Archive - Jan 6, 2011 - Story

Tyler Durden's picture

One Minute Macro Update





News again refuses to register, as reverse decoupling is the only relevant metric in the world: the US will pull the world out of its doldrums, and that's all that matters. That economic "growth" may actually mean the end of QE and the elimination of about 300 S&P point purchased via Brian Sack, is completely ignored.

 

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Byron Wien's Atrocious "Forecasting" May Have Cost Blackstone Hundreds Of Millions





The one man in finance, who after Buffett and Munger is way overdue for retirement, Blackstone's Byron Wien who at 77 is only made relevant once a year with his atrocious following year forecast, which due to its ongoing track record of being right approximately on zero out of ten predictions, provides Wall Street with an annual bout of uncontrollable laughter. So far this has been an innocuous exercise in worthlessness, but not any more. According to Bloomberg, Wien's latest forecast may have so infuriated the New York pension system that they may no longer invest money with Blackstone. "The New York City Comptroller’s office backed out of a scheduled meeting with Blackstone Group LP and trustees for the city pension funds who want the firm to repudiate chief strategist Byron Wien’s statement that public- employee retirement benefits are too high." The reason: "Last January, Wien, 77, said in his annual forecast that taxpayers 'literally can’t afford the benefits we have given our retirees in state and local governments and we have to change that.'" The result: New York State pension administrators are not amused.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Today's Economic Events





Following this morning’s Monster Employment Index, we have claims, retail chain stores, and the Fed’s balance sheet. Speaking of the latter, there is $6-8 billion in 1/31/2015 – 6/30/2016 bonds to be monetized, which means futures are already levitating.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

UK December PMI Plunges To Sub-50 Level, Lowest Since April 2009, As Inflation Slashes UK Margins Next





That whole reverse decoupling meme, where the US is supposed to bail out the world (courtesy of a "stimulative" payroll tax cut of all things) better work soon, cause after an insolvent Eurozone, and a tightening China where the interbank lending market is all but dead, now we get a UK PMI index which plunged from 53 to 49.7 (on expectations of 53). This was the lowest print in the index since April 2009. And confirming the trend that every single diffusion and manufacturing index in the US has been warning about, is that corporate input costs surged to the highest since September 2008 as average cost inflation accelerated markedly in December. Following in the footsteps of Walmart, Tesco will likely start selling 49 ounce coffee in 33 ounce coffee containers next (at the same price of course), hoping nobody will notice.

 

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RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX – 06/01/





RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX – 06/01/

 

Tyler Durden's picture

China In Diplomatic Gaffe, Backtracks After Leaked Report Discloses Country Ready To Use Preemptive Nukes





This morning China is forced to do some unpleasant diplomatic damage control. After an earlier report in Kyodo News disclosed leaked documents that China has revised its escalation doctrine to initiate a pre-emptive nuclear strike in response to a conventional attack, the country is now furiously scrambling to refute any such "interpretations." After all the last thing the already volatile North-South Korean theater needs is the worry of an unstable big brother next door who may just type in the launch codes if an artillery shell veers a few degrees off course. In its original report Kyodo announced that The Chinese military will consider launching a preemptive nuclear strike if the country finds itself faced with a critical situation in a war with another nuclear state, internal documents showed Wednesday. The newly revealed policy, called "Lowering the threshold of nuclear threats," may contradict China's strategy of no first use of nuclear weapons under any circumstances, and is likely to fan concern in the United States, Japan and other regional powers about Beijing's nuclear capability. Per obtained documents, the People's Liberation Army's strategic missile forces, the Second Artillery Corps, "will adjust the nuclear threat policy if a nuclear missile-possessing country carries out a series of air strikes against key strategic targets in our country with absolutely superior conventional weapons." China will first warn an adversary about a nuclear strike, but if the enemy attacks Chinese territory with conventional forces the PLA "must carefully consider" a preemptive nuclear strike. Of course, there is only one country that has "absolutely superior conventional weapons" and they know it. Which begs the question: why was this leaked now, and considering the recent spike in Chinese stealth fighter sightings, is China trying to send its biggest debtor "ally" a not so secret message?

 

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John Taylor On Why "Gridlock" Will Lead To A Slowing US Economy, A Drop In Equities And Commodities, And A Spike In The Dollar





"The 112th Congress just began today, but House Republicans have already laid out plans that are aimed at rolling back or not funding as many of the Obama programs as they can. As the Democrats control the Senate and the President has the veto as well, the programs are likely to survive the House challenges. However, these divisive tactics assure that pleasantries will be hard to come by in the Congress during the next year. Even the Fed looks like it will be dragged into this mud. If some decisions are necessary – the financial crises in state and municipal financing comes to mind – who is going to make the compromises to get the job done? God help the US if it goes into a recession and some real economic decisions, benefiting the workers or supplying capital or spending money, need to be made. It will be almost impossible to get a decision. Trench warfare is what we see and a deep recession is what we fear. Even growth below 2.5% would be very problematic and a big disappointment for the markets. Although we see equities down significantly, the dollar should rally and commodities decline as the US economy slows."

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Spanish, Belgian CDS Hit Record Wides, Even As China Announces Plans To Buy €18 Billion In Spanish, Greek And Portuguese Bonds





Today, despite the announcement by Chinese Vice Premier Li Keqiangin in Madrid that China is willing to buy as much Spanish debt as that of Greece and Portugal (but not Ireland), or roughly €6 billion each, CDS in both the core and the semi-periphery, are back to record levels (El Pais and Reuters sources). Spain was last seen trying to catch up with Illinois, somewhere in the mid 300s, while Belgium also took out record wides at 225 bps. On one hand this is beneficial news for Spain, now that China is seemingly instituting its latest sphere of influence, but in reality is just doing all it can to precent the euro from collapsing (and thus killing Chinese exports to its second largest trading partner, the EU) and with net issuance in the country expected at just €47.2 billion, Spain may have well gone the distance to plugging as much as 13% of its net funding needs for the year. However, and what is spooking markets more, is that, as we reported yesterday, today European Commissioner Michael Bernier will publish a “consultation
paper” outlining ways to shield taxpayers from banking crises, chief among which is the renewed floating of the debt haircut idea.

 

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After Three Weeks, Bond Outflows Reverse As Revised Equity Inflows Barely Budge





Well, that lasted all of 3 weeks: after ICI reported outflows in taxable bond funds for all of the prior four weeks (for a whopping combined $5 billion after hundreds of billions in inflows in the past year), the bond inflows are once again back in the last week of 2010, as bond investors placed $2.5 billion with taxable bond funds. The only category that saw outflows was mutual bond funds, which in itself is obviously quite troubling as it indicates that the state funding situation is about to get rather dire especially in light of the non-renewal of the BAB program. Basically this is exactly as we suspected would happen: following the major drop in bond prices in December, investors are now back and are in fact more interested in buying bonds at more attractive prices. Which of course means that that other trend: inflows into equities is about to taper off as well, as money flows shift out from equities and into bonds once again. Indeed, last week's inflow of $335 million in domestic equity funds was revised to just $14 million, and the last week of 2010 saw another token (and probably soon to be revised downward again) inflow of just $493 million. Should the equity inflow indeed reverse to an outflow shortly, the propganda machine will be doubly confused to explain how, a mere few weeks after it made such a story out of the first inflow in 33 weeks, outflows are again back.

 
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