• GoldCore
    01/13/2016 - 12:23
    John Hathaway, respected authority on the gold market and senior portfolio manager with Tocqueville Asset Management has written an excellent research paper on the fundamentals driving...

Archive - Jan 2, 2013 - Story

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: January 2





  • Senate-Passed Deal Means Higher Tax on 77% of Households (BBG)
  • Bipartisan House Backs Tax Deal Vote as Next Fight Looms (BBG)
  • Fresh stand-off looms after US cliff deal (FT)
  • Congress Deal Averting Tax Increase Curbs Risk to States (BBG)
  • How Colombian drug traffickers used HSBC to launder money (Reuters)
  • Danes Face New Reality in Struggle to End Crisis, PM Says (BBG)
  • Ban on demanding Facebook passwords among new 2013 state laws (Reuters)
  • Oil Climbs to Three-Month High as U.S. House Passes Budget Bill (BBG)
  • Cameron seeks bold steps from G8 leaders (FT)
  • China to outstrip Europe car production (FT)
  • North Korea Picks Stronger Economy, South Ties as Top 2013 Tasks (BBG)
 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk EU Market Re-Cap - 2nd January 2013





 

Tyler Durden's picture

The Cliff Is Dead, Long Live The Cliff: Futures Soar





And so after much pomp and posturing over the past 48 hours, much of which will likely reshape the layout of the GOP in both chambers, both the Senate and the House passed the first concurrent tax hike and permanent tax cuts in about two decades. The net result of this will be a roughly 1% drag on GDP, even as the US budget deficit increases relative to the CBO's old baseline, and the beneficial impact from the tax hikes offsets roughly two weeks of spending. In other words, while addressing the tax part of the equation, politicians delayed the spending part of the problem for exactly 60 days by punting on the expiration of the sequester, or the government spending cuts. They also delayed addressing the debt ceiling, perhaps the most integral part of the Fiscal Cliff, which has now been breached and which as of this moment means the US can't incur one additional dollar in additional debt. So looking forward it means the US now has about 4 separate cliffs: the debt ceiling cliff in February/March, the sequester cliff in March, the farm bill cliff in September and the expiration of jobless benefits on December.But that's all in the future, and it will all be a function of just how quickly the GOP rolls over to once again confirm that when it comes to the stock market, America has just one political party. The party of up at all costs, which in turn is manifested right now in the first futures print of the New Year, with both the S&P and the DJIA futures up nearly 2%, and with the E-Mini up some 50 points, or half a turn of S&P multiple expansion in two trading sessions: a nice rally to show just who Washington truly works for.

 
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