Archive - 2010 - Story
January 6th
Rosie: "Why This Is Not The Onset Of A New Secular Bull Market"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/06/2010 11:08 -0500One table, two markets. All you need to compare the present market with 1982, courtesy of David Rosenberg. The numbers, unlike TV stations, don't like.
Schapiro Forces Perot Insider Trader To Refund $8.6 Million Profits, Still No Announcement On NYB Insider Trading Case
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/06/2010 11:00 -0500The SEC, which had its Dell-Perot insider trading case handed to them by various blogs, has forced the disgorgement of $8.6 million in profits from the perpetrator Reza Saleh. And while this action is completely insufficient to warrant the continued abuse of taxpayer money by the SEC, and its ongoing worthless existence, we still demand that the SEC immediately initiate an investigation into the blatant insider trading, most likely facilitated by a person at the FDIC, in regard to the New York Community Bancorp taxpayer funded acquisition of recently defunct AmTrust Bank. We will keep reminding the Chairwoman of her grotesque failing as anything but a bureaucrat who managed to milk FINRA for so much more than she is worth ($3.3 million to be precise, and other insane pension benefits), and is currently merely a figurehead, whose sole responsibility is to let the Ken Lewises off the hook with nothing but a handslap.
RANsquawk 6th January US Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 01/06/2010 10:34 -0500RANsquawk 6th January US Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
Peter Costa: "Longer-Term I Still Think We Are In A Heap Of Trouble"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/06/2010 10:23 -0500
"Longer-term, I still think we are in a lot of trouble, a heap of trouble...I am still on the bearish bent. End of the year I think we will be here or a little lower. I am sorry." - Peter Costa
Fed Admits It Accepts Unworthy Collateral In TALF
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/06/2010 09:51 -0500"The New York Fed continuously reviews the stress value estimates and recently identified and corrected a methodological error. The New York Fed has determined that as a result of this error, one legacy CMBS — CUSIP 059497AX5 — was accepted as collateral that would not have been accepted using the current methodology. However, the New York Fed continues to expect no losses on the loans backed by this CMBS because the stress value is based on extremely unlikely economic circumstances, and because the market value of this CMBS is well above the TALF loan amounts." - New York Fed
Treasury Flooded Consumers With Money In December, Just In Time To Unleash Holiday Shopping "Animal Spirits"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/06/2010 09:03 -0500
When you have your back against the wall, and the only thing at your disposal is the Fed's money printer on loan, what do you do? Well, if you are the Treasury, you let money rain. Literally. In December, according to the Financial Management Service, the US Treasury dispensed a stunning 69.5% more in Social Security Outlays and Unemployment Insurance on a year over year basis: the administration knew all too well it could not afford to let this holiday season go to waste. So, after averaging at $43.6 billion in monthly outlays, Social Security withdrawals from the UST surged by a unprecedented 48.6% in December to a whopping $69.5 billion. This is not a volatile or seasonal series.
Frontrunning: January 6
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/06/2010 08:25 -0500- ECB Board member Juergen Stark says buck stops here, EU will not bail out Greece "The markets are deluding themselves when they think at a
certain point the other member states will put their hands on
their wallets to save Greece", comments whack euro (Bloomberg, FT) - In the meantime, Greece, its head stuck deep up its...sand, says bailout not needed contrary to every indication to the opposite (Bloomberg)
- Iceland, and Iceman Mishkin, also thought so once, now country promises it won't default either, Dubai deja vu (Bloomberg)
- If Fed missed this bubble, will it see a new one (NYT)
- The rats are fleeing the global excess liquidity titanic en masse: first Dodd, now Japan Finance Minister - Naoto Kan named new fin minister (Bloomberg)
- Report from the "move your money" front (HuffPo and IRR)
RANsquawk 6th January Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 01/06/2010 04:40 -0500RANsquawk 6th January Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc.
Breaking: Senator Chris Dodd (D-CT) to Retire
Submitted by Marla Singer on 01/06/2010 00:52 -0500Developing....
January 5th
Guest Post: Is VIX Cheap Hedging Yet or Do Stocks Have More Leg Up?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/05/2010 22:37 -0500Volatility is a good hedge against all kinds of disasters: socialism, Obama, other geopolitical and macroeconomic events, government tax revenue shortfalls—pretty much anything that influences price uncertainty. But it is only good for this when acquired at a good price. Buy it cheap, and it is beautiful insurance. Buy it dear, and the negative carry is a leaky artery. So the issue really reduces to finding a good price for volatility. A good place to answer that is history.
China Between Rock And Hard [Place/Case] After Public Anger Mounts Over House Unaffordability, Real Estate Bubble
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/05/2010 22:10 -0500Even as China proves to the world it has perfected Greenspan's repertoire for blowing asset bubbles in any and every asset class, the fact that China is still a communist country and thus has to carefully respond to public pressure (ironically, more carefully than "capitalist" America) could put a damper in its plans to overtake the US in flooding the market with masses of excess liquidity. The reason: increasing social anger at the affordability of houses. Because unlike the US, where Mozillo's hellspawn and other subprime henchmen were all too willing to subsidize every deadbeat with a 150% LTV on a FICO of 101, China's credit mechanism is not that "advanced" meaning billions of people have become cut off from the home market for the simple reason of lack of affordability (yes, the concepts of equity and savings are still appreciated in certain non-US dominated parts of the world).
US Avoids Technical Default By Three Days
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/05/2010 19:37 -0500
On December 24, the Senate passed a vote by a razor thin margin (with not a vote to spare) to raise the Federal debt ceiling from $12,104 billion to $12,394 billion. The actual debt ceiling increase took effect on December 28. And as the chart below shows, the Treasury's cash flow projections were spot on: 3 days later, and the debt subject to limit surged to $12,254, a jump of over $200 billion in 2 days, and a whopping $150 billion over the old debt ceiling. Three days is all the buffer the administration's reckless spending spree has afforded this country to avoid bankruptcy. Had one more Democratic vote dissented from the stopgap measure, the US would now be in technical default. There is just $140 billion left before the revised debt ceiling is breached. We hope for the country's sake that Bill refunding in January is massive, because as we already pointed out, on January 7th we expect another ~$130 of new Treasuries to be announced for auction by January 15th. And then there are two more weeks in January... Which is why the Treasury better be using that TARP money to pay down all it can, because if the general population understands how close this nation was to the fiscal brink, many more answers may be demanded out of the ruling party as to how it could allow things to get so out of hand.
MarketWatch Calls Out Fed To Disprove It Is Manipulating Index Futures
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/05/2010 18:40 -0500A week ago we presented the observations of TrimTabs' Charles Biderman, who laid out a logical case for why there is significant circumstantial evidence that the Fed is manipulating markets by purchasing index futures in the aftermarket: "One way to manipulate the stock market would be for the Fed or the Treasury to buy $20 billion, plus or minus, of S&P 500 stock futures each month for a year. Depending on margin levels, $20 billion per month would translate into at least $100 billion in notional buying power...This type of intervention could explain some of the unusual market action in recent months, with stock prices grinding higher on low volume even as companies sold huge amounts of new shares and retail investors stayed on the sidelines. For example, Tyler Durden of ZeroHedge has pointed out that virtually all of the market’s upside since mid-September has come from after-hours S&P 500 futures activity." Today MarketWatch has an open appeal to the Fed to put Biderman's allegation to rest by publicly disproving that it is involved in any direct market manipulation. "Biderman's accusation of PPT market manipulation is another argument in favor of a complete public audit of the Fed's books...there is a widespread belief that the PPT does manipulate stock prices on a daily basis to enrich its pals and screw individual investors. It would be useful to prove them. " We couldn't agree more.
December Rolling Tax Witholdings Collapse To Multi-Year Low
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/05/2010 18:10 -0500
The month of December was supposed to be a bright spot in the Treasury's tax withholding calendar: after all taxes used to be the way this great nation funded its coffers until the Fed and Primary Dealers came along. And with Wall Street bonuses presumably at record levels, the withholdings were expected to jump not only compared to December of last year, but to all Decembers. Well, as is the norm with this administrations, these expectations never materialized, and instead rolling withholdings hit recent record lows.
Cleveland Fed Ridicules Krugman, Says Probability Of Recession Based On Yield Curve At Record Lows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/05/2010 17:02 -0500
The doctor recommended daily Fed reading/hilarity generating allowance presented for your late day pleasure.




