Archive - Nov 2010 - Story
November 5th
RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 05/11/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 11/05/2010 12:10 -0500RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 05/11/10
Bill Fleckenstein versus Barton Biggs On QE2
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2010 11:38 -0500
Today's must watch clip comes from Bloomberg TV, which interviews Bill Fleckenstein and Barton Biggs for their takes on the Fed's launch of the latest iteration of monetary insanity. Bill Fleckenstein, whose opinion on the Fed is no secret and has appeared on Zero Hedge many times previously, obviously sees the Fed's action for what it is: the last act of a desperate, secretive politburo in which a group of petrified economists, who have not been right once in the institution's recent history, pretend to set interest rates, when all they do is create bubbles. We are now seeing the last bubble: that, whose implosion will require extraterrestrial lifeforms to write a blank check to rescue a failed global Keynesian experiment. This is not lost on Fleckenstein. As for Biggs, there is no surprise where the 70+ year old stands on the issue of endless monetary stimulus by the Fed: sacrifice a calf while chanting Ben Shalom 100 times each night. That and taking one's geritol, which dosage after a statement like the following obviously was missed last night: "Bernanke has gotten the stock market up, which is what he wants to do, the stock market is an important symbol of confidence, and Mr. Market is a pretty good forecaster of the economy." Fleckenstein's response is, of course, spot on, and calls out the complete logic fail in the Traxis man's stream of consciousness: "When Mr. Market was reveling in the equity bubble and real estate bubble, it didn't see any of the problems coming. Easy money gets markets up, but doesn't solve any of the problems." Much more in this long overdue smack down of one of the most overrated asset managers in history.
Pending Home Sales Drop -1.8% On Expectations Of A 3.0% Rise, Down Big From Prior Revised 4.4%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2010 11:36 -0500The now forgotten foreclosuregate rears its ugly head once again, courtesy of reality. Will it also serve as a strawman for early rumblings of QE3? Sure enough, stocks jump on the bad news.
Guest Post: Let Them Eat Mud Pie
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2010 10:59 -0500The monetary and financial system that we are enslaved under at the current moment in human history has recently transformed itself into one of the most immoral and destructive forces the world has ever seen. The reason many citizens in America cannot see the extent of it at this time is because the Federal Reserve in coordination with Washington D.C. and the money center banks are doing everything in their power to keep you blind and complacent while they rob you blind. Many of the people in these institutions are not cognizant of the theft they are engaging in as they are either useful idiots or so wrapped up in their ego and false belief that they are making the paycheck they are based on some useful skill rather than simply working at the institutions that are instrumental in carrying out the ponzi scheme. You see, at the highest levels the elite must understand that the U.S. is flat broke; however, an admission of this would mean loss of power and possibly criminal prosecution. As a result, they have zero, I mean ZERO interest in the outcome for the general public and will do “whatever it takes” to quote Ben Bernanke to cover up their economically fatal mistakes and keep the mirage alive. As I mentioned above, there are two main segments that are crucial to keeping the ponzi scheme going, Washington D.C. and the big money center banks. This is why the Federal Reserve is quite purposefully directing all of the new money they are creating out of thin air into these two already bloated and corrupt cancers on the American landscape. - Mike Krieger
A Look At Projected Global Central Bank Balance Sheets
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2010 10:52 -0500
One aspect of a globalized economy that some are forgetting is that Ben Bernanke's fiefdom is merely one of many across the world. In addition to the Fed, there are 3 more key central banks out there: the BoE, the ECB and the BoJ (not to mention the PBoC). And while we already know that the Fed has no plan to stop printing money for the foreseeable future (and nobody has accounted for the massive revenue shortfall that the US will experience courtesy of an extension of the Bush taxcuts - likely to add an additional $500 billion in bond issuance requirements over the next year) and will not raise rates in this lifetime, here is what other central banks are planning on doing as of now. It appears that in the developed world, only the Fed and England are the monetarily irresponsible transgressors: the BOJ and the ECB are the two central banks that so far have demonstrated remarkable restraint when it comes to devaluing their currency, and destroying their middle class. This is visualized on the chart below from SocGen. The question then becomes how long before the last two rational entities throw in the towel and join the printing fray. With the EUR now trading over $1.4 consistently, a level where it will stay absent some monetary action out of Trichet (and hammer European exports), we believe that both central banks will soon be forced to push the max overdrive button on their respective printers.
Guest Post: Requiem For America
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2010 10:08 -0500America, that grand experiment created to probe the limits of human freedom, liberty and equality, has succumbed to its many injuries and passed away. The exact time of death is uncertain, the causes many. America was always, until its demise, a work in progress, but that progress stopped. The country lost its way, forgot where it was headed, and fell prey to a host of enemies, all of them coming from within.
Rosenberg Update On NFP, Market Action, Gridlock, And QE
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2010 10:04 -0500As usual, those who want the truth behind the cheery, and misleading, headlines don't have many options. David Rosenberg continues to be one of the best options. Here is his take on today's NFP, recent market action, impact of D.C. gridlock (bad for fiscal policy, no impact, we believe on monetary - all hail emperor Ben), and why $5 trillion in total QE means Goldman's estimate for $1,650 gold may need to soon add an extra zero to it.
Gold, Silver Surge After Goldman Recommends Buying Gold... Again
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2010 09:39 -0500Gold continues its push to $1,400. The catalyst: Goldman's David Greely has just released a report on gold saying that: "we expect that gold prices will continue to rise over the next 12 months to our $1650/toz target as US monetary policy remains accommodative and US real interest rates remain low. Further, the Federal Reserve’s return to quantitative easing and the movement of gold prices to these new record highs could spark renewed investor demand for gold, which has been remarkably subdued in recent months. This represents upside risk to both our forecasts and to gold prices." As Goldman's last call on gold marked a temporary peak in the appreciation, as we expected, this time the top ticking effect will likely be lost. We believe that $1,400 gold to be breached as soon as today.
Goldman Explains Why The "Orphaned" 30 Year Will Soon See Buying Interest, Expects A Drop In The 10s30s Back To 110bps
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2010 09:31 -0500
FUG (as Goldman's Francesco U. Garzarelli signs his emails) has released another note with his outlook for the Treasury curve over the next several months. As readers will recall, it was Goldman's call that the long-end would be bought up by the Fed, leading to an implicit flattening of the curve. Nonetheless, the New York Fed disclosed that, as Morgan Stanley expected, the bulk of purchases would occur around the belly, resulting in, as we highlighted yesterday, what turned out to be a record steepening of the 5s-30s, which could merely be the last trump card the Fed has to generate some profitability for the banks, whose core business model, now that the hedge fund and sales and trading model is in shambles with plunging market participation, is the treasury curve trade (long near, short far). Despite Brian Sack's attempt at giving taxpayer capital to banks in this last attempt to goose the banking sector, Goldman continues to be skeptical about further steepening of the curve: "Our best guess (corroborated by our GS Curve estimates) the slope between 10-yr and 30-yr will retrace to around 110-125bp, from 160bp currently." The explanation for why the Fed would ignore purchases of the long bond even as it bids up everything else is as follows: "While arguably increasing transparency and predictability, the Fed has also lost degrees of freedom, and the costs and benefits are yet to be seen. In the eyes of many, the long bond now appears to have been orphaned by the Fed. One explanation for this may be that the FOMC wanted to have some quantification of the potential costs of the asset purchase policy under future interest rate scenarios before its launch." Well, it now knows. And now that the UST curve look literally like a hockeystock, and the Fed is about to be accused of massive telegraphing of intentions by Ron Paul, we expect that Goldman will be proven right as the yield chase game continues, and the Fed ultimately makes it clear that it will have no choice but to gobble up the long-end as well, especially since if as we expect, MBS repurchases will be far higher than expected, resulting in a far greater contribution to monetization due to QE Lite, and leaving far less available for purchase across the balance of the curve.
Americans On Foodstamps Hits New Record In August, Increase By Over Half A Million To 42.4 Million, 17% Increase Year Over Year
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2010 08:51 -0500Another highlight you may not hear in the President's address from this morning: according to the last Department of Agriculture update, Americans on foodstamps has increased by over half a million in August, hitting a fresh all time high of 42.4 million people relying on the government for basis sustenance. At least now we know where that labor force is going. The August number is a 17% rise from the same time a year ago. That number is up 58.5% from August 2007, before the recession began.
People Who "Want A Job Now" Jumps To Second Highest Ever As Persons Not In Labor Force Reaches Record
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2010 08:17 -0500
Some more facts emerging from a look at two more sub-headline indicators: the persons not in the labor force, which we noted in the prior post, is now at the highest ever, at 84,626K, an increase of 462K from September. This odd change conveniently allowed the unemployment rate to stay low. And more importantly, the number of people who want a job now per Table A-1 is now the highest in 2010, and the second highest in history: 6,255K, an increase of 53K from the month prior. Good thing that none of the 462K other who dropped out of the labor force had any desire to work, as otherwise both the U-3 and U-6 would have painted a far uglier picture than presented.
Labor Force Participation Rate Drops To 25 Year Low, At 64.5%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2010 08:03 -0500
The inverse silver lining to today's jobs report that will be lost in the shuffle of what is perceived as a good NFP (despite consistent initial jobless claims of around 450K, which means that either there is a massive data error, or the rate of job creation has somehow surged) is that labor force participation has now dropped to the lowest rate it has been since 1984, at 64.5%. Assuming a reversion to the long-term average participation rate of 66%, means that the civilian labor force is in reality 157.4 million as opposed to the disclosed 153.9 million, a delta of 3.5 million currently unaccounted for. Maybe someone can ask the president during his imminent press conference what happened to the unemployed population, which would have been 18.3 if this labor force delta was incorporated, resulting in an unemployment rate of 11.6%.
October NFP: Up 151,000, Private Up 159,000, Unemployment Rate 9.6%, Underemployment Rate 17%, Birth Death Adds 61K
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2010 07:31 -0500- Unemployment rate: 9.64%, just shy of 9.7%, compared to September's 9.58%
- U-6 Rate at 17%, down 0.1% from September
- September data revised from -95K to -41K
- US Change in Nonfarm Payrolls (Oct) M/M 151K vs. Exp. 60K (Prev. -95K, Rev. to -41K)
- Change in Private Payrolls (Oct) M/M 159K vs. Exp. 80K (Prev. 64K, Rev. to 107K)
- Birth/Death adds 61K after adding just 11K last month
- Those unemployed for over 27 weeks increases to 6,206, represents 41% of total unemployed
- Change in Manufacturing Payrolls (Oct) M/M -7K Exp. 5K (Prev. -6K, Rev. to -2K)
- US Average Hourly Earnings (Oct) M/M 0.2% vs. Exp. 0.1% (Prev. 0.0%, Rev. to 0.1%)
- US Average Hourly Earnings (Oct) Y/Y 1.7% vs. Exp. 1.6% (Prev. 1.7%)
- US Average Weekly Hours (Oct) M/M 34.3 vs. Exp. 34.2 (Prev. 34.2)
Goldman's Advance Look At The NFP Number, And Why The Firm Continues To Be More Bearish Than Consensus
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2010 07:13 -0500With just 20 minutes left until the real deal, Goldman highlights its case for ongoing economic weakness, in this case manifesting in an NFP number due at 8:30 am that is about 35K below consensus, at 60K, and Private Payrolls at 75K, also below exp of 80K. The three reasons for Goldman's bearishness: 1. State and local cutbacks, particularly in education; 2. The remaining wind-down of temporary Census employment; and 3. Little change in federal non-Census employment. Will they be right? Check back in 20 minutes to find out.
Daily Highlights: 11.5.2010
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2010 07:05 -0500- Dollar steady against euro, which buys $1.4211.
- Eurozone retail sales down .2% for second month in September.
- Gold rallied to $1,393.40, the highest ever, in after-hours electronic trading.
- Japan's central bank kept its key interest rate unchanged at near zero.
- "Material failure" or "faulty design" the likely cause of A380 engine blowout – Qantas CEO
- Amkor 3Q earnings fell 4% to $78M.
- BHP Billiton to build its Canadian potash business despite Ottawa blocking its $39B bid for Potash Corp.



