Archive - Mar 2011 - Story

March 24th

Tyler Durden's picture

Lipper Reports Largest Ever Weekly High Yield Outflow





Just out per Lipper, High Yield recorded its largest weekly outflow ever with a negative $2.8 billion this week. Presumably this is due to the risk off mood in the markets carried over from last week, or maybe just more funds converting out of fixed income and pumping into equities in advance of what even the futures just seem to realize is an inevitability (go ahead, check out the ES chart AH, we dare you). That said, per ICI there was a 3rd consecutive outflow from domestic equity, so perhaps this was simply derisking. Continuing on the Lipper news, the 4 week average dropped from $181 million of inflows to $641 million in outflows, pushing the year to date down by half to just $2.9 billion in inflows. On the other hand, loan funds continues being John Holmes with $9.5 billion in YTD inflows, although just $57 million (down from $686 million) in the last week.

 

Zero Hedge's picture

Lear Capital: Will Rising Interest Rates Skyrocket the Gold Price?





The great Gold Bull Market of the 20th Century is said to have started in 1972, just after Richard Nixon announced on August 15, 1971, he was taking the United States off the Gold Standard. At that time Nixon realized foreign countries were hoarding more gold and silver-backed currency than could actually be redeemed by the precious metal's reserves we held.

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 24/03/11





RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 24/03/11

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Tokyo Runs Out Of Bottled Water





While the broader population continues to read stories of a stoic Tokyo population, casually taking each day of deteriorating news from Fukushima in stride, the reality is far from what is being represented. The latest escalation: Tokyo is running out of bottle water, now that the government disclosed (with a two week delay), that drinking water is irradiated. From Reuters: "Many shops in Japan's capital ran out of bottled water on Thursday after a warning of radiation danger for babies from a damaged nuclear plant where engineers are battling the world's worst atomic crisis since Chernobyl." And if the government appears to be on the verge of losing control (and no city of 13 million can operate without water, no matter how bullish Douche Bank's chief strategist sounds on CNBC) after disclosing this one factoid, what happens when the true extent of the secondary effects from Fukushima are made public: "The government urged residents not to panic and hoard bottled water -- but many shops quickly sold out."If this is long term, I think we have a lot to worry about," said Riku Kato, father of a one-year-old baby." Perhaps it is time for Malcolm Gladwell to do a tipping point analysis of herding mentality, vis-a-vis a decision to participate in a mass urban exodus. Which brings up tonight's $64k question: is Snake Plissken too old for the "Escape from Tokyo" sequel.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Someone Leak Something?





Something rather disturbing from a European trading desk...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

And Like Clockwork, CME Hikes Silver Margins Halting Surge





In tried and true fashion, just as Silver was about to viciously destabilize the global capital markets as it surged to new 31 year highs, the CME stepped in and did its usual 3-6 half life intervention by hiking initial and maintenance margins on silver futures from $11,138 and $8,250 to $11,745 and $8,700 respectively. This is merely the latest margin hike in what appears to be a neverneding series designed to reduce speculative "fervor" courtesy of endless liquidity. What it will do is merely provide a better entry point for those who by now realize that silver's next stop in the fiat endgame is $40, then $50, and so forth. Naturally, the price drop in silver caused gold to sell off too. And now that the CME accepts gold as collateral, we can't even visualize the reflexive loops that develop once the metal that is also a collateral currency becomes more and less valuable at the same time.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Mike Krieger Explains Why A Calm Sea Does Not Make a Skilled Sailor





In case you wondered where the title for this piece came from, it was actually the message that popped out my fortune cookie during a meal on Monday night. It just summed up so many things for me. It summarized why our culture is so damaged. At the core of the malignancy killing the nation is the fact that we possess the world’s reserve currency that can be created at will out of thin air and forced upon goods producing nations (whether manufacturing or resource goods). This means we do not need to produce to consume, which hollows out the entire core of the economy over time and has made us the generally lazy and decadent society we are today. I mean take for example the C announcement recently of a reverse 1 for 10 stock split. I haven’t heard such an embarrassing press release since reading about how U.S. taxpayers are going to make money from the bailouts. So for the last year all I heard on propaganda channel CNBC was how once C’s shares got above $5 it would attract a whole new class of investors and the shares would soar. Well the stock wasn’t able to hold above $5 so look what happened. Magic, they are just going to make the stock trade at $45 with this scheme. Bankers can’t lose, didn’t you get the memo? Oh and they are paying a whole penny a share in dividends. You have got to be kidding me guys. Pathetic.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: Phase Shift - The Next Leg Down in House Prices





Way back in August 2006, near the top of the housing bubble, I suggested a two-part scenario for the housing bust: it would take eight more years to play out, and the declines would occur in sharp downlegs following a phase-shift model. A few months later, literally at the top of the housing bubble in early 2007, I suggested that a mere 4% of homeowners defaulting could trigger a collapse of the entire U.S. housing market. That is pretty much exactly what happened, for when the 4% who couldn't pay their subprime mortgages folded, they took down an exquisitely corrupt and vulnerable banking sector and the FIRE (finance, insurance, real estate) economy which had come to depend on it.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Coeur d'Alene CEO Sees Gold At $1,500, Silver In Mid-$40s "This Year" As Pan American Silver Reduces Production Forecast





That a CEO of a silver miner sees precious metals prices rising, especially on a day like today when silver hit a new 31 year high (and gold is at a record) is not surprising. Especially since that is precisely what happened: "The head of U.S. silver miner Coeur d'Alene Mines
Corp said on Thursday that he "would not be
surprised" if silver prices reached the mid-$40s per ounce and gold
prices rose to $1,500 to $1,600 an ounce this year
." What is, however,  surprising is that another prominent silver miner, Pan American silver, announced during its earning call that "it plans to produce between 23-24 million ounces of silver in 2011, down from 24.3 million ounces in 2010. The company said it expects to produce between 76,000-78,000 ounces of gold in 2011, down from the 89,555 ounces it produced last year." So despite a record price in silver, the company is unable or unwilling to mine more to keep up with demand? Perhaps the peak [blank] crowd should take a long hard look at silver.

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 24/03/11





RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 24/03/11

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Anonymous' Operation Empire State Rebellion Releases "Civil Disobedience" Video #2





Two weeks ago the Anonymous hacker collective released a video indicating it was moving to a peaceful form of civil disobedience, until such time as the Fed is abolished, to be preceded by the "sign of good faith" that is Bernanke's stepping down. Needless to say, so far Bernanke has not quit. So today Anonymous' OpESR has released a second video which unlike the previous one is more or less a collage of hacker-friendly video clips. Hopefully there is some more to this latest form of anonymous activism than the clever use of iMovie...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Fitch Downgrades Portugal To A-, On Rating Watch Negative





In a very unsurprising move, Fitch just downgraded Portugal to A-, is on Rating Watch Negative, and may be downgraded further. Nobody cares since everyone knows all too well Europe is pretty much insolvent. In fact we are shocked the EURUSD is not at 2.00 on the news.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Dollar Cremation Resumes





Just as Bob Pisani was getting giddy that for probably the second time in 2011 the dollar went up in concert with the Russell 2000, here comes reality washing over the true value of the world's most hated reserve currency, and forcing the DXY to drop to yesterday's lows, which incidentally are just pennies away from multi year lows. Should the Yen resume its strength forcing the BOJ et G7 to intervene again (just as ineffectively), look for the DXY to promptly take out all lows as the Bernank once again goes to the front of the currency devaluation race.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Summary Of Key Health Threats From Fukushima Radioactive Substances





Now that both food and drinking water in Japan have been confirmed to be tainted with various stages of radioactive toxicity, Reuters provides a quick summary of the impact the three key fallout isotopes (Iodine 131, Caesium 134 and Caesium 137) have on human health, and what to look for to determine if one may have injested just a tad too much of those glow in the dark shoots...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Think The Japanese Disaster Is Just What The Keynesian Doctor Ordered? Mo Says No





That would be Mohamed El-Erian from Pimco, by the way, who first among the lunatic fringe (here's looking at you Goldman and Kudlow), admits that contrary to what all the Koolaid guzzlers claim, the Japanese quake may not be what the Keynesian doctor ordered after all. We urge readers to read this piece as a counterpoint to Goldman's stern defense that the Japanese quake is but a scratch, and one that will lead to world peace, prosperity and a doubling (give or take) of global GDP. In fact, El-Erian tells all the pundits who in addition to permabulls are also suddenly nuclear physicists and geologists, to shut the hell up, "as tempting as they may be, analytical shortcuts are best avoided
at this early stage.
It will take time and thorough analysis to specify
the true consequences of Japan’s triple calamity, including the
longer-term impact on its economy and that of the rest of the world. The Japanese have shown admirable courage in the face of unthinkable
tragedy. I have no doubt that a successful reconstruction program will
lead their country to recovery. In the meantime, however, the urgency of
restoring a sense of normalcy and hope to a dramatically wounded
society warrants thoughtful and deep analyses
." On this matter, we couldn't agree more.

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