Archive - 2011 - Story
January 12th
The Fed Is Gifting Primary Dealers With A Monthly Commission Fee Of Over $5 Billion
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2011 15:29 -0500The topic of how much money the Fed is gifting to the Primary Dealers via POMO comissions has to become front and center right now. While we appreciate fluff "profile" pieces in the NYT addressing the issue tangentially, and assuring us via worthless promises by people whose one purpose in life is to pad the pockets of their future employers in preparation for that inevitable day when said parasites move from faux public service to doing the hard core biddings of a vampire squid, the truth is that this is daylight robbery and it is happening in front of everyone's eyes. As a reminder, per the NYT: "As offers to sell Treasuries flash on a bank of trading screens, a computer algorithm works out which ones to accept." We contest that this algorithm is costing tapxayer billions each and every month and demand that Bill Dudley, Brian Sack, Josh Frost or one of the 20 year old henchmen traders immediately disclose just wha the operatin terms of the algorithm are, and what the slippage is. The reason: we have reason to believe that the Fed's slippage rate is up to 5%. On a monthly POMO notional total of over $100 billion, this means that the Fed hands out well over $5 billion each and every month to the Primary Dealers. This is an abortion of the Fed's fiduciary responsibility and should be criminal if proven to be in fact correct.
More Troubles For China Green Agriculture As SEC Launches Inquiry Into Fraud Claims
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2011 15:06 -0500After a week ago Zero Hedge speculated that China Green Agriculture (CGA) may be the "next Chinese fraud" based on an extensive report by J Capital claiming the company could be shell worth about 80% less than it was trading at the time, it appears that the SEC has finally shut down its midget porn TV station and realized that the microcap market it is supposed to be policing has become a playfield of fraud and 10(b)-5 lies, and has decided to launch an inquiry into the company's operations looking at the fraud allegations. Once again, Zero Hedge is happy to have brought attention to a problem some may consider epidemic: namely pervasive market fraud and lies.
Bill Gross Explains Why He Is Not Buying Portuguese Debt (Read: Is Short), And Gives His Latest Muni Bond Outlook
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2011 14:37 -0500
While the fact that PIMCO is not a big fan of Europe is not surprising, nor is it surprising that Bill is talking his BAB book, and is therefore bullish on the muni question (especially on a relative basis, in essence saying that the US Treasury is in the same insolvency boat as California), what is surprising is that Newportbeachian, at least superficially, appears honestly confused what happens in June when QE2 ends. Which is funny: Fed's Fisher earlier said that the central bank has reached its limit of asset purchases... barring unexpected shock. Which of course means completely expected to the Fed. And since the Fed has to continue monetizing all the deficit issuance, it has no choice but to continue QE2. The conclusion is that in April or May, something "unexpected" will happen to give the Fed ammo to continue monetizing. May 6 anniversary anyone?
Fed Releases New POMO Schedule, To Monetize $112 Billion In Bonds And Prop Up Stocks On 18 Out Of 19 Trading Days
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2011 14:07 -0500The New York Fed's equity crash prevention team of Sack-Frost has just released its most recent POMO schedule. Over the next month, ending on February 9, the Fed will purchase about $112 billion in debt in 18 discrete operations. And for the first time unlike the prior two QE2 monthly schedules, there is not one dual POMO day. From the release: "Across all operations in the schedule listed below, the Desk plans to purchase approximately $112
billion. This represents $80 billion in
purchases of the announced $600 billion purchase program and $32 billion
in purchases associated with principal payments from agency debt and
agency MBS expected to be received between mid-January and mid-February." The days when there is no POMO will be Monday, January 17 and Wednesday, January 26. All other days have a POMO operation scheduled.
China Confirmed As Buyer Of Directly Placed Portuguese Debt
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2011 13:18 -0500A few days ago, when it was first announced that Portugal is contemplating a direct placement of bonds (with amount and buyer undisclosed), we speculated: "Reuters reports that Portugal is in the process of making a private
placement of bonds, without announcing details on size or the buyer. Our
guess: buyer is China, and size is about €1 billion." We were off. By €100 million. The WSJ has just confirmed that China was indeed the buyer, and the amount purchased was €1.1 billion. It is unclear if, as we suspect, Goldman Sachs was the underwriter on the transaction.
$21 Billion 10 Year Auction Closes At 3.39%, As Primary Dealer Take Down Is Lowest Ever
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2011 13:12 -0500
Today's 10 year $21 billion auction closed at 3.388%, an increase from last month's 3.34% and the highest since May 2010. The Bid To Cover came at a strong 3.30 compared to the one year average 3.12, and much better compared to last month's 2.92. The reason for the strong auction, which has caused 10 Years to pare their losses on the day is that indirect bidding jumped, and took down a whopping 53.6%. Just as importantly is that Primary Dealers, read the Fed's shell intermediaries, bought just 31.6% of the auction (with 14.9% going to Directs): this is the lowest primary dealer take down ever (at least according to our database)! This is very surprising as the Fed continues to have to monetize every single auction eventually, which means that China et al, who make up the indirect bidder roster, will have to flip their bonds to the Fed sooner or later, presumably at a profit. This also confirms our observations that PDs have become allergic to US paper in recent week, with PD UST holdings plunging by a stunning $70+ billion since late November. This trend appears to not be reversing for now.
"Successful" Portugal Bond Auction Cost To ECB: €1 Billion In Two Days
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2011 12:54 -0500The reason for today's most recent bizarro boil up per Bloomberg: "The European Central Bank spent between 1 billion euros ($1.3 billion) and 1.5 billion euros in government bonds in the last two days, according to Nomura International Plc estimates." No news yet on how much Japan, China, the Smurfs, and Uranus ended up having to purchase to bring you today's 1% surge in stocks.
Tunisia Rioting Escalates, Hits Capital As More Are Killed While Protesting Surging Unemployment And Food Prices
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2011 12:49 -0500
Virtually every US media continues to ignore the situation in Algeria and now Tunisia, where rioting predicated by high unemployment (read massive economic slack) and surging cost of living (but, but, didn't you just say massive slack??? how the hell can cost of living be up if you have "massive" slack? that's unpossible - the San Fran Fed has said so repeatedly), especially food prices, has just escalated once again. According to RFI, Tunisian rioting has spread to the capital, following more protesters (killed by the Police), and where a curfew has just been imposed. "Weeks of unrest in Tunisia have spread to the capital, where the heaviest protests took place on Wednesday. Police opened fire on a demonstration in the central town of Douz, killing two, the AFP wire service reports." And, lo and behold: even in Tunisia politicians are accountable when surging prices lead to death: the Tunisian interior minister was sacked earlier in an attempt to placate the rioters. Alas, no such luck: "The sacking of the Tunisian interior minister and the deployment of troops has failed to bring calm to the capital Tunis which again erupted on Wednesday. Security forces fired tear gas on hundreds of demonstrators in the heaviest protests yet in the capital after weeks of demonstrations since December." What fools: do they not realize that Core CPI in the US is pretty much at the lowest it has ever been? They should all just disperse and eat 50% off LCD TVs post haste.
The Global Commodity Equity Index Hits 27 Month High
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2011 12:20 -0500
Quote the chairman: "This fear of inflation is way overstated. We've looked at it very, very carefully. We've analyzed it every which way... We will not allow inflation to rise above 2% or less... I am 100% certain i can control inflation." Presenting the Jefferies global commodity index (CRB) which just hit a 27 month high.
Nigel Farage On Whether Italy Is Next
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2011 12:08 -0500
As we have been highlighting for quite a while, the 5th member of the PIIGS, Italy, has emerged very much unscathed so far from the European sovereign debt fiasco. Is that merited? Not according to famous euroskeptic Nigel Farage, who gives another unvarnished, and uncensored interview with RT, in which he lays out his reasons for why a plunge in Italy bonds has at best been delayed.
More Clues Of China's Real Estate Bubble: Ghost Malls
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2011 11:41 -0500
We have already seen Chinese ghost cities, rickety buildings, and a construction spree that makes our own unionized labor force seem positive antiquated. Time to add empty malls to the list. The latest confirmed sighting of Chanos' "treadmill to hell" China real estate bubble thesis comes from Bloomberg's Paul Allen who reports from Dongguan, China on the New South China Mall, which has remained mostly vacant since it opened in 2005. Allen tours the South China Mall, originally conceived as the world's largest mall, and finds retail space that has been largely vacant since 2005. Allen reports, "The reality at South China Mall is somewhat different: shuttered shops, unfinished, never occupied by a single tenant. The few retailers that are here have favorable leases, but little profit." Allen also states that despite obvious problems, the mall’s owners plan to expand to more than one million square meters of retail and residential space will be available.
RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 12/01/11
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 01/12/2011 11:33 -0500RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 12/01/11
Rosenberg Presents The Wile E. Coyote Market In 18 Easy Charts
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2011 11:09 -0500
David Rosenberg, who appears to have almost jumped the xtranormal bandwagon, and now realizes that the most effective way of communicating with the several 20 year old ADHD-addled speculators who still trade the market is in cartoon or chart form, continues on his one picture is worth a thousand words theme from yesterday. Today, he generously spares readers the trouble of reading 18,000 give or take words, and instead present 18 charts about the economy that paint a somewhat less rosy picture of what is going on out there, the bulk of which continues to be a government stimulus-funded, steroid liquidity driven sugar high, which has no choice but to keep getting ever more in stimulus and liquidity, or else everything collapses. And that in the meantime food riots are spreading from Africa to India (more on that shortly), should not worry anyone at all. After all the Chairman said he is 100% confident he can stem inflation before it results in such riots as we already reported on two occasions in 2011 alone (here and here).
India Gold Imports Hit Record As "Price Is No Longer A Factor"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2011 10:39 -0500All those who continue ridiculing gold, saying it has no utility, tend to forget one thing: it just happens to be the ultimate status symbol (especially for the nouveau riche). And who these days wants to demonstrate status (and has a lot of nouveau richness)? Why, the 2+ billion consumers who are benefiting from the biggest growth story in the world, i.e., China and India. According to the World Gold Council, gold demand in India in the last year reached a record. Per Bloomberg: "Purchases were about 800 metric tons, compared with 557 tons in 2009,
Ajay Mitra, managing director for India and the Middle East at the
producer-funded group, said today in a phone interview from Dubai." But how is that possible? After all gold prices surged in 2010 compared to 2009: is gold demand supposed to be inelastic? Surely you jest? Well, no: "Our assessment is demand will continue to be strong,” [Mitra] said. “Price is no longer a factor.”" Re-reading the bolded sentence a few times just may explain why PM distribution centers with actual physical inventories have suddenly become rarer than hen's teeth.
Bill Gross Says PIMCO Is Not Buying Portuguese And Other European Debt
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2011 10:22 -0500Just headlines for now. And so we have gotten to the point where even the 'smart money' is publicly denouncing the global Bernanke put, and the world's central bank "white knights" in the form of China (whose real debt number is wrapped in boxes, mysteries and enigmas), and Japan (which has more debt as a % of GDP than any other developed country). Luckily both can afford to buy a little debt of some other Ponzi nation, and thus preserve their own trade surplus status quo for a few more months. In the meantime the world's biggest bond fund is implicitly saying that frontrunning the last recourse EUR backstops is too risky for him.



