerning the cancellation of
about $1.1 billion of jets it had on order with Cessna.
Frontrunning: December 18
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/18/2009 08:58 -0500- Skies darken for Ben Bernanke nomination (Politico)
- Discord behind TARP payment (WSJ)
- UK public sector net borrowing hits record high in November (BBC)
- The Great stabilization: The recession was less calamitous than many feared. Its aftermath will be more dangerous than many expect (Economist)
- Bank of England official says crisis shows U.K. bank exodus may be no bad thing (Bloomberg)
- Obama loses lending lever as Citigroup, Wells Fargo repay TARP (Bloomberg)
RANsquawk 18th December Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/18/2009 08:29 -0500RANsquawk 18th December Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
Daily Highlights: 12.18.09
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/18/2009 08:28 -0500- Asian stocks fall on concern banks will need to raise more equity.
- Bank of Japan keeps its benchmark interest rate at 0.1% in unanimous vote.
- Dollar rises, stocks fall worldwide as Greek downgrade fans safety demand.
- European Union approved a 6 percent increase in spending next year.
- German Business confidence probably rose to the highest since July 2008.
- Initial Jobless Claims in US unexpectedly increased to 480,000 last week.
- Japan central bank says it won't tolerate deflation; holds key interest rate at 0.1 percent.
- Japan shares down as banks retreat on prospect of more stringent capital requirements



