Archive - 2011 - Story
January 11th
Former S.A.C. "Portfolio Manager" Ron Insana Is Back... And He Appears To Be Pissed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2011 21:30 -0500This one was just too hilarious to pass by without presenting it. It was in fact hilarious enough that it could be presented a la carte without spoiling it by actually commenting...
Guest Post: Gold, The Improbable Answer To Life, The Universe, And Everything
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2011 19:11 -0500When you're on the right side of a macro trend, supposedly random events inexplicably go right with improbably high probability. I can live with such blatant disregard of nice mathematical properties. What I cannot live with is the lack of understanding when the trade may end. There're many ways the gold trade may end, but valuation is not one of them (though valuation may cause temporary pull-backs once in awhile). As I said in the beginning, there's simply no rational basis for gold valuation in anything else. It is, quite simply, whatever value the market is willing to pay for.
Is The Criminal Case Against Goldman About To be Reopened, As Robert Khuzami's "Ethical" Reputation Lies In Ruins
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2011 19:09 -0500After a few days ago we described in detail the facts behind the ACA lawsuit against Goldman, we were left scratching our heads how it could be that the SEC could ever possibly scuttle this criminal case which was obviously a slam dunk through court, and which based on the disclosures presented by ACA, is a blatant violation case of 10(b)-5 securities fraud and underwriter representation. We asked: did the SEC hide a key piece of the case against Goldman to fast track a settlement process? We concluded that even the SEC's otherwise completely inexperienced legal team should have been able to get this case through the finished line without the need to settle. Two developments today may allow us to postpone the head scratching for at least a bit. According to the FT, the Senate permanent subcommittee on investigations is about to issue a report which "will press the SEC to reopen its investigation into the bank." And in a completely separate report, we learn from Bloomberg that the SEC's top enforcement official, Robert Khuzami, who settled the SEC case with Goldman, is now being probed for his role in Citi's abrupt settlement over the summer. According to Bloomberg disclosures in a letter that served to open the probe "Khuzami ordered his
staff to drop the claims after holding a “secret conversation,
without telling the staff, with a prominent defense lawyer who
is a good friend” of his and “who was counsel for the company,
not the individuals affected.” We hope readers are able to put two and two together, and ask: just why is Robert Khuzami, former General Counsel for Deutsche Bank, still pretending to represent investor interests, when he obviously has far more powerful (and rich) interests to answer to?
Market Recap: 1.11.2011
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2011 18:38 -0500A summary of today's market action with an emphasis on equities, vol, currencies, rates and commodities, and an outlook of tomorrow's key events.
GoldCore Review of 2010 And Outlook For 2011
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2011 18:00 -0500Zero Hedge is happy to announce a new collaboration with the precious metals experts at Gold Core. We look forward to posting periodic industry updates, notes, analysis and commentary in conjunction with GC on all matters of topical significance in the PM space. As an introduction, we would like to present GoldCore's review of 2010 and Outlook for 2011. A sample from the analysis: "Should the dollar and other debt laden currencies and government bonds fall sharply in value due to a panic and wholesale liquidation we could experience hyperinflation. In this scenario paper assets will be shunned and people will protect themselves by buying hard assets such as real estate, commodities and gold and silver bullion. In such a scenario, gold and silver surge would quickly reach their inflation adjusted 1980 high of $2,300/oz and $130/oz before overshooting to much higher levels as was seen in Weimar Germany and more recently in Zimbabwe."
Must Read Observations On The Great Vega Short – Volatility, Tail Risk, And Sleeping Elephants
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2011 17:30 -0500In the eyes of this volatility trader the current paradigm of monetary and fiscal stimulus may best be understood as the greatest leveraged volatility short in economic history. The current stimulus is analogous to continuously rolling "naked" put options on the global economy, backed by margin provided by the US taxpayer, generating short-term growth at the expense of long-term systematic risk. The reinvestment of the premium into risk assets by the investor class ensures the Fed's naked put is never exercised. In theory the Federal Reserve is now the largest volatility trader in the world...You've most likely heard the old adage about the danger of picking up pennies in front of a steamroller. The great volatility short is no different in principal as our government collects trillions of pennies from the treads of a debt steamroller repatriating them to the driver in exchange for a promise to slow the machine. We must hope the operator is able to find a better job before he becomes dependent on those pennies for his survival. At 9.4% unemployment it will be challenging. In a recent letter to senior members of Congress Treasury Secretary warned there will be "catastrophic economic consequences" if the government's $14.29 trillion debt ceiling is not increased immediately. What should be apparent by now is that one day the greatest volatility short in history will face a margin call the US taxpayer will be unwilling or unable to meet. While the markets remain in a state of euphoria it may be the right time to opportunistically position yourself on other side of the Fed's volatility trade by going long tail risk.
114 Times More Insider Selling Than Buying In First Week Of 2011
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2011 16:45 -0500After insiders closed off 2010 with just 19x more selling than buying, they have greeted 2011 with a ratio of selling to buying of 114x, a decent pick up in dumping. Specifically there were 4 purchases in the first week of 2011 in S&P 500 names, for a total of $2.5 million in notional. This was offset by $290 million in sales, in 86 transactions. The only notable purchase in the last week was in ATI, which has continued to see insider buying for the past month. The selling side is far more interesting, and here we can see ongoing dumping of Google, MCK, Qualcomm, Ford, HP, Carnival, CSX, and so forth. Luckily for the PDs and the Fed, the retail hot grenade lemmings are finally stepping in, because it was unclear how much longer the HFTs could keep the market from crashing again.
RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 11/01/11
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 01/11/2011 16:21 -0500RANsquawk Market Wrap Up - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 11/01/11
Violence Over Surging Food Prices In Algeria Spreads As Rioting Leaves Many Dead In Neighboring Tunisia
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2011 16:02 -0500
A week ago we noted that the first Fed 'excess liquidity' inspired violence of the year broke out in Algeria, where following the recent release of FAO data confirming food prices have just hit an all time high, rioting broke out "over rising food prices and chronic unemployment... with youths torching government buildings and shouting "Bring us Sugar!" To be expected, this event received no coverage in the US. In the meantime, the violence has escalated and spread to neighboring Tunisia, where weeks of clashes have left 14 dead. The reason for the lethal violence- "high unemployment and the surging cost of living." One would think that excess economic slack from pervasive unemployment would bring about a plunge in the cost of living... Unfortunately, that is not the case in a centrally planned world.
Bad News For Our Chicago Readers: Illinois House Committee Passes Bill To Hike Taxes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2011 15:27 -0500From Dow Jones
- Illinois House Committee Passes Tax Bill To Cut Deficit
- Illinois Income Tax Would Jump To 5% From 3%
- Illinois Corporate Tax Would Jump To 7% From 4.8%
- Illinois Bill Now Goes To Full House
Cazenove's Griffiths: "Not Owning Gold Is A Form Of Insanity And May Even Show Unhealthy Masochistic Tendencies"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2011 15:24 -0500
Whoever said CNBC does not have good content: the biased station's European division actually has some very informed and interesting guests. Of particular note is yesterday's interview with Cazenove's technical strategist Robin Griffiths. And while the chartist tends to not be too happy with the recent stock market action (who is), the most notable item on the docket was Griffiths discussion of gold. And it was quite memorable: "I
think not owning gold is a form of insanity, it may even show unhealthy
masochistic tendencies, which might need medical attention. Real assets hedge paper money being printed into oblivion, so you've got
to own gold and you've got to own other commodity-related investments
still. Gold is far from being an overowned trade at the moment, far, far from it. Although it's been a top performer for each of the last ten years, it's
still in a linear trend. Eventually it will go exponential and make more
in the last little bit than the whole of the ten year trend." That pretty much covers it.
Goldman Prop: A Veritable (Physical) Gold Mine... As Suspected
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2011 14:58 -0500Over a year ago we attempted to deconstruct Goldman's prop trading activity using scraps of data from the tax returns of the Goldman Sachs Foundation. The reason we did that, is that up until today, the firm had never disclosed the non-client aspect of its trading, instead dumping all related revenues and profits in the umbrella "Trading and Principal Investments." That is no longer the case, as starting today the firm will break down its client facing and prop ("Investing and Lending") revenue and profit streams. The reason for our long-term fascination with Goldman prop trading, which is nothing less than a glorified hedge fund, and has no client flow focus whatsoever (presuambly), is that we had always claimed it accounts for a substantial portion of the firm's if not top, then certainly bottom line. After all it was Lucan van Praag who told us directly, that prop trading contributions to Goldman were really de minimis, a response which we took extremely skeptically as the margins associated with a modest revenue amount may well be huge and thus result in a substantial pre tax net income benefit to the firm. Today Goldman also published an 8-K that did a pro forma breakdown of its earnings. To our great surprise, we were correct in assuming that Goldman prop has been the dynamo behind the firm's profitability in 2010.
Liquidity Fail
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2011 13:58 -0500
Someone forgot to change Johnny 5's fuses. The result: no mas liquidez.
MarketWatch Freudian Ponzi Slip FTW
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2011 13:41 -0500
That's ok guys. In this ponzi scheme of a banana republic, we too are having problems figuring out who is doing the buying, when the seller is the buyer is the seller ad inf.
Market Stutters As $6 Billion In ES Goes Through
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2011 13:19 -0500We are hearing that the recent market downdraft and volume upswing occurred as a major block of just about $6 billion in E-Minis hit the bid. What is odd is that such a big order would go as a block and not be split. Either this was a fat finger or someone is making a statement. In the meantime the NYSE cume TICK hit -1,313, indicating just how much of everything trades as one, and the second there is any selling for whatever reason, the house of cards is once again in jeopardy.



