Archive - Jul 2010 - Story
July 14th
Guest Post: Lies Divide, Truth Unites
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/14/2010 14:55 -0500The good news in America today is that many of lies from our leaders and media no longer seem to be working. Four out of five people view the current proposed financial reform as ineffectual. Many in Congress who voted for socialism for the rich now look like they will be voted out for continuing those giveaways. Now the only way those Banksters can survive is to pretend that their corporate communism is working even in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary. Most recently, they decided that instead of taxing complicit financial institutions the cost of their "Financial Reform-In-Name-Only", they will instead use what I call the Big Tarp Lie to pander for the vote of Senator Scott Brown and others. The mainstream media rarely fights back against this lie, either by an inability to understand, a desire to protect their access to these same Politicians and Bankers or an unwillingness to go up against the very same financial institutions that are often the only thing between them and the unemployment line. However, we the people have to fight back against these lies - and thankfully we own the truth.
Barlcays Cuts Q2 GDP Estimate By A Third From 4.5% To 3.0%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/14/2010 14:29 -0500Yes, they really did have it at 4.5% before. These are precisely the deranged groupthink herd mentality and permabullish prognostications that only economic Ph.D.s can come up with. From the downgrade: "Incorporating today’s weaker- than-expected news on business inventories and retail sales, we have cut our Q2 GDP forecast to 3.0%, below our previous tracking estimate of 3.5% and our official 4.5% forecast. Business inventories rose 0.1% in May, below our (0.3%) and the consensus (0.2%) forecast, and this suggests that inventory accumulation is unlikely to make as big a positive contribution to Q2 GDP as we previously projected. Meanwhile, as discussed below, although core retail sales rose 0.2% in June, downward revisions to April and May point to private consumption growth of about 2.5% in Q2 as a whole, compared to our previous forecast of 3.5%. Finally, May’s trade data suggest the trade deficit widened further in Q2, implying more of a drag on GDP growth than we had previously expected." Look for many more red and discredited faces as the economist lemmings gradually realize that Rosenberg's prediction of negative GDP in 2011 is proven right.
Will Sprott's Brand New Physical Silver Trust Become JPMorgan's Biggest Nightmare?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/14/2010 14:14 -0500Following hot on the heels of his blockbuster physical gold ETF, which at times has been trading at a premium as high as 30% over NAV, indicating the willingness of investors to pay over fair value just to know that their asset claims wouldn't be diluted to nothingness on a moment's notice (here's looking at you GLD), the Canadian asset manager is launching a comparable physical ETF, this time investing with silver: the Sprott Physical Silver Trust. This is not looking good for the LBMA and JPM - since the silver market is allegedly even tighter than gold, yet just as manipulated by JPM and the LBMA (as evidenced by our earlier post on intraday gold prices) and locating physical can be far more problematic, the elimination of a few thousands tonnes of the precious metal out of circulation is sure to create quite a few sleepless nights for Jamie Dimon's PM manipulation club, who may suddenly find itself with a massive short position covered by even less actual deliverable, bringing the much anticipated monumental short squeeze one day closer. For all those wondering just how the silver market is manipulated and why control over the precious metal is so critical, we refer to a previous post: A Deep Insider's Walkthru To Silver Market Manipulation.
FOMC Minutes: Fed Sees No Need For Additional "Policy Accomodation", 5 To 6 Years Of Economic Weakness
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/14/2010 13:14 -0500Some very negative observations from the Fed in the latest FOMC minutes including views on unemployment deterioration, the economic outlook, the duration of the depression, and lastly, on QE.
Shadowstats' John Williams Exposes The Media's Propaganda Spin, Or Why Watching CNBC Can Be Hazardous To Your Wealth
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/14/2010 12:58 -0500In his latest letter to subscribers, Shadowstats' John Williams dissects recent economic data, and after providing yet more evidence that after the recent period of "bottom-bouncing at a low-level plateau of business activity" the economy has once again entered a double dip. Overall, it has cost the US taxpayers several trillion in debt (which will never be repaid), and a major hit to the value of the paper in their wallets, just to play the game of extend and pretend for a just under 18 months. The positive effects of the sugar high are now gone, leaving just the negative, one of which is the propaganda spin engulfing the entire legacy media complex whose survival depends on the ongoing perpetuation of the Ponzi lie that all is well. And courtesy of Mr. Williams we have prima facie evidence of precisely why formerly reputable channels such as CNBC are in the process destroying their credibility and causing an exodus of viewers, with the few remaining viewers remaining primarily for the opportunity to heckle the openly lying talking heads. To wit from Shadowstats: "Let me recount two personal experiences. Back in late-1989, I contended that the U.S. economy was in or headed into a deep recession. CNBC had me in to discuss my views along with a senior economist for a large New York bank, who was looking for continued economic growth. Before the show, the bank economist and I shared our views in the Green Room. I outlined my case for a major recession, and, to my shock, his response was, "I think that pretty much is the consensus." We got on the air, I gave my recession pitch, and he proclaimed a booming economy for the year ahead. He was a good economist and knew what was happening, but he had to put out the story mandated by his employer, or he would not have had a job. More recently, following an interview on a major cable news network (not CNBC), I was advised off-air by the producer that they were operating under a corporate mandate to give the economic news a positive spin, irrespective of how bad it was." And that is how the free media operates in this now doomed country, programmed from above to lie to its viewers.
$13 Billion 30 Year Auction Closes Strongly At 4.08%, 2.89 Bid To Cover, As Investors Shun Inflation Threat
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/14/2010 12:19 -0500
The last coupon auction for the week was a success, pricing at 4.08%, the lowest yield since October 2009 when the auction priced at just 4.009%. Bid to cover was also the strongest in many months, matching the March interest and lower then just the September 2009 record of 2.92. Primary Dealers took down 46.4%, higher than the past 3 auctions but in line with the long-term average. Surprisingly Indirect bidders showed the greatest appetite for the 30 year part of the curve taking down 37.4%, the highest since the 40.7% in January. Direct Bidders continue declining, and at a 16.1% take down, was the lowest allocation since January's 4.9%. Based on this very strong auction, investors seem to put far more faith in a deflation than inflation scenario.
Todd Harrison Muses On The Rise of the East and the Downgrade of the West
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/14/2010 11:28 -0500Earnings season has arrived and the eyes of the world are on corporate America as they share their fare on the state of affairs. After a tenuous second quarter stretch -- one that could have been entirely worse given the sovereign situation -- the market slapped on a brave face for reporting season, rallying 7% since the third quarter began and inching within a kitten’s whisker of the flat line. As analysts sharpen their #2’s and investors wait with bated breath, the other side of the world stirred this week when China’s leading credit agency stripped America, Britain, Germany, and France of their AAA ratings, accusing Anglo-Saxon competitors of ideological bias in favor of the west, according to the Telegraph UK. So what, you say? Could this be a one-off rant? Au contraire Mon frére, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, chief of the IMF, validated the view by offering, “Asia’s time has come.” - Todd Harrison
Another Perfectly Abnormal Day In The Life Of Gold Manipulation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/14/2010 11:11 -0500
One can almost smell the LBMA panic at the highs of the day. The resultant paper gold assault is a sight to behold. Either that, or HFTs have decided to extend the Hurst Exponent to 100 as yet another market gets "fractalized."
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 14/07/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 07/14/2010 11:00 -0500RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 14/07/10
RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 14/07/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 07/14/2010 10:51 -0500RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 14/07/10
Volume Dies, Market Flies
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/14/2010 10:44 -0500
Looking at broad market volume during most recent Central Bank facilitated ramp, did someone just send out a memo for everyone to stop trading as JPM's buying wave takes everything higher on no volume? Yet with volume non-existant, VWAP has barely moved from the lows as not even VWAP reversion algos work in this market.
Rumor JPM Just Spiked European Equities And Talk Of Coordinated Currency Ramp
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/14/2010 10:28 -0500RanSquawk notes market talk that JPM is behind the latest uptick in EU equities, and reports talk of a EUR currency buying program in place ahead of cash close. As everyone knows JPM is merely the proxy for the FRBNY. So once again, it is not surprising that global central banks refuse to permit stocks to even consider having a downtick on a day that was supposed to be a blowout courtesy of Intel (which in turn is seeing record selling into earnings strength, which has pushed the stock from being up 8% after hours to just 3% higher now).
For Those Still Clinging To Hope, Here Is David Rosenberg: "This Is The Weakest Post-Recession Recovery On Record"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/14/2010 10:02 -0500To all those fewer and fewer optimists who believe the economy may avoid a double dip (or alternatively suffer the realization it never really got out of the depression in the first place), David Rosenberg provides a glimpse just how tenuous the so-called recovery has been, even despite the unprecedented attempts by everyone at the top to shepherd the economy into growth at any cost, and the daily reminder from Ben Bernanke that risk is dead and the Fed will never let capital markets drop again. As for the future, Rosie asks the logical question: how is it that earnings are expected to grow by 20% in 2011, when it is becoming increasingly obvious that GDP growth next year will be negative?
Spanish Banks Borrow Record €126 Billion From ECB In June As Country's Funding Lock Out Enters Third Month
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/14/2010 09:36 -0500For all those celebrating that Spain and Greece can peddle a few billion in short-term Bills to the ECB and a few Chinese investors (did SAFE recover yet from the massive drubbing it suffered in its US stock holdings earlier this year when it was begging for more capital?) it may be prudent to consider that, as Bloomberg reports, Spanish banks borrowed a record 126.3 billion euros ($161 billion) from the European Central Bank in June. This represents a 48 percent increase from the €85.6
billion borrowed in May. Which is why we hope that anyone claiming liquidity conditions in Europe are anywhere even close to normal, will be brave enough to lend even one dollar to Spain's Cajas or appropriately tickered bank Santander (NYSE: STD), because nobody else has done so for over two months!
Trading Stocks? Pack Your Dramamine
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/14/2010 09:15 -0500
A few days ago we discussed that the market no longer responds to any fundamentals but merely gravitates toward various chaotic "strange attractors" now that HFT-driven stock trading patterns are merely Mandelbrotian fractals, with no rhyme or reason behind self-similar trading patterns and unprecedented record daily volatility. Today, David Rosenberg provides the following chart best capturing the minimum RDA of dramamine required to trade stocks: with 6% average swings in 12 distinct periods in 2010 alone, even with the market virtually flat for the year, it is no wonder retail investors have decided to say goodbye to stocks for ever. This is not a market in which anyone, including retail and institutional investors, with the possible exception a few momentum inducing algos, can generate any alpha. Period. And leveraged beta trades are a recipe for suicide for anyone except those with discount window access. Which is why very soon the only ones trading stocks will be the primary dealers and those who pay multimillion monthly collocation fees to the NYSE in hopes they can frontrun a trade here or there (oh and SEC, your inability to halt flashing a year after saying you would do so, continue to inspire confidence that you are on top of your corruption game).



