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Archive - Jan 13, 2010 - Story

Tyler Durden's picture

January 2010 Beige Book: "Commercial real estate was still weak in nearly all Districts"





CRE is still the biggest wildcard: "Commercial real estate was still weak in nearly all Districts with rising vacancy rates and falling rents. Since the last report, loan demand continued to decline or remained weak in most Districts, while credit quality continued to deteriorate." - Beige Book

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Senator Kaufman Approves SEC Proposal Calling For Elimination Of Naked Access





“I am very pleased that the Commission is ready to ask serious questions and drill down beneath the standard-issue ‘provides liquidity’ defense of high frequency trading. The SEC needs to understand and control technology and its benefits, not permit technology to operate without regulatory understanding or access to needed data, and in doing so outrace the regulators’ ability to ensure market fairness for long-term investors. I am hopeful that a variety of independent parties will provide the Commission with the empirical studies needed to assess the price impacts of these trades on long term investors, though I worry that the data needed to undertake those studies is still not available,” - Senator Ted Kaufman

 

Tyler Durden's picture

$21 Billion 10 Year Reopening Closes At 3.754%, Indirect Bidder Take Down Scarce At 29%, Vs 43% For Last Eight Auctions





Yields 3.754% vs. Exp. 3.763%

Bid To Cover 3.00 vs. Avg. 2.86 (Prev. 2.62)

Indirects take down 29.0% vs. Avg. 43.05% (Prev. 34.76%)

Indirect Bid To Cover 1.89

Alloted at high 49.95%

Direct bid take down surges again to 17%from 8.9%

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Massive Spike In S&P Futures Volume Rallies Market, Breaks Dollar Trend





With Greece imploding, the last thing we need is for the US market to do what it did when Dubai faced a near-death experience in November. Whether or not that is the reason, we don't know, but someone just purchased a massive order of ES futures contracts in the open market, causing a dramatic spike in the market, and breaking the dollar's trendline.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

High Yield: An Inquisition





Low policy rates don’t impact speculative grade debt so much. Mortality rates for lower-rated debt are much higher than investment-grade debt; the three year mark is where defaults really start to bite. Three years ago (2007), 51% of HY issuance was rated B or below. Mortalities have been accelerated by economic factors, but cumulative default rates will still be high. A buy-and-hold strategy with a broad index of HY debt consistently outperforms the Treasury benchmark. Trading strategies benefit from treasury positioning.

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk 13th January US Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.





RANsquawk 13th January US Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

The Junk Bond Extend-And-Pretend Hits New Highs





The latest indication of the exuberance in high yield was today's announcement from oil-tanker owner Teekay. The firm is offering $300 million of debt to finance a tender offer of the firm's 8.875% 2011 senior notes. Nothing has changed from the frothy days of 2007: tender short, provide sweetener, price longer maturity deal, wait out the next crash, repeat. In the meantime, the company's products are used as glorified warehouses to store ever greater amounts of oil for that day when Goldman's $1,000,000/barrel price prediction finally comes through. In the mean time, EIA reported another 3.7 million crude inventory build to 331 million barrels. Of course, massive supply will bring its own demand... Eventually.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Greek Risk Explodes To 327 bps, All Time High As Sovereign Risk Again Front And Center





Dubai - meet Greece. Apparently credit traders appreciate biblical allusions, as Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou "promised" for the third time today that all is good in the debt-stricken country, claiming there is "no way" the country would leave the euro or seek aid from the IMF. Credit's response: Greek CDS surges to an all time high of 327 bps, and the country now represents 24% of SovX risk.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

SEC Intends To Prohibit Naked Access, Seeks Public Comment





First flash, now naked access. While we are certain those whole livelihood depends on scalping and manipulating markets and finding loopholes from regulation will scream bloody murder (look at the industry response to suggestions that HFT is "evil") will provide some very vocal public comments, at least the SEC implicitly acknowledges that naked access is not quite the boon to investors that Goldman et al would like to make it seem.

It should come as no surprise that Zero Hedge has long been warning against the dangers of sponsored access. Some broad background on the topic can be found here and here.

For once we applaud the SEC in this endeavor. Of course, once the SEC ends the public comment solicitation period with "no action", or a ruling that does nothing at all to change the actual naked access process, we will resume our daily calls for Mary Schapiro's immediate resignation.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Did Goldman Sell Its $2.5 Billion AIG CDS While In Possession Of Material, Non-Public Information?





With all the recent outrage over the AIG fiasco focusing on Tim Geithner, is the anger misplaced? Is the real culprit in this situation Goldman Sachs, which allegedly sold its $2.5 billion in extremely profitable AIG CDS prior to March 15, when the full disclosure of the government's measure to preserve AIG became first known; a time in which Goldman, by implication, may well have been in possession of material, non-public information?

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Watch Today's FCIC-Banker Hearings Live Commercial Free





Watch the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission's grilling of Blankfein, Dimon, Mack and Moynihan live and turbofan enginge commercial free at the FCIC's website here.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: January 13 (Goldman Sachs Edition)





  • Must read: Bring back Glass-Steagall - Banks that behave like hedge funds (and "trade ahead" of their clients) don't deserve guarantees (WSJ)
  • And speaking of Goldman hypocricy - The subsidy that won't die (Slate)
  • Friedman: Is China the next Enron? (WSJ)
  • Bernanke challenged on rates role in bust (WSJ)
  • German economy shrinks 5% in 2009, more than expected (Bloomberg)
  • Moody's says Greece, Portugal may face "slow death" (Bloomberg)
 

Tyler Durden's picture

Daily Highlights: 1.13.10





  • Asian stock markets lower Wednesday, weighed by Wall Street's decline and Chinese central bank's move to rein in excessive credit creation.
  • China’s stocks declined the most in 3 weeks, after a shift by central bank to restrain lending.
  • China's central bank said it will raise the % of deposits that banks must keep in reserve.
  • Indonesia plans to renegotiate a trade pact between SE Asia, China that took effect this month.
  • Japanese corp. bankruptcies fell for the first time in 4 yrs in 2009 led by export-led recovery.
  • More problems in Greece, weak US corporate earnings and China's curb on lending sends European stocks lower.
 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk 13th January Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.





RANsquawk 13th January Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.

 
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