Archive - May 2010 - Story
May 3rd
Volume: Back To Abysmal
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2010 16:42 -0500
Volume today was a fraction of Friday's, which is probably why the numerous breakout attempts (at least three) over 1,200 in ES failed. The distribution on Friday pushed out many of the momo hands at lower levels, so few were willing to jump right back in, even with the Primary Dealers gunning for new post 1,200 highs, and the algos frontrunning every large block order with reckless abandon. Since many of the algos are controlled by the PDs, champagne was served all around at 4:15pm. In the meantime, the US treasury is facing another imminent debt ceiling increase most likely at about the time of the mid-terms, as we have been predicting since December of 2009. Those massive repo-based capital gains don't come cheap (to the taxpayers).
RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 03/05/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 05/03/2010 15:59 -0500RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 03/05/10
Goldman Subpoeaned Over Galleon-Related Trading Records
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2010 15:53 -0500As part of today's surprise disclosure of Goldman's outstanding lawsuits (oh, so now it's material), we find that the firm is a party to a subpoena request for potential involvement in the Galleon massive insider trading case. While the existence of the subpoena is surprising, it does not seem to implicate Goldman in any actual wrongdoing. At least not yet. Should the full trade ticket trail indicate that Goldman was executing trades on behalf of Quad Capital and Incremental Capital trader Michael Kimelman, whom we discussed previously, and who is the object of the investigation, it would not be difficult to compare trades executed in flow on behalf of Kimelman and compare these with trades done by Goldman's prop trading desk. Of course, if Goldman prop suddenly decides to take the same side of the trade as Kimelman did at or around the same time, then Lloyd may need to out his PR campaign in turbo boost mode. We hope the presiding Judge on the case Richard Sullivan is smart enough to have requested all of the firm's trading records surrounding the times and dates of any trade potentially executed with Kimelman.
Treasury Refunding Upside "Surprise", Q2 Borrowing Higher Than Previous Estimate By $71 Billion, Sees September Debt Of $13.6 Trillion
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2010 15:23 -0500Today the Treasury issued its quarterly Treasury Refunding statement in which it announced that previous estimate for Q2 borrowing were woefully below expectations. We are confident none of our readers are "surprised" by this development, although seeing how it is an "upside" surprise it will be further evidence of the benevolent decoupling of the US economy from the world. In a nutshell here is what Tim Geithner's payday lending operation announced: "During the April – June 2010 quarter, Treasury expects to issue $340 billion in net marketable debt, assuming an end-of-June cash balance of $280 billion, which includes $200 billion for the Supplementary Financing Program (SFP). The borrowing estimate is $71 billion higher than announced in February 2010. The increase in borrowing is primarily related to cash balance adjustments associated with the recent restoration of the SFP to $200 billion. During the July – September 2010 quarter, Treasury expects to issue $376 billion in net marketable debt, assuming an end-of-September cash balance of $270 billion, which includes $200 billion for the SFP." In other words, the Treasury itself, which chronically underestimates its funding needs by about 20%, sees $716 billion in net funding needs in 6 months. Zero Hedge is prepared to make a market (and no we won't disclose to you that you are idiots if you sell protection on this bet either) on this number actually being north of $850 billion. In April, the Treasury issued a net of $176 billion in total debt (includes Trust Funds and marketable debt), to end the month at $12,892,729,000,000. The final Bill redemption balance in April was a paltry $596 billion, or $675 including Bonds. Let us repeat: in April the US Treasury had to roll over two thirds of a trillion in debt. Assuming the treasury is correct, the Treasury balance will be $13.23 trillion on June 30, and $13.6 trillion on September 30.
Euro Tanks on Bailout, Hedge Funds Cheer and Buy REITs, Retailers, et al
Submitted by RobotTrader on 05/03/2010 15:15 -0500How many times can they run the same play over and over? The Eurozone dive bombs, and investors immediately start buying REITs, retailers, and other assorted garbage. Maniacal trading has overtaken the stock exchanges as the 20-yr. old motion chasers are getting frantically horsewhipped by the FemBot portfolio managers to "buy whatever is going up, regardless of fundamentals".
Savings Rate Declines By 10% As Spending Once Again Outstrips Income, Which In Turn Is 70% Transfer Payments
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2010 13:08 -0500Even with consumers defaulting "strategically" on their mortgages left and right (with planned defaults accounting for 31% of foreclosures in Q1), and thus not having to incur almost any housing-related expenses (courtesy of the Treserve for making it all too obvious that nobody is expected to pay anything they owe ever again), the savings rate still declined by 10% in March, from over 3% to 2.7% of Disposable Income, as Personal Spending (+0.6%) outstripped Personal Incomes (+0.3%), and of this 0.3% increase, 70% was made up of a pick up in transfer payments! At this point we are fairly certain that US consumers are finally mimicking the administration and the financial sector in not caring if they ever get to pay another bill. That, and the government is directly funding the broader population's latest Apple product fix. It sure isn't due to increasing wages, for the simple reason that wages have not increased in years. And whereas in other nations the savings rate is materially higher due to the lack of such "we'll save it for you" entities as Social Security and Medicare, we now know that SSN is virtually bankrupt as we speak, with "cash out" now greater than "cash in." Yet instead of saving for their retirement, Americans are buying, buying, buying. One would think that based on this data real unemployment was lower than 16.9%. It isn't. The government's and the financial sector's methadone clinic has now moved to the suburbs. That this is yet another stimulus high that will ultimately fizzle, because that's what all one-time stimulus programs do by definition: they end, is clear. It is also now clear that the government has no idea what to do when the trickle down benefits from the drunken spending orgy do in fact end.
Robert Gates Escalates Iran Tensions, As US Delegates Walk Out On Ahmedinejad Speech At UN
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2010 12:32 -0500Just as the White House released a brief note saying the US delegation has walked out on Ahmedinejad's speech at the UN, so Robert Gates was quoted by Reuters saying that "Iran is taking steps to challenge U.S. naval power in the Middle East." The defense secretary added: "Iran is combining ballistic and cruise missiles, anti-ship missiles, mines, and swarming speedboats in order to challenge our naval power in that region." What about weapons of mass destruction? Oh wait... Either way, the only thing from keeping liquidity overflow from taking the Dow to 36,000 is that risk that Oil would hit $1,000/bbl first. And geopolitical events are just what is preventing the JPMs of the world from using the same harsh tactics as they do with PMs. The last thing this administration needs is a middle-east war which would send a gallon of gas to $5, the stock market tumbling, and the clotheless Ponzi economy exposed, as even without paying one's mortgage, if the price of a refill doubles, there are only so many iPads one can buy.
Is Goldman's Flat Curve Indicative Of Aggressive Countperaty Risk Hedging?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2010 11:52 -0500
Looking at the market one would think that Bernanke just announced an imminent death warrant would be issued to anyone who dares to sell. Yet not all is apparently good underneath the surface. The Goldman CDS curve is as flat as they come - if it was any flatter, it would be inverted. Which of course would mean that Goldman would qualify for IMF assistance. Yet rumors are rampant: some believe that the reason for the underperformance in the short end of CDS over bonds, is a rapid accumulation of short-dated (and thus cheaper) counterparty risk. Is the market once again mimicking the Paulson 2006 financials trade and hedging against a Goldman failure? Possible. We certainly give this rumor more credence than the other one floating out there, that Hank Paulson is coming back as CEO. That would only be possible if John Corzine and Robert Rubin were to all make a repeat appearance at the mothership.
Decoupling Is The New Well-Forgotten Victory For The Bulls
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2010 11:41 -0500
Institutional memory is short. On Friday the plunging EURUSD was the trigger to kill the market. Today it's the other way around. Despite, as Reuters reports, new concerns about the Greek bailout proceeding, causing the EURUSD to drop from 1.33 to below 1.32, the low volume market is now in a total decoupling induced trance: the same lunacy that "explained" why the Baltic Dry was fairly valued in the stratosphere in early 2008. And volume is of course low, which means it is time to crank out the carry trade. The decoupling from Europe (incidentally the biggest export partner to the US and the biggest import partner to China, but who cares, we all live in liquidity bubbles now) is now complete. The only trade that matters is shorting Japan to buy US lack of risk. Recall that Bernanke issued a directive that nobody can ever fail again. Which in turn explains the outperformance of the financials, because last time we checked the justice department had not withdrawn its case against Goldman. Better get used to it - day trading is now characterized by a market that is now either slow 1% melt up on no volume, or a sudden a and dramatic 1% self off on all volume. And inbetween, the algos make money trading the high rebate bankrupt stocks.
RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 03/05/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 05/03/2010 11:27 -0500RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 03/05/10
Bove On Goldman: Just A Little Less Credible Than Buffett On Gold
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2010 08:19 -0500The man who went long Lehman days before its bankruptcy, again reminds the world of his presence, and for some reason we find his latest update on Goldman (Buy, $200 PT), titled Andrew Mellon and Goldman Sachs, notable enough to bring attention to it. For that we apologize. In other much more important news, in the 15 seconds in which Buffett wasn't talking his book, he found enough time for one insightful observation: "All currencies are likely to lose purchasing power." Wish we could say Bove had anything insightful to say: his punchline "It appears that President Obama needs a symbol of financial evil that must be expunged from the system. That symbol is Goldman Sachs." leaves a bit to be desired. Then again, we are shocked that Bove's recommendations have any "relevance power" remaining at this point.
Market-Neutral Wipe Out, Likely Next On The Bail Out Bandwagon As Liquidity Disappears Again
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2010 07:51 -0500
The Highbridge HSKAX index just suffered its biggest drop since March 2009. Market Neutral players are getting carted out feet first as liquidity is now totally gone and 100k SPY blocks move the market. Nobody but the upward biased and risk-free primary dealers want to participate in this market. MNs are deleveraging massively as the index hits lows not seen since mid-2008.
Presenting The Most F*#&$d Up Curve In The World
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2010 07:42 -0500

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.
S&P-To-Gold Ratio: On Verge Of 1.00 Breakdown
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2010 07:27 -0500
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.
Daily Highlights: 5.3.09
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2010 07:14 -0500- 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.




