Archive - Nov 2010 - Story

November 5th

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Today's Economic Data Highlights





For those who still care about the economy, now that it has no bearing at all on the market, which is merely Bernanke's plaything, today we have payrolls, pending home sales, consumer credit, and a horde of Fed speakers, though only a couple of which are apt to provide any insight into this week's decision…No POMO: enjoy it - starting next week the floodgates open.

 

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RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX – 05/11/10





RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX – 05/11/10

 

November 4th

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Is The SEC's Insider Trading Case Implicating FrontPoint A Sting Operation Aimed At S.A.C. Capital?





When we first read Matt Goldstein's narrative of a rabbi named Milton Balkany, whose attempt to extort Steve Cohen's SAC for $4 million landed him in jail, we thought little of it and dismissed the story more or less as one in which an individual had gotten access to information that had been first perceived as damaging, yet ended up being simply innocuous. However, Goldstein's follow up to the very curious saga of Balkany, which also includes recently alleged insider trading in company Human Genome Sciences by one Joseph "Chip" Skowron, most recently of Morgan Stanley spin off FrontPoint (and previously of S.A.C.) caught our attention, and after doing some additional research, we may have uncovered some circumstantial facts that could indicate that the connection between Chip Skowron, the insider trading scandal, and SAC may be more substantial, that the rabbi may have indeed been on to something, and that there may be far more here than meets the eye.

 

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Charting The Bernanke Put





The below chart of implied vol skew from UBS is the closest thing we will get to visualizing the now prevalent "Bernanke put" on the stock market. Also, the commentary from UBS is pretty much all we need to know that even the smallest decline in the market indicates that something is very wrong at the Fed, which has now made any stock drops implicitly impossible.

 

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M2 Update: First Decline After 16 Consecutive Increases





Typically at this time on Thursday we present our weekly Fed balance sheet update. At this point, that particular data is irrelevant as what the Fed's assets look like today, is nothing compared to what they will look like in 8 months, when the Fed will own more Treasuries than China and Japan combined. So instead we present the M2 update, where after 16 consecutive weeks of increases, M2 has finally dipped. Oddly enough, this occurs just before the Fed went balls to the well in buying EVERYTHING.

 

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Daily Oil Market Summary: 11.05.2010





On the second day of quantitative easing … the markets gave to us: new highs in equities, new lows in the dollar, new recent highs in a number of commodities including oil and a weekly unemployment report that showed a rise in jobless claims. It certainly must have felt like Christmas, Chanukah and Kwanzaa for a number of longs on Thursday, but it was not necessarily good for consumers. Unless this somehow boosts employment and household earnings, it may turn out to be most noticed by a majority of consumers in the form of higher prices – for just about everything. At least, after one day, though, it does look like QE2 is doing what is supposed to. - Cameron Hanover

 

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Advance Look At Time's 2010 Award Edition Cover





Following up on Time's unbelievable success with picking the 2009 person of the year, we have managed to intercept the winner of the 2010 edition. For your advance viewing pleasure.

 

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Guest Post: The Many Faces Of Deleveraging





Three and one half years ago in March of 2007, we penned a discussion entitled, "It's Delightful, It's Delovely, It's Deleverage". Of course the upshot of that missive was that we suggested that the whole idea of balance sheet deleveraging was to be a huge investment theme to come. Little did we know, huh? You already know this was well in advance of the ultimate systemic credit cycle debacle that was to come and a year and a half in front of Lehman as a singular event. Deleveraging subsequently became a popular and virtually consensus theme in late 2008 and early 2009. Associated with this headline theme were tangential anecdotes such as "new normal", etc. It's time to quickly revisit the subject of deleveraging now as per the recently released 2Q Fed Flow of Funds statement.

 

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Allan Meltzer Explains Why Friedman Would Never Endorse Increasing Inflation To Stimulate The Economy





Another person chimes in to prove that the Chairman's schizophrenia is now at genocidal levels.

 

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RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 04/11/10





RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 04/11/10

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Must Watch: David Stockman Says The Fed Is Injecting High Grade Monetary Heroin Into The Financial System





Today's absolutely must watch clip comes from David Stockman, director of the OMB under Ronald Reagan. "An independent Fed is what we had when I was in the government. Volcker was the head of it...Today the Fed is scared to death that the boys and girls and robots on Wall Street are going to have a hissy fit. And therefore these programs, one after another, are simply designed to somehow pacify the stock market, and hoping to keep the stock indexes going up, and that somehow that will fool the people into thinking they are wealthier and they will spend money. The people aren't buying that. Main Street is not stupid enough to believe that engineered rallies as a result of QE2 stimulus are making them wealthier and so they should go out and buy another Coach bag. This is really crazy stuff that I can't say enough negative about...The Fed is telling a lot of lies to the market... it is telling all the politicians on Capitol Hill you can issue unlimited debt cause it doesn't cost anything. We have $9 trillion of marketable debt. Upwards of 70% of that has maturities of 5 years or less down to 90 days. All of those maturities are 1% down to 10 basis points. So from the point of view of Congress, the cost of carrying the debt is essentially free. When you tell politicians they can issue $100 billion of debt a month for free, how do you expect them to do the right thing, and ask their constituents to sacrifice... I think the Fed is injecting high grade monetary heroin into the financial system of the world, and one of these days it is going to kill the patient."

 

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Market Down Only 1.5% Priced In Gold





The market as we know it, is now finished. As of last night, stocks are nothing but a policy tool, controlled exclusively, and very much legally and with no legislative control, by Ben Bernanke. The Federal Reserve has rendered the economy irrelevant. We hope America enjoys paying $10 for a loaf of bread shortly. In the meantime, the market closed down 1.5% priced in gold, which closed $7 dollars short of $1,400. Next stop: $10,000.

 

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QE2 - The Day After: Entire World Blasts Deranged Madman's Uncheckable Insanity





Yesterday's Ben Bernanke penned an Op-Ed in which he essentially said: "I am doing whatever I interpret my mandate to be, which right now means only thing: Dow 36,000. I am only accountable to the private bank that is the Federal Reserve, a few Wall Street CEOs, and no one else. Congress has no power over me. Try to stop me." And while the stock market is so far in love with this exhibition of outright hubris which promises record bonuses even as a record number of Americans subsist on foodstamps and real, not BLS, unemployment is over 20%, putting the Chairman in a long-overdue strait jacket will ultimately require an outright clash between those who still believe in that piece paper called the constitution and the kleptocratic cartel to whom the trade-off between a senior bond impairment and their first born is never all that clear. And while more and more try to educate a hypnotized, strategically defaulting US society what QE2 means to their future, the rest of the world is already rising in a tidal wave of disapproval aimed at the Federal Reserve. As the FT reports, Brazil, China, German, and Thailand, and soon everyone else, have already voiced thighest criticism and their condemnation of this escalation in FX wars.

 

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CLSA's Chris Wood Says Bernanke Will Continue "Mad Experiment" Until He Kills US Dollar Paper Standard, Looks Toward QE3





GREED & fear’s view on QE2 remains that it will not precipitate releveraging of the American economy, just like the first version did not. But it will probably take some time for the equity market to work that out reflecting the natural bullish bias. Still when the releveraging hopes are dashed attention will then turn to QE3, which next time may include a formal inflation target and purchases of private sector debt. Billyboy will likely carry on with his mad experiment until he precipitates the collapse of the US dollar paper standard. The Fed’s attempt to combat the perceived problem of deflation will end up creating a far bigger problem. That is the systemic risk posed by the anticipated ratcheting up of QE. This is why the view here remains that America will turn out to be a case of “Japan-heavy” not “Japan-lite”.

 

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Fitch Puts Entire US Residential Mortgage Servicer Space On Negative Outlook Over Fraudclosure Concerns





What's that you say Bank of America and JPM, "it's all contained?" Hey Fed, it's not too late to add $8 trillion in MBS to QE2. On the other hand, now we know what QE3 will be buying. "Fitch Ratings has assigned a Negative Outlook for the entire U.S. Residential Mortgage Servicer ratings sector on increased concerns surrounding alleged procedural defects in the judicial foreclosure process. This industry-wide issue will cause all servicers to be under increased scrutiny from a wide range of state and federal regulators, state attorneys general, and GSEs. All servicers will be affected, even those fully in compliance with all foreclosure rules and regulations."

 
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