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Archive - Mar 9, 2010 - Story

Tyler Durden's picture

ECB Withdraws Massive €295 Billion Of Liquidity In One-Time "Fine-Tuning" Operation





A quick glance at today's ECB open market operations section indicates that even Trichet may be getting a little worried about liquidity gone wild in Europe. Of course, his US counterpart has no such concerns. Earlier today, the European Central Bank announced that it had drained a whopping €295 billion in an unscheduled, one-time liquidity-absorbring, fine-tuning operation. There were 193 bidders supporting the ECB operation. Is liquidity getting a little frothy? "Fine-tuning" liquidity by almost a third of a trillion may seem to indicate so.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

On The One Year Anniversary Of 666





The reality is that as the fluff was written down, reported earnings slumped 90% in the bear market and the S&P 500 dropped 60%. This is why the market bottom occurred a year ago with valuations at stretched levels relative to previous troughs. What changed were the rules of engagement as the Fed blew out its balance sheet in support of the mortgage industry, the government guaranteed the survival of the large banks, the shorting industry was sharply curtailed and the banks were allowed to hide losses again on their illiquid assets via accounting changes that were foisted onto the SEC from Congress in the name of saving the system. And of course, a government deficit that is now running at a record $1.5 trillion, and the spending to get the economy going has been so acute that even if revenues had not gone down with the economic turndown, the budget gap would still far exceed the $1 trillion mark. - David Rosenberg

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Following Up On The Japan Disaster Scenario; Or Can Still We Learn From The Failure Of Keynesianism?






"A few months ago I wrote about an impending government funding crisis in Japan. The pushback was so interesting I thought it worth writing up. None of you really disputed the long-term problems facing Japan but, for various reasons – which I’ll look at below – very few of you thought it was worth worrying about just now. Meanwhile, the biggest JGB holder on the planet – the Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF) – which has already admitted it’s no longer able to roll maturing bonds, has announced that it will open credit lines so it doesn’t have to sell them to fund its obligations. With ¥213 trillion of JGBs to roll this year, or around 45% of GDP (see chart below), maybe I’m not the only one scared stiff after all!" Dylan Grice, SocGen

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Boeckh On The Return Of The Bond Vigilantes





The bond vigilantes are back in town as indicated by the blowout earlier in the month in sovereign credit spreads of the PIGS (Portugal, Ireland, Greece and Spain), and widening of corporate spreads over Treasuries. It was precipitated by Greece’s catastrophically high fiscal deficit (13% of GDP), debt (120% of GDP) and current account deficit (10% of GDP), numbers that imply default is likely. Bond investors have reassessed risk in a number of countries whose fiscal position is tracking Greece’s. - Boeckh Investment Letter

 

Tyler Durden's picture

ECB Warns Germany's First Quarter Growth May Be Negative





The most probable replacement to Trichet, Axel Weber who is a member of ECB's governing council said earlier on Bloomberg TV that extend and pretend is now shifting to Europe warning that Germany's Q1 growth could be negative, of course qualifying the statement that everything past this quarter will be stronger. Weber said that "a very weak first quarter means that the second and third quarters will be stronger." Even so he said there was still no reason to revise the expectation of German growth in 2010 to just over 1.5%. German growth in 2010 to just over 1.5%. We fail to see how with austerity measures sweeping across traditional German import partners, particularly within the PIIGS, there is any hope that the German economy will regain an upward trajectory, although by Q2 and Q3 when various additional stimulus measures will have to be announced globally, and the ECB will likely finally commit to QE, he may very well be right. As more and more of the world is becoming like China in goalseeked GDP growth virtually all economic indicators are starting to lose any predictive value, especially on an adjusted "stimulus-free" basis.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: March 9





  • Merkel urges ‘quick’ regulation as Greece takes plea to U.S. (Bloomberg)
  • Eaton Vance dumps dirt bonds as Florida land districts default (Bloomberg)
  • Collapse of the American Empire: swift, silent, certain (MarketWatch)
  • Gold "unlikely" to be main China reserve investment (Bloomberg)
  • M&A target IRRs lowered, what does it say for CapEx IRRs: Exxon lowers bar, buys assets previously deemed unattractive (Bloomberg)
  • China committed to US debt, wary on gold (Reuters)
 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk 9th March US Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.





RANsquawk 9th March US Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Daily Highlights: 3.9.10





  • Bank of England sees 'grounds for optimism' on Britain's recovery as risks diminish.
  • China's interest-rate gap driving pressure for Yuan gains, regulator says.
  • German industrial output rises 0.6% in Jan , despite 14.3% fall in construction activity.
  • Gold is “unlikely” to be China’s primary investment to diversify its reserve hldgs: regulator.
  • Taiwan's February exports rose 32.6%, suggesting strong economic growth.
  • Yen strengthens as exporters bring home profits; most Asian stocks slide.
 

Tyler Durden's picture

RANsquawk 9th March Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.





RANsquawk 9th March Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk 9th March Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.





RANsquawk 9th March Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.

 
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