Archive - Dec 9, 2009 - Story
Comedy Central Takes On The Federal Reserve
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2009 10:39 -0500Stephen Colbert destroys "Dr. Blankcheck von Moneypants." Must watch clip.
Deal That Was Supposed To Mark Renaissance Of New York Commercial Real Estate Market Collapses
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2009 10:28 -0500
Remember the deal which to much fanfare, lots of subsequent Merrill upgrades, and endless boasting by SL Green CEO Marc Holliday was supposed to usher in the second golden age for New York Commercial Real Estate? The deal that was the alleged steal of 485 Lex by a bunch of shady investors which we wrote about first 4 months ago. The deal that SL Green CEO, Marc Holliday said "is a first, but significant step
towards the sale of interests in 485 Lexington Avenue. If ultimately
approved, the transaction would demonstrate that the Midtown Manhattan
office market continues to stand as one of the world's top locations
and that investor interest is once again on the rise." Remember now? Ok. That deal just died. And with it died any hope that the "Midtown Manhattan office market continues to stand as one of the world's top locations," that REITs fairly priced, and that Bill Ackman's recent REIT book talking tour is anything but.
RANsquawk 9th December US Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 12/09/2009 10:25 -0500RANsquawk 9th December US Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
RANsquawk 9th December Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 12/09/2009 10:14 -0500RANsquawk 9th December Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
Extension Of TARP Now Official: TARP Maturity To Suspiciously Coincide With Mid-Term Elections
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2009 09:55 -0500"I am hereby extending [TARP per] the authority provided under the Act to October 3, 2010. This extension is necessary to assist American families and stabilize financial markets because it will, among other things, enable us to continue to implement programs that address housing markets and the needs of small businesses, and to maintain the capacity to respond to unforeseen threats, as described above." Tim Geithner
Threat #1 - landslide change in the political landscape in 12 months
Reverse Repo Test #3 Now A Fact: $225 Million In Liquidity Sopped Up By Fed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2009 09:50 -0500Just a day after the second reverse repo test was conducted, the Fed has launched repo test #3: this time, as we expected, for a greater (if still notionally meaningless) amount of $225 million, compared to yesterday's $180 million. The term of this operation is just one day, compared to the 8 and 3 in tests #2 and #1. The increasing frequency of these Temporary Market Operations should be making the liquidity bulls very nervous. And as we pointed out yesterday, the notional on the repo test "can only go up" - so far we have been proven right. Yet wait for the collateral to move down from Treasurys. That's when all hell will break loose.
Albert Edwards: Here Comes The Next Leg Of The Bear-Market
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2009 09:44 -0500
"The equity bear market has not finished. The valuation bear market began in 2000 and we have only seen two Acts of a far longer and more disturbing play. The mega-rally in the equity markets this year is little different from what we saw in Japan during the mid-1990s. Even a structural bear could have made a lot of money in Japan playing cyclical rallies, but he/she needed to sell as the cycle turned downwards. Hence the topping out of some key US leading indicators may signal that the top of the equity rally is close. Look to exit risk positions." - Albert Edwards
Next Up Spain: Ratings Revised To Negative From Stable By S&P, Still At AA+
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2009 09:08 -0500Nothing to see here. Just an oncoming sovereign default freight train. Oh, and a total collapse in the euro.
Britain To Tax Banker Bonuses At 50%, Will US Bankers Now Drop Market Preemptively To Show Who Is In Charge?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2009 09:04 -0500In his pre-budget report, British Chancellor Alistair Darling said that he will now levy a 50% tax on banker bonuses. The new tax will be effective from today until April 5.The tax will hit virtually all financial companies, including subsidiaries of foreign banks . Thus a Goldman banker working in London will suddenly be faced with a much higher marginal tax rate that his associate in New York. This will either generate much transatlantic resentment, or expect a comparable move to the replicated by the IRS with the President's blessing, who has already lost control of the unemployment picture, so the last thing he can do to regain some popularity is to take Main Street's outcry direct to the southern tip of Manhattan.
Yet even as the likelihood of a copycat tax in the U.S. is increasing, the question is do the domestic trading desks now drop the market and show the administration who is really in charge? Because even the President's working group can not survive a concerted attack from every single financial entity in the world. And bankers are nothing if not efficient at marking their territory in the protection of take home pay. If that requires a 200 point drop in the S&P, so be it.
Frontrunning: December 9
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2009 08:49 -0500- The new underground economy (Washington Times)
- Goldman Sachs taking "Hard Look" at pay practice, board member says (Bloomberg)
- China said to plan 8 trillion Yuan new loans cap for next year (Bloomberg)
- China squeezes property speculators with tougher tax penalty (Bloomberg)
- Greece finance minister says no risk of default (Bloomberg)
- At the same time Greece tumbles (FT)
- Dubai stocks slump for third day, Nakheel sukuk in focus (MarketWatch)
Daily Highlights: 12.9.09
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2009 08:27 -0500- Asian shares were down Wednesday in the wake of weak US closing, Japan GDP nos.
- Dubai companies' bonds decline as credit swaps display 33% risk of default.
- Japan's economy grew 1.3% last quarter, less than initial estimate of 4.8%.
- China plans to require all the nation’s steel mills to have at least 1M tons of capacity
- Oil rises above $73 after expected US crude supply drop suggests demand recovery.
- 3M's 2010 profit forecast meets analysts’ estimates, says recovery is occurring “slowly.”
RANsquawk 9th December Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 12/09/2009 07:38 -0500RANsquawk 9th December Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
Absent Inventory "Bounce" Is Reason For Japanese GDP Miss
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2009 00:02 -0500The world's second biggest economy just posted a dramatic miss in GDP expectations, and demonstrated how tendentious "developed" governments can be when fudging numbers in volatile economic times. And the biggest reason for the divergence: the mythical inventory bounce, which based on preliminary estimates was supposed to generate a 4.8% GDP. Alas,inventories never " bounced" leading to a disappointing 1.3% reading. Is the US next in line for major GDP disappointment? Or do we have mid-term elections to thank for continued GDP fudging for at least the next 12 months?



