Archive - Sep 2012 - Story

September 5th

Tyler Durden's picture

Chart Of The Day: China Industrial (Lack Of) Production





It appears China's growth trajectory just dead-cat-bounced and is now resuming its downward trend. With Industrial Production at its lowest since March 2009 (though we are sure we will be told - "yeah, but it's still growing at 9.2% YoY"); perhaps it is better to look at this chart with no 'government-sponsored' y-axis since the bottom line is - it's bad and getting worse (and the PBoC remains 'stuck').

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Analysts Respond To ECB's Toned Down Plan: "Priced In" And Details Still Lacking





The first responses by the Wall Street sellside brigade to the ECB's "unlimited" yet somehow "sterilized", no longer rate capping thus unsterilized plan emerge and they are, in a word and as expected, unimpressed.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Saving The World





Saving the World somehow seems like an extreme sport. It is talked about by many but practiced by few. The newest attempt has been claimed by Mario Draghi but it may be one of those Lance Armstrong kind of things where the steroids of the moment pushed the claimer past his boundaries. The markets, the equity markets in particular, have been betting for weeks that the world was going to be saved and have been waiting for the evidence of the transformation as I have stood on the sidelines and shook my head. I have seen the prophets before; the world is going straight to Heaven, the world is going straight to Hell and yet somehow we always find ourselves stuck in Perdition where mankind vacillates between the two. In Mario Draghi’s case, you see, he needs the parishioners to go along with the scheme and while everyone may share the same Bible the interpretation is not the same.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Gold’s Rise To Continue Above $2,500/oz On Negative Real Interest Rates





Gold prices languished from 1980 to 2000 and had declining correlations with debt levels because GDP growth was sufficient to mute fears about budget and deficit issues. The current economic recovery has been too weak to support a sustained rise in real rates above the 2% level that has acted an inflection point for gold prices. With energy and food inflation deepening and soon to affect consumer price indices, interest rates may have to rise significantly in order to restore real interest rates above 2%.  This is with ex Federal Reserve Chairman Volcker did in the late 1970’s - when he increased interest rates to above 15% in order to protect the dollar and aggressively tackle inflation. It is unlikely that similar ‘hawkish’ monetary policy would be implemented by the Bernanke Fed today. It is unlikely that they would and even doubtful if they could – given the appalling fiscal situation and levels of debt in the US and global economy.  A continuing succession of higher real gold prices above the inflation adjusted high, or real record high, of $2,500/oz is likely until we see interest return to more normal levels and zero percent interest policies are supplanted by positive real interest rates.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

For Spain, The Beginning Of The End Arrives As Bank Of Spain Starts Using ELA





As we described in detail yesterday, things are going from worse to worserer as the problems in Spain - more specifically in its banking sector - are deepening as deposit flight accelerates, and "the private sector is leaving the banking system." But the Bank of Spain isn't leaving anything to chance. The WSJ disconcertingly highlights that last month the central bank appears for the first time to have activated an emergency lending program that will enable its banks to borrow from the Bank of Spain directly, bypassing the ECB's relatively tough collateral demands. That would make Spain at least the fourth euro-zone country - following Greece, Ireland and Portugal - to use the ELA, which generally is reserved for situations when banks have exhausted all other financing options. As we pointed out yesterday, this would appear to confirm a "full-blown bailout" is imminent, as the collateral problems mount.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

No Bazooka As ECB Backtracks: Draghi Won't Pursue Yield Caps, To Sterilize Bond Buys In SMP Continuation





In what can only be interpreted as a huge disappointment for the ECB and Draghi yielding to German demands, Bloomberg has leaked what likely will be the final plan of the ECB tomorrow, which contrary to previously rumors stating that the ECB will pursue yield caps, or even just buy bonds on an unsterilized basis, appears to be a huge dud:

  • ECB BOND PLAN SAID TO REFRAIN FROM SETTING PUBLIC YIELD CAPS
  • DRAGHI'S BOND PLAN SAID TO PLEDGE UNLIMITED, STERILIZED BUYING
  • ECB PLAN SAID TO FOCUS ON GOVT BONDS, MATURITIES UP TO 3 YEARS
  • ECB SAID TO CONSIDER SELLING BONDS IF CONDITIONS NOT MET
  • ECB PLAN SAID TO STRESS CONDITIONALITY OF ANY BOND PURCHASES
  • ECB BOND PLAN SAID TO HAVE BROAD COUNCIL SUPPORT - but not unanimous, as Germany again objects

The keyword above is highlighted: sterilized, which simply means for those who are unaware, such as all the algos taking the EURUSD higher, that the ECB's entire overhyped plan is nothing more than a continuation of the Securities Market Program, or the SMP, which has been dormant for over 25 weeks, and which was deactivated because it did not work! Because sterilized means no new money enters the system, something which for Europe is unacceptable considering Spain alone is now seeing $100 billion in outflows each month.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Bill Gross Releases Latest Monthly Outlook: The Lending Lindy





Having operatied for years under ZIRP, and with the NIRP neutron bomb just around the corner, and already implemented in various European countries, one question remains: can banks be banks, i.e., can they make money, in a world in which borrowing short and lending long, no longer works, courtesy of ubiquitous and pervasive central planning which is now engaged solely and almost exclusively (the other central bank ventures being of course to keep FX rates and equities within an acceptable range) on the shape of the yield curve. Since 2009 our answer has been a resounding no. Today, Bill Gross speaks up as well, and his answer is even more distrubing: "If the dancing has slowed down, then the reason is not just an overweight partner. It’s that the price of money (be it in the form of a real interest rate, a quality risk spread, or both) is too low. Our entire finance-based monetary system – led by banks but typified by insurance companies, investment management firms and hedge funds as well – is based on an acceptable level of carry and the expectation of earning it. When credit is priced such that carry is no longer as profitable at a customary amount of leverage/risk, then the system will stall, list, or perhaps even tip over." Indeed, according to Gross central banks have now clearly sown the seeds of the entire financial system's own destruction. That he is right we have no doubt. The only question: how soon until he is proven right.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: September 5





  • The bankers are coming: Banker Plan Would Fund Super-PACs to Sway U.S. Senate Elections (Bloomberg)
  • Risk Increases of Prolonged World Slowdown, BOJ’s Miyao Says (Bloomberg)
  • Spain Seeks to Stem Its Banking Crisis (WSJ)
  • Deadly shooting mars new Quebec premier's victory rally (NBC)
  • Democrats Keep Tax-Raising Focus On Top 2% Of Households (Bloomberg)
  • Merkel Swings Into 2013 Election Mode Evoking Crisis, China (Bloomberg)
  • Europe’s money market funds future in focus (FT)
  • Pressure Mounts on ECB to Bring Down Bond Yields (Reuters)
  • Swiss bank vows to hold franc down (FT)
  • Australia economy still solid in Q2 despite GDP miss, but threats mount (Reuters)
  • Clinton Brings to Beijing Plea for Maritime Solution (Bloomberg)
  • The End of a 1,400-Year-Old Business (BusinessWeek)
 

Tyler Durden's picture

Germany Steals Draghi's Bazooka Before The Main Event As Monetization Mutiny Grows





With one day to go until the European soap opera hits its peak, and with the ECB doing all it can to spread disinformation and sow discord and disunity between Germany and everyone else on both the ECB governing council and everywhere else, Germany has decided to again make it clear just where it stands on the topic of hyperinflation and other printing matters. The punchline:

  • ECB'S DRAGHI DOESN'T HAVE 'TOO MUCH' SUPPORT FROM MERKEL, MERKEL BACKS WEIDMANN
  • ECB CAN ONLY BUY BONDS ATTACHED TO CONDITIONALITY

But wait, there is much more. Readers may recall that yesterday that one of the articles we pointed out came from Dutch Dagblad which suggested that it was Weidmann who was isolated on the ECB governing council, and that the Dutch member of the ECB council Klass Knot as well as all other members was "for buying government bonds of Southern European countries." Well, prepare to be shocked, because what kind of soap opera would it be if it wasn't for unexpected narrative plot lines. Today, Frankfurt-based Market News reported precisely the opposite, and not only is Knot on the same side as the Germans, but so are virtually all the other "virtuous" European countries, aka the non-beggars.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Overnight Summary: Quiet Before The Printing Storm





After opening on a very weak note, it was only expected that following some even weaker economic news overnight which continue to confirm the global turn into a sharp recession, futures are doing all they can to remain unchanged, and in some cases are even green as the traditional Pavlovian reaction kicks in: the worse the news, the likelier the intervention. Of course, the market's dogs are ignoring the fact that right now both gas (never higher on this US day in history) and food prices are surging and the central planners are quite aware of this, not to mention the US presidential election, although at this point nobody really believes that the Fed is impartial so that is a secondary consideration, even as actual fundamentals continue to deteriorate and the spread between cash-flow implied valuations and central bank set risk prices has never been wider. Which brings us to the overnight session, which is slowly picking up in activity but is nothing compared to what will be unleashed tomorrow early in the morning and continuing likely through the end of the year.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

German 10 Year Bond Auction Suffers Technical Failure





This morning, Germany attempted to sell €5 billion in 1.5% 10 Year bonds. It sold just €3.61 billion directly to investors (who had submitted a less than auction clearing €3.91 billion in bids), forcing the German Treasury to retain 27.8% of the auction, €1.39 billion: the highest retained amount since November 2011 when it was 39%. For one reason or another: the yield was too low at 1.42% (compared to the 1.634 average), there was much more supply elsewhere, fears of what the ECB will do tomorrow, or who knows - the real bid to cover was a paltry 0.79 (all in BTC 1.09 including government retention) compared to 1.57 at the last auction and a 1.31 average at the past 4 auctions. In other words the auction was for all technical reasons, a failure, and only the second such "failure" of 2012. The immediate reaction was Bund futures down 22 ticks at 143.28 vs 143.70 before auction as the market digested the surprising disappointment, with the German 10-year government bond yield up 2.4 basis points at 1.41 percent vs 1.37 percent before auction. In summary, if the Germans needed any more reasons that funding the insolvent Eurozone at all costs up to an including debt monetizations, which may result in failed bond auctions for German itself, are not in their best interest, they just got one. The good news: in an email sent out immediately by the German Finance agency, the bond sale was "not a risk to the budget." Wouldn't want a failed bond auction to jeopardize the budget now.

 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk EU Market Re-Cap - 5th September 2012





 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk EU Data Preview - 5th September 2012





 

September 4th

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: Does the Iranian Government Have A Right To A Nuclear Bomb?





The heightening tension between the United States government and Iran’s is based off of the fallacious notion that nuclear weapons have a legitimate purpose outside of killing enormous amounts of people.  Yet they have no other real purpose in the end.  Governments possess nuclear weaponry because there is little recourse for state-sanctioned murder.  The millions of innocent lives that stand to be vanquished off the face of the Earth have little meaning to the power-tripping political elite.  So while the Iranian government’s pursuance of nuclear weapons should be condemned, the United States government, the Israeli government, and others capable of waging nuclear war are in no place to criticize.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Visualizing The Political Importance And Truthiness Of The Payroll Report





With the current lackluster economic trends and job outlook, unemployment and salary figures are tossed around left and right; figures can make or break a politician's career. The Non-Farm Payroll report supplies these numbers, and its monthly findings impact global economic performance expectations - but its reporting (as we have been vociferous about) on unemployment rates and job outlook are skewed to paint a falsely healthy picture of the economy. The following info-graphic sheds more light how the 'official' unemployment figures are much lower than they really are.

 

 
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