Archive - Sep 7, 2010 - Story
Fed Monetizes $2.7 Billion Worth Of ~5 Year Bonds, Submitted-Accepted Ratio Drops To 5.8x
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2010 10:50 -0500Today, the Fed monetized $2.708 billion as part of its ongoing POMO monetization operations, to inject the market with a daily dose of liquidity and keep stocks higher. The biggest issue repurchased was the 2.625% of 12/31/14, followed by the 2.375% of 3/31/16, once again confirming that the Fed prefers buying the cheapest issues on the curve spline. Surprisingly, the Submitted/Accepted ratio came at a very low 5.8x: it appears few were as excited by today's monetization as those of prior weeks, when this would come well in the double digit range. And now that the liquidity injection is complete, and the mini ramp post 11am is done, we have to look forward to today's 1 PM auction of $33 billion in 3 Years, which will likely soak up all the non-risk allocatable funds held by the Primary Dealers.
Michael Burry Is Long Farmable Land, And Agrees With Paulson On Gold (But Not The Other "Recovery" Themes)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2010 10:32 -0500
Michael Burry, who needs no introduction, was on Bloomberg TV earlier discussing his latest investment allocation, which no longer focuses on shorting real estate via the cheapest possible instrument, and instead is going long cash assets in the form of farmable land (oddly enough, not multi apartment commercial real estate), small tech, and, yes, gold. “I believe that agriculture land -- productive
agricultural land with water on site -- will be very valuable in
the future. I’ve put a good amount of money into that.” Burry, just like Zero Hedge, laments the surge in cross-asset correlations, which makes all hedging strategies virtually impossible, and is a primary reason for why so many rational investors have decided to depart from the market: "I’m interested in finding investments that aren’t just
simply going to float up and down with the market. The incredible correlation that we’re experiencing -- we’ve
been experiencing for a number of years -- is problematic." Lastly, Burry agrees with the Paulson-Greenspan view on gold, but not any of the other Paulson "Recovery" themes we presented in extreme detail over the weekend: "Paulson's big in gold, and that's something that is interesting to me given how I see the world playing out, but other than gold I haven't really bought into any of the other theses." (And no, you still can't eat it, dammit).
Guest Post: Dangerous Economic Misconceptions
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2010 09:54 -0500
In some fields of research, dishonesty and misconceptions can cost lives. In economics, dishonesty and misconceptions can cost MILLIONS of lives. Mainstream financial analysts (and the MSM in general) have lost all sense of responsibility for what they do, and thus, continue to put our society at risk and continue to lose vaster portions of their audience year after year. The problem is that the vacuum left behind by this mass exodus from the MSM has not yet been correctly filled with principled alternative news providers. We are growing everyday, but the information void is still ever present, and the memory hole continues to be exploited by global bankers. Some people don’t know where to turn, and have instead given up on looking for the truth altogether. My only option has been to continue drilling away at the root points of disinformation, along with many other uncompromised researchers, and hope that consistency and perseverance win the day by accumulation and attrition. With that strategy in mind, we will now examine the instabilities behind our current recession/depression. We will then follow by deconstructing the most prominent economic misconceptions surrounding them (often perpetuated by the MSM), along with those misconceptions you will probably hear in the near future… - Giordano Bruno
Goldman's Take On Obama's Flurry Of Fiscal Micro-Stimulus Programs: Complete Dud
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2010 09:43 -0500Now that the administration is in full panic mode with just two months away from the mid-terms and facing a record low approval rating, it is throwing the kitchen sink at the DOL and BLS to make sure it doesn't enter November with 10% unemployment rate. Over the weekend, we saw a flurry of micro stimulus programs announced by the president, which will have no measurable long-term impact, and in some cases result in growth declines in the future, yet likely result in a very short period of Cash-4-Clunkerseque sugar high boost to the economy. Here is Goldman's summary of the most recent set of proposals, on which Jan Hatzius' take can be simply summarized with just one word: "dud"
When Ignorance Is Bliss, The Recession Is Truly A Depression
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2010 09:32 -0500With the market still drunk with hopium and grotesque stupidity from last week, after surging triple digits on an NFP number which was exactly as expected (returning strikers added 10,000 workers and the Birth-Death model, when accurately measured, contributed a net 17,000 jobs, so strip out these two effects and we actually end up with +40,000, which was bang on the consensus estimate) here is another reality check from David Rosenberg for all those who may be confused and believe that buying the "dips" or the market is in any way a prudent decision, when all it does is begs for someone to pull the rug from under the feet of speculators who believe that momentum and an implied correlation of 1 is indicative of improving fundamentals. Additionally, as nobody else seems to enjoy touching the topic, here is another observation on why we continue to live in a depression.
Surging Retail (And ETF) Outflows Mean Worst Quarter For Wall Street Since 2008 On Deck
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2010 09:04 -0500"After two months bankers would like to forget, Wall Street may need a September to remember to avoid closing the books on the worst quarter for investment banking and trading revenue since the peak of the financial crisis." So begins a Bloomberg piece highlighting why the ongoing boycott by retail investors (who incidentally hold the bulk of the S&P's market cap) of terminally broken capital markets may finally achieve more than all futile campaigns to pull deposits out of the TBTF banks ever could. It is no secret that regular, non computerized, investors have now shut out Wall Street as they now have absolutely no faith left in capital markets, a phenomenon we have been tracking since its inception. The "joke" that are capital markets has led such asset manager as Jim Rickards to tell his clients to pull their money from the stock market. He won't be the last. Yet incidentally, this simplest form of denial to participate in the ponzi is precisely the stake that will go right through the heart of the various vampire entities controlling capital formation. The alternative is a toxic spiral whereby low revenues, mean more Wall Streeters get fired, leading to yet lower revenues, and so forth, once again demonstrating that just like any natural system, you can only push the balance out so far, before the system snaps right back. Ironically, this will happen without any regulation or intervention whatsoever, as the regulators have become as corrupt as the markets they are supposed to oversee, leading investors (and not speculators) to take matters into their own hands. The pain for Wall Street is just starting... It couldn't have happened to a nicer group of people...
Dollar-Yen Falls To 15 Year Low As Stocks Relatively Overpriced Beyond Recognition
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2010 08:04 -0500
The USDJPY has just dropped to a 15 year low as the market is in full risk-off mode, hitting 83.54. Philip Hildebrand is also seeing black and blue as the EURCHF approaches all time lows, now that the BoJ once again let matters into other central bankers' hands. In the meantime, based on funding correlations (AUDJPY and Curve Butterfly) stocks are so mispriced here, it is just getting ridiculous: ES is easily 20 points rich to correlation intrinsic values. There appear to be no viable correlation desks left in the world, willing to take on the Fed's now grotesque mispricing of stock markets.
Spot Gold Surges, UniCredit Sets New 2012 Price Target Of $1,600
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2010 07:50 -0500
Gold is rapidly approaching its all time high intraday high (and someone please inform Dennis Gartman that Gold in euro terms is close to its record again), as spot has surged $12 in a few minutes and is now near $1,260 (record intraday was $1,265 set back in June). In addition to the CHF and the JPY, gold is once again the safety trade. This comes hot on the heels of the recent report issued by UniCredit SpA’s Jochen Hitzfeld, the most accurate gold forecaster tracked by Bloomberg in the last three quarters, in which the analyst raised his estimate for the metal’s average price next year by 12 percent to $1,400 an ounce, and for 2012 to $1,600. As the full report below indicates, the surge will be helped by concern about the effect of government economic- stimulus plans and speculation about increased demand in China, the world’s second-largest buyer after India. Hitzfeld also is so daring as to think what will happen when actual demand, and not central bank interventions, sets the price of gold: "gold supply will increasingly be determined by investors. Twenty years from now, investors will probably find it hard to imagine that there was once a time when jewelry demand determined one of the world’s most important asset classes. If investors were to switch only 1% of the global market capitalization of equities and bonds into gold, at the current gold price of around USD 1,250 per troy ounce, this would translate into demand of 36,000 tons. According to the US Geological Survey, this is roughly equivalent to the known gold reserves. In reality, however, there will be a mix of gold purchases and increases in gold prices. At a gold price of USD 2,500, only 18,000 tons of gold would be required to reach a share of 1%." But you still can't eat the damn thing!
Matterhorn Asset Management Sets Three Gold Price Targets: $6,000 – $7,000 – $10,000
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2010 07:29 -0500A few preliminary facts on gold from Matterhorn Asset Management:
- It is a fact that gold in US dollars (and many other currencies) has gone up 400% in eleven years or 16% per annum annualised.
- It is a fact that the US dollar has declined 80% in value against gold since 1999.
- It is a fact that the dollar and most other currencies have gone
down 98-99% against gold since 1913 when the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York was created. - It is also a fact that the Dow Jones (and many world stock markets) has declined over 80% against gold since 1999.
- It is a fact that gold has made a new all time monthly closing high in dollars in August 2010.
As to how Matterhorn gets to its 3 gold price targets of $6,000, $7,000, $10,000 read inside...
Frontrunning: September 7
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2010 07:23 -0500- Noooo, they lied to us, this can't be: Europe's Bank Stress Tests Minimized Debt Risk (WSJ)
- Captain obvious headline of the day: Strong Yuan Would Hurt China: Economists (Reuters)
- Captain obvious headline runner up: Greece Default Risk Is `Substantial,' Pimco's Bosomworth Says (Bloomberg)
- Peter Orzsag shows why he got out of Dodge: "In the face of the dueling deficits, the best approach is a compromise: extend the tax cuts for two years and then end them altogether." (NYT)
- French unions test Sarkozy in pensions strike (Reuters)
- The Obama Economy: How trillions in fiscal and monetary stimulus produced a 1.6% recovery (WSJ Editorial)
- Get ready for anti-incumbent wave (WSJ)
- GDP plus change in debt - and the US flow of funds (Steve Keen)
Schumer Is Shocked, Shocked, There Is Quote Stuffing Going On In Here... Asks SEC To Look Into it
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2010 07:05 -0500And another one wakes up. Better late than never. We wish to remind the Senator that perhaps he should first follow up on why after the SEC "banning" Flash trading, DirectEdge and other exchanges still frontrun orders on a daily basis, and why flash trading continues to lead to, ahem, flash crashes. "U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer urged federal securities regulators to explore ways to slow some high-speed trading at times of market stress and to investigate strategies that have raised concerns of stock manipulation, including one known as “quote stuffing.” Schumer, a New York Democrat, urged the Securities and Exchange Commission to launch a formal inquiry into whether computer-powered trading firms’ rapid entering and canceling of stock orders, called quote stuffing, played a role in the so-called flash crash of May 6, and to more broadly reconsider these participants’ role in the U.S. marketplace."
Daily Highlights: 9.7.2010
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2010 06:55 -0500- Asian stocks fall for first time in five days; Japanese automakers decline.
- Australia extends interest rate pause on concern global growth is slowing.
- Australian Labor Party gains enough seats to form a minority government.
- China's 4 biggest banks lent $32.2B in new yuan loans in August, in line with govt ruling.
- China passenger car sales increased 18% in August.
- China rejects currency pressure.
- China's slowdown in industrial output growth will deepen, Government says.
- Copper declines in London.
- Asian steelmakers rally on Obama's infra plan; Euro drops on bank funds concern.
Domino #2, Ireland, Set To Topple?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2010 06:51 -0500
The Irish-Bund spread is going nuts on reports that the ECB is bidding up sovereign debt once again, together with a WSJ report that the Stress Test was, as everyone with half a brain knew all too well, a blatant lie, and sovereign debt was misrepresented. Earlier, a report in the FT Deutschland suggested that the bailout of Anglo Irish alone, (not to mention AIB and Irish Nationwide) would be sufficient to threaten the country's solvency. Things domestically are no better, after a poll in the Sunday Independent found that 74% of respondents believed the country would default, and preceded earlier news that Irish consumer confidence plunged from 66.2 to 61.4. The IMF's recent expansion and creation of credit facilities is now roundly seen as having focused on Ireland, but many now believe that it may be too late and a Greek-type rescue is in the works as the second domino is about to topple. Hopefully the Irish will figure out the Ambrose Evans-Pritchard was right all along, and that the time to riot is now if they hope to get the same preferential treatment by the ECB/EU/IMF as was afforded to Greece... Because we all know what the endgame is now.
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 07/10/10
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 09/07/2010 05:00 -0500RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 07/10/10



