Archive - Sep 25, 2009 - Story
S&P Technical Update
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/25/2009 09:19 -0500Other technical observations show the MACD has turned momentum but we are not in negative territory just yet, quite a way from it. Certainly expect the market to attempt a run higher into the close to turns things around and not close the week in trouble.
Consumer Confidence Does Not Ignite YoYo Market
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/25/2009 09:09 -0500
More troubling to TPTB should be the immediate reversal following yet another "stunner" out of UMich, Consumer Confidence or "The Market Is Up Because The Market Is Up Because The Market Is Up, etc." index.
Visualizing The Upcoming Treasury Funding Crisis
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/25/2009 08:40 -0500In his interview yesterday Julian Robertson expressed substantial concerns about the ongoing US debt funding threat, using words such as "Armageddon" to describe what will happen when and if China and Japan stop buying US debt. More disturbingly, as was pointed out on Zero Hedge first, and was subsequently picked up by the WSJ, the Fed has accounted for half of all Treasury purchases in Q2 ($164 billion of total of $339 billion). Below we present data for what could be construed as a Treasury funding crisis borne out of lack of demand for longer maturities, once the QE portion of UST purchases expires. This crisis could hit as soon as October.
Frontrunning: September 25
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/25/2009 08:07 -0500- Former PPT member Kevin Warsh voices in: The Fed's job is only half over (WSJ)
- Still waiting for the inventory bounce: durable good orders drop 2.4% in August, worst since January (Bloomberg)
- Mattress-maker Simmons finally throws in the towel, to file Chapter 11 (AP)
- Investors don't feel like taking chances with stocks, spending (USA Today)
- Battle brews over unused TARP cash (WSJ)
Daily Highlights: 9.25.09
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/25/2009 07:41 -0500- Asian stocks decline on Nomura’s share sale, US housing data.
- China’s stocks fell, with Shanghai Composite set for its biggest weekly loss in 6 weeks.
- Dollar, Yen rise on speculation G-20 will act to curb riskier investments.
- Fed regulators say banks, other institutions face $53B in losses on loans.
- Freddie Mac announces $1B reopening of 2.125% three-year Reference Notes security.
- G-20 poised to crack down on bankers' pay, increase policy coordination.


