Archive - Nov 12, 2010 - Story
Guest Post: Fraud and Complicity Are Now the Lifeblood of the Status Quo (Banality of Financial Evil, Part 2)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2010 10:14 -0500Though fraud and complicity are presented in the mainstream media as isolated conspiracies outside the status quo, the truth is that the status quo is now entirely dependent on fraud and complicity for its very survival. Every level of the status quo would immediately implode were fraud and complicity suddenly withdrawn from the system. How is this true? let me count the ways.
UMichigan Consumer Sentiment At 69.3, Beats Expectations Of 69.0, Inflation Expectations Rise
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2010 10:04 -0500The latest completely irrelevant economic data has just come out: UMich consumer confidence has "jumped" from 67.7 to 69.3, in line with expectations. Basically this continues the trend of consumer confidence going absolutely nowhere two years after it has plunged to recent lows. Oddly, unlike before, the current conditions segment of confidence was better than consensus (79.7 vs exp 77) while expectations misses (62.7 63.5). Are Americans starting to get resigned that the present is truly as good as it gets? Elsewhere, ABC Consumer Confidence, continues to be close to all time record highs, confirming that even this "data" is nothing but a policy tool used for propaganda purposes. Perhaps the only somewhat relevant data in today's release is that 1 year inflation expectations pushed higher yet again, from 2.7% to 3% (even as 5 year stayed flat).
Rosenberg Presents The Latest And Greatest Wall Of Worry
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2010 09:57 -0500... to which the market has just one response: Brian Sack's POMO. Yet as reality and Fed perception are disconnected to record degrees, at some point even infinite money printing will have to be fully discounted. In the meantime, an $8 billion POMO prepares to lead off the latest QE2 AAPL, AMZN, NFLX pump in 20 minutes.
Goldman Boosts China 2011 CPI Expectations From 1.3% To 4.3%, Sees Many Upcoming Rate Hikes As Fed Inflation Exports Go Ballistic
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2010 09:35 -0500Yesterday we highlighted that Goldman had closed out its long China trade in anticipation of reactionary measures to what the Beijing politburo decided to telegraph as high inflation (after all there is no such thing as Chinese "economic data": it is whatever the central committee agrees on). The news sparked a fresh wave of selling in the SHCOMP resulting in the biggest two-day selloff for the index in months. Today, Goldman pours more fuel on the fire, by raising its 2011 Chinese CPI expectations from 1.3% to 4.3%, which guarantees that the State Counsil will have to hike rates as it is obvious that the CNYUSD currency peg will not be removed as long as it is being used as a political scapegoat by Washington. Furthermore, ongoing insanity by the Fed guarantees that surging commodity prices will generate even more inflation in China, which in turn will eventually lead to higher prices in the US, leading to greater margin contractions, leading to more layoffs, leading to the need for what the Chairman will see as even more QE, thereby compounding the most virtuous cycle in the global economy that nobody talks about, as more and more money sloshes around the global system, and finds packets of least resistance. However that is a topic for Q1 2011.
Irish Bank Borrowings From ECB Jump To €130 Billion, Or €100,000 For Every bp In Anglo Irish Sub CDS
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2010 08:57 -0500
According to the ECB, borrowings by Irish-based lenders’ from the European Central Bank rose to €130 billion as of Oct. 29, up almost €10 billion from €121.1 billion at the end of September. Adjusted for size, this is roughly equivalent to US banks borrowing a few hundred trillion from the Fed, give or take a few trillion. "Pass thru" institutions include both international and domestic banks in Ireland. In other words, the ECB continues to buy the bonds issued by Ireland, to provide the funds to Irish banks so they can buy their own bonds, and when all this fails, the ECB can step in and provide money to the government directly. Elsewhere, the CDS of Anglo Irish bank blew out by 20% yesterday, and have surged by over 10,000 bps since the end of October to nearly 13,000. Luckily, the end game is known: Ireland will be bailed out by the ECB, the country will become another Greece, lying each and every day about its deficit and economic recovery, until yet another country gets mauled. At some point the Fed/ECB/IMF's rescue ploy will fail. Then, it will be best to be far away.
Frontrunning: November 12
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2010 08:30 -0500- Fed's Lockhart Says Tax, Regulatory, Fiscal Uncertainty Hurts Employment (Bloomberg)
- Globalized "cooperation" proves it is completely worthless as usual as US loses all leverage - G20 Closes Ranks but Skims over Toughest Tasks (Reuters)
- ...As is US foreign trade policy, as Obama is humiliated once again: U.S. Hit by Trade Setback (WSJ)
- Krugman stunned deficit commission wants to cut deficit (NYT, h/t Fernando)
- Bankrupt California searching for idiots to sell $14 billion in bonds to (LA Times)
- As Zero Hedge has been saying for over a year, Taxes May Solve U.S. High-Frequency Trading Mess: Peter Coy (Bloomberg)
- Fed Efforts to Revive Economy Find Critics (NYT)
- Why Oil Could Top $100 a Barrel (Bloomberg)
Daily Highlights: 11.12.2010
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2010 08:20 -0500- China inflation surges to 25-month high; jump in prices could lead to more rate rises.
- Euro falls to six-week low versus Dollar on Europe slowdown, debt concerns.
- Home prices fell in nearly half of U.S. metropolitan areas in the third quarter.
- G-20 leaders endorse gradual changes in currency values, to develop early warning system.
- Obama opposes permanent top tax rate extension, Advisor says.
PIIGS CDS Hit All Time Wides
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2010 08:00 -0500
It has been a few month since everyone was throwing the word "contagion" around just to sound smart. Prepare to get a whole lot more of that. PIIGS CDS are now at a fresh all time record, way wider than during the May days, that lead to the flash crash and Greece's bankruptcy. All this means that the fair value of the market is now even lower than where it was on May 6, but the tail risk has been internalized by not only US but European taxpayers. That rubber band will snap again. Just a matter of time.
Overnight Futures, FX Fireworks Threatens QE2 Rally
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2010 07:36 -0500
Futures (and their driver - AUDJPY) have been spooked overnight by a circulating think thank report which claims that an Ireland bailout package is coming on Tuesday. Coupled with another rumor of a Chinese rate hike (China now down 6% in last two days) means Brian Sack's cronies had a very busy night. ES plunged as low as 1193 before recouping a whole 12 points, and wa down just 6 at last check. It appears that just like in the flash crash, one of the key correlation catalysts is the EURUSD, which once dropping below 1.36, all hell breaks loose. For today, Ireland may be a rumor. Next week it will be a fact. And not even the Fed will be able to halt a multi-trillion selling onslaught.
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 12/11/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 11/12/2010 05:47 -0500RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 12/11/10
Chinese rate hike rumors overnight
Submitted by naufalsanaullah on 11/12/2010 01:33 -0500Just a quick update from my piece earlier.




