Archive - 2010 - Story
January 13th
CLSA's Mike Mayo Discusses A Financial Industry On Steroids, Lays Out The 10 Main Problems With Banks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2010 15:39 -0500"In summary, the banking industry has been on the equivalent of steroids. Performance was
enhanced by excessive loan growth, loan risk, securities yields, bank leverage, and consumer
leverage, and conducted by bankers, accountants, regulators, government, and consumers.
Side effects were ignored and there was little short-term financial incentive to slow down the
process despite longer-term risks." - Mike Mayo
The SEC Seeks Your Advice On How To Fix A Broken Market
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2010 15:04 -0500Since the SEC is beyond incompetent, and all it knows is how to place its employees at major Wall Street firms, the regulator is appealing to you, dear reader, to inform Mary Schapiro just how busted up the current equity market truly is, and to provide ideas on how to fix it, and to explain why "the current highly automated, high-speed market structure" is fundamentally unfair for investors.
The S&P 1,150 Strange Attractor
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2010 14:49 -0500Why we are likely hours away from S&P 1,150: Commentary from RBS Derivatives (alternatively, just more book pushing by the Scottish bank which has about 4 traders left)
Yet Another Options Expiration Shank and Crank
Submitted by RobotTrader on 01/13/2010 14:41 -0500Another day to mark down. How many times have we seen this happen? Where key "leading" sectors are shanked one day then cranked the next day during expiration week? Fear and greed is now oscillating between extremes on a daily basis, as bewildered and confused fund managers are getting whipsawed by the Prop Desk traders.
S&P Downgrades California To A-, Outlook Negative
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2010 14:28 -0500OUTLOOK: The negative outlook reflects our concerns about the large structural projected budget deficits facing the state and their implications for the state's cash position. Following a year in which the state grappled with a more than $60 billion deficit, we think the current deficit of approximately $19 billion could be more difficult to resolve given the state's extensive reliance on nonrecurring measures in the prior budget cycle. We believe indications of economic stabilization suggest that a recovery, if underway, remains precarious. Furthermore, if economic or revenue trends substantially falter, we could lower the state rating during the next six to 12 months.
December Budget Deficit Hits $91.9 Billion, $389 Billion So Far In Fiscal 2010
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2010 14:18 -0500
The December budget numbers are out and they are ugly. December was the record 15th straight budget deficit in a row with -$91.9 billion more in outflows than inflows, compared to a $51.8 billion deficit in December of 2008. Fiscal 2010 budget deficit so far is -$388.5 billion, and $1.47 trillion for the trailing twelve months.
January 2010 Beige Book: "Commercial real estate was still weak in nearly all Districts"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2010 14:04 -0500CRE is still the biggest wildcard: "Commercial real estate was still weak in nearly all Districts with rising vacancy rates and falling rents. Since the last report, loan demand continued to decline or remained weak in most Districts, while credit quality continued to deteriorate." - Beige Book
Senator Kaufman Approves SEC Proposal Calling For Elimination Of Naked Access
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2010 13:29 -0500“I am very pleased that the Commission is ready to ask serious questions and drill down beneath the standard-issue ‘provides liquidity’ defense of high frequency trading. The SEC needs to understand and control technology and its benefits, not permit technology to operate without regulatory understanding or access to needed data, and in doing so outrace the regulators’ ability to ensure market fairness for long-term investors. I am hopeful that a variety of independent parties will provide the Commission with the empirical studies needed to assess the price impacts of these trades on long term investors, though I worry that the data needed to undertake those studies is still not available,” - Senator Ted Kaufman
$21 Billion 10 Year Reopening Closes At 3.754%, Indirect Bidder Take Down Scarce At 29%, Vs 43% For Last Eight Auctions
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2010 13:18 -0500
Yields 3.754% vs. Exp. 3.763%
Bid To Cover 3.00 vs. Avg. 2.86 (Prev. 2.62)
Indirects take down 29.0% vs. Avg. 43.05% (Prev. 34.76%)
Indirect Bid To Cover 1.89
Alloted at high 49.95%
Direct bid take down surges again to 17%from 8.9%
Massive Spike In S&P Futures Volume Rallies Market, Breaks Dollar Trend
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2010 12:20 -0500
With Greece imploding, the last thing we need is for the US market to do what it did when Dubai faced a near-death experience in November. Whether or not that is the reason, we don't know, but someone just purchased a massive order of ES futures contracts in the open market, causing a dramatic spike in the market, and breaking the dollar's trendline.
High Yield: An Inquisition
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2010 12:00 -0500Low policy rates don’t impact speculative grade debt so much. Mortality rates for lower-rated debt are much higher than investment-grade debt; the three year mark is where defaults really start to bite. Three years ago (2007), 51% of HY issuance was rated B or below. Mortalities have been accelerated by economic factors, but cumulative default rates will still be high. A buy-and-hold strategy with a broad index of HY debt consistently outperforms the Treasury benchmark. Trading strategies benefit from treasury positioning.
RANsquawk 13th January US Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 01/13/2010 11:54 -0500RANsquawk 13th January US Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
The Junk Bond Extend-And-Pretend Hits New Highs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2010 11:27 -0500The latest indication of the exuberance in high yield was today's announcement from oil-tanker owner Teekay. The firm is offering $300 million of debt to finance a tender offer of the firm's 8.875% 2011 senior notes. Nothing has changed from the frothy days of 2007: tender short, provide sweetener, price longer maturity deal, wait out the next crash, repeat. In the meantime, the company's products are used as glorified warehouses to store ever greater amounts of oil for that day when Goldman's $1,000,000/barrel price prediction finally comes through. In the mean time, EIA reported another 3.7 million crude inventory build to 331 million barrels. Of course, massive supply will bring its own demand... Eventually.
Greek Risk Explodes To 327 bps, All Time High As Sovereign Risk Again Front And Center
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2010 10:51 -0500
Dubai - meet Greece. Apparently credit traders appreciate biblical allusions, as Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou "promised" for the third time today that all is good in the debt-stricken country, claiming there is "no way" the country would leave the euro or seek aid from the IMF. Credit's response: Greek CDS surges to an all time high of 327 bps, and the country now represents 24% of SovX risk.
Lloyd Blankfein Says He Never Got Request To Take Less Than 100 Cents On Dollar For AIG CDO Exposure
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2010 10:18 -0500So... Timmy... Who's lying here?




