Archive - 2010 - Story
January 19th
Insider Selling Outpaces Buying By 24 Times In Last Week
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2010 19:24 -0500What is there to say about the endless barrage of insider sales that hasn't been said for 9 straight months before. Insiders are selling into the neverending rally, as domestic mutual funds have no equity inflows, yet stocks somehow miraculously keep rising, providing yet more attractive exit price points for directors and insiders. In the past week insiders bought $18 million worth of stock and sold $419 million. There is no way to spin this data. There were no notable buyers, while Nelson Peltz was vacating HNZ shares with a vengeance, selling $30 million worth of the canned food maker. Ralph Lauren also apparently wasn't too hot on Polo's Spring/Summer collection.
Daily Credit Summary: January 19 - Credit Pities The Equity Fools
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2010 19:17 -0500Spreads were generally wider in the US from Friday's close as IG underperformed HY and breadth was very negative at around 4-to-1 wideners-to-tighteners (and 2-to-1 steepeners to flatteners). Single-names were much more negative than indices in the higher beta names. HY13 is tighter from Friday's close but is wider on yesterday's weak volume day although it remains below par and intraday was unable to trade below 500bps. As stocks moved to the upper end of their ten-day channel into the close we came off our wides of the day in IG and HY but single-names remained weak overall.
Hedge Fund Launches And Re-Openings Surge; Top December And Notable 2009 Hedge Fund Performers
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2010 17:59 -0500Notable 2009 performers:
- Paulson Credit: 34%
- York: 45%
- Maverick: 24%
- Moore Global: 22%
- Tudor: 15%
- Brigade: 40%
- Davidson Kempner Distressed: 45%
- Brevan Howard: 19%
ABC Consumer Confidence At Three Month Low: Comes In At -49 On Expectations Of -44
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2010 17:39 -0500
The decline in weekly consumer confidence as measured by ABC will not end. From -41 two weeks ago, this number has now fallen a dramatic 8 points to -49. And add another double-dip data point: after being respondents were evenly split between those who think the economy is getting better and those who saw deterioration on December 13, 2009, the spread has surged with 36% now seeing a worsening while those who think things are getting better is now 24% the worst reading since June 2009. People have just about had enough of change they can believe in.
PIMCO Sells $37 Billion In Treasuries, Adds Bunds, MBS And Cash As Total Return Fund Hits Record In December
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2010 17:01 -0500Congratulations Bill Gross: PIMCO's flagship Total Return Fund closed December at $202 Billion, representing $70 billion in net inflows, more than the combined inflows of the prior three years. December also saw a curious reshuffling of TRS' portfolio: Gross sold a whopping $34 billion in Treasuries, bringing the total to $64.6 billion from $101.7 billion in November. And while the bond manager surprisngly added $10 billion in MBS (now accounting for 17% of holdings) after selling $95 billion in MBS to the Fed in the previous 10 months, for the first time (probably ever) PIMCO's holdings of Treasuries and MBS accounted for less than half of total holdings. As was previously noted, Bill Gross notably increased his non-US Developed country bond holdings by $22 billion to $32.3 billion, which is a direct result of his recent purchases of German Bunds.
Marc Faber Joins Sprott Board Of Directors
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2010 16:28 -0500This latest development should surely make for some abnormally entertaining Sprott reports: "Sprott Inc. (TSX: SII) (the "Corporation") is pleased to announce that the Board of Directors has appointed Marc Faber as a director and member of the Audit Committee."
Roubini Blasts Faulty Fed Monetary Policy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2010 16:18 -0500
Joseph Mason from Roubini Global Economics has written an interesting analysis of Fed monetary policy, focusing on the Fed Fund rate as the primary tool of economic intervention, in which concludes that the Fed's traditional weapon for moderating the business cycle is becoming increasingly irrelevant, and has reached a point where the traditional central bank arsenal could be considered irrelevant. By analyzing historical data of rate tightening into and during recessions, coupled with loosening interventions, Mason observes that by "reducing rates before recession may both add to the speculative fury that will (eventually) necessitate the (potentially larger) downturn and leaves no room to lower rates in order to address lagging effects like unemployment." If correct, and if the excess reserve phenomenon currently witnessed, which is purely a function of negative implied interest rates per the Taylor rule, is unable to force the economy into a recovery mode, the Fed will be left with absolutely no additional mechanisms to facilitate monetary expansion, resulting in an impotent Federal Reserve, whose only function would then become to fund balance sheet shortfalls at major financial institutions. And if there is a an actual empirical point arguing that the Fed no longer needs to exist, in addition to all the rhetoric we have witnessed over the past year which implicates the Fed as merely a proxy vehicle for banker status quo perpetuation, this could very well be it.
Guest Post: Gold & The Keynesian Elixir
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2010 15:05 -0500A must read paper focusing on the Kryptonite to all things Keynesian: gold, and the precious metal's vast implications to modern financial and economic theory.
Waiting For Earnings Bombs or Blowups
Submitted by RobotTrader on 01/19/2010 15:04 -0500Now that the market has launched 70% off the lows, many participants are eagerly awaiting the first "earnings bomb" to be released which sends the market into its first major correction. Unfortunately, many are still playing the "less bad" game evidenced by the non-stop intraday moonshot in Citigroup today.
Democrats Seek To Reconfirm Bernanke This Friday
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2010 14:50 -0500And not a day too soon: The Chairman has about 12 days left in his tenure before things get really surreal.
Developing Story
Credit Ignoring Equity Rally
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2010 14:42 -0500
As several pundits already pointed out, today's supposed political regime change (the polls are still not closed) implies that the stimulus spigot may well be closed for the Obama administration, after the Massachusetts "policy no-confidence" slap in the face, on the verge of the President's one year anniversary. What this implies is that the economy at this point could very well be on its own. Just ask Paul Krugman (or any economic skeptic for that matter) what will happen to the U.S. if gobs of money can not be printed out of thin air to support a recovery that as the NAHB data earlier indicated is already heading into a potential double-dip situation. Yet the market is giddy. Let's paraphrase - the equity market is giddy. Credit, oblivious to the 1% pop in stocks, has turned wider once again, with key indices IG and SovX both trending wider for the day. IG 13 was 84.5 bps at last check, 1 basis point wider for the day, and almost 10 bps wider since January 11. Yet equities are almost 1% higher in the same period.
And while credit is certainly spooked by the rise in the dollar, equities once again, continue to trade in a vacuum of the Fed's devices. Which begs the question: does anyone even trade equities anymore?
Bernanke Yields To Pressure, Welcomes "Full Review" Of AIG, Copies Boilerplate Language From Prior Testimony
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2010 13:59 -0500Ben Bernanke has yielded to increasing public pressure to finally disclose all the details surrounding the AIG bailout, and in a letter to Acting Comptroller General Gene Dodaro, Bernanke said he would welcome a full review of the AIG taxpayer bailout by the GAO and will make available "all records and personnel necessary to conduct this review," emphasizing that a review should give taxpayers "the most complete understanding of our decisions and actions." One wonders why stop at AIG? Why not open up the Fed to a GAO audit on all bank bailout activities undertaken in the period commencing with the GSE nationalization, and culminating with the Lehman bankruptcy. Surely that would provide an ever more "most complete" understanding of just who got what and how much taxpayer capital was put just so Wall Street could enjoy another record bonus season.
The Double Dip In Builder Confidence Is Here
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2010 13:36 -0500
The NAHB reported its December housing market index, which came in at 15, missing expectations of a rebound from November's reading of 16, and is now at the low levels last seen in June. The double dip, at least in perceptions of what is happening to the housing market is here, and follows the recent housing starts inflection point.
Observations On The Aftermath Of The Artificial Recovery From Dean Baker
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2010 13:10 -0500Dean Baker, Co-Director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research, has put together a simple yet comprehensive presentation on a topic Zero Hedge has discussed in the past: how the demographic shift in the US will mirror the spender-to-saver transformation of an aging Japanese society, and as a result lead to an accentuation of the economic crisis into the double-dip phase, should all the artificial , one-time stimulus actions be phased out. For all those who think that a "new normal" with unemployment straddling double digits for years to come will be conducive to growth, think again. And after today's failed referendum on Obama's healthcare policies, America's immediate future will be focused on two simple propositions: [yes/no] on stimulus and [yes/no] on Q.E. 2. Everything else will be smoke and mirrors.
The 20 Point S&P Channel
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/19/2010 12:25 -0500
Buy at 1,127, sell at 1,147, turn on reversion algos, throw in some momentum kickers, rinse, repeat, watch the money come in. For the truly creative ones, go long the crappiest companies in the world, and wait for a short-interest covering spree following the most recent Goldman upgrade. In other news, the SEC is concerned about efficient markets.



