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Archive - Aug 19, 2010 - Story

Tyler Durden's picture

M2 Update





The "M" is there. Now all the Fed needs to get is to find the velocity that goes with it. However, with GDP now realistically declining, the latter is proving to be quite problematic for the Chairman.

 

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Hinde Capital On Why Silver Velocity Will Be The Bullet That Sends The Metal Much Higher





Hinde Capital's Ben Davies, long known for his expansive analyses of gold's undervaluation, this time focuses on silver, and the metal's relative value vis-a-vis gold and other commodities. In the report below, posted initially on King World News, Davies lays out the case for a violent move higher in the price of silver, predicated by the inability of the value suppression cartel to keep the price artificially low going forward, as well as a return to silver's fundamental value.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Senior NOAA Scientist Admits He Lied That Gulf Spill Oil Is Gone, Puts Administration's Spill-Disclosure "Credibility" In Question





The fears of all those who had long believed that the administration, either in collboration with BP or otherwise, had been flagrantly lying about the true situation in the GOM, have been confirmed by The Guardian (via BNO). "A senior U.S. government scientist on Thursday admitted that
three-quarters of the oil that was released into the Gulf of Mexico
after BP’s Deepwater Horizon spill was still there, contradicting his
earlier claim that the worst of the spill had passed, the Guardian
reported.
Bill Lehr, senior scientist at the National Oceanographic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), presented a radically different
picture than the one the White House had presented to the public earlier
this month. He contradicted his own reports from two weeks ago that
suggested that the majority of the oil had been captured or broken down.
“I would say most of that is still in the environment,” Lehr told the
House energy and commerce committee.
" So just how many other thing are the President and his crony corrupt "scientist experts" lying about?

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Macro Update: Trading Beta





I apologize as I have not provided much added commentary on relative value trading ideas these past few days, I have been solely focused on trading bet (or risk) and digging into the data of last year's POMO days to isolate patterns and trends associated with Federal Reserve market operations. Regarding that last point I will have a comprehensive analysis out tomorrow, so far the results are interesting, maybe that will convince a few traders out there to actually come in on Friday to read it tomorrow! As far as relative value is concerned, I had recommended bear conditional flatteners right at the highs. While the curve has lost a lot of delta to the curve, it is well in the money as we have flattened dramatically the past week. Why a bear flattener? Clearly a bull flattener would have been more profitable but the trade had no negative carry, in case of further bull steepening you would therefore have broken even, and since on a sell-off a flattening was virtually guarantied, the risk reward for that trade was excellent. On the flip side bull flatteners had negative carry. Still a good trade and the odds are that now market is going to keep flattening aggressively with steepeners getting carried out on stretchers, low participation overall, and the demand for yield pushing buyers ever further out the curve. - Nic Lenoir

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Hindenburg Omen Confirmation #1





Today we got our first Hindenburg Omen confirmation. The number of new highs was 136, and new lows was at 69 (per the traditional WSJ source). Granted this particular criteria set was a little weak as the 69 is precisely on the borderline for confirmation (the 2.2%), and the new highs number was not more than double the new lows (although it was close). Less gating were the McClellan oscillator which was negative at -83.6, and the 10 week MVA, which rose, which were the two remaining conditions. The first omen was spotted on August 12 - a week later the H.O has been confirmed. The more confirmations, the scarier it gets from a technical perspective, not to mention the conversion into a self-fulfilling prophecy (like every other technical indicator).

 

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RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 19/08/10





RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 19/08/10

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Nikkei-S&P Convergence Update






Two days into the proposed Nikkei-SPX convergence, the ROI stands at about 4% after last night's ramp in the Nikkei and today's plunge in the S&P. Granted, it is disingenuous to not account for the today's Nikkei session which is why absent a 4% down day in the Tokyo index, the trade should still be profitable. We are still confident that the BOJ will be forced to act to stop the Yen surge, unless the most recent PM wants to have a tenure even briefer than that of his predecessor, at which point the convergence will outperform further toward the goal of 10%. Regardless, those who believe deflation has a firmer foothold in Japan may be wise to unwind. The flipside is that the US will be unable to pursue further QE steps until September 21 at the earliest when the next Fed meeting will be held. Which is why the trade can likely be held for at least a few more weeks without any adverse catalyst on the horizon.

 

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Guest Post: Social Security, and How the Dictator Pinochet Would Have Fixed the American System





Social Security is a demographic and financial time-bomb. With something like 60 million Baby Boomers about to begin retiring, the so-called “Social Security lock-box” is going to take quite the beating—especially considering that that famed “lock-box” is stuffed not with money but with nothing but Treasury IOU’s. Politicians of both parties are making rumbling noises, essentially in two directions: Cutting benefits, and finding an “alternative system". One of those alternative systems some American pundits and politicians have been looking at is the Chilean system of AFP’s—Administradoras de Fondos de Pensiones, literally “Managers of Pension Funds”. This system is a workable free market solution to the problem of funding worker pensions, and has worked like a charm for the past 30 years. Unfortunately for this good idea, the system was imposed by decree by the Right-wing dictator Augusto Pinochet. - Gonzalo Lira

 

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Matterhorn's von Greyerz Explains Why The Apocalypse Is Nigh





A few days ago we presented the most recent investor letter by Egon von Greyerz of Matterhorn, whose pessimism makes David Rosenberg seem like a CNBC staple cheerleader. Today, CNBC invited the hyperinflationist to its European studio where von Greyerz engaged in some entertaining sparring with the anchor over two totally different worldviews. Those who have read the letter previously, and have followed the inflationist side of the argument, will not be surprised by any of the disclosures: decades of debt fueled prosperity, $20 trillion backstop of financial institutions, deteriorating fundamentals, reckless money printing, and gold as the only real store of value: in other words - all the things that those who see no treasury bubble will close their eyes to and quickly walk away from.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

JPMorgan Slashes GDP Forecast For Remainder Of 2010





As we expected, the murder (or whatever a group thereof is called) of wall street Ph.D. lemmings is appropriately positioning its collective tail between its legs and duly following Jan Hatzius into preliminary double dip(ression) territory. JPM's Robert Mellman just cut his Q3 and Q4 GDP forecast from 2.5% and 3.0% to 1.5% and 2.0%. The firm has not touched its 2011 estimates yet. Obviously once Q2 GDP is revised to sub 1% as we are fairly confident will be the final revision, it will. We are waiting for the hilarious capitulation from Wall Street's most discredited cheerleader: that of BofA's David Bianco.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Intraday Market Commentary From Stifel Nicolaus - August 19





Who’s putting out those estimates for the Philly Fed Survey? Obviously not an exact science but I demand a Congressional Investigation. While they are at it, how about a look into the crush in the Spoos and NDX futures after 4 pm yesterday (on no news) for 6 and 14 points respectively. That’s all I have to say about that. The market unraveled on the worse than expected Philly Fed Survey with a couple of support levels being taken out. Around noon, the S&P found support at 1070 but with the NYSE a/d off worse than 5 to 1 negative, I don’t expect a bounce to carry that far. If the market continues its slide tomorrow, I expect the S&P 500 to make a stand in the 1055-1060 area.

 

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$102 Billion In 2,5 And 7 Year Treasuries On Deck For Next Week As Fed Prepares To Become Top Holder Of U.S. Debt





Even as the public debates aggressively on the nature of bond bubbles and whether they have a footing in the US economy, Tim Geithner's office has no intention to discover the denouement of this particular polemic, and instead is preparing to belch the lastest batch of US-backed paper. In the upcoming week the US Treasury will issue a total of $102 billion in 2, 5 and "curve sweetspot" 7 year notes, with nominal amount all in line with expectations. In other news, the Fed will surpass Japan as the second largest holder of USTs by the end of September, and China, which holds just $40 billion more, by the mid-term elections. In other words, we should not worry that China will soon forsake us - after all the Fed is gladly once again monetizing the Chinese stake.

 

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CBO Says Its Own Budget Estimate May "Significantly Underestimate" Short-Term Deficit Outlook





Those who were disappointed by the earlier CBO budget reestimate which increased total deficit by about $44 billion over the next two years, will have to weep more tears based on the just released statement by Congressional Budget Office director Doug
Elmendorf who said that in reality the budget deficit could come much higher than the just disclosed estimates, and the recent economic data releases have been "more negative" than data factored into the projection. Which, in government talk, means that the real deficit will likely come at least 20-30% higher, and since debt issuance tends to track around 40% higher than nominal deficits, the bottom line is that the US will have to issue a gross $3 trillion+ over the next two years. But who cares: one could add 10 zeroes to this number, and rates would likely drop to zero overnight.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: The 0% BLT Economy





Two years ago when I told everyone I knew that the United States was bankrupt and would ultimately default of its debt one way or the other (by inflation or restructuring) I was called crazy and dismissed by 95%+ of the people I met. These days many of the same people still think I am crazy when I say that a political, financial and intelligence elite which has now teamed up with large corporations is attempting to create a global currency and world government (with them at the helm of course), but the notion that the U.S. is bankrupt is now more or less mainstream. Even the corporatist/socialists in power are now unable to merely dismiss questions about the deficit. The public has woken up from its slumber of consciousness and is now starting to see things as they are. This is an extremely positive development and is why as I have said before I think the elite are in their last days as the freight train of consciousness runs them and their twisted illusions of grandeur into the sea. The weakest link in this sick and corrupt financial system that was forced upon many of us before we were even born with its mechanics purposely hidden in the shadows so that we remained ignorant of its preposterousness, is the commodity market. However, within the commodity market the weakest link is gold. - Mike Krieger

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 19/08/10





RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 19/08/10

 
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