Archive - Aug 23, 2011 - Story
Bank Of America CDS Now Offered At All Time Wides: Full Fin CDS Rerack
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/23/2011 07:36 -0500And while stocks continue to blissfully exist in some parallel universe, the rout in financials has just entered overdrive, of particular note Bank of America, which has just passed it all time wides on the offered side. When the mid-market is north of 400, probably in about 2-3 hours, it may be time to cue the Lento from Chopin Piano Sonata, No. 2 in B-flat minor, Op. 35.
Pop Quiz
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/23/2011 07:27 -0500In an improvised pop quiz, we present two charts and ask readers to tell us which one is Bank of America's, and which is Goldman's...
Gold Reaches $1,913.50 – Smart Money Moving Into Silver As UBS Says $50 Silver In 3 Months
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/23/2011 07:16 -0500UBS have raised their 3 month forecast for silver sharply from $30/oz to $50/oz. They suggest that investors are too nervous to short gold and may be preferring to buy silver instead. Silver remains more than 16% below the record nominal high seen in late April 2011 and in January 1980. While gold at $1,888 is now 120% above its nominal 1980 high of $850/oz. The inflation adjusted high for silver is over $130/oz and those who understand the fundamentals of the silver market are positioning themselves for the possibility of a move to these levels in the coming months. Speculative fever in the silver futures market remains muted with COT data showing net longs well below the records seen in April. Silver is volatile but in the current climate what isn’t? Recently, there has been huge volatility in currency and bond markets and entire equity indices have been as volatile as silver. While silver is volatile, what makes silver valuable is the fact that like gold it has no counterparty liability or risk (with silver coins, bars or allocated storage) and therefore cannot go bankrupt unlike banks and sovereign governments. Media coverage of silver remains minimal with big brother gold getting some of the limelight recently.
Today's Economic Data Docket - New Home Sales, Richmond Fed, $95 Billion In Debt Issued
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/23/2011 07:05 -0500Two economic data points today - New home sales and the Richmond Fed index. Since LaVorgna just hiked his Richmond Fed estimate, leading the consensus to rise from -7 to -5, we would be particularly concerned about this number missing by a mile. Also, Treasury issues $95 billion in new 4 week, 52 week and 2 year debt, for net new cash of $46 billion.
Frontrunning: August 23
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/23/2011 06:52 -0500- Bernanke to aid recovery with gradual boost in dosage (Reuters)
- China factory output cools in August: HSBC (Reuters)
- German court to rule on Sept 7 on euro, Greek bailouts (Reuters)
- European Banks Must Pay Up to Borrow $100B (Bloomberg)
- A ‘no-growth’ boom will follow 2012 global crash (Market Watch)
- Merkel and Sarkozy Relationship Betrays Europe Crisis (Bloomberg)
- White House to Scale Back Regulations on Businesses (WSJ)
Plunging German Investor Confidence Sends European Bank Risk To Record
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/23/2011 06:28 -0500
Just like yesterday we have the makings of a perfectly schizophrenic day. While stock futures are rapidly higher to begin with, as on Monday, on news of a slightly better than expected PMI out of China, we are very concerned whether this algo induced ramp can be sustained. The reason is that earlier today we got an absolutely abysmal German ZEW investor confidence number which dropped to -37.6 from -26, a doubling of the previous -15.1, and the lowest since December 2008. This epic collapse can only be compared with the stunner out of the Philly Fed last week. The biggest component of the ZEW, the current situation, imploded from 90.6 to 53.5, trouncing (to the downside) expectations of 85.0. Additionally, the eurozone economic sentiment dropped to -40 from -7.0. So what is the immediate impact? Well, as we said equity futures are completely ignoring that Europe's growth dynamo is now confirmed to be in a double dip recession. However, not debt: as Bloomberg reports, "the cost of insuring European bank debt against default rose to a record as German investor confidence fell to the lowest 2 1/2 yrs+ on concern the region’s debt crisis will curb growth." Specifically, iTraxx Fin soared to record 255 bps, +5 overnight, while SovX (the sovereign CDS index) was 5 bps wider to 302, just off the record 206 form July 18. We give stocks, which are once again soaring on renewed expectations of a QE3, a few hours before they realize that the news is actually i) very bad and ii) as has been said countless times, stocks have to drop far more, before LSAP resumes for the third time.
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 23/08/11
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 08/23/2011 05:37 -0500A snapshot of the European Morning Briefing covering Stocks, Bonds, FX, etc.
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