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Archive - Aug 16, 2010 - Story

Tyler Durden's picture

Obama Says Turkey's "Ally" Status In Doubt Unless Country Changes Its Pro-Iran, Anti-Israel Stance





Ever since the Gaza flotilla incident, in which several Turkish citizens were killed after a boat headed with supplies to the Palestine (with full politically correct details still being ironed out on who attacked whom and all that), was attacked, relations between Turkey and Israel have been horrendous, and deteriorating rapidly. Demonstrating just how seriously Israel is concerned with the Turkey (which also happens to be a NATO member, and in possession of lots of ultramodern things that go boom) relations hit, is today's first ever visit by Netanyahu to Athens, where he is scheduled to meet with Greek counterpart and country's opposition leader, to streamline Israel's relationship with Turkey's traditional antagonist, wisely driven by the principle of "the enemy of my enemy." (More on Netanyahu's historic visit via Haaretz). Yet where it is getting very dicey, is the just released report from the FT, which notes that "President Barack Obama has personally warned Turkey’s prime minister that unless Ankara shifts its position on Israel and Iran it stands little chance of obtaining the US weapons it wants to buy." And more: "One senior administration official said: “The president has said to Erdogan that some of the actions that Turkey has taken have caused questions to be raised on the Hill [Congress] . . . about whether we can have confidence in Turkey as an ally. That means that some of the requests Turkey has made of us, for example in providing some of the weaponry that it would like to fight the PKK, will be harder for us to move through Congress." It is unfortunate that the administration still believes intimidation is the best policy course when it comes to resolving latent (and soon to be bilaterally uranium-enriched) middle-east conflicts. Should this path of "negotiation" be insisted on, Obama may soon alienate a critical NATO-member and the country located at the most strategic location at the Europe-Middle East nexus. And this does not even account for the political unrest that is sure to develop should the country's 72 million disgruntled citizens decide the US (and its Middle East interests) are not their ally.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

France Warns Iran Over Plans For Third Uranium Enrichment Plant





Yesterday's statement by Iran's atomic chief Ali Akbar Salehi that the Islamic republic's search for sites for 10 new enrichment facilities is coming to an end, is already generating heavy condemnation by the international community. AFP reports that "France warned on Monday that already serious international concerns over Iran's nuclear programme have deepened after Tehran said it would start building a third uranium enrichment site next year. "This announcement only worsens the international community's serious concerns about Iran's nuclear programme," said foreign ministry spokeswoman Christine Fages. This comes hot on the heels of last week's condemnation by various developed countries, who did not take kindly to the announcement that Russia would supply reactor fuel for the country's first nuclear plant near Busheher, now expected to launch imminently.

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 16/08/10





RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 16/08/10

 

Tyler Durden's picture

African "Gold" Turns Out To Be Dust Upon Arrival In UAE; Millions In Ethiopian Central Bank Bullion Confirmed Fake





Add this one to the wtf files: a headline in Emirates 24/7 is sufficient to demonstrate what ridiculous proportions goldmania has reached in various parts of the world: "Tons of gold imports turn to dust on arrival. Gold imported into the UAE by traders and investors turned out to be fake on closer inspection." Thank god for "closer inspection." The total impact of such fake gold in the UAE alone: "over $200 million."And the scariest bit: "Recent media reports suggested that several million dollars worth of
gold with the Ethiopian Central Bank turned out to be fake. These bars
of gold turned out to be gold plated steel bars."
In other news, gold everywhere else is safe until proven to be gold-plated tungsten... pending closer inspection.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Nic Lenoir Macro Update: Bearish On Japan And The Yen





My conclusion is that the only possible way for the Nikkei to appreciate (in JPY terms, as quoted) and the Nikkei to depreciate in USD terms is for USDJPY to appreciate. People have been talking a lot recently about the BOJ possibly stepping up in the market to stop the JPY appreciation but it is believed and they have hinted that these levels are not necessarily a concern for them yet. However GDP data disappointed quite a bit, and this could be the boost in terms of public opinion and political capital for intervention. Whether it is by buying calls on Nikkei or buying USDJPY between 85.00 and 85.40 with a stop on a daily close below 83.50, I think this is a great opportunity especially for traders who are already short US/European equities and/or short AUD and emerging currencies. A breakdown of this USDJPY / S&P correlation would be very interesting. USDJPY also trade in line with 10Y US yields traditionally, and they on the other hand keep dropping like a stone. Something has to give here and personally I believe it could well be the JPY. I feel better about this call since everyone I floated the idea to seemed to think I am crazy. Usually contrarian trades have a way to come to fruition when no one thinks they will. I would keep an eye on the 10Y Japan CDS as well for confirmation. To me it looks like Japan is about to make a move in the race to the bottom.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Since June, Banks Have Bought $83 Billion In Government And Agency Bonds





It is good to know banks are doing something with that $1 trillion + in excess reserves. And yes, "reinvestment" is technically considered doing something. David Rosenberg explains that since American citizens are now broadly considered unworthy of crediting (and since those same consumers would rather have a steady income and/or a job before taking out a loan), banks are now merely riding on the increasingly flattening treasury wave.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Matterhorn Asset Management There Will Be No Double Dip... It Will Be A Lot Worse





No, there will be no double dip. It will be a lot worse. The world economy will soon go into an accelerated and precipitous decline which will make the 2007 to early 2009 downturn seem like a walk in the park. The world financial system has temporarily been on life support by trillions of printed dollars that governments call money. But the effect of this massive money printing is ephemeral since it is not possible to save a world economy built on worthless paper by creating more of the same. Nevertheless, governments will continue to print since this is the only remedy they know. Therefore, we are soon likely to enter a phase of money printing of a magnitude that the world has never experienced. But his will not save the Western World which is likely to go in to a decline lasting at least 20 years but most probably a lot longer. - Egon von Greyerz, Matterhorn Asset Management

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Bonds And Stocks Diverge Terminally As Steepeners Capitulate





The attempt to gun stocks despite a battery of bad news is so far succeeding, as risk is now diverging completely from yields and no correlations hold any longer. Those tempted to test whether any human correlation traders remain may play the convergence trade, but with this unprecedented amount of central planning in the market now, it would appear unduly risky. Yet one place where there is most certainly risk, is for job prospects of all those on the steepener bandwagon: the 2s10s has just hit 208 bps, as the steepener trade and the thousands of lemmings behind it are getting slaughtered. We eagerly anticipate the latest life support note from Jim Caron.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

TIC Data Confirms China Bond Sell Off Continues; Foreigners Dump Corporate Bonds And Stocks





Today's Treasury International Capital data had some unpleasant disclosures about the flow and size of international capital flows. The gross headline number of inflows was as expected higher, coming in at $44.4 billion, consisting of $33.9 billion in net foreign purchases of long-term securities ($16.6 billion purchases by private investors and 17.3 billion by official institutions), as well as $10.4 billion in sales of foreign securities by US individuals. This brought total foreign holdings of US securities to just over $4 trillion for the first time ever, or $4,009 billion. So far so good, however looking at the composition of purchases, it appears that foreigners were frontrunning the Fed already in June - they bought $33.3 billion in LT Treasuries, and $18.2 billion in agencies, precisely the categories that the Fed would be monetizing, even as they sold $13.5 billion in corporate bonds (the highest amount since January 2010), and $4.1 billion in corporate stocks, the most since July 2008. What are foreigners seeing that all the mutual funds are also seeing (with 14 straight outflows from domestic equity funds), yet the HFT, Primary Dealer group is so stubbornly ignoring? Most importantly: Chinese Treasury holdings dropped to a 1 year+ low of $843.7 billion, following reductions in both long-term and short-term treasurys. China now has almost $100 billion less in USTs compared to the peak of $940 billion in July 2009. One wonders what China is buying with the sale/maturity proceeds.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Morning Gold Fix: August 16





Deflation talk has the markets spooked during these last couple weeks. Since Bullard's comments (preparing the ground for QE2) and Bernanke's promises to combat deflation through treasury purchases, even the CNBC talking heads are discussing it. Editor's Contrarian note: Probably time to consider unwinding your bond longs if T.V.'s equivalent of your shoe shine boy is telling you deflation is coming. In deflation, Gold should be the tallest pygmy. Even If it drops 40% in a deflationary depression, it will still stand tall among the financial wreckage that is defaulted debt and worthless equity. But, if the Fed succeeds in combating this event (preemptively or after the fact), Hyperinflation becomes a high risk and we know what that portends for fiat currency.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Empire Manufacturing Index Misses Consensus Of 8.0, Prints At 7.1





The Empire State Mfg index rose modestly from 5.08 to 7.1, yet still missed expectations of 8.0. In a nutshell, price indexes fall, the employment indexes climb, and most critically, as this is a survey after all, the degree of optimism continues to weaken.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: August 16





  • China Overtakes Japan as World's Second-Biggest Economy (Bloomberg)
  • US banks get securities buy-back window - $118bn of high-cost ‘Trups’ can be redeemed over 90 days (FT)
  • Yield Curve as Harbinger (WSJ)
  • It Takes a Tea Party to Start a Tax Revolution (Bloomberg)
  • Evans-Pritchard: Ireland can withstand the euro's ordeal by fire, but can Southern Europe? (Telegraph)
  • Workers Let Go by China’s Banks Putting Up Fight (NYT)
  • Goldman Undercuts Rivals in GM IPO as It Loses Top Role (Bloomberg)
  • Is This Normal? The uncertainty of our economic uncertainty (NYMag)
  • Mark Zandi oped: The Tax Cut We Can Afford (NYT)
 

Tyler Durden's picture

Daily Highlights: 8.16.2010





  • China favors Euro over Dollar as Bernanke alters path.
  • China's stocks rally on economic outlook, led by shippers, energy shares.
  • Crude oil trades near a one-month low after Japan's economic growth slows.
  • HK govt tightened mortgage lending rules, to increase supply of land to help cool prices.
  • Japan economy surpassed by China as GDP is less than estimated.
  • Japanese economy slows unexpectedly; annualised growth for quarter only 0.4%.
  • Wheat futures advance, erasing losses, as Russia lowers harvest estimate by 38%.
 

Tyler Durden's picture

Here We Go Again: European Peripheral Spreads Explode As Safe Havens Collapse





It's starting again. Japan 10 year JGBs just dropped to fresh 7 year lows of 0.95%, as UST 10 years are down at 16 month lows of 2.65% and German 30 Year yields are down to record lows of 3.09%. Maybe the Fed should just let deflation run its course to get ever closer to the target UST curve which we noted before. And while Japan is ravaged by a fresh bout of deflation, Europe is starting to crumble once again now that (lack of) vacations are generally over: the Greek/Bund spread has just hit the widest level since May 10, at 811 bps, while the Irish/German spread is at its widest ever of 303 bps, a move of 10 bps on the day. European weakness is resuming now that CPI came in at expectations (as opposed to beating them as has been the tradition for the past month) at 1.7%. The export-driven golden age, as we noted, is over. Elsewhere, the Telegraph posted rumors that the BoE is preparing to join the Fed and is about to commence a fresh round of QE as a new wave of global monetary easing is about to hit.

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 16/08/10





RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 16/08/10

 
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