Archive - Sep 2009 - Story
September 28th
The Chart That Cost John Mack His Job
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/28/2009 19:32 -0500
In the new, new normal, if you want to keep your job, look up moral hazard: it is your friend.
USD Strength: A Rally Is Shaping Up
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/28/2009 17:12 -0500Investors are long commodities as a placement AGAINST the value of the USD, and banks and governments around the world borrow in USD. Germany and Austria have recently issued debt that is USD denominated, and they were soon immitated by... Venezuela. That to me is a sign the short-USD trade is ripe for a reversal, when basically even the biggest idiot in the house is short. The ultimate pain trade would certainly be renewed USD strength. Maybe if it happens the Fed will have the pleasure this time of bailing Venezuela with cross-currency swaps.
Daily Credit Summary: September 28 - Divergent Dullness
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/28/2009 16:09 -0500Spreads were tighter in the US as all the indices improved (though were unable to break Friday's tights and closed wider than Thursday's close). IG trades only 8.1bps tight (rich) to its 50d moving average, which is a Z-Score of -0.7s.d. At 105bps, IG has closed tighter on only 8 days so far this year (192 trading days). The last five days have seen IG converging to its 50d moving average.
San Fran Fed Spends More Money To Justify Colossal Failure At Anticipating Consequences Of Its Actions
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/28/2009 15:05 -0500"The enormity of the current financial collapse raises the question whether the crisis could
have been predicted. This is the second of two Economic Letters on the topic. This Letter
examines research suggesting that early warning models would not have accurately
predicted the relative severity of the current crisis across countries, casting doubt on the
ability of such models to forecast similar crises in the future." - San Francisco Federal Reserve
Even Goldman Expects Post Cash For Clunkers Hangover
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/28/2009 14:10 -0500Goldman Sachs, which disagrees with Edmunds' expectation for an 8.8 million September SAAR, has shared its own projection of 9.3 million. Even so, the drop from the 12.5 million in September 2008 and the 14.1 million in August, is dramatic. What is scary is that there is no indication October will be any better. The only new initiative launched by Detroit: 60 day money back guarantees. Will that stimulate car sales, or simply end up as a bureaucratic nightmare for dealers, is still unknown. Although rental companies, those Chinese rockets like Hertz and Avis whose stocks have gone up by about 10,000%, will very likely not be too happy that GM has now also entered the "rental" car business.
Quarter End Markup Begins in Earnst
Submitted by RobotTrader on 09/28/2009 14:08 -0500Very predictable to see the "DaBoyz" use the light volume session today to mark everything up for Quarter End, re-substantiate Bernanke, Geithner, LLP as the leader of the "G-String" (aka G20) oligarchy, and blow up some GridBot and Forex Megadroid players at the same time.
Kanjorski Draft On Credit Rating Agency Legislation Released
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/28/2009 13:32 -0500Rep. Paul Kanjorski is preparing to take the rating agencies head on with a bill on credit agency reform. Some key Bill highlights presented.
Spot The Odd One Out
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/28/2009 12:27 -0500
A chart showing the relative performance of the SPY and the UUP (dollar ETF, shown inverted). The no volume equity market no longer cares about either correlation or causation.
Intraday Market Observations (For The Three Computers Who Are Actually Trading)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/28/2009 11:59 -0500
After a very weak start to the day, the dollar has regained all of its losses. Bonds are trading appropriately. However, don't tell that to the few computers who are pushing stocks to each other today: stocks are still at the days high supported literally by no volume.
Ohio Attorney General Cordray Joins BofA Litigation Club
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/28/2009 11:54 -0500“[Bank of America and Merrill Lynch] were concealing billions of dollars in losses with one hand and clearing the way for extravagant bonus payments with the other. This case gives the public pension funds and other shareholders a chance to stand up against Wall Street.” - Richard Cordray, Ohio Attorney General
Another (Anything But) Broad Based Rally
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/28/2009 11:04 -0500
A mere two hours into the holiday trading day, and the SPY is already 20 million below the average cumulative volume. With nobody trading, it is time for the straight line up autopilot.
The Unbearable Lightness of Reporters
Submitted by Marla Singer on 09/28/2009 10:32 -0500Today seems the perfect day to remind readers about our piece: An Open Letter To The Financial Media.
Guest Post: The Global Carry Trade And The Crimes Of Patriots
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/28/2009 10:30 -0500If the American people want to get the US financial system under control, then the first areas of investigation, we submit, must be fiscal and monetary policies. And if Americans do not soon get control over the habit of borrow and spend practiced by the Congress and facilitated by the Fed, then end result must be a populist backlash against Washington and incumbents in politics and the corporate world. As Congressman Ron Paul (R-TX) writes in his latest book, End the Fed: "Nothing good can come from the Federal Reserve… It's immoral, unconstitutional, impractical, promotes bad economics, and undermines liberty."
Private Jet Maker Hawker Celebrates Goldman's Industry Optimism By PIKing Notes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/28/2009 10:05 -0500What better way to celebrate Goldman's recent Conviction Buy optimism on Top 20 Bankruptcy Candidate Textron, and the private jet industry in general, than by clamping down and preserving liquidity at all costs? That's precisely what Textron competitor (and Goldman Sachs portfolio company) Hawker Beechcraft did earlier today.
Bank Of America Merrill Lynch Gets Paid To Pay Itself Back In Developers Diversified
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/28/2009 09:30 -0500REIT stocks benefited mightily from Merrill Lynch's generosity earlier in the year, when the ML REIT team issued follow on equity offerings, followed by prompt upgrades to the stock, although not necessarily in that order. The bottom line - roughly 5% in underwriter fees on almost $20 billion worth of new equity issued. And while last week's REIT massively downsized IPOs were an indication that the top for REIT stocks has come, that has not prevented Ken Lewis' firm from continuing to profit handsomely from the next shoe to drop in real estate.




