• GoldCore
    01/13/2016 - 12:23
    John Hathaway, respected authority on the gold market and senior portfolio manager with Tocqueville Asset Management has written an excellent research paper on the fundamentals driving...

Archive - May 3, 2010 - Story

Tyler Durden's picture

Presenting The Most F*#&$d Up Curve In The World





 

If you thought a Fed bailout is ugly, you ain't seen nothing yet: this is what a European bailout looks like. Not much commentary needed. With Europe and the IMF explicitly funding the delta from the smooth inverted curve (it's inverted because the market knows too well the country will default) and with a bulk of Greek debt in the short-dated side of the curve, the implicit immediate loss borne by European and US taxpayers is about 6% on $145 billion of debt or about $10 billion, which investors in the short end are underwater by currently. We are not even accounting what the impicit cost for the broader parallel curve shift as a result of this intervention is, but something tells us it is in the tens of billions too. Yet somehow, we are certain that the ECB and the IMF will spin this as a massive victory for the bulls. We are confident the appropriate talents of CNBC in this regard have already been retained.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

S&P-To-Gold Ratio: On Verge Of 1.00 Breakdown





As the attached chart demonstrates, the S&P may soon take out the 1.00x ratio to gold price per oz. With the IMF facilitated Greek bailout, the euro is now a sideshow and nothing more than a political corpse in the hands of a few million Nordrhein-Westfalen voters next weekend. That a bailout of a country can hinge on whether the already indicated German majority (59% oppose the Greek bailout at last count) can manifest itself in the decisions of the weakest link, should be enough for even the biggest skeptics to bury their dreams of euro viability. And as we have long pointed out, what is the alternative - massively overpriced and overbought stocks, where a jittery market can wipe out 10% in flash, the dollar, which will certainly soon suffer the full wrath of its natural born killer, the Federal Reserve, or industrial commodities, where oil is trading at prices that boggle the mind when considering the record inventories lying around, not to mention that China's rapidly changing liquidity policy may soon take make the lives of copper and other longs a nightmare. We are confident that gold, which over the past two weeks has been a one way ticket higher, will continue to strengthen, and once the 1:1 parity with the S&P is broken, the next resistance level will be in the $1,300's.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Daily Highlights: 5.3.09





  • BP PLC is being hit by massive losses from the spill.
  • CAN Financial's March results: $226M loss last year and $245M gain this year.
  • Continental and United announce a merger.
  • Glencore considering a merger with Xstrata.
  • Goldman is being defended by Buffett.
  • ITT's March net income declined from $184M last year to $146M this year.
  • Sysco's March net income rose from $226M last year to $248M this year.
 

Tyler Durden's picture

RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX 03/05/10





RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX 03/05/10

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 03/05/10





RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 03/05/10

 

Tyler Durden's picture

China Hikes RRR, Faber Sees Chinese Crash In 9-12 Months





The chorus of anti-Chinese sentiment is becoming troubling: after virtually every major hedge fund manager has recently voiced in support of a Chinese bubble pop, with today's most recent statement by Marc Faber just the cherry on top, could Farrell's rule #9 be relevant here and with everyone expecting the endgame, one would end up not occurring? Earlier Marc Faber said in a Bloomberg TV interview that "China’s economy will slow and possibly “crash” within a year as declines in stock and commodity prices signal the nation’s property bubble is set to burst. The market is telling you that something is not quite right. The Chinese economy is going to slow down regardless. It is more likely that we will even have a crash sometime in the next nine to 12 months." Roger's sentiment comes on the heels of the latest Chinese increase in the reserve requirement (RRR) which has had a nasty effect on Asian markets overnight (and, briefly, on US futures as well). Alas, the Chinese action is not enough, as even JP Morgan admits: "PBOC’s 50bp RRR hike underlines two messages on monetary policy: (1) More tightening in China is needed; (2) Pace of action will be moderate. BI should again signal it is in no hurry to hike."

 

Tyler Durden's picture

ECB Will Accept Junk-Rated Greekman Brothers Debt As Collateral In Suspenion To Rating Threshold Program





Did the ECB just learn the last bastion of rating agency insanity, aka Moody's, is about to downgrade Greece? Today Trichet decided to abandon all caution, and has proceeded to officially recognize all Greek toxic garbage as collateral for ECB-backed loans. Looks like the ECB president has been paying careful attention during Bernanke 101 in which his transatlantic colleague has been advocating the collateralization of a sovereign currency with all sorts of gamma decaying substances, for well over a year now. Now Ben is starting to get woefully behind the curve in the devaluation race. In the meantime, using simple math, we wonder: if Greece, which as so many have pointed out is only 2.7% of European GDP, ended up costing 110 billion euros, does that mean that a full blown bailout of Europe will be over $5 trillion? Surely this is a bargain compared to the $20+ trillion that the rescue of the US ended up costing. Looks like a slam dunk relative default pair trade to us.

 
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