Archive - Jan 4, 2010 - Story
ICAP's Macro Drivers For 2010
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/04/2010 23:06 -0500"As you know I strongly believe in respecting market price-action, and I will update market scenarios and price targets across asset classes as trading unfolds and supports or resistances are met or broken. Let’s brace for a choppy 2010 as I think it is our greatest certitude: volumes will remain relatively low and the markets will therefore be chaotic. The only case where we see volumes picking up actively is a strong rebalancing towards risk aversion as the world economy relapses, so I guess we should welcome ranging choppy price action for now as we cannot hope for much better given none of the fundamental problems with the world economy have been resolved." Nic Lenoir, ICAP, 2010 Outlook
Farewell RateLab
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/04/2010 22:49 -0500Greenspan’s error in judgment, conceived from his Ayn Rand based view of the World, was not that people would act in their own self-interest (they do), but rather that removing all the rules was a required pre-condition for this to occur. It is not a mutually exclusive situation where you can only have personal freedom/responsibility with no rules. On the contrary, real freedom is the ability to act on your own within the confines of the rules. Without a set of rules, there cannot be a game, only chaos. Hopefully, the new Financial regulations being discussed will focus upon creating rules that motivate behavior that benefits the public good as opposed to focusing on micro-managing the actions of the individual. This concept is certainly the basis for the old saying: “Good fences make good neighbors”. - Harley Bassman, ML RateLab
Taibbi on Fannie, Freddie, Mortgages, Bankers and Marla Singer
Submitted by Marla Singer on 01/04/2010 22:49 -0500Zero Hedge readers will miss out if they fail to carefully study Matt Taibbi's piece on Fannie, Freddie, and the mortgage bubble (as well as a number of other tangential but critically important topics). Mr. Taibbi makes much of being delicate with me over what he sees as our disagreement on the issues, but I think he mistakes a few (and generally minor) differences in our conclusions for a real divide on the facts. We are, as near as I can tell, in pretty violent agreement on the substance of the argument: The present exploding bubble is the result of mis and malfeasance on all sides.
Did You Miss Us While You Were Gone?
Submitted by Marla Singer on 01/04/2010 19:24 -0500Well, despite some brutal holiday travel, international airports, flight delays and exciting weather for our psychotically committed staff, the machine rolled on (albeit a bit more slowly) at Zero Hedge. So if you were off coping with in-laws and children not-your-own with as much liquor as you could consume, you might have missed out on quite a lot. Don't worry. We have the cliff notes for you here, and we've got things revved up again for 2010. So take a quick look at the past week or so, and then brace yourself for the months to come. We've got a wealth of things planned for you. It promises to be a rather interesting year.
Effective Immediately...
Submitted by RobotTrader on 01/04/2010 16:04 -0500After last year's debacle, most hedge funds feel lucky to still be alive. After suffering through the steepest, fastest bear market in history, many lessons were learned. And I'm guessing that many hedge fund gamblers are starting out in January with some New Year's trading resolutions.
What Would We Do Without Experts?
Submitted by Marla Singer on 01/04/2010 13:27 -0500At this point is the United States even capable of permitting bubbles to deflate without a massive run-up to a desperate crash? Probably not.
"M.O.? The M.O. is They're Good...."
Submitted by Marla Singer on 01/04/2010 12:46 -0500Someone in France has seen "Heat" too many times.
RANsquawk 4th January US Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 01/04/2010 11:45 -0500RANsquawk 4th January US Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
RANsquawk 4th January Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 01/04/2010 10:43 -0500RANsquawk 4th January Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
Guest Post: Is the Nabacco Pipeline Worth the Projected $11.4 Billion?
Submitted by Marla Singer on 01/04/2010 10:38 -0500Inside Beltwayistan, a number of Bushevik oil patch zombies still roam the recession-blasted landscape mindlessly chanting their Caspian mantra, "Happiness is multiple pipelines" - with the caveat that they flow westwards and bypass both Russia and Iran. They've now added a new word to their vocabulary, "Nabucco," and worse, have bitten a number of Obama administration officials and visiting European politicians, who have joined their shuffling ranks.
Frontrunning: January 4
Submitted by Marla Singer on 01/04/2010 09:10 -0500- Martin Whitman to relinquish Third Avenue Chief Investment slot. (End of an era) [reuters]
- Greece prepares fiscal plan for EU. (Write "I will not forge GDP numbers" 200 times first) [bbc news]
- Burj Dubai occupancy may reach 75 percent this year. (And Dubai's GDP growth may reach 75 percent too). [bloomberg]
- Bernanke: "Low rates didn't inflate housing bubble." (Alan: "Check is in the mail Ben!") [bloomberg]
PIMCO Hunkers Down, Not Buying Much Of Anything Anymore In Anticipation Of "Disinflation"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/04/2010 04:19 -0500"For interest rate exposure, or duration, we are currently cutting back in the U.S. and U.K. because, as mentioned before, supply and demand dynamics are likely to be negatively affected as borrowing rises and central bank buying declines...With corporate bonds, we are becoming a bit more cautious than we have been. In the third and fourth quarters of 2009, we believed the massive narrowing of spreads we saw in the second quarter wouldn’t go much further. We weren’t necessarily selling credit on any scale, but we’d reduced buying....In agency MBS, we are underweight, having reduced our exposure as the Fed’s buying programs have dramatically tightened spreads...we are underweight TIPS versus the benchmark, reflecting our view that risks are currently weighted toward a disinflationary environment." Paul McCulley





