Archive - Jan 30, 2012 - Story
Europe Has Worst Day In Six Weeks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2012 12:01 -0500
The divergence between credit and equity marksts that we noted into the European close on Friday closed and markets sold off significantly. European sovereigns especially were weak with our GDP-weighted Eurozone credit risk index rising the most in six weeks. High beta assets underperformed (as one would expect obviously) as what goes up, comes down quicker. Stocks, Crossover (high-yield) credit, and subordinated financials were dramatically wider. Senior financials and investment grade credit modestly outperformed their peers but also saw one of the largest decompressions in over a month (+5.5bps today alone in the latter) as indices widen back towards their fair-values. The 'small moderation' of the last few weeks has given way once again to the reality of the Knightian uncertainty Europeans face as obviously Portugal heads squarely into the cross-hairs of real-money accounts looking to derisk (10Y Portugal bond spreads +224bps) and differentiate local vs non-local law bonds. While EURUSD hovered either side of 1.31, it was JPY strength that drove derisking pressure (implicitly carry unwinds) as JPYUSD rose 0.5% on the day (back to 10/31 intervention levels). EURCHF also hit a four-month low. Treasuries and Bunds moved in sync largely with Treasuries rallying hard (30Y <3% once again) and curves flattening rapidly. Commodities bounced off early Europe lows, rallied into the European close and are now giving back some of those gains (as the USD starts to rally post Europe). Oil and Gold are in sync with USD strength as Silver and Copper underperform - though all are down from Friday's close.
RANsquawk US Afternoon Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 30/01/12
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 01/30/2012 12:00 -0500World's Most Profitable Hedge Fund Follows Record Year With Mass Promotions
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2012 11:42 -0500- AIG
- B+
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank of International Settlements
- Bank of New York
- Capital Markets
- European Central Bank
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- Federal Reserve Bank of New York
- Germany
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Italy
- Michigan
- Morgan Stanley
- New York Fed
- Newspaper
- Portugal
- Risk Management
- Rosenberg
- University of California
- University Of Michigan
It was only logical that following its most profitable year in history, the world's most successful hedge fund (by absolute P&L), which generated $77 billion in profit in the past year, would follow up with mass promotions. In other news, it is now more lucrative, and with better job security, to work for the FRBNY LLC Onshore Fund as a vice president than for Goldman Sachs as a Managing Director. Also, since one only has to know how to buy, as the ancient and arcane art of selling is irrelevant at this particular taxpayer funded hedge fund, think of all the incremental equity that is retained courtesy of a training session that is only half as long.
This Is Europe's Scariest Chart
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2012 11:24 -0500
Surging Greek and Portuguese bond yields? Plunging Italian bank stocks? The projected GDP of the Eurozone? In the grand scheme of things, while certainly disturbing, none of these data points actually tell us much about the secular shift within European society, and certainly are nothing that couldn't be fixed if the ECB were to gamble with hyperinflation and print an inordinate amount of fiat units diluting the capital base even further. No: the one chart that truly captures the latent fear behind the scenes in Europe is that showing youth unemployment in the continent's troubled countries (and frankly everywhere else). Because the last thing Europe needs is a discontented, disenfranchised, and devoid of hope youth roving the streets with nothing to do, easily susceptible to extremist and xenophobic tendencies: after all, it must be "someone's" fault that there are no job opportunities for anyone. Below we present the youth (16-24) unemployment in three select European countries (and the general Eurozone as a reference point). Some may be surprised to learn that while Portugal, and Greece, are quite bad, at 30.7% and 46.6% respectively, it is Spain where the youth unemployment pain is most acute: at 51.4%, more than half of the youth eligible for work does not have a job! Because the real question is if there is no hope for tomorrow, what is the opportunity cost of doing something stupid and quite irrational today?
As Europe Goes (Deep In Recession), So Does Half The World's Trade
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2012 10:55 -0500
Following the Fed's somewhat downbeat perspective on growth, confidence in investors' minds that the US can decouple has been temporarily jilted back to reality. It is of course no surprise and as the World Bank points out half of the world's approximately $15 trillion trade in goods and services involves Europe. So the next time some talking head uses the word decoupling (ignoring 8.5 sigma Dallas Fed prints for the statistical folly that they are), perhaps pointing them to the facts of explicit (US-Europe) and implicit (Europe-Asia-US) trade flow impact of a deepening European recession/depression will reign in their exuberance.
Guest Post: One Dam Metaphor For The 2012 Global Financial System
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2012 10:39 -0500Metaphors have an uncanny ability to capture the essence of complex situations. Here is one dam metaphor that distills and explains the entire global financial system in 2012. The way to visualize the current situation is to imagine a dam holding back rising storm waters. The dam is the regulatory system, the rule of law, trust in the transparency and fairness of the system and the machinery of perception management. All of these work to keep risk, fraud and excesses of speculation and leverage from unleashing a destructive wave of financial instability on the real economy below. As legitimate regulation and transparency have been replaced with simulacra and manipulated data, the dam's internal strength has been seriously weakened.
Goldman's Market Top Tick Returns 1.6% To Its Prop Desk, Clients - Not So Much
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2012 10:20 -0500
As we commented last week when Goldman propped a Long Russell 2000 position, their recent track-record in perfectly wrong-footing their clients is statistically outstanding as a contrarian indicator. Following on the heels of Stolper's record-breaking run of wrong calls in EURUSD, the Goldman strategy team has very magnanimously had 1.6% of client moneys donated to their bonus fund since they managed one of the better top-ticks we have seen in months. And with collapsing trading volumes pointing to another plunge in quarterly bank earnings, Goldman's "Investing and Lending" group desperately needs any alpha it can get its hands on.
Presenting The "Superbowl Market Indicator" Or Why A Giants Victory Means Market Pain
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2012 09:43 -0500
Considering that the only thing more irrelevant in a period of centrally-planned financial suppression than fundamentals are historical chart patterns, such as the recently resurgent 'Golden Cross', which will have no bearing at all on a market which lives and dies by every eyebrow twitch of the Chairsatan and his central planning cartel cronies, we have decided to present yet another just as worthless, if much more fun market "predictor" - presenting the Superbowl Market Indicator, or the relative performance of the S&P following an NFC vs an AFC team winning the championship final. And not only that, but as SMRA adds, "on the three occasions when the Giants won the big game, the S&P 500 was lower by an average of -6.6% from the day of the Super Bowl through year-end." So while clueless pundits wax philosophical about precious metal and/or zombified "crosses", feel free to rebuke them that a Manning win will obliterate any possible gains from that particular irrelevant chart formation.
Everything You Need To Know About Europe In Three Charts
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2012 09:40 -0500
Juxtaposing Merkel's (righteous and principally correct) insistence on debt brakes and fiscal discipline with the socialist tendencies of her European (let us print) comrades is at the heart of the crisis in Europe. Nowhere is that more apparent than in these three charts, from the World Bank, which highlight just how large in absolute and relative terms Europe's social protection based government spending has become. This situation will only get more demanding as by 2060 almost a third of Europeans will be over 65 years old. While there was a belief that Europeans were willing to accept less growth for better growth (cleaner, smarter, kinder?), in order to meet the needs of an increasingly heavy 'social' burden, government debt brakes will clearly have to be unhitched further, no matter what Merkel demands (increasing tensions), or the 'new growth model' that is heralded but not yet substantive will have to be a miracle. As the World Bank notes "Europe will have to make big changes in how it organizes labor and government. The reasons are becoming ever more obvious: the labor force is shrinking, societies are aging, social security is already a large part of government spending, and fiscal deficits and public debt are often already onerous"
Guest Post: Baltic Dry Index Signals Renewed Market Decline
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2012 09:06 -0500
What is the bottom line? The stark decline in the BDI today should be taken very seriously. Most similar declines have occurred right before or in tandem with economic instability and stock market upheaval. All the average person need do is look around themselves, and they will find a European Union in the midst of detrimental credit downgrades and on the verge of dissolving. They will find the U.S. on the brink of yet another national debt battle and hostage to a private Federal Reserve which has announced the possibility of a third QE stimulus package which will likely be the last before foreign creditors begin dumping our treasuries and our currency in protest. They will find BRIC and ASEAN nations moving quietly into multiple bilateral trade agreements which cut out the use of the dollar as a world reserve completely. Is it any wonder that the Baltic Dry Index is in such steep deterioration? Along with this decline in global demand is tied another trend which many traditional deflationists and Keynesians find bewildering; inflation in commodities. Ultimately, the BDI is valuable because it shows an extreme faltering in the demand for typical industrial materials and bulk items, which allows us to contrast the increase in the prices of necessities. Global demand is waning, yet prices are holding at considerably high levels or are rising (a blatant sign of monetary devaluation). Indeed, the most practical conclusion would be that the monster of stagflation has been brought to life through the dark alchemy of criminal debt creation and uncontrolled fiat stimulus. Without the BDI, such disaster would be much more difficult to foresee, and far more shocking when its full weight finally falls upon us. It must be watched with care and vigilance...
T-4 Months For Portugal And Counting
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2012 09:05 -0500
Portuguese 5Y bond yields just broke to Euro-era record levels at over 22.5% taking then up to the same levels at which Greece traded just four short months ago. Ironically, Bloomberg notes that:
- *ECB SAID TO BE BUYING PORTUGUESE GOVERNMENT BONDS TODAY
which appears to be wholly focused on the short-end, as the long-end is blowing out. It also seems that many want to talk about the CDS blowing out but as we have seen time and again with Portugal (since its bond market is less liquid than the already thin CDS market), bonds are underperforming notably as real money exits in a hurry. While comments are plenty that Portugal is smaller and is not Greece, they have (relatively speaking) notable maturities within the next few months (EUR 10bn by May2012) that will not be able to roll in the private markets and then a large lump of over EUR 10bn in June.
Merkel Says No Greek Creditor Deal Today
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2012 08:54 -0500There is a reason why we mock the IIF's perpetual optimism that a deal will be done any. minute. now at every possible opportunity. Especially when after all of last week, we kept hearing over and over from every source imaginable just how "guaranteed" a deal is before today's Euro Council meeting began. Well, surprise, surprise, the red carpet clownshow is on, and there is no deal. And it gets worse. According to Bloomberg, European leaders won’t finalize Greece’s second aid program today because talks with banks over debt reduction aren’t completed, German Chancellor Angela Merkel said. Leaders are also awaiting an assessment of Greece’s current needs and the status of its economic reforms, Merkel told reporters before a European Union summit in Brussels today. Said otherwise, that 150 pip surge in the EURUSD, which as was said was very transitory, has faded. Even more amusing, Stolper is once again out of the money on both his latest EURUSD call, and his Sunday long USD call. Simply stunning.
European Elections And Tolstoy's Portugal
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2012 08:45 -0500
For better or worse, all of last year had Merkel and Sarkozy on the same page. Saying whatever it took to calm markets. They didn’t really spend a whole lot of time worrying about their own citizens. With the elections coming up, expect more negative and potentially confusing headlines to come out of Europe. Does Germany really want to control the Greek budget process? Sarkozy wants to “unilaterally” impose a financial transaction tax in France by August. That is the problem, what the politicians have to say to appease the voters is not always what the financial markets want to hear. The EU continues to try and perpetrate the myth that Greece is unique and that Portugal is different. Portugal has the benefit of being smaller, but they are next in line for principal write-downs (or whatever they are calling haircuts now).
Third Aircraft Carrier Group Coming To Iran
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2012 08:25 -0500
For months now we have been following US naval developments and deployments in the Arabian Sea, which serve one purpose and one purpose only - to demonstrate US military strength in the Straits of Hormuz region and to keep Iranian 'offensive passions' subdued. Yet never has the US had a total of three aircraft carrier groups in the vicinity, always topping out at 2 in the Bahrain-based Fifth Fleet, most recently these being the CVN-70 Vinson and CVN 72 Lincoln, with a third boat present merely until a rotation in or out of the theater of operations was complete. That is about to change, and with it the prevailing price of Brent, which we are confident is about to take a new step wise price higher as the US makes it all too clear what the endgame is, because as Naval Today reports, the "US navy to deploy third carrier group to Persian Gulf", probably the CVN-77 George H.W. Bush which departed Norfolk two weeks ago according to the most recent naval update, or any other Norfolk-stationed aircraft carrier: there is a wide selection to chose from.
European Council Meeting Begins - Live Webcast
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2012 08:09 -0500The clown procession begins. Watch as the head Euro-clowns give their canned remarks that all is well, and that a grand resolution will come any minute now. In the meantime, Brussels caterers rejoice at the thought of going public to a higher valuation than FaceBook.




