Archive - Jun 11, 2009 - Story
Unprecedented Volatility In Mortgages
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/11/2009 16:52 -0500Ever since the 30 year auction closed earlier, the market has been acting about as rationally as the Stalingrad Bourse back in 1939. Nowhere can this be seen better than the volatility in the 15 Year mortgage. Vol has moved from stocks, to CDS, to treasuries and is now roosting in mortgages. Rinse. Repeat?
Unprecedented Volatility In Mortgages
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/11/2009 16:52 -0500Ever since the 30 year auction closed earlier, the market has been acting about as rationally as the Stalingrad Bourse back in 1939. Nowhere can this be seen better than the volatility in the 15 Year mortgage. Vol has moved from stocks, to CDS, to treasuries and is now roosting in mortgages. Rinse. Repeat?
Judge Drain Orders Against Gifting Delphi To Platinum
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/11/2009 16:18 -0500WSJ reporting that Judge Drain in charge of the GM bankruptcy case has ordered Delphi to hold an auction and allow bids to challenge the government-brokered sale to Platinum Equity. Drain's comment with regard to Tom Gores' henchmen is priceless: "What's so special about Platinum?" They're just guys in suits. Why can't the other guys in suits just pay more?"
The Opportunity Cost Of Green Shoots
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/11/2009 14:35 -0500JPM's Michael Cembalest with a terrific compare and contrast between the current economic situation and that of the 70's. Useful to not that no matter how many contrasts on draw to previous major recessions, what we are living through now is so much more than a simple manufacturing recession as Rosie keeps pounding the table. Anyone who believes that the impact from the unwind of 50 years of progressively cheaper and pervasive credit will be resolved within a 1 year of the Lehman bankruptcy is either hopelessly naive, or ideologically conflicted, or both.
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The Opportunity Cost Of Green Shoots
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/11/2009 14:35 -0500JPM's Michael Cembalest with a terrific compare and contrast between the current economic situation and that of the 70's. Useful to not that no matter how many contrasts on draw to previous major recessions, what we are living through now is so much more than a simple manufacturing recession as Rosie keeps pounding the table. Anyone who believes that the impact from the unwind of 50 years of progressively cheaper and pervasive credit will be resolved within a 1 year of the Lehman bankruptcy is either hopelessly naive, or ideologically conflicted, or both.
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Barney Frank Does Not Appreciate Having Words Put In His Mouth
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/11/2009 14:05 -0500Other things, maybe, but not words. Barney Frank tells CNBC to sit on it, after Mark Haines, who by his own admission "can not remember what happened yesterday," calls him out for his repeated auditioning for the role of Populist Compensation Queen, er, Czar.
Fast Forward to 5:50 in the clip below: Hell hath no fury like a... Barney Frank... scorned.
Live Webcast Of Ken Lewis Proceedings
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/11/2009 13:22 -0500Courtesy of the House Committee on Oversight And Government Reform
World Health Organization Declares Swine Flu Pandemic
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/11/2009 13:21 -0500While the world seems to have moved on from H1N1 as any threat whatsoever, the World Health Organization just declared a Swine Flue Pandemic, and raised the error threat to the highest available.
We will keep you posted as we learn more.
Passport Capital Portfolio Manager Busted For Frontrunning, Barred
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/11/2009 12:21 -0500More troubles for John Burbank's pro-cyclical $2.4 billion Passport Capital which was down a whopping 50.9% in 2008. According to India's equivalent of the SEC, Passport PM Dipak Patel had been front running the fund for about two years from 2007 to 2009, and has been subsequently barred from the industry. As expected, the firm has washed its hands of any wrongdoing:
Daily Highlights: 6.11.09
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/11/2009 12:11 -0500- Asian stocks rise as Chinese investment boosts growth optimism.
- Australia's jobless rate rises to 7-year high of 5.7 percent as companies cut workers.
- Bank of Korea keeps key interest rate at record low 2 percent for 4th straight month.
- China's May exports and imports plunge 26.4 but analysts say economy improving.
- European stocks up ahead of key US data.
- Fed Beige Book says recession may be 'moderating,' labor weakness persists.
- Foreclosures fall 6 percent in May from April, smallest annual drop since mid-2006.
- Japan's 1Q GDP rev
May Foreclosure Activity Decreases By 6%, Up 18% Year Over Year
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/11/2009 04:41 -0500After hitting a record high in April, RealtyTrac has announced that the pace of foreclosures has slowed down, and in May dropped by 6%. Nonetheless, “May foreclosure activity was the third highest month on record, and marked the third straight month where the total number of properties with foreclosure filings exceeded 300,000 — a first in the history of our report,” said James J.






