Archive - Oct 19, 2010 - Story
Dallas Fed's Fisher Stunner: Admits Worries Fed Has Created Nothing But Bubbles
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2010 12:04 -0500The war of words continues, this time with Dallas Fed's Fisher. More quotes from the fourth spoke in the Kocherlakota, Plosser, Hoenig, hawk sanity quadrangle. In his just released speech we read this stunner: "In my darkest moments,
I have begun to wonder if the monetary accommodation we have already
engineered might even be working in the wrong places." Aside from adding Fisher to the Shirakawa, Hildebrand suicide watch, it is notable that the Fed is finally doubting the actions of the Fed, and realizing it is creating neither employment, nor moderate inflation, but just bubbles, bubbles and more bubbles. And here is why Fisher may soon be looking to resign: "A great many baby boomers
or older cohorts who played by the rules, saved their money and
migrated over time, as prudent investment counselors advise, to short-
to intermediate-dated, fixed-income instruments are earning extremely
low nominal and real returns on their savings. Further reductions in
rates earned on savings will hardly endear the Fed to this portion of
the population." Hardly indeed. And next time it won't be the Pentagon.
Goldman Pitching Short EURCHF Trade; Time To Go Long
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2010 11:45 -0500One of the worst top tickers in the history of Wall Street, Goldman's FX team, has come out with a tactical short EURCHF call. Like every other time Goldman says to do something, the prudent thing to do is the opposite. Of course, this means more weakness for gold, as the Swiss Franc is simply the safest equivalent of gold in the monetary realm. Oh well - if better cost bases are to be had, than so be it. Of course, if Goldman is right, this means that today's short-term reversion in gold is just that, and nothing more. On the other hand, we wonder how Goldman reconciles this call with its bet from two weeks ago that the euro is going to $1.55 from the firm's previous target of $1.38, which incidentally was our indicator that the EUR has top ticked.
Art Cashin On Black Monday, 'The Raven' Remixes And The Tepper Corollary
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2010 11:25 -0500As always, some very entertaining and enlightening musings from Art Cashin, with an emphasis on Black Monday, modern-day Edgar Allan Poe remixes, and, last and certainly least, the Tepper Corollary.
RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 19/10/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 10/19/2010 10:58 -0500RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 19/10/10
Bullets Shot At Pentagon From High Powered Rifle
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2010 10:58 -0500The Pentagon’s main building was struck by several bullets about 5 a.m. Washington time today and officials are looking for the shooter, a Defense Department spokesman said.
Companies Petition Obama For Tax Amnesty To Repatriate Cash, As Myth Of "Cash On Sidelines" Crumbles
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2010 10:35 -0500About a month ago, when discussing the debunking, for the latest time, the biggest lie in modern history, namely the massive exaggeration about the corporate cash on the sidelines, we noted: "Our advice to all those who like blind lemmings follow the advice and chase the "cash hoard" - think, and do your homework first. If indeed over a third of the record cash holdings are foreign, they are as good as useless to shareholders." The reason for this: a major portion of the billion or so dollars in cash is held abroad and "repatriating this cash to the good old USA would cost companies hundreds
of billions in US corporate taxes. That's right: even though companies
are taxed abroad, the issue of double taxation is resolved by
subtracting foreign taxes paid from the US tax liability. However,
because foreign corporate taxes are typically lower there is an adverse
tax consequence associated with remittance to the parent company.
In other words, of the $1.2 or however many trillions in total
corporate cash on balance sheets, a good 30% chunk of this belongs to
Uncle Sam if these companies wish to use it for domestic IRR purposes.
And yes, just so there is no confusion: using foreign cash to pay dividends or share repurchases is considered repatriation from the perspective of US tax regulations." And now that the cat is out of the bag that the huge cash hoard is really about 30% less, here come these very same multinationals begging Obama for tax amnesty so they can actually bring the cash home and, gasp, use it. Too bad this request will never fly, and why even CNBC may soon (with a few cartoons), understand just how stupid they sound in pumping the hollow cash on the sidelines argument day in and day out.
Moody's Commercial Property Price Index Drops 3.3% In August, At Lowest Level Since 2002
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2010 10:01 -0500
Luckily the banks don't care about that $3 trillion footnote on their balance sheets known as CRE. Because if they did, they would all be insolvent: the Moody's REAL/Commercial Property Price Index index dropped by 3.3% in August, and is now 45.1% lower compared to the October 2007 peak. The attached chart says it all, or almost all - it actually says nothing about why banks are still trading at positive equity values.
Apple Ramp "At All Costs" Results In Another Complete Correlation Failure Day
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2010 09:43 -0500
Today's attempt to ramp Apple into the green no matter what (and with 20% of the NASDAQ, and thousands of ETFs creating a massive feedback loop, bidding up Apple generates the biggest bang for the buck), which, if unsuccessful, will see dozens if not more funds scream at EOD once the margin calls start rolling in (yes, many are "all in"), has resulted in yet another complete collapse in all correlations. Note the simply ridiculous divergence between the AUDJPY and the ES. This is all on account of the glaring ramp undertaken by virtually everyone whose livelihood depends on the aforementioned AAPL green close. We would argue that a long AUDJPY, short ES trade makes sense, but with the market as broken as it is, only idiots would hope for anything to make sense any more.
Stephen Roach Warns The Fed's Failed Policies Guarantee Another Crisis
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2010 09:36 -0500Stephen Roach, chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia, has penned one of the most unapologetic letters bashing the central banking climate we have ever read from an institutional insider (he is still technically part of MS). And Roach should know: From 1972 until 1979, Roach served on the research staff of the Federal Reserve Board in Washington, D.C., where he supervised the preparation of the official Federal Reserve projections of the U.S. economy. As a result he is all too aware of the quality and caliber of Fed individuals. Which serves as the groundwork for this stunning speech presented on October 12 before the World Knowledge Forum in Seoul. The topics covered include the creation of, and asset bubble "resolution" authority , the collapse of America into a Japanese deflation death spiral, the general destructive worthlessness of the Fed, and other such pleasant issues. Most importantly, Roach speaks out in all too clear terms against another "hyper stimulus" round: "Whether it’s the latest round of quantitative easing now under way by major central banks or the polarizing tax cut debate in the US, there is a limited likelihood these measures will achieve meaningful traction in the real economy. The authorities would be much better off not wasting the next stimulus on policies that won’t work and better disposed toward taking actions that are directed at providing support to the true victims of this recession— namely, the structurally unemployed and underemployed." Roach's dire warning: "I fear that unless regulatory reform is accompanied by a rethinking of monetary policy, another crisis is far more likely than not."
Fed's Evans Says US Is In A Liquidity Trap, Says Boosting Inflation Is "Entirely Appropriate"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2010 08:56 -0500As if we needed any further confirmation that the Fed is now willing to risk an all out bout of hyperinflation, here it comes courtesy of Chicago Fed's Charles Evans, whose comments that inflation is "acceptable", and welcome, and is the only way to battle the "liquidity trap" the US finds itself in, mirror those of NY Fed's Dudley who earlier confirmed Zero Hedge expectations that $100 billion is too low a QE2 number. Which means that very soon the Fed will buy up every single Treasury in existence. It will also kill the dollar absent Europe continuing on its path from earlier today, and saying the stress test was, in fact, a lie.
Goldman Warns On The (Hyper)Inflationary Consequences Of A Successful QE2
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2010 08:45 -0500One of the more devious consequences of QE2, is that it carries the seeds of its own destruction with it. Namely, if after flooding bank basements with another $2 trillion in excess reserves, and if bank lending picks up, suddenly the amount of currency in circulation will explode by over 300% from under $1 trillion to around $4 trillion. And while a comparable increase in wages is certainly not guaranteed to occur concurrently, what this explosion in the free money will do is lead to a very rapid and drastic destabilization in the concept of a dollar-based reserve currency. The only thing that could prevent this are the Fed's mechanisms to extract liquidity from the system. Alas, the IOER process is very much unproven, and should animal spirits kindle at the peak of the biggest liquidity tsunami in history, that money will inevitably make its way to Main Street, not Liberty 33. All this has made Goldman's Ed McKelvey warn that should increased bank lending be the end result of QE2 (and ultimately that is precisely what it should be, as that would be indicative of a healthy economy), then, to put it so everyone will get it, "this would cause too much money to chase too few goods." And, as liquidity extraction then would likely be impossible, it would be the beginning of the end: "The obvious risk to this last point is if inflation expectations surge. In a stronger growth environment than now prevails, such a surge could prove difficult to control. It would require Fed officials to remove the liquidity quickly, which is why they will concentrate on purchases of Treasuries (easier to sell back into the market) and remind us continually of the tools they have developed to withdraw the liquidity (by periodically using them in small size)." Too bad the Fed will soon be forced to buy MBS (again), REITs, ETFs and pretty much everything else.
Frontrunning: October 19
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2010 08:17 -0500- Must read for all those who still don't get the Sino-US monetary/FX dynamics: PBOC's `Vicious Cycle' Worsened by Fed, Yu Yongding Says (BusinessWeek)
- And, apparently, this guy should read it - IMF Head Cautions on Money Flows to Asia (WSJ)
- Time to panic: Geithner vows U.S. will not devalue dollar (Reuters)
- China Daily:Appreciation Must Proceed 'Gradually' (China Daily)
- Instinet joins the Flash Crash voices of reason: SEC "flash crash" study draws another skeptic (Reuters)
- Sarkozy Stands Firm Against Pension Protests (FT)
- Japan Says Economy at Standstill (Reuters)
- EU Deal Opens Treaties for Renegotiation (FT)
Ministry Of Truth Fail - Today's WTF Moment Comes From Europe
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2010 07:54 -050019 Oct 2010 13:40 BST *DJ Trichet: Warns Not All EU Govt Finance Statistics Are Reliable
19 Oct 2010 13:40 BST *DJ Trichet: Must Close Information Gaps In Global Statistics
What's that, Trichet? The EUR is too high you say? Must kill the EUR you say? It was all a lie you say?
Read you 5x5 partner.
Whistleblower Speaks On Fraudclosure
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2010 07:49 -0500Zero Hedge has been approached by an individual who participated directly in the various aspects of what is now broadly known as Fraudclosure. The below narrative recounts his experience in the due diligence process of selecting loans for the MBS pipeline. And far more than just legalese "technicalities" or a broad abrogation of property rights, as he points out there is a far more palpable issue for all those who hold Mortgage Backed Securities or other pool aggregations of mortgage loans: "we have no idea what is in those packages." This coming from the person who helped pick, diligence and sort through the various loans...
USD Update
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2010 07:35 -0500Following yesterday's market observation, the USD has moved relatively convincingly and is now sitting on the resistances we indicated would be tested. AUDSD is sitting on the hourly channel support as well as on the neckline of the H&S. EURUSD is on the 76.4% retracement from yesterday's rally. The dollar index is on the neckline of the inverted H&S. Acceleration from here will mean this move is for real and there will be significant follow through (I see the next target in AUDUSD at 0.9560, at least 2%). However yesterday's rally can be broken down as an impulse in terms of Elliott structure and the EURUSD in particular does not look impulsive on the way down, so we would advise trailing stops to protect P&L and watch for a break to confirm the market has turned and last Friday's hammer on the Dollar Index has sealed the lows for now. - Nic Lenoir



