Archive - Jun 2010 - Story
June 28th
RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 28/06/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 06/28/2010 15:40 -0500RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 28/06/10
NY Fed Finds No Wide-Ranging Risk To Financial System From BP Exposure, Which Likely Means It Is Panic Time
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/28/2010 15:32 -0500A Reuters source has reported that the New York Fed has looked into BP counterparty exposure and "gave banks' exposure to BP a passing grade," Of course, since this is coming from the Fed, whose tremendous track-record of predicting catastrophes of all shapes and sizes, such as subprime, the credit bubble, the dot com bubble, the August 2007 quant crash, and the 5/6 flash crash, and many others, is immaculate, this almost certainly means it is now time to panic. We are confident that the FRBNY in fact has discovered just the opposite. Why else would they be looking at this issue if they did not have credible concerns of a domino effect on a possible BP bankruptcy.
Volume Abysmal As Nobody Left Trading
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/28/2010 15:14 -0500
The intraday accumulation volume difference in the SPY is 146 million compared to an average of 220 million by EOD: a solid 33% below baseline. Today is the lowest volume day since April 26, when the market was near 2010 highs. If one assumes (simplistically) that 70% of normal daily volume is HFT and computer based, human traders have added -3% to today's trading volume. Everyone is now out watching football. Yet even with this abysmal volume, the market still was unable to stage a melt up: are even the algos fans of the Cariocas?
Bulgaria CDS Cheap As National Bank Reports Tripling In Bad And Restructured Loans
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/28/2010 14:55 -0500Several weeks ago we urged readers to consider CDS of Greek neighbors Bulgaria and Romania. Even as spreads of the two countries have widened materially over the last 10 days, especially following last week's news in which a Romanian court found pension cuts critical for IMF loan procurement unconstitutional, there appears to be much more pain to come. In a report from Moody's, the rating agency confirms our worries, in a piece titled "Continued deterioration of loan quality pressures Bulgarian banks." In the report, analyst Elena Panayiotou notes: "Last Wednesday, the Bulgarian National Bank released figures for problem loans at Bulgarian banks, showing a tripling in the percentage of bad and restructured loans to 11.4% of total loans at the end of May 2010, compared with 3.66% a year earlier and 10.7% in April. This is credit negative for Bulgarian banks, as the recent increase in problem loans will further impact the banks’ net profitability, given the requirements to set aside higher provisions for such loans." Since the Bulgarian currency is pegged to the Euro courtesy of the IMF's currency board, the country is effectively as powerless to inflate its way out of troubled bank balance sheets as its eurozone members. With Bulgarian CDS at 360, and with the country about to experience the double whammy of the collapsing Greek economy, and deteriorating asset value, we firmly believe a fair target this spread is at least half of where Greek 5 Year protection trades.
Drilling Moratorium Overturn Case Gets Weaker On Revelation Judge Feldman Sold Exxon Shares Hours Before Ruling
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/28/2010 13:55 -0500The drilling lobby's case to overturn the Obama moratorium on deepwater drilling just got materially weaker, as it has been revealed that Judge Martin Feldman, who had previously overturned Ken Salazar's ban calling it "capricious", sold shares of Exxon stock hours before he issued his ruling. Even though the disposed stock value is not too material, at under $15,000, and it is unclear whether the judge made a profit on the transaction, it will be more difficult for the lobby to defend their decision before the Fifth Circuit where the Obama administration has appealed Judge Feldman's ruling. Furthermore, the question of why Feldman did not recuse himself from the case will now become quite prominent. Unlike Hank Paulson, we doubt he got an ethics waiver from the US Treasury.
Curve Flattening Pain Back To May Levels
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/28/2010 13:14 -0500
As we have long been warning, the most popular trade in rates over the past year, and the one that Morgan Stanley has gotten virtually all of their clients into, whether outright or through CMS and other contraptions, has been the bullish steepener trade. Well, things have gotten bearish and very flat in a hurry - alas, this trade has now collapsed and is now back to September 2009 levels. When one considers the gobs of leverage associated with this unwind, primarily driven by the 10 Year about to have a 2 handle as a deflationary panic suddenly grips the land, and as vigilantes make it impossible for the Fed not to push the QE 2.0 button, and the completely senseless action in the market suddenly makes a little more sense. In the meantime credit funds are losing tens of billions, and are forced to seek liquidation of other positions. In fact, one very prominent hedge fund is rumored to be selling off parts of its gold exposure to mitigate collateral requirements as it is yet again incorrectly positioned in the treasury curve.
RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 28/06/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 06/28/2010 12:32 -0500RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 28/06/10
Goldman Takes Axe To Bank Earnings On FinReg, Sees Higher Mortgage Rates Coming
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/28/2010 12:16 -0500Fin Reg has now passed, and Goldman's Richard Ramsden is not happy: "Based on these changes, we now forecast that the large banks could see a 13% hit to normalized earnings while the regional banks could see a 5% reduction in normalized earnings. Ultimately, we believe that some of the increased regulatory and legal burdens will be passed on to customers either in the form of annual fees or higher spreads on lending. As an example, conforming mortgage rates are currently 90bps above MBS yields vs. a historical average of 20bps. This implies that banks are not passing on the full benefit of low rates and the Fed MBS purchase program because on the other side they are concerned about losses such as GSE repurchase requests. Hence, we believe the impact that we have estimated on normalized earnings could prove to be too high over time." Good work Congress - mortgage rates are about to go up. How's that whole shooting yourself in the foot thing working out so far?
G20: The Death Of Cooperation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/28/2010 11:57 -0500As I've mentioned in the past, the Pittsburgh's G20 at the end of 2008 filled me with real hope that global policy makers were willing and prepared to tackle the painful issues that lay at the root of the global crisis. I'm not talking about morally corrupt bankers or delinquent US home owners but rather the massive capital imbalances created by individual nations and their excess spending or saving. After all, if it weren't for the current account surplus countries and their cash, there wouldn't have been the cash to finance the consumption binge in the US, UK etc. Now its possible that even with aggressive policy steps, it might have been impossible for politicians to curb the squirrel-like savings habits of the German's or the gargantuan appetite of US consumers. However, it's absolutely certain that if policy makers shirk this responsibility in the face of domestic pressures, we are just heading towards the next crisis as clearly as night follows day.
- Thermidor
Second Gold Price Intervention In An Hour
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/28/2010 11:26 -0500
There is smoke rising from the windows of the LBMA as the 270 Park boys have rarely been so busy creating gold short contracts out of thin air and selling them to all willing manipulators. Gold now down $22 after second major leg down on no news, and in fact as ML reiterates its $1,500 PT for gold by the end of 2011. In the meantime, the CHF is rising. The paper cartel is doing all it can to present the Swissie as the last ditch reserve currency. For now, it is succeeding. And as the SNB's balance sheet is pristine, at least compared to that of the US, UK and the ECB, and further considering that the only major asset class is accumulated EURs from all that intervention (now over), think what will happen to the CHF when the SNB decides to offload its €200 billion in EURs...
Stocks Decouple From FX As Gold Suppression Provides Risk Respite
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/28/2010 11:17 -0500
Stocks have once again decoupled from FX, with the now defunct EURJPY being ignored and even the relevant AUDJPY decoupling. The only relevant signal today seems to be the temporarily successful gold price supression by the Wall Street paper gold dumping brigade. Eithe way selling overvalued stocks and hedging with cheap FX pairs is the right trade here. Alternatively one could buy the EURJPY and sell the AUDJPY.
Thunder Road Report: Moving Closer To A "War Footing" On Iran Concerns - Buying Oils
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/28/2010 10:58 -0500Paul Mylchreest periodic report on all that is important is, as usual, a must read. In this issue:
- Buying Oils and Rare Earths
- Gold and the Euro - rumblings of economic discontent
- Feedback from the secretive Bilderberg & Trilateral Commission
meetings - Why we shouldn’t be surprised that Obama has failed to live up to all
the hope - Arch Crawford’s warning of a rare planetary alignment
- Decoding Stanley Kubrick’s Eyes Wide Shut
Market Got You Down? Don't Worry, JPMorgan And The LBMA Are Here To Punish Gold And Rip Stocks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/28/2010 10:09 -0500
Gold at all time record highs? Goldman Sachs sending bankers to pitch a Radioschack LBO to gold? Can't have that - here comes the royal PM beatdown courtesy of Jamie Dimon's completely unflagrant gold plunge enforcement goons. Also, let's not forget - let's *not* forget, Dude - that keeping gold, a precious metal, for uh, domestic, you know, within the city - that (soon) aint (gonna be) legal either.
Supreme Court Finds Audit Board Violates Constitution, Puts SarbOx In Question
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/28/2010 09:55 -0500Just headlines: "the audit board violates constitution, supreme court finds." As Reuters explains: "At stake in the case is how corporate America is audited and a key provision of the Sarbanes-Oxley corporate reform law adopted in 2002 in response to the Enron and WorldCom accounting scandals. If the Supreme Court strikes down the board, the ruling will put pressure on Congress to revisit the law, opening it up for potential changes in the reporting duties of companies." Then again, who even pretends we have remotely credible filings anymore? With FASB indefinitely locked in the basement and companies allowed to report their numbers on a mark-to-unicorn basis, it is all lies anyway.
Rick Santelli Implies Liesman Is A Communist, Almost Makes CNBC Head Economist Cry In Latest CNBC Pay-Per-View Event
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/28/2010 09:28 -0500
Yet another smackdown by the inimitable Rick Santelli of all that is fiat, and its henchmen. "Go read some Austrian economist instead of the funny pages." Santelli tells Liesman, to which the response is "I am ready to talk about Fred Hayek, John Hayek, and Selma Hayek." Followed promptly by the Santelli coup du jour: "Go back to Russia where you understand the state and the citizen."



