Archive - Mar 1, 2011 - Story

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: March 1





  • China says media must 'cooperate' after clampdown (AFP)
  • Shirakawa Says Current Yen Level 'Not Working As An Additional Risk Factor' (WSJ)
  • China Sees Drop in New Bank Loans (WSJ)
  • EU Raises 2011 Growth Forecast, Sees Inflation Accelerating (Bloomberg)
  • Europe Wary of Rethink Over Irish Bail-Out (FT)
  • Charlie Sheen v Muammar Gaddafi: whose line is it anyway? (Guardian)
  • BOE's King Says Raising Rate to Make a Gesture Is Self-Defeating (Bloomberg)
  • Cameron Says UK Could Arm Rebels (FT)
  • Bill Gross Gets `A' for Effort on Trader Greed (Bloomberg)
 

Tyler Durden's picture

Daily Highlights: 3.1.2011





  • Australia's central bank keeps benchmark interest rate steady, as expected.
  • China Treasury Holdings rise to $1.16 trillion in December, US data show.
  • China’s PMI fell to 52.2 from 52.9 in Jan - slowest pace in six months.
  • European economy recovers; joblessness below 10% but inflation still above target.
  • Oil trades near one-week low after Saudi Arabia offers to cover supplies.
  • US approves first deepwater drilling in Gulf since BP oil spill.
 

Tyler Durden's picture

One Minute Macro Update





Markets in positive territory this morning. NY Fed President William Dudley said yesterday that unless inflation expectations are significantly surpassed, short-term interest rates will remain low, while also adding that no change in current monetary policy is likely. In contrast, St. Louis Fed President James Bullard said yesterday in an interview that the Fed will finish QE2 without full dispensation. The statements reflect the heating debate over the future of the current stimulus program. Economic events today include ISM, which by all preliminary indicators should print ahead of the 61.0E. Such a high print might well set the stage for a front end selloff, which we would use as an entry point as we do not believe the historical relationship between ISM and overall GDP growth will hold owing to the fact that ISM will be more bolstered by large sized exporters that are neither the trough of the economy, nor the path it will take back. Additionally today features Fed Chairman Bernanke’s Humphrey Hawkins testimony. Today’s Senate Banking Committee portion is usually calmer than tomorrow’s House Financial Services Committee schedule, but we expect the usual grandstanding from legislators and for Bernanke to be cautiously optimistic regarding the economy, but defensive about monetary policy. The market has in the past interpreted commentary regarding potential exit strategies as being indicative that those strategies are about to be employed, therefore we think Bernanke will avoid that discussion as best he can. If he does not, however, we believe that as with the ISM above, the front end should be bought up on a selloff.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

In Advance Of Bernanke's 10:00 AM "Humphrey Hawkins" Testimony





As oil (read Brent) looks set to take out interim highs following news of a rapid escalation in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, it will be interesting if Ben Bernanke, in his first of two semi-annual Humphrey Hawkins reports before Congress and the Senate, will actually discuss what is relevant: namely the inflationary surge in every single commodity, and plunge in the dollars, and the Fed's continuing preposterous policy of only caring about the Russell 2000 instead of actually doing anything to improve the economy. Reuters' advance look of today's presentation before the Senate Banking Committee at 10:00 am which will be webcast on Zero Hedge is quite amusing: "Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke will likely remain skeptical about the strength of the economic recovery in testimony on Tuesday, despite recent data pointing to improvement, signaling the central bank is unlikely to cut short its $600 billion stimulus plan." Why skeptical? Has he not been listening to the endless stream of permabulls on TeeVee every day, not to mention the teleprompter, all of whom have invested their entire reserve of credibility in lying to the public that we are in a V-shaped recovery and what not. Or is the economic recovery only and always merely a function of the Fed's ongoing injection of $100+ billion directly into the banking system (and the Russell 2000)? Because oddly the "pundits" always continue to ignore that one minor point.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Silver Hits Fresh Post Hunt Brother High Of $34.43 On News Saudi Has Sent Tanks To Bahrain





If RIA Novosti's update on the Middle East escalation is correct, the Middle East's worst kept secret, that Saudi Arabia would interfere militarily in Bahrain before the country fell, has just been confirmed. From RIA: "Saudi Arabia has sent dozens of tanks to Bahrain, where anti-government protests continue for about two weeks, Egypt's Al-Masry Al-Youm newspaper said on Tuesday. Eyewitnesses reported seeing "15 tank carriers carrying two tanks each heading towards Bahrain" along the 25-km King Fahd causeway, which links the small island nation of Bahrain to Saudi Arabia." And while nobody expects the DXY to do much if anything on this news, now that the dollar is irrelevant in the FX realm, the same can not be said about silver. Silver just hit $34.43 minutes ago, the highest print in the last 31 years.

 

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RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 01/03/11





RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 01/03/11

 
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