Archive - Apr 3, 2009 - Story
Is The White House In DE Shaw's Pocket?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/03/2009 22:39 -0500Larry Summers, who was not only Tim Geithner's predecessor as the 71st Secretary of the Treasury (from 1999 to 2001), but also the 27th President of Harvard University, and is currently the top White House economic advisor and serves as a director of the National Economic Council, apparently has a fond place in his heart and bank account for his most recent employer, $30 billion rocket scientist infested hedge fund D. E. Shaw (nothing like signing an NDA before conducting interviews).
Is The White House In DE Shaw's Pocket?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/03/2009 22:39 -0500Larry Summers, who was not only Tim Geithner's predecessor as the 71st Secretary of the Treasury (from 1999 to 2001), but also the 27th President of Harvard University, and is currently the top White House economic advisor and serves as a director of the National Economic Council, apparently has a fond place in his heart and bank account for his most recent employer, $30 billion rocket scientist infested hedge fund D. E. Shaw (nothing like signing an NDA before conducting interviews).
March Hedge Fund Performance
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/03/2009 21:43 -0500"The last shall be first."Ah, to be a Russia focused hedge fund (for once). Enjoy it while you can. In the meantime, the big boys are doing ok, with no major surprises in either direction.
Bad News For High School Drop Outs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/03/2009 17:47 -0500The jobless rate differential between people with less than a high school education (13.3%) and college grads (4.3%) hits a 17 year high. This is pretty bad news for working class people who are really affected by marginal changes in mortgage rates and credit availability.
Tom Hicks Defaults On $525 Million In Loans
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/03/2009 16:21 -0500FINalternatives reports that in a startling development, billionaire Tom Hicks, founder of HM Capital (f/k/a Hicks Muse Tate), and subsequently left the private equity firm in 2006, has defaulted on $525 million of loans. According to FINalts "Hicks Sports Group, which owns baseball’s Texas Rangers and hockey’s Dallas Stars, failed to make its interest payment on $525 million in syndicated bank loans on Monday. The group is now in talks with its lenders about a forbearance."
Today's Real Payroll Number: 750,000, Total Unemployment Rate at 19.8%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/03/2009 15:48 -0500John Williams, who runs the great Shadow Government Statistics site, presents the true numbers behind today's "seriously flawed BLS payroll reporting." The upside bias coming out of the BLS is almost scandalous: one wonders how much "push from above" there is to concoct these numbers.
Today's Real Payroll Number: 750,000, Total Unemployment Rate at 19.8%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/03/2009 15:48 -0500John Williams, who runs the great Shadow Government Statistics site, presents the true numbers behind today's "seriously flawed BLS payroll reporting." The upside bias coming out of the BLS is almost scandalous: one wonders how much "push from above" there is to concoct these numbers.
Today's Real Payroll Number: 750,000, Total Unemployment Rate at 19.8%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/03/2009 15:48 -0500John Williams, who runs the great Shadow Government Statistics site, presents the true numbers behind today's "seriously flawed BLS payroll reporting." The upside bias coming out of the BLS is almost scandalous: one wonders how much "push from above" there is to concoct these numbers.
Dennis Kneale Calls The Treasury "One Big Ponzi Scheme"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/03/2009 15:39 -0500Steve Liesman corrects him that the sophisticated term is "monetizing the debt" and we have a race to the bottom as the ponzi goes global.
Both are correct.
Everyone in the world prints money and levers up using garbage as collateral, everyone has a massive fail. In the words of Dave Rosenberg "full stop."
Barney Frank Declares All Out War On Republicans
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/03/2009 15:16 -0500
Earlier Barney started war on Mark To Market. Now he is expanding to two fronts, crossing the Volga river deep into republican territory. Just want to pointed out that the whole two-front thing did not work out too well for Germany.
The Housing Trainwreck From Yet Another Angle
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/03/2009 14:43 -0500According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the increase in unemployment in the architecture and engineering occuptions has doubled from 2007 to 2008! This is roughly 4 times the average change in unemployment for all people aged 16 and over, which was 26.1% at the end of 2008. This statistic was relevant when total unemployment was 5.8%. With today's reading of 8.5% unemployment, all bets are off as to what on earth is going on in the U.S. labor market.
Slaughtering The Bulls' False Hopes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/03/2009 14:05 -0500Nothing like a Friday update from Dave and his recap on why the Kool Aid is flowing freely. Some of the main points presented in the weekly recap. Please read this before you buy even one more stock.
We see a very uncertain future
A Profound Debate On The American Money Hole
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/03/2009 13:42 -0500[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JnX-D4kkPOQ&hl=en&fs=1]
hat tip reader anonymous
Why Despite FASB's Efforts To The Opposite, MTM Change Is A Non-Event
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/03/2009 13:04 -0500Despite the financial stocks jumping the shark yesterday, and investors gobbling it all up happily, Richard Ramsden of GS says this is just a load of hot air.
Mark to market is not the bottom
Our views on banks do not change following the FASB mark to market rule changes. Our core view is that banks will not bottom until nonperforming asset growth decelerates. All of the data points we track in 1Q point to acceleration.
Why Despite FASB's Efforts To The Opposite, MTM Change Is A Non-Event
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/03/2009 13:04 -0500Despite the financial stocks jumping the shark yesterday, and investors gobbling it all up happily, Richard Ramsden of GS says this is just a load of hot air.
Mark to market is not the bottom
Our views on banks do not change following the FASB mark to market rule changes. Our core view is that banks will not bottom until nonperforming asset growth decelerates. All of the data points we track in 1Q point to acceleration.



