Archive - Jul 9, 2012 - Story
All You Had To Do Was Wait
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/09/2012 07:01 -0500All of the time wasted on firewalls and great deceptions worked in the short term but the height of a fence does nothing to help a horse or a nation which is sick inside them. Europe has vastly overspent and tried their best to whitewash the financials of the countries and the European banks and now, and each quarter out for some time; we are going to see a worsening financial landscape for the European nations and their banks. This will not be Armageddon or the end of the world but it is going to be quite painful and have a decided impact on the United States and perhaps the scaring may be deep. In Europe that have mouthed so much nonsense for such a long period of time that they have come to believe in what they have manufactured. This is not uncommon historically but the depth and breadth of it is without comparison. Germany says one thing to placate France and Italy believes the drivel that is touted by the Netherlands and now Greece wants the ECB to forgive their $238 billion in Greek debts on the basis of a united Europe, which would bankrupt the ECB, and then it becomes clear that someone has to pay for all of this and countries start banging on the doors of the asylum to get out. Listen carefully; the banging has begun and will grow loader and more raucous during the balance of the year.
China Threatens With Furious Retaliation In Growing Trade Wars
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/09/2012 06:40 -0500Last week it was the Fairness Distributor In Chief threatening China with WTO action over its unfair duties on US car imports. Before that it was Europe trying to protect its crumbling trade at all costs with its primary trade partner. Now, it is China's turn to retort to the world's beggars, and all those who just happen to ravenously import its iWares with the reckless abandon of a gadget junkie. FT reports: "Beijing has threatened swift retaliation against a range of European Union industries if Brussels presses ahead with an investigation into government subsidies granted to two Chinese telecoms equipment companies. The Chinese threat was delivered at a meeting with EU trade officials in Beijing late last month that was arranged at the behest of Chen Deming, China’s commerce minister, to try to defuse a brewing trade dispute that is straining commercial relations between the two sides. Instead, it collapsed into acrimony, with the Chinese warning their EU visitors that they would respond to any investigation of Huawei and ZTE Corp by probing subsidies granted to European agriculture, automotive, renewable energy and telecoms companies. “Put it this way: it’s not like they went for a beer after and watched football,” one person briefed on the meeting said." None of this is new: recall China Lays Out Conditions Under Which It Will Bail Out Europe; Does Not Want To Be Seen As "Source Of Dumb Money" in which Li Daokui "added that Beijing might also ask European leaders to refrain from criticising China’s currency policy, a frequent source of tension with trade partners." Looks like we can scrap those "China bails out Europe" (ignore the fact that the Chinese economy itself is imploding for a second) rumor in perpetuity.
Daily US Opening News And Market Re-Cap: July 9
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/09/2012 06:38 -0500European equities have been grinding lower throughout the European morning, with basic materials seen underperforming following the release of a multi-month low Chinese CPI figure, coming in at 2.2%, below the expected 2.3% reading. The focus in Europe remains on the Mediterranean periphery, as weekend reports from Spanish press suggest that the heavily weighted Valencia region may be pressed into default unless it receives assistance from the central government. The sentiment is reflected in the Spanish debt market today, with the long-end of the curve showing record high yields, and the 10-yr bond yield remaining elevated above the 7% mark. News from an EU council draft, showing that Spain is to be given extra time to meet its deficit targets did bring the borrowing costs off their session highs, but they do remain stubbornly high at the North American crossover. The gap between the core European nations and their flagging partners continues to widen, as Germany sell 6-month bills at a record low of -0.0344%. As such, the 10-yr government bond yield spread between the Mediterranean and Germany is seen markedly wider on the day.
RANsquawk BoE's Tucker Testimony Preview - 9th July 2012
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 07/09/2012 06:28 -0500Frontrunning: July 9
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/09/2012 06:15 -0500- Afghanistan
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank of England
- Barclays
- BOE
- Boeing
- Bond
- China
- Corruption
- European Central Bank
- Eurozone
- France
- Germany
- LIBOR
- Lloyds
- Morgan Stanley
- Morningstar
- Private Equity
- Quote Stuffing
- Reuters
- Switzerland
- Trade Balance
- Turkey
- Unemployment
- Wall Street Journal
- Wen Jiabao
- Euro zone fragmenting faster than EU can act (Reuters)
- Wall Streeters Lose $2 Billion in 401(k) Bet on Own Firms (Bloomberg)
- Eurozone crisis will last for 20 years (FT)
- Chuckie Evans: "Please suh, can I have some moah" (Reuters)
- Quote stuffing and book sales: Amazon ‘robo-pricing’ sparks fears (FT)
- Situation in Egypt getting worse by the minute: Egypt parliament set to meet, defying army (Reuters)
- Chinese goalseek-o-tron speaks: China’s inflation eased to a 29-month low (Bloomberg)
- A contrarian view: "Barclays and the BoE have probably saved the financial system" (FT)
- Flawed analysis: Dealers Declining Bernanke Twist Invitation (BBG) - Actually as shown here, ST Bond holdings have soared as dealers buy what Fed sells: more here
- Obama team targets Romney over taxes, Republicans cry foul (Reuters)
- And all shall be well: Brussels to act over Libor scandal (FT)
- Bank of England's Tucker to testify on rate rigging row (Reuters)
EUR Spikes As A Desperate Europe Regurgitates Last Summit's Headlines
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/09/2012 05:37 -0500Those following the EURUSD may be surprised by the rather violent spike higher in the past few minutes. Don't be: it is just the same old European unfounded speculation repackaged and regurgitated as headlines, in this case the following:
- EU SAYS NO SOVEREIGN GUARANTEE NEEDED FOR DIRECT ESM BANK FUNDS
Or, for those whose event memory has a one week cutoff, the exact same thing that the Euro summit from June 28 "concluded" sending the EURUSD higher by 200 pips, only to see it crash to 2 year lows in the week following after Germany made it clear this was not really the case. Turns out it is not really the case this time either:
- Details of how the future system will work remain to be negotiated: Commission spokesman Simon O’Connor
Cue responses from Finland, Holland, Slovakia and maybe, just maybe Germany, all of whom agree to disagree, and some of whom even demand collateral even for just EFSF borrowings.
Spain's Budget Deteriorates So Much, It Gets A One Year Extension By The EU To Meet Deficit Targets
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/09/2012 05:30 -0500Remember the running joke about Spain's constantly deteriorating budget? Or was that Greece's? No matter: there was a time when Spain was expected to hit a 5.3% budget deficit in 2012, and the Maastricht mandated 3.0% by 2013. So much for that. It turns out the Spanish economy has deteriorated so much in the last few months, that the EU had no choice but to grant Spain a 1 year extension, according to Europapress. In doing so, the EU has eased deficit targets for Spain by 1% in 2013, granting it a 6.3% deficit miss, a number which will be revised at least once more before the year is over, and the 2013 target is now widened by 1.5% to 4.5%. So much for serious deficit cutting. But let's blame "austerity" while we are at it. It would, however, be great if countries in Europe, or anywhere, were actually austere, and cut their deficits, instead of just blaming austerity for every economic problem while never actually enacting such policies (as we explained before). So while Spain gets an extension due to a "recession of rare violence", the trade off will be even greater supervision by the Eurogroup, or said otherwise, more people will watch how Spain does nothing to actually fix itself and then 6 months from now everyone will be shocked, shocked, when the 2013 deficit is over 8%. In other news, Spain 10 Year bond were trading at 7.08%, well wide for the day and about 20 bps shy of the all time record lows.
RANsquawk EU Preview - Eurogroup Meeting - 9th July 2012
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 07/09/2012 03:00 -0500- « first
- ‹ previous
- 1
- 2
- 3



