Archive - Mar 13, 2012 - Story
Will The 3rd Time Be The Charm For European Credit Bears?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/13/2012 08:14 -0500
What do European credit markets know that equities don't? For the 3rd day in a row, credit markets snapped higher at the open and have then sold off considerably - diverging bearishly from European equities. At the same time, European sovereigns (most notably the pivot securities of Italy and Spain) are now 20-25bps wider (in spread) from Friday's Greece 'deal' announcement. European financials are underperforming dramatically.
We Will Hit 84 Degrees In NYC Today (Seasonally Adjusted)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/13/2012 07:47 -0500

There has been a lot of talk lately about “seasonal adjustments” and what they actually mean and do for the data. Reporting today’s forecast in “seasonally adjusted” terms would not be incorrect. Seasonality isn’t bad, and is useful in many ways, but so is the raw data and trying to figure out if the adjustments make sense or need to be modified a lot due to the particular circumstances at the time (like great warm weather). The markets are almost all doing well so far this morning, aside from European sovereign spreads which continue to leak wider (Spain now +20bps post-Greece and Italy +24bps).
Retail Sales Come In Line With Expectations, Rise 1.1% In February
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/13/2012 07:40 -0500Following several months of retail sales misses, the market was hoping for blow out data- after all consumers have been largely releveraging. What it got was a normal that was in line with expectations at the seasonally adjusted headline level (+1.1%), following an upward revised 0.6% increase in January (0.4% before), and a stripped number ex autos and sales of +0.6%, on expectations of +0.5%. The latter was revised as a decline from the previous 0.6% which was in turn hiked up to 1.0%. Motor vehicle sales, courtesy of the already noted soaring channel stuffing by Government Motors, rose 1.6% in February sequentially. Gasoline stations saw a 3.3% jump sequentially, and 10.3% compared to last year. This even as demand for gas has plunged to all time lows: maybe it has something to do with price. At least people are still eating (+0.8%), and are clothed (+1.8%) even if they are shopping less at General Merchandise Stores (-0.1%) and have less furniture (-1.2%). According to Bloomberg economist Rich Yamarone, the report reflects "broad-based strength," may show "commodity inflation, with building materials sales up 1.4% and gasoline stations up 3.3%." And BBG's Joe Brusuelas adds: "Two-thirds of growth in retail sales due to rising gasoline & auto sales. Gen merch declines 0.1%, due to subs effects caused by inflation." Thank you inflation - may we have another.
The Selling Of (New) Greek Bonds Has Resumed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/13/2012 07:29 -0500Second day of trading in the new Greek bonds (GGB2). It took a whopping 24 hours for the selling to resume. Per BNP "Market heavy."
Risk-EURUSD Decouples (Again) - Citi Explains Why
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/13/2012 07:23 -0500Even as futures cruise happily along well in positive territory, the EURUSD has once again decoupled from risk (funny how that always happens when the EURUSD is sliding, rarely if ever when it is surging on short covering). What is the reason for this latest schism? According to Citi's Steven Englander it has all to do with Europe once again aligning itself with Obama, and against China, which the market has recently been viewing as a white knight for Europe (contrary to repeated evidence otherwise). As a reminder, China made it very clear last September that it will (somehow) save Europe, if however Europe no longer pursues trade actions against it. Well, Europe just announced it would join the US in the WTO case against China on rare earth metals. Sure enough, China is about to pull the carpet from under Europe all over again. End result: EURUSD under 1.3100 and sliding.
Chart Of The Day: The European Commission's Greek GDP Forecast
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/13/2012 07:00 -0500
Reuters has been kind enough to release the "Second Economic Adjustment Programme for Greece" - a 195 page blueprint that Greece has to follow (unlike the first one, which it kinda, sorta ignored) in order for the money to keep flowing (money to bail out Europe's banks that is). We can save you the reading: below is the only chart of note. This is what the European powers expect Greek GDP to do. It needs no further commentary.
Daily US Opening News And Market Re-Cap: March 13
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/13/2012 06:57 -0500European equity markets are trading higher across the board ahead of the US open, with the financials sector outstripping others and Health Care lagging behind, although still in positive territory. The main news from yesterday’s finance minister’s meeting was instruction to reduce their deficit by a further 0.5% of GDP; this is having an effect on the Spanish spread against the German bund today, underperforming against other European spreads. The main data of the European session so far comes from Germany, with the ZEW survey for Economic sentiment beating expectations for March, as well as the UK trade balance figures showing a record high in the UK’s non-EU exports. As the session progresses, participants will be looking towards the US retail sales data and the latest FOMC rate decision.
Overnight Sentiment Bubbly Ahead Of Retail Sales, FOMC
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/13/2012 06:34 -0500While US equity futures continue to do their thing as the DJIA 13K ceiling comes into play again (two weeks ago Dow 13K was crossed nearly 80 times), ahead of today's 2:15pm Bernanke statement which will make the case for the NEW QE even more remote, none of the traditional correlation drivers are in active mode, with the EURUSD now at LOD levels, following headlines such as the following: "Euro Pares Losses vs Dollar as Germany’s ZEW Beats Ests" and 20 minutes later "EUR Weakens After German Zew Rises for 4th Month." As can be surmised, a consumer confidence circular and reflexive indicator is the basis for this Schrodinger (alive and dead) euro, and sure enough sentiment, aka the stock market, aka the ECB's balance sheet expansion of $1.3 trillion, is "improved" despite renewed concern over Spain’s fiscal outlook after better than expected German ZEW per Bloomberg. Next, investors await U.S. retail sales, which have come in consistently weaker in the past 3 month, and unless a pick up here is noted, one can scratch Q1 GDP. None of which will have any impact on the S&P 500 policy indicator whatsoever: in an election year, not even Brian Sack can push the stock market into the red.
Frontrunning: March 13
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/13/2012 06:15 -0500- Afghanistan
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Boeing
- Bond
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- CPI
- European Union
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- France
- Germany
- Israel
- Italy
- Japan
- LIBOR
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- MF Global
- Natural Gas
- New Zealand
- Obama Administration
- Private Equity
- Renminbi
- Reuters
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Switzerland
- Trade Balance
- Trade Deficit
- World Trade
- Tainted Libor Guessing Games Face Replacement by Real Trades (Bloomberg) - so circular, self-reported data is "tainted" - but consumer confidence is great for pumping a stock market?
- Japan Sets up $12 Billion Program for Dollar Loans, Increases Growth Fund (Bloomberg)
- China Hints at Halt to Renminbi Rise (FT)
- Spain Pressed to Cut More From Its Budget (FT)
- Bailout can make Greek debt sustainable, but risks remain: EU/IMF (Reuters)
- Banks to Face Tough Reviews, Details of Mortgage Deal Show (NYT)
- U.S. and Europe Move on China Minerals (WSJ)
- Use of Homeless as Internet Hot Spots Backfires on Marketer (NYT)
- Obama administration seeks to pressure China on exports with new trade case (AP)
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 13/03/12
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 03/13/2012 06:06 -0500- « first
- ‹ previous
- 1
- 2
- 3



