Archive - Jun 1, 2010 - Story
Morning Gold Fix: June 1, 2010
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/01/2010 07:42 -0500
On Monday, the ECB made a statement that was not shocking to us, but apparently was relevant to the 3 or so people left with long positions in the Euro and the E-zone banks. Reuters reported, "The European Central Bank warned on Monday that euro zone banks faced up to 195 billion Euros in a "second wave" of potential loan losses over the next 18 months due to the financial crisis, and said it had increased purchases of euro zone government bonds." The result of that statement and it implications left the Euro down 1.3 % as of this writing, with equities down across the board, and the barbaric relic Gold up 10 dollars.
Daily Highlights: 6.1.10
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/01/2010 07:36 -0500- Asian stocks fall on Japan political concern, China growth.
- China's manufacturing expands at slower pace as economic growth moderates.
- China supercomputer named second-fastest in global list.
- ECB expects additional $239.26B in write-downs by European banks.
- ECB states rating firms aggravates crisis.
- Euro-zone unemployment tops 10% in April.
- Euro moved lower against USD, Yen, on German Pres. Köhler's unexpected resignation.
European Bank Willingness To Offload Liquidity Plunges
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/01/2010 07:30 -0500As we reported yesterday, the ECB completed a €35 billion one-week liquidity absorbing Term Deposit tender: the amount was set to match the volume of govvie bonds purchased in the prior week, and is the third sequential and growing liquidity reduction exercise by the ECB (following €16.5 billion and €26.5 billion). Digging into the numbers however reveals a troubling trend. While the 68 total bidders in the latest tender round submitted a safe number of bids to take down the entire offered amount, or €73.6 billion, the bid to cover was only 2.1x, a far cry from 3.25x in prior week's tender, and the 10x Bid To Cover in the first liquidity withdrawing exercise. It appears European banks are rapidly losing their interest to trade off liquidity in exchange for a one week Fixed-Term loan. The marginal allotment rate for today's operation ended up at 0.28%, with a max set at 1.00%. As the ECB is likely buying increasing amounts of government debt, we anticipate next week's Fixed-Term tender to be in the €40+ range, and the bid to cover to have a 1 handle, if it is covered at all. Once again the ECB shoots itself in the foot by telegraphing on the liquidity absorbing side, that things within European banks are going from bad to worse. And the fact that the FTDs can be used as collateral in ECB refi operations apparently is not going to help one bit.
S&P Places Caja Madrid, Spain's Fourth Largest Banking Group, On CreditWatch Negative
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/01/2010 07:13 -0500Things were so much simpler when contagion was "contained" to just Greece..."The CreditWatch placement reflects the possibility that we could downgrade Caja Madrid, based on our view that its financial profile will likely continue to weaken in 2010 and 2011. Depending on the degree of deterioration, Caja Madrid's creditworthiness could cease to be consistent with our 'A/A-1' ratings on the savings bank. In particular, we believe that Caja Madrid's operating profitability will likely come under heavy strain during the remainder of this year and 2011. This is because the repricing of the full loan book to the prevailing low interest rates will reduce Caja Madrid's earnings substantially, while at the same time, in our view, its loan loss provisions will remain elevated. In our view, the modest net operating profits that Caja Madrid will likely report might leave it with little room to maneuver if unexpected events arise. Furthermore, we think that by the end of 2011 Caja Madrid will probably have exhausted all its existing loan loss reserve cushions to cover the credit losses in its loan book. Spain's fourth-largest banking group, Caja Madrid had total assets of €191 billion on March 30, 2010." Standard and Poors
Fat Fingered Flash Crash, Japan Edition: Nikkei Plunge Blamed On Erroneous Sell Orders, As Panic Selling Just Does Not Exist
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/01/2010 07:08 -0500The latest example of selling not being actually "selling" comes courtesy of a Deutsche Bank oven mitt. Bloomberg reports that "Deutsche Bank AG sent a spate of erroneous sell orders for Japan’s Nikkei 225 Stock Average futures contracts because of a system malfunction. The erroneous orders sent stocks on the Nikkei 225 into a brief plunge seconds after the market opened at 9 a.m. The average sank as much as 1.1 percent to 9,658.44 before rebounding to about 9,743. The gauge was at 9,691.08 as of 1:54 p.m. in Tokyo." We are trying to remember when the last time that a "fat finger" was responsible for panic buying. But when every single HFT algo is programmed to only buy on no volume, the possibility of that happening is slim to none.
Sovereign Risk Back With Vengeance As Italy CDS Hits New Record At 250 bps
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/01/2010 07:00 -0500MarkIt reports Italian CDS has exploded by 50bps, from 200 on Monday to 250bps, a new record. The weakness is spreading globally now. A slightly delayed CMA report indicates that the biggest CDS movers are all sovereigns, and led by Korea and other Asian names. In the meantime eurodollar futures are pushing ever higher, even as Libor is still testing the temporary breaks at 0.53%. All fine and dandy, until you look at Euribor, where things are getting surreal. We will discuss this shortly.
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 01/06/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 06/01/2010 06:14 -0500RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 01/06/10
Zero Hedge Video Analysis Reveals Paintball Guns, Secret Turkish Weapon
Submitted by Marla Singer on 06/01/2010 00:10 -0500
Tellingly, a number of commentators on the recent "Gaza Flotilla" kerfuffle, including some right here on Zero Hedge, appear to have fallen prey to the seductive wiles of the Palestinian (and now Turkish) propaganda ministry, painting the Israeli Defense Forces as a "go in guns blazing" murder squad victimizing a few, poor, international protesters on an innocent blockade runner on a diplomatic mission that absolutely, positively did not intercept those transmissions. True, it seemed quite unlikely that the IDF would board a blockade runner ("Darth Vader. Only you could be so bold.") with just paintball guns, but exclusive Zero Hedge analysis can now reveal that not only did IDF forces board the Mavi Marmara with sidearms holstered and only paint ball guns as their primary weapons, but, in what must be the most significant Israeli intelligence failure in decades, they were unwittingly lured into facing a historic and potent enemy they could not hope to vanquish with colored ink.
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