Archive - Jul 20, 2009 - Story

Marla Singer's picture

Paulson & Co. Teaches Bair Econ 101





It almost takes you back.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Andrew Horowitz Interview With Matt Taibbi





Andrew Horowitz of the Disciplined Investor conducts a very informative interview with the (in)famous Matt Taibbi, touching on such broad topics as the economy, CIT's bankruptcy, earnings, program trading and of course Goldman Sachs. A much better way to spend 45 minutes instead of watching the high-pitched talkings heads in the octobox.

Interview link (and also check out Andrew's website: he has many other great interviews with the likes of Mish Shedlock, Kevin Depew, Dennis Gartman, Brett Steenbarger and many others).

 

Tyler Durden's picture

People Becoming Curious About High Frequency Trading... Too Curious?





The only benefit from Sergey's recent brush with Goldman Sachs, a/k/a the FBI, seems to have been an increased curiosity if not awareness in this most nebulous topic by pretty much everyone with an even remote interest in Wall Street... a 500% increase over one month in fact.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Loans Versus Bonds Relative Value: Week of July 16






The divergence in loan and bonds trends has picked up marginally, with the bond universe wider by 8 bps to 968 bps and loans tighter by 22 to 471 bps. Mostly noise in the subset of 30 companies, except for the traditional yoyo TRW whose bonds and loans both screamed tighter by 410 bps and 130 bps, respectively. Is there any fundamental reason for this? Of course not.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Daily Highlights: 7.20.09





  • Euro hits $1.42 level-- highest level against the dollar since early June.
  • Leading Index, Home Resales probably rose in sign recession easing.
  • IRS has stepped up scrutiny of offshore accounts and foreign income.
  • Regulators shut 2 banks in California, 2 banks in Georgia, South Dakota, boosting total to 57.
  • Barnes & Noble cuts publishing staff as it hunts for efficiencies.
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    Tyler Durden's picture

    Is Goldman Starting To Offload Prop Positions?





    Abby Joseph Cohen must have threatened with retirement and David Kostin is here to pick up the Olympic torch. Goldman Sachs just raised its 2009 year end S&P target to 1060, "13% above the current level" meaning Goldman prop positions are full and the great offloading to marginal buyers has begun. The justification: "After trading in a 10% band for the past three months, our “Pop, Stall, & Sustained recovery” framework, sequential improvement in ex-Financials EPS, stabilization in profit margins, and higher forward EPS guidance all point to a rising market through 2009." More specifically, 85 Broad is raising its 2009 EPS to $52 from $40, and 2010 EPS to a patently absurd $75 from $63, a 45% increase in bottom line earnings, and almost 100% from the old $40 estimate. And just so it seems more credible, "measured on a pre-provision and pre-write-down basis our estimates are $69 and $81. S&P 500 trades at 12.5x our 2010 operating and 11.6x our pre-provision EPS." In other words, pure rose-colored glasses halcyon.

     

    Tyler Durden's picture

    Frontrunning: July 20





  • Doubts over veracity of economic reports not helping to build confidence (Irish Times)
  • CIT bailout means everything more expensive in the world, except dollar of course... that's plunging as usual, thank you for giving them the idea Rosenberg (Reuters)
  • Oil at $65 (AP)
  • Volkswagen drops most since December on report of Porsche delay (Bloomberg)
  • Malcolm Gladwell: The psychology of overconfidence (New Yorker)
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