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Archive - Feb 17, 2010 - Story

Tyler Durden's picture

Here Come The Witchhunts: France Notes Six US/UK "Greek Debt Speculators" Have Been "Singled Out"





For anyone who thought that Greece's double digit budget deficit as % of GDP (or is that triple digit? We don't know - remember all the numbers are false) was the actual cause for the need to bailout Greece, you are about to get a rude awakening: see, it was all the fault of six speculative US and UK hedge funds. Dow Jones reports that French Finance Minister Christine Lagarade has said that "six financial institutions have been singled out for speculating on Greek debt during the ongoing crisis." Heaven forbid such a thing as a somewhat efficient market exists, and Greek yields were merely an indication of the country's otherwise perfectly default status. Nah, surely it is all just speculation.

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk 17th February US Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.





RANsquawk 17th February US Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Who [Bought|Sold] How Many Treasuries In 2009?





Yesterday we first pointed out the rotation at the top of foreign US debt holders, with China selling $34 billion in USTs (shifting to a longer duration exposure by selling Bills and buying Bonds) to a new total of $755 billion, and giving up the top US debt holder position to Japan, which with $769 billion in UST holdings regained the top spot for the first time since August 2008. Overall, total foreign debt holdings in 2009 increased by $538 billion, with two unexpected buyers emerging in the face of Japan and the UK, which combined accounted for 58% (or $314 billion) of all 2009 purchases. We say surprising, because it has been long publicized that both countries have their own internal funding issues to grapple with: Japan an uncontrollable deflation and a demographic shift, which would make JGB's a better buying proposition than chasing micro yield in the US, while the UK is engaged in its own version of Quantitative Easing. With the BOE taking on excess supply one wonders how the UK can spare the dime to purchase our own debt (of which we have plenty more to issue in the future)?

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Spain Prices €5 Billion 4.65% 2025 Bond At 99.831, Midswaps + 0.85





Spain's 15 year €5 billion 4.65% offering has priced at 99.831, as expected 85 bps over midswaps. The issue is rated Aaa/AA+.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Euro "Creator" Robert Mundell: Greece Is Not Biggest Threat To Euro, Italy Is





Nobel-winning Columbia professor Robert Mundell, considered the "father of the euro" provides some biased views on his creation, and how it is impacted by Greece (spoiler alert: this will only make the EMU stronger). To be sure, he sees no risks of Greece spillover into the broader eurozone, and in fact is calling for the adoption of the euro by Britain. Probably not worth holding your breath on that one. What he does highlights is that Greece is not the powderkeg - Italy is. This is inline with Bank of America and others' warning that the biggest concern in the eurozone crisis is indeed the Boot. "I think it would be very difficult to bail Italy out. I think we have to make sure that whatever is being done to Greece, and possibly to Portugal and maybe Ireland has to also save Italy. Italy has got to be worried...Right now I think they should let the euro ever, for the next 10 years, rise above $1.40." We are confidence Bernanke and Shirakawa will miss that particular memo.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

James Montier Is Back, Discussing Ten Lessons Not Learned From The Bad Dream





It appears as if the market declines of 2008 and early 2009 are being treated as nothing more than a bad dream, as if the investment industry has gone right back to business as usual. This extreme brevity of financial memory is breathtaking. Surely, we should attempt to look back and learn something from the mistakes that gave rise to the worst period in markets since the Great Depression. In an effort to engage in exactly this kind of learning experience, I have put together my list of the top ten lessons we seem to have failed to learn. So let’s dive in! - James Montier, GMO

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: February 17





  • Greece loses EU voting power in blow to sovereignty (Telegraph)
  • Goldman Sachs didn't disclose swap, investors "fooled" (Bloomberg)
  • BofE rate setters voted 9-0 to halt QE (Telegraph)
  • Deja vu: Dubai World said to present restructuring plan in March... 2010 or 2999? (Bloomberg)
  • Walgreen to buy Duane Reade for $1 billion (Reuters)
  • UK unemployment jumps to highest since 1987 (Bloomberg)
 

Tyler Durden's picture

Spain €5 Billion 15 Year Notes To Price 85 bps Wide Of Benchmark Swap Rate, 12 bps Premium To Current 15 Year Bonds





The Spanish 15 year €5 year bonds whose auction all of Europe is watching closely, will price today at a 12 basis point premium to where existing 15 year bonds trade. The book has closed with €12 billion worth of orders. The sale was managed by BBVA, Credit Agricole, HSBC, Banco Santander and Soc Gen. Last week Portugal priced a 10 year issue at 20 bps over existing debt, and 140 bps over midswaps. The issue has since tightened by 17 basis points to 123.

Spain currently has an unemployment rate of nearly 20% and saw its GDP contract 0.1% in Q4, declining 3.1% in 2009.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Daily Highlights: 2.17.10





  • Asian stocks, currencies rally on improved earnings, global growth outlook.
  • China cuts US Treasury holdings by most (-4.3%) in decade; Japan buys more debt.
  • Hong Kong Exchange expects more IPOs from overseas to tap China investors.
  • Japan's Service demand fell 0.9% in December, biggest slide in nine months.
  • Oil trades above $77 after advancing as Euro strengthens against Dollar.
  • Treasuries decline on speculation US Housing, Production rose last month.
  • Treasury says new loans by 11 TARP banks rose 13% in December.
  • U.K. unemployment claims jump to highest since 1997.
 

Tyler Durden's picture

RANsquawk 17th February Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.





RANsquawk 17th February Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk 17th February Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.





RANsquawk 17th February Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.

 

Travis's picture

Car Problems? Let's Call it Another Recall





Just when you thought it couldn't get any worse- Toyota is considering yet another recall as it probes Corolla steering problems, amid a myriad or other woes. Oh, and Toyota President, Mr. Toyoda... He's not attending the Congressional hearing to be held in his company's honor on the 24th of the month.

 
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