Archive - Feb 2011 - Story

February 25th

Tyler Durden's picture

It Starts: JPM Cuts Q1 GDP Forecast From 4% To 3.5%, Sees CPI Growing At 4%





And so the sunset of the QE2 inspired Golden Age begins: From JPM's Michael Ferolli: "We are revising down our projection for the annual growth rate of real GDP in Q1 from 4.0% to 3.5%. Prior to this week, first quarter growth had already been tracking a little soft relative to our forecast. In particular, consumers stumbled a bit to start the year, and while we expect them to pick up the pace some in coming months, the recent rise in energy prices poses a notable headwind. Most cyclical indicators remain quite favorable, and the unwind of adverse weather effects could support next quarter growth; for these reasons we are maintaining our second quarter growth forecast of 4%. If energy prices remain at their elevated level, however, this would pose a challenge to our outlook for next quarter. Another downside risk to Q2 GDP growth comes from the federal government sector, which could see a faster move to austerity than is in our current forecast. We've also revised our headline CPI forecast, particularly in Q1 where we now see the CPI increasing at a 4% annual rate. Below is our updated forecast spreadsheet."

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Rosenberg On The 6 Things That Drives The Market, Asks If Bullard Is Long Stocks





David Rosenberg shares his updated list of the now 6 (formerly 4) drivers of stock performance: "Well, we use to say there were four key drivers: 1. Fundamentals; 2. Fund flows; 3. Technicals; 4. Valuation. Then we introduced another one last week: 5. The Fed’s balance sheet; And now there is a sixth: 6. Corporate earnings surprises. No wonder St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank President Bullard is opting for QE3 — he’s probably long the market!"

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Marginal Lending Facility Borrowings Plunge - Is The European Liquidity Situation Back To Normal?





After having surged for 6 days starting with a major jump on February 16, from €1.2 billion to €15.8 billion, borrowings under the ECB's 1.75% Marginal Borrowing Facility plunged overnight from €14.9 billion to €2.2 billion. As was reported previously, the supposedly responsible banks for this surge in borrowings were Ireland's two most insolvent financial entities: "The FT reports that "Anglo Irish Bank and the Irish Nationwide Building Society, Ireland’s two most troubled lenders, were behind a spike in overnight borrowings this week from the European Central Bank, according to people familiar with the transactions." A senior figure familiar with the transaction said it was “to facilitate” the sale of deposits by Anglo Irish and Irish Nationwide under the restructuring plan. Under the ECB’s normal refinancing operations, the collateral is locked up for a week. Tapping the ECB’s overnight or “marginal lending” facility, although more expensive “gives the banks the freedom to have the assets at their disposal immediately if there is a quick sale" he said." So does this mean that AIB and the INBS have completed their asset sales and the collateral has been unwound from overnight activity? That would be the logical explanation, especially as today is an important day for Ireland with Enda Kenny expected to become Taoiseach imminently. What will be curious is if the MLP borrowings surge once again in the coming days: at that point the "Irish" excuse will no longer be applicable.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Federal Reserve Balance Sheet Update: Excess Reserves Surge, Fed Owns 37% More Treasurys Than China





There are two key datapoints to present in this week's Fed balance sheet update: the surge in excess reserves, and the comparative Treasury holdings between the Fed and other foreign countries. But first the basics: the total Fed balance sheet hit a new all time record of $2.5 trillion. The increase was primarily driven by a $23 billion increase in Treasury holdings as of the week ended February 23 (so add another $5 billion for yesterday's POMO) to $1.214 trillion. With rates surging, QE Lite has been put on hibernation and there were no mortgage buybacks by the Fed in the past week: total MBS were $958 billion and Agency debt was also unchanged at $144 billion. The higher rates go, the less the QE Lite mandate of monetization meaning that the Fed will be continuously behind schedule in its combined QE2 expectation to buy up to $900 billion by the end of June. Yet most notably, as we touched upon yesterday, the Fed's reserves with banks surged by $73 billion in the past week, as more capital was reallocated from the unwinding SFP program. As noted previously, we expect the total bank reserves held with the Fed to jump from the current record $1.29 trillion to at least $1.7 trillion by June.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Big Miss To Second Q4 GDP Read: Comes At 2.8% On Expectations Of 3.3%, Previous Estimate Of 3.2%





As we had been expecting, Q4 data once again continues to take downward revisions. Second revision of Q4 GDP prints at 2.8%, widely missing of 3.3% widely, compared to a 3.2% reading previously. US Personal Consumption came at 4.1% on expectation of 4.2% (Prev. 4.4%). Core PCE was 0.5%, on expectation of 0.4%. The attempt at getting the consumer to releverage, at least according to the BEA, is working: personal outlays increased from $10,736.3 to $10,883.2 resulting in a decline to savings of $55 billion. And still the economy refuses to either generate jobs to keep up with the rate of population growth, or to grow at the required rate of 4-5% nearly 2 years following the "end" of a recession. Make room for QE3.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Visual Atlas Of Distressed Oil Production





As recent developments out of Libya have demonstrated, when geopolitics and oil production mix, the resultant product is quite explosive. And as more protests are sure to spread to other countries in the region (with Saudi of course being the key domino whose potential fall would send crude well over $200), below we present a summary atlas of the key production capacities in both crude and gas, as well as proven reserves of all the countries in the MENA region. At this point, with Libya largely priced in, all attention should once again shift to developments in Bahrain, which contrary to the media black out, have not been put under control even remotely. The rumored fact that Al Jazeera may have allegedly received a "request" from Saudi Arabia to not cover recent events is a different story altogether.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: February 25





  • Irish Voters Set to Take Revenge on Ruling Party (FT, Bloomberg)
  • Saudi youth call for protest in solidarity with Libyan uprising (Monsters and Critics)
  • Wisconsin Assembly approves plan to curb unions (Reuters)
  • Special report on Glencore: The biggest company you never heard of (Reuters)... actually that would be the DTCC
  • US Warns Extreme Food Prices Will Stay (FT)
  • Gotta love Bloomberg headlines: Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac Seek $3.1 Billion Amid Improved Earnings (Bloomberg)
  • More completely expected criminal fraud out of Citigroup: What Vikram Pandit Knew, and When He Knew It (Bloomberg)
  • CFTC, SEC halt criminal investigations, blame lack of money (WSJ)
  • Sentance Says BOE Must Tighten Now to Prevent Tough Moves Later (Bloomberg)
  • House Republicans Move to End U.S. Foreclosure Aid Criticized as Harmful (Bloomberg)
 

Tyler Durden's picture

One Minute Macro Update





Markets up again this morning. Wisconsin’s state assembly passed the highly debated legislation that weakens state workers’ unions and the bill will now head on to the state senate. In a meeting with outside economic advisors, President Obama acknowledged that current rates of unemployment will continue in the near term. St. Louis Fed President James Bullard told reporters yesterday that he supports a more flexible quantitative easing program that would change the amount of bond buying based on the health of the economy. Bullard’s comments were not limited to QE2, and said a third easing program is a possibility. Today will see the release of 4Q GDP, estimated at 3.3% v 3.2% prior.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

UK Stagflation Worsens (Cold Blamed) After GDP Revised Even Lower, LSE Promptly Halts Trading





Following a surprising confirmation of a double dip in the UK a few weeks ago, after GDP was reported to have dropped by 0.5%, today the economic growth number was revised even lower, coming in at -0.6%. Per Bloomberg: "Gross domestic product fell 0.6 percent from the previous three months, compared with an initial estimate for a 0.5 percent drop, the Office for National Statistics said today in London." Yet how pathetic would a country be seen if it didn't blame a weak winter data point on the snow: "The statistics office said its “best estimate” for the impact of cold weather on the data remains 0.5 percent. The slump was led by construction and investment. The coldest December in a century hampered the recovery, dragging the economy to its worst performance in more than a year. The Bank of England kept its key interest rate on hold this month as inflation at twice the 2 percent target led to a four-way split among officials. Recent surveys suggest the contraction may have been a temporary setback, with services resuming growth in January and manufacturing strengthening." Of course, with no additional money printing (for now) it may well have been permanent. We will need to wait until spring showers are blamed for another 1% or so drop. And it wasn't even half an hour later that the entire London Stock Exchange crashed. "Investors were left in limbo as the London Stock Exchange halted trading due to a technical glitch, dealing an embarrassing blow to its new systems. The LSE, which launched its new trading system last week, suspended dealings before the opening bell on Friday morning in the latest in a string of technical problems." Snow was not blamed: "It blamed issues with the market data technology and said it was investigating the problem." So once again, just like in the case of the Italian market a week ago, the second there is the potential for massive market volatility following disappointing data, a market wide "circuit breaker" comes in preventing anyone from selling. Truly an effective solution to retain asset price stability.

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 25/02/11





RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 25/02/11

 

February 24th

Tyler Durden's picture

Adjusted Monetary Base Goes Vertical





Just in case there was any confusion in the interpretation of the M2 chart, here is the latest just released Adjusted Monetary Base.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: The Transition To A Free Society





The first, most fundamental, and most necessary step in the transition to a free society is the demise of the modern “monster state.” And the first, most fundamental, and most necessary step in this process is the demise of the monstrous American state, its erstwhile role as a beacon to the world having long ago given way to a superpower that brings not light but heat, pulling a shroud over its own people in the process. The monster will object that it only wants to keep its people warm and safe, of course, but as people elsewhere start kicking their shrouds off, it is increasingly clear that the status – as in statist – quo is changing and that neither suffocating domestic policies nor incendiary foreign ones will be tolerated much longer.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Paul Mylchreest's Latest Must Read Report: Gresham’s Law Squared – Gearing Up For Game Over





So here we are, waiting for the “event” which triggers a loss of confidence across the system. Will it be a sovereign, a US state, a bank, QE3 or QE5, the oil price, Chinese fixed investment, a false flag event (a convenient distraction/excuse) or a revolution? When it happens, the speed at which capital will move in today’s over-liquefied world will take people’s breath away. Where will it go? This is the global end of normal (baby) so that, first and foremost, it will go into the strategic assets - gold/silver, energy, food/agriculture, rare earths, etc, (as well as the equities of the financially strongest economies). Bernanke’s QE2 is nothing short of economic warfare, in the form of a wave of inflation, directed at the rest of the world and even his own population (at least anybody without a large stock market, commodities or precious metals portfolio). This inflation is not temporary, as per the false reassurances, it’s baked in. In response, creditor nations have no other choice than to cut purchases of US Treasuries (China is selling), leaving the Fed increasingly standing alone. Rampant or hyperinflation results from the complete loss of confidence in a currency and we are being steered in this direction by the gentlemen above. Sure, they are smartly dressed, well educated (kind of) and pretend to know what they’re talking about with their carefully worded “policies”. It’s all NONSENSE. All they’re doing is leading us down a well-trodden path which has happened time and again throughout history.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

What You Need To Know About Buying Silver At A Time When Even The Canadian Mint Says "It Has Sold Everything It Has"





Even as silver performed some unprecedented fireworks today, plunging on what was a margin hike in... crude, the metal continues to trade just below its post-Hunt Brother highs. So for those who still have not decided whether or not to take the plunge and buy into the precious metal (which, granted, was selling at $8.80 three years ago, and has since nearly quadrupled in price), we present the following discussion between Jeff Clark of Casey Research and The Daily Crux, which answers "what you need to know about buying silver today." This comes a week after we first highlighted that the Canadian Mint has sold it last stock in silver and has demand for much more.

 
Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!