Archive - Aug 20, 2010 - Story
Knight Trading Reports July Average Daily Share Volume Lowest Since April 2009
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2010 10:36 -0500
For a firm which describes itself as "the leading source of off-exchange liquidity in U.S. equities and [has] greater share volume than any U.S. exchange" , "share volume", as one can surmise, is the lifeblood of the firm. And should there be a dramatic drop in "share volume" it means that both revenue, as well as the general volume of other exchanges must be very low, since Knight is presumably a good proxy of trends elsewhere. Which is why when we pulled up Knight's recent trading volume we were rather surprised by the dramatic plunge in stock trading over the past 4 months. After hitting a near record in April of just under 16 billion daily average shares, volume has since plunged to 7.4 billion, or the lowest since last April, when it was a mere 5.9 billion. And no, this is not merely the seasonal summer slowdown: last July Knight did an average of 10.2 billion shares, thus July 2010 was a 27% decline in share volume. But one doesn't need to look far to confirm this: a casual glimpse at the NYSE daily volume, or the ridiculous moves in stocks on vapor trading when a block of SPOOs can move the bid ask by a quarter of a dollar, are sufficient to demonstrate just how fragmented the market has become. This merely reinforces our observations that in addition to pulling capital out of equity mutual funds, retail investors and increasingly institutional ones, simply refuse to trade. Luckily our message that the market is (at least for the time being) broken has finally been heard far and wide. And to all those who think that based on a series of lucky coin tosses, they can outwit an irrational and chaotic system, we wish them all the best.
ECRI Declines To -10.0 From Unrevised -9.8% (Yet Prior Is Conveniently Revised To -10.2%)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2010 09:54 -0500
The ECRI's micro dead cat bounce is over... or is it? The ECRI Leading Indicator came in at 120.8 W/W, lower from a previous number of 122.4, revised from 122.0. In practical terms, this means that the annualized change is now back to a double dip predictive -10. Which is a deterioration from last week's actual -9.8. Well, not really - the prior number was just revised to -10.2, meaning all those early chants of ECRI improvement were premature (just as we had expected, as this is merely becoming one more in the endless series of downwardly revised series to mitigate the negative data impact). Either way, the weekly chart speaks volumes. And with all input signals into the ECRI once again deteriorating, we expect the second leg down in the ECRI to continue, revised or not.
Double Top Formation Suggests 2.2% Or Lower Yields For The 10 Year, 2.8% For The 30
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2010 09:28 -0500
While traditionally technicals have been considered voodoo by the vast majority of "legitimate" financial analysts, lately the trend has flipped, and scribbling that one is something as demode as a fundamental analyst tends to generate scowls of disapproval and outright disgust from PMs with a 10 second holding horizon during hedge fund interviews. Which is why looking at the chartist tea leaves, as Goldman's John Noyce has done, suggests that those looking for much more irrational exuberance in bond yields may get their wish, as a double top formation may be forming in 10 Years. The result of a broader double top would likely be an end target of between 2% and 2.2% in the 10 Year, and something potentially as low as 2.84% in the 30 Year, which would probably put all those with TBT exposure in the poor house.
Michael Pento Explains How Dr. Keynes Killed The Patient
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2010 08:35 -0500"American consumers are trying their best to deleverage. In terms of the story, the patient is actually trying to lose weight. But the government is blocking deleveraging and trying to boost consumption. They are forcing food down the patient's throat. According to the Flow of Funds Report, households reduced debt at a 2.4% annualized rate ($330 billion) during Q1 of 2010. Meanwhile, the federal government was piling on debt at an 18.5% annual rate ($1.44 trillion). Since every dollar of government debt is a promise to tax the private sector in the future with interest, this public spending spree effectively negated the Herculean efforts of the private sector to return to a sustainable path. That's where the arrogance of Washington is really apparent. Scores of millions of American consumers have made the decision that reducing their debt burden is in their best interests right now. But a few hundred individuals in government believe they know better than the collective wisdom of the entire free market. By leveraging up the public sector, they have used their power to confiscate our savings. In short, they are forbidding us from following the common sense path to fiscal health." - Michael Pento
Goldman Explains Why The Job Loss Trend Is A Deterioration Not A Distortion, Asks If Maximum Welfare Now Is 198 Weeks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2010 08:26 -0500
Goldman's Andrew Tilton has nothing good for the factless pumpers of the recoveryless recovery: "The timing of the rise in new claims fits with the surge in extended benefit recipients (although as already noted the auto distortion probably had its largest downward impact on claims in that same week). This raises the question of whether some of the people who lost benefits due to funding problems reapplied via new claims, when in fact they simply should have gone back on the benefit rolls without the need to file a new claim. It is difficult to know for sure whether this has happened. Our Labor Department contact thought this also would be minor. In our view, the fact that claims have continued to rise in the first two weeks of August, even though total benefit recipients were already back at spring levels by late July, casts further doubt on this re-filing hypothesis as a major factor, as most eligible recipients should have re-filed by now. Certainly, any further increases in new claims – or simply a persistence of these high levels – would suggest that the labor market has in fact deteriorated further. In short, we need to see a fairly quick reversal of the recent increase in initial claims to sign onto the view that distortions were principally responsible for this apparent deterioration in US labor market conditions." In other words, those who are trying to misattribute the surge in initial claims, and cast the economy in a rosier light, can only do so by blaming government error and inefficiency in reassigning existing claimants to initial status. This is a scary possibility, as it means that those on the verge of exhuasting their 99 weeks of maximum benefits may have found an unexpected loophole to make the length of the "welfare state" support up to 198 weeks (or double the existing max). While it goes without saying that the economy is double dipping, the fact that those who would at least have been forced to look for a job at the end of 99 weeks of welfare subsistence may have doubled their benefits' duration should raise major red flags. However, that this occurred as a function of governmental incompetence is no reason for surprise whatsoever.
Frontrunning: August 20
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2010 07:50 -0500- BP Oil Spill Leaves a 22-Mile Plume Migrating in Gulf of Mexico (Bloomberg)
- China May Introduce Stimulus to Boost Imports (China Daily)
- and yet, China Stocks Fall, Paring Weekly Gain, as Developers Decline on Inflation (Bloomberg)
- All over for the non-HFT quants? Shrinking ‘Quant’ Funds Struggle to Revive Boom (NYT)
- Weber Says ECB Should Plot Out Exit in First Quarter (Bloomberg) and appropriately, Trichet's Successor as ECB Head Doesn't Need to Be a Diplomat, Weber Says (Bloomberg)
- Russia Opening Iran Nuclear Plant Helps Bid to Be Power Broker (Bloomberg)
- The realization that financial monopolies (Goldman, Pimco) are bad is spreading: How Pimco Is Holding American Homeowners Hostage (Minyanville)
- We can't afford this government - Costs of bureaucracy spread like a deadly virus (WashTimes)
Guest Post: The Weekly Peak - The Uncertainty Of The Micro Versus The Macro
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2010 07:27 -0500At the heart of this investor uncertainty, or even confusion, is the battle between the micro-economic data and the macro-economic data. By micro-data, I mean corporate profits. Considering that 82% of U.S. companies beat expectations in the most recent earnings season, it’s understandable that investors could believe the economy is on the mend. This view is reinforced by the fact that many of those same companies raised earnings and, in some cases, revenue guidance for the remainder of 2010. The macro-data, on the other hand, is not so positive. In fact, it’s downright dismal when we look at the bleak state of the employment situation, the housing market, and bank lending not to mention shrinking GDP. While investors collectively seem not to know what to make of this spar, I offer one analogy and one explanation as to why the macro-data will dominate and destroy the micro-data. - Peak Theories Research
Daily Highlights: 8.20.2010
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2010 07:12 -0500- Asian stocks decline, Yen strengthens on concern global growth is slowing.
- Australia's first female PM faces voter backlash at first election.
- BoJ said to be still assessing economic impact of stronger Yen.
- China shares fall on criticism of local finance vehicle.
- Euro steady above $1.28 in wake of poor US economic data.
- Oil slips below $75 in Asia as economic news renews expectations of weak crude demand.
- U.S. Budget Deficit forecast increased by CBO to $1.066 trillion for 2011.
- US jobless claims climb, Philadelphia factories slump as recovery slows.
- Aeropostale's Q2 net rose 12.9% to $43.6M helped by 9% rise in revs to $494.7M.
- Apple to shut down Quattro wireless Ad network.
Iran Test Fires, Touts Advanced Surface-To-Surface Missile Day Ahead Of Nuclear Reactor Launch
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2010 07:09 -0500
Nothing like a little geopolitical ruckus to spoil the fun...the fun. Xinhua reports that hours ago, and just a day before the Bushehr nuclear reactor is supposed to go online, Iranian Defense Minister Ahmad Vahidi said that Iran had test fired a surface-to-surface missile, Qiam, footage of which was shown on state television. Surely this fits well as a time slot segue from the recent clip showing mass graves prepared for Iran's "aggressors."
EUR Plunges Against Majors, Drops To Month Low Vs Dollar On ECB Comments, Rumors SNB Unwinding Euro Positions
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2010 06:55 -0500
Things in Europe this morning have a decidedly deja vu May feel. The EUR has plunged against all majors, touching a one month low against the dollar as John Taylor is proven correct for the nth time, having top ticked the EURUSD inflection point literally to the day. Further validating the return of European concerns fo the main stage is the fresh all time record yield on the Bund, with the future rising above 133 for the first time. There are two key reasons cited for today's weakness: the first are extremely dovish comments from ECB's Aexl Weber that the central bank should keep "unlimited lending through year end." This simply means that Bernanke's QE Lite idea is not lost on Europe, whose own little mini gold age has ended, and the continent is once again considering ways and means to kill its currency. Don't be surprised if Germany decided to throw Greece on the sacrificial altar - in that regard, the recent Spiegel article may just have been the warning shot. Additionally, there are rumors that the SNB is unwinding its hundreds of billions of EUR holding. The indirect evidence: a surging CHF, which however could merely be a return to the flught to safety of the old regime, as Europe once again realizes just how bad things truly are beneath the surface.
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 20/08/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 08/20/2010 04:27 -0500RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 20/08/10
Guest post: Will summer’s end bring a bear market's beginning?-- The market’s dreaded month, t-bills, and Elliot wave trades
Submitted by naufalsanaullah on 08/20/2010 00:30 -0500I will be updating this blog on about a weekly basis with market commentary, as well as articles on specific topics. I will instead also be providing daily market commentary in newsletter .pdf format. If you would like to subscribe (for free) to the Shadow Capitalism market commentary newsletter, please email me at naufalsanaullah@gmail.com so I can put you on the mail list. Thank you.




