Archive - Apr 4, 2012 - Story
Frontrunning: April 4
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/04/2012 06:33 -0500- Low cost era over for China's workshops to the world (Reuters)
- The HFT scourge never ends: SEC Probes Ties to High-Speed Traders (WSJ)
- Rehn says Portugal may need "bridge" (Reuters)
- China's GDP likely to have slowed in the first quarter (China Daily)
- Chinese Premier Blasts Banks (WSJ)
Man Commits Suicide In Broad Daylight On Athens' Syntagma Square To Protest "Occupation Government"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/04/2012 06:21 -0500
The Arabian Spring started after the self-immolation of a 26 year old fruit vendor in Tunisia to protest a life he could no longer live. Will the European Summer set off with a suicide as well? News are crossing that a few hours ago, a 77 year old Greek has killed himself in broad daylight on Athens' symbolic and inappropriately named Syntagma square to protest the "occupier government" and not wanting to be a burden to his child. As Kathimerini reports, "an elderly man committed suicide on Friday morning in Syntagma Square in Athens, in front of Parliament. Some reports said witnesses claimed the man shouted «I don't want to leave debts to my children,» before he shot himself in the head. According to Skai TV, witnesses said the man did not say anything. The incident occurred shortly before 9 a.m. when the square was full of people and commuters using Syntagma metro station. The man had positioned himself next to a big tree and was not in view of most people in the square. Two people who were sitting on a bench some 10 meters away have been questioned by the police." Will this latest tragedy provoke a groundswell popular response? We doubt it - alas the status quo appears set to continue chugging along as per usual, taking advantage of appathetic and welfare addicted societies around the world.
Sentiment: Deep Red As Europe Is Back With A Thud
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/04/2012 05:57 -0500
Oh where to begin. The weakness in the markets started late last night when Australia posted a surprising second consecutive deficit of $480MM on expectations of a $1.1 billion surplus (with the previous deficit revised even higher). This is obviously quite troubling because as we pointed out 3 weeks ago when recounting the biggest Chinese trade deficit since 1989 we asked readers to "observe the following sequence of very recent headlines: "Japan trade deficit hits record", "Australia Records First Trade Deficit in 11 Months on 8% Plunge in Exports", "Brazil Posts First Monthly Trade Deficit in 12 Months " then of course this: "[US] Trade deficit hits 3-year record imbalance", and finally, as of late last night, we get the following stunning headline: "China Has Biggest Trade Shortfall Since 1989 on Europe Turmoil." So who is exporting? Nobody knows, but everyone knows why the Aussie dollar plunged on the headline. The shock sent reverberations across Asian markets, which then spilled over into Europe. Things in Europe went from bad to worse, after Germany reported its February factory orders rose a modest 0.3% on expectations of a solid 1.5% rebound from the -1.8% drop in January. But the straw on the camel's back was Spain trying to raise €3.5 billion in bonds outside of the LTRO's maturity, where the results confirmed that it will be a long, hard summer for the Iberian country, which not only raised far less, or €2.6 billion, but the internals were quite atrocious, blowing up the entire Spanish bond curve, and sending Spanish CDS to the widest in over half a year.
RANsquawk EU Morning Briefing - What's Happened So Far - 04/04/12
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 04/04/2012 05:37 -0500RANsquawk EU Morning Call - UK Services PMI Preview: 04/04/12
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 04/04/2012 03:04 -0500- « first
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