Archive - Oct 2010 - Story
October 18th
RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 18/10/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 10/18/2010 10:46 -0500RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 18/10/10
Insider Selling To Buying Update: 2,019 To 1
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2010 10:36 -0500Just when everyone thought we may see some moderation in the wholesale dumping of equities by those who actually know what their companies are worth better than moronic stock pumpers on stations that are rapidly losing their viewership, here come the same insiders and pull the rug right from underneath the latest batch of hot potato recipients (that would be various collocated computers mostly, and involuntary taxpayers course). Two weeks ago, insiders sold "only" 1,169 times more than they bought. Alas, last week selling apparently is the new black again, with selling outpacing buying on the S&P by a factor of 2,018. Insiders in Oracle, GameStop, Google, CSX and General Mills appear to be particularly partial to the new black. Something tells us CNBC will not pick up this particular piece of news.
Massive $6.3 Billion POMO Closes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2010 10:11 -0500Ben Batmanke saves the day again. Today's POMO is a whopper: at $6.3 billion it is the largest since the announcement of QE Lite (not the largest ever mind you - next month, for example we will see $15-20 billion daily POMOs). The submitted to accepted ratio was 3.5x as PDs gladly tried to convert $21.8 billion worth of 7-10 Year Bonds into shares of Apple, Amazon, Google and Netflix. Following last week's $4.7 billion POMO, today's action bring the Fed's balance sheet to $831 billion. Japan - watch out. And now the HFTs are stuck in churn mode as the liquidity infusion is done for the day. Next POMO - Wednesday.
Rosie On The Fed's Intent To Get Everyone Onboard Its All-In Bet On Stocks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2010 09:56 -0500Just in case there is someone living in a cave who still doesn't understand that the Fed's one and only mandate (forget that crap about inflation and jobs) is to give everyone one last shove into the all in ponzi before the diarrhea hits the HVAC, here is David Rosenberg explaining, for the cheap seats, what the Fed's terminal intent is.
Today's POMO Starts
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2010 09:27 -0500Another day, another chance for Brian Sack to give $3-5 billion in free, free linen to the Primary Dealers to buy themselves some Apple. Today's POMO has started, and the bonds to be monetized include a variety of 2016-2020 vintages. Once again, these are the bonds which will likely be purchased the most in the upcoming $1-$1.5 trillion QE2, so PDs may hold off selling them back to Brian until they get much better prices. Although who the hell knows or cares anymore. After all, if things get ugly the UK will simply come in and buy a quadrillion worth of Bonds using some more of that Fed free, free linen.
JPM's First Official Spin On Fraudclosure: Manageable, But With $55 Billion Of Risks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2010 09:10 -0500Over the weekend, JPM's Ed Reardon shared the bank's first official takeaway on fraudclosure (yes, it refuses to go away). According to the bank "In our view, many of the mortgage foreclosure problems highlighted in the past few weeks are process oriented and can be fixed in the near term." One wonders when the biggest bank in the world actually has come out with a less than rosy view on an event that could be a game changer: we are too lazy to go back in the archives to read JPM's take on subprime in early 2007 but we are confident it would have been summarizied in one word: "manageable." Yet even JPM is forced to acknowledge that putbacks are the biggest risk, as we highlighted yesterday via a confidential memorandum from Wells Fargo. To wit, from JPM: "We estimate putback risk to be approximately $23-$35bn for agency mortgages, $40-80bn in non-agency and roughly $20-30bn for second liens and HELOCs. However, there are a number of reasons why these estimates are on the high end, including losses already taken and loss reserves established. Specifically, putback losses could reach $55bn in our base case scenario, but, importantly, will be spread out over years owing to the complexity and cost of implementing putbacks, especially in non-agency securitizations. Consequently, the annual putback cost to the industry is likely to be in the range of $10-25 billion. There are several reasons for our lower putback success rate assumptions in the private-label market relative to the agencies, including creating a process to put loans back, and demonstrating not only that the loan breached a representation or warranty, but also that the breach affected the value of the loan." This is basically JPM's way of saying that QE2, instead of being a UST purchasing program, will actually be one where the Fed will buy a new batch of completely fraudulent MBS. This also jives with what Pimco is expecting, based on the firm's recent surge in MBS purchases on margin.
Foreign Holdings Of US Treasuries Surge Driven By Record "UK" Purchases
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2010 08:51 -0500
August saw the second largest purchase of US Treasurys by foreigners in history, which at $117.1 billion was just slightly smaller to November 2009's $117.9 billion. However, unlike then, in August there was an inflow into every single category of US security, with inflows of $4.6 billion in Agencies, $10 billion in Corporate Bonds, and $4.8 billion in Corporate Stocks. The generic data is there: Chinese and Japanese holdings both increased, the former by $21.7 billion to $868.4, the latter by $15.6 billion to $836.6 billion. Which means that the Fed has once again relinquished second place in total UST holdings to Japan...but only so for a few days. At about $825 billion, and with 8 POMO coming up in the next 3 weeks, Japan will be left in the dust shortly. Unfortunately, the historic event of overtaking China as the world's largest holder of Treasuries by the Fed will have to be delayed until late November. Yet there was something very troubling about August's TIC data: the primary driver for the explosion in total foreign holdings from $4.066 trillion to $4.213 trillion, an increase of $147 billion, was the literal explosion in "UK" holdings of $74 billion from $374BN to $448BN. (we put it in parentheses because the purchasing is certainly not being done by the UK government which itself is planning on starting it next round of QE, or monetizing its own debt, imminently). What the true source of this purchasing power and interest is, only the Federal Reserve truly knows.
As South Korea Sets Off To Formally Expand Its Gold Holdings, Is China Far Behind?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2010 07:56 -0500Today's most important piece of news for holders of precious metals comes from the far East, where Kim Choong-soo, governor of South Korea’s central bank, told a parliamentary committee on Monday, that the country: "needs to give careful consideration to the matter of increasing gold volumes in the foreign reserves.” In other words, as the FT summarizes, "South Korea, holder of the world’s fifth-biggest foreign exchange reserves, is considering expanding its small holdings of gold to diversify its dollar-heavy portfolio." Last week, a mere unsubstantiated whisper that China was doing the same sent gold $10 higher. So with the regional game theory framework changing, as more countries rush into the yellow metal, will China finally be forced to come out of its shell of gold shyness and officially start accumulating, sending gold soaring?
Frontrunning: October 18
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2010 07:25 -0500- Federal Reserve urged to act on economy (FT)
- Weil: Foreclosure Fiasco’s Trail Leads to Washington (Bloomberg)
- Few Ready For Currency War (JAD)
- ECB's Trichet Rejects Weber's Call to End Bond Purchase Program (Bloomberg)
- Banks Face Mortgage Scrutiny as $49 Billion in Value Vanishes (Bloomberg)
- Homeowners in Limbo - Mortgage Mess Means Delays for Those Facing Foreclosure (WSJ)
- BOE Will Expand Stimulus by 100 Billion Pounds, CEBR Predicts (Bloomberg)
- The Recklessness of Quantitative Easing (Hussman)
- Why a Foreclosure Moratorium Is a Bad Idea (WSJ)
- Fast Yuan Rise Will Be Short-Lived (Reuters)
- Investors Bet Fed Action Will Bring Inflation (FT)
- Hedge Funds Succumbing to Mutual Funds’ Mediocrity (Bloomberg)
- Germany Bows to Call for Political Sway Over Euro Sanctions (Bloomberg)
- Income Inequality: Too Big to Ignore (NYT)
- U.K. Readies Cuts in Defense Outlays (WSJ)
Daily Highlights: 10.18.2010
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2010 06:56 -0500- Asian stocks slip, Dollar gains on Fed stimulus speculation; Oil declines.
- Euro down to $1.3889 due to effects of Bernanke comments on Fed action.
- Oil falls below $81 in Asia as US dollar recovers.
- Key Chinese data due this week. G-20 meet, Australian central bank minutes also on tap.
- US structured-note sales surge to $38.4B to break record of 2008.
- Allergan: Botox approved by US FDA for treatment of chronic migraines.
- Aluminium Bahrain seeks to raise $541M from initial share offering.
- BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto cancel plans for a $120B joint venture in Australia.
Today's Economic Data Highlights
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2010 06:35 -0500Industrial production, homebuilder sentiment, the TICS data, and a Fed speech…
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 18/10/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 10/18/2010 05:03 -0500RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 18/10/10
October 17th
Is the USD selloff poised to reverse?
Submitted by naufalsanaullah on 10/17/2010 19:37 -0500If you would like to subscribe to Shadow Capitalism Daily Market Commentary, please email me at naufalsanaullah@gmail.com to be added to the mailing list.
Wells Fargo Prepares For Tsunami Of Loan Repurchase Demands
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/17/2010 18:45 -0500Zero Hedge has obtained Wells Fargo's brand new confidential protocol guidelines on loan repurchase demands by investors and mortgage insurers, sent out on October 15, and which becomes effective tomorrow. We have reproduced these below to see just how much more "streamlined" the process is, now that the bank is fully aware of the massive liability it faces as a "loan puttable" entity in a world that is suddenly replete with pervasive and rampant title fraud. Amusingly, in the CIM, Wells states: "Wells Fargo is committed – just
like you are - to honoring contractual obligations with investors and
mortgage insurance (MI) companies*. We want to ensure that the
resolution process for Repurchase and Rescissions is as smooth and swift
as possible." And even so, Wells continues to refuse to halt foreclosures knowing full well it would face billions in impairments should it do so voluntarily, even though as we confirmed Warren Buffett's pet bank was recently caught with its robosigning pants down as well (an event which was sufficient for everyone else to invoke a self-imposed moratorium, even Goldman, whose Litton Loan Servicing unit was rumored to have serviced about 4 or 5 mortgages in the past century... but not the California real estate monster). What is critical, is that Wells Fargo admits that should all avenues under existing legal guidelines be exhausted, and robofraud is certainly a dealbreaker that can not be "explained or validated away", then the bank will be forced to repurchase the loan. In other words, starting tomorrow Wells is preparing for the loan repruchase tsunami to hit the fan as investors and insurers everywhere swamp the bank with tens if not hundreds of billions of repurchase and recissions demands. Suck it in, Wells investors.
Weekly Recap, And Upcoming Calendar - Here Are The Main Events To Look For
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/17/2010 16:43 -0500Following the IMF and G7 meetings last weekend, most markets continued along the patterns seen in recent weeks. Stocks continued to grind higher, the Dollar weakened, and Asian currencies strengthened. Four issues will likely preoccupy markets in the upcoming week. QE2, Asian FX, business surveys, and maybe French politics. Market participants will continue to scrutinize any news relating to the upcoming Fed decision on QE2 and the extent to which the FOMC will manage to surprise markets, given that a fair amount of QE appears priced across asset classes.




