Archive - May 2010 - Story
May 20th
Goldman's Bubble Team Scratching Head As Forced To Downgrade AUD Target Of $0.95
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/20/2010 10:11 -0500
It is time for Bloomberg to update its analysis from yesterday on how many billions in dollars Goldman's clients have lost listening to the hedge fund's research call. After earlier apologizing for their EURUSD call, here comes the JBWere guys (the firm's down under subsidiary), saying the time for the downgrade of the AUD is nigh.
German Finance Minister Says Needs Rules For Orderly Insolvency Of EMU States
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/20/2010 09:42 -050010:30 05/20 GERMANY FINMIN: NEED RULES FOR ORDERLY INSOLVENCY OF EMU STATS
10:30 05/20 GERMANY FINMIN: CAN'T HAVE EU AID PACKAGE EACH TIME
What's that? We are to expect more "orderly insolvencies" without EU bailouts? What kind of Keynesian travesty is this? But at least the road is clear for Portugal, Spain and Italy CDS to go points up front shortly.
EURJPY Liquidations Take Pair Below 110, 100 pip Move In Seconds; BOJ Expected To Intervene Imminently
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/20/2010 09:26 -0500
Nobody cares about the euro any longer, but the following chart shows why EUR traders just ran out of money to even prepay their bodybags. The EURJPY just plunged 100 pips in one block!!! This is complete capitulation and the BOJ has no choice but to intervene. Too bad about that GDP miss and record low deflator announced yeterday.
FDIC Still As Bankrupt As Ever, DIF-to-Deposit Ratio At -0.38%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/20/2010 09:21 -0500
The FDIC's quarterly banking profile has been released. Inbetween all the fluff we find that the deposit "insurance" agency has exactly negative $20.7 billion to satisfy any upcoming bank runs and liquidations. Thank god for that ongoing Treasury lifeline. Atatched is a chart of the Deposit Insurance Fund-to-Deposit ratio. Negative is, well, bad. Luckily, depositors decided to get the hell out of deposits in the last quarter, pulling out $29 billion from the not all that Too Big To Fail any longer.
Pan-European Bank Run Is Now On: Capital Flight From UK To Switzerland, As GBPCHF Intervention Strikes Next
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/20/2010 08:49 -0500
Yesterday we disclosed that the reason for numerous SNB interventions in the EURCHF was due to billions in deposits rushing out of Germany and seeking the relative stability of Swiss neutrality. A quick look at the trading pattern of the GBPCHF shows that it is now UK depositors who are panicking and shifting their money to unnamed (not so much anymore) Zurich bank vaults. The result: a 300 pip move in the GBPCHF as the SNB rushes to put out this particular capital flight fire. Too bad it only succeeded for about 12 hours. The run on the bank (to another bank) in Europe is now on.
NYSE Warns Of Massive Volatility Again, Invokes Rule 48
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/20/2010 08:24 -0500
John Taylor: Rushing Toward Smoot-Hawley v.2.0
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/20/2010 08:21 -0500Today, banks are being widely castigated for their stupidity and cupidity. In both the US and in Europe, legal restrictions on leverage, on off-balance sheet vehicles, and on proprietary trading are widely supported in government circles and by the public. Universal banking is probably on its way out in the US. In Europe the rage against those who foresaw the weakness in Greece and protected themselves or profited has fanned the political desire to curb the movement of capital. Protecting weak credits by banning short selling or restricting offshore investors’ access to the markets will drive capital away. If banks can’t protect themselves against risk, they won’t invest at all. Eliminating SIVs and offbalance sheet vehicles may seem smart, but they are the investors in government debt and private bonds. Who will own this debt? Less leverage and smaller banks, plus restricted hedge funds, mean that the global money supply will drop and global GDP will too. Welcome to Smoot-Hawley v.2.0. - John Taylor, FX Concepts
Hmmmmm.
Submitted by Marla Singer on 05/20/2010 08:00 -0500
What does it say that we simply expect things like this ten minutes before EU's open now?
Guest Post: Call Of The Markets VIII
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/20/2010 07:59 -0500Massive firepower and resources are devoted to the activity of evolved trading (scalping). Huge financial institutions called Exchanges cater to this activity so myopically, that they have lost all perspective of the real role of financial markets. And sadly, our regulators have allowed them to do so. In the name of evolution and “adapt or die” mentality, our markets have been hijacked and stripped of its most important role and function. We need to all adjust our thinking, because our economy demands it. We need to adjust our perspective, because our economy demands it. Markets need to be fair, and inspire confidence! That confidence is needed so that those with capital can feel confident in investing. This confidence is unfortunately on the wane. You hear it at parties, and you hear it on the street. Amazingly you hear it from brokerage firm executives (one who yesterday wrote an article suggesting that the source of our markets problems is the market order! Yes… he thinks the solution is to eliminate the market order and tell the world that our “most efficient and liquid markets” can’t handle the 100yr old market order!)
Market Plunge Guaranteed With Critical German Vote Tomorrow; Merkel Warns Of EMU Failure If Bundestag Vote Doesn't Pass
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/20/2010 07:45 -0500Just like two Thursdays ago the market plunged to give Europe a heads up on what will happen if the $1 trillion bail out contemplated that weekend is not passed, so in advance of tomorrow's critical Bundestag vote to ratify the European aid package we will likely see another unprecedented market collapse. Why critical? Dirk Schumacher from Goldman explains.
Initial Claims Confirm Economic Deterioration: +471k, Miss Expectations By 31k, Previous 446k
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/20/2010 07:37 -0500Initial claims come in at 471k, increasing the divergence from consensus which was at 440k. Continuing claims 4,625k vs expectations of 4,610k. Not much to be said: the economy is now openly double dipping in the all important housing and employment sectors. The market, which is now below the 200 DMA will shortly follow.
Goldman's Latest FX Mea Culpa: "What We Have Is Huge Position Liquidation"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/20/2010 07:28 -0500On Tuesday I mentioned that I had turned neutral and cautiously wondered whether the Euro was now a buy on dips rather than a sell on rallies. Not for one moment did I envisage the collapse down to 1.2144 nor amidst the panic did it feel like a buy when we were down there and yesterday I was part of the huge herd that chose to sell into the eur/chf brick wall at 1.4005, only to pay the price later. - Goldman Sachs
High Beta Liquidations Begin: Ambac CDS Goes Vertical, +19,827 bps On The Day
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/20/2010 07:23 -0500
Ambac CDS is quoted at 36,289.9, or up 19,827 bps for the day. Yes, yes we know this should be quoted in points up, but this is looks so much prettier this way. For those who want to see what rolling high beta worthless nameliquidations will look like, check out this chart from CMA: this is soon coming to pretty much every HY/distressed name that enjoyed the most spectacular bear market rally in history.
Daily Highlights: 5.20.2010
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/20/2010 07:14 -0500- Asian stocks fall for fifth day on Europe concern; Commodity shares gain.
- British government plans to partially privatize struggling Royal Mail.
- China officials say won't yield to yuan pressure at U. S. talks.
- China's growth unexpectedly accelerated in the first quarter of 2010: Poll.
- Euro falls to lowest since April 2006 on European debt crisis.
- Fed officials are in no rush to sell mortgage assets, Meeting minutes show.




