Archive - Nov 2013 - Story
November 13th
Vietnam Shows How To Clean Up The Banking System: Ex-Banker Faces Death Penalty For Fraud
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/13/2013 08:08 -0500
The lack of prosecution of bankers responsible for the great financial collapse has been a hotly debated topic over the years, leading to the coinage of such terms as "Too Big To Prosecute", the termination of at least one corrupt DOJ official, the revelation that Eric Holder is the most useless Attorney General in history, and even members of the judicial bashing other members of the judicial such as in last night's essay by district judge Jed Rakoff. And naturally, the lack of incentives that punish cheating and fraud, is one of the main reasons why such fraud will not only continue but get bigger and bigger, until once again, the entire system crashes under the weight of all the corruption and all the Fed-driven malinvestment. But what can be done? In this case, Vietnam may have just shown America the way - use the death penalty on convicted embezzling bankers. Because if one wants to promptly stop an end to financial crime, there is nothing quite like the fear of death to halt it.
Frontrunning: November 13
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/13/2013 07:36 -0500- BAC
- Barack Obama
- Barclays
- Bloomberg News
- Bond
- Central Banks
- China
- Commercial Paper
- Commodity Futures Trading Commission
- Comptroller of the Currency
- Credit Crisis
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- Deutsche Bank
- Federal Reserve
- Housing Market
- International Energy Agency
- Iran
- Iraq
- Janet Yellen
- Japan
- Kraft
- Las Vegas
- LBO
- Meltdown
- Monetary Policy
- Morgan Stanley
- NYSE Euronext
- Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
- People's Bank Of China
- President Obama
- Raymond James
- Real estate
- recovery
- Reuters
- Third Point
- Treasury Department
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- YRC
- Desperate Philippine typhoon survivors loot, dig up water pipes (Reuters)
- Fading Japanese market momentum frustrates investors (FT)
- China's meager aid to the Philippines could dent its image (Reuters)
- Headline du jour: Granted 'decisive' role, Chinese markets decide to slide (Reuters)
- Central Banks Risk Asset Bubbles in Battle With Deflation Danger (BBG)
- Navy Ship Plan Faces Pentagon Budget Cutters (WSJ)
- Investors pitch to take over much of Fannie and Freddie (FT)
- To expand Khamenei’s grip on the economy, Iran stretched its laws (Reuters)
- Short sellers bet that gunmaker shares are no long shot (FT)
- Deflation threat in Europe may prompt investment rethink (Reuters)
Equities Act Weak, Confused Following Oscar-Worthy Good Cop, Bad Cop Performance By The Fed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/13/2013 07:09 -0500As DB notes, it appears that markets continue to steadily price in a greater probability of a December taper judging by the 2bp increase in 10yr UST yields, 1.2% drop in the gold price and an edging up in the USD crosses yesterday. Indeed, the Atlanta Fed’s Lockhart, who is considered a bellwether within the Fed, kept the possibility of a December tapering open in public comments yesterday. But his other comments were quite dovish, particularly when he said that he wants to see inflation accelerate toward 2% before reducing asset purchases to give him confidence that the US economy was not dealing with a “downside scenario”. Lockhart stressed that any decision by the Fed on QE would be data dependent - so his comments that the government shutdown will make coming data "less reliable" than might otherwise have been, until at least December, were also quite telling. The dovish sentiments were echoed by Kocherlakota, a FOMC voter next year. In other words, an Oscar-worthy good-cop/bad-cop performance by the Fed's henchmen, confusing algotrons for the second day in a row.
PREVIEW: BoE Quarterly Inflation Report- 13th November 2013
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 11/13/2013 04:17 -0500What to look out for on November 13th's BoE quarterly inflation rate due at 1030GMT/0430CST
November 12th
Obama Translated
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2013 22:58 -0500
Sadly, only in our new normal world is this funny...
7 More Years Of Low Rates.. And Then War?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2013 22:45 -0500
While chart analogs provide optically pleasing (and often far too shockingly correct) indications of the human herd tendencies towards fear and greed, a glance through the headlines and reporting of prior periods can provide just as much of a concerning 'analog' as any chart. In this case, while these 3 pictures can paint a thousand words; a thousand words may also paint the biggest picture of all. It seems, socially and empirically, it is never different this time as these 1936 Wall Street Journal archives read only too well... from devaluations lifting stocks to inflationary side-effects of money flow and from short-covering, money-on-the-sidelines, Jobs, Europe, low-volume ramps, BTFD, and profit-taking, to brokers advising stocks for the long-run before a 40% decline.
Peak Insanity: Retail Investors Are Making Direct Subprime Loans In A Reach For Yield
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2013 22:29 -0500
Being somewhat conscious human beings in a world in which our “leaders” have completely lost their minds can be challenging at times. One side effect of this condition is a certain emotional numbness when it comes to reacting to new events occurring in the world around you. It’s simply hard to shock us these days, but every now and then it does happen. The following article had us literally shaking our heads the entire time. If this isn’t peak insanity, we do not want to know what is.
Why Has Nobody Gone To Jail For The Financial Crisis? Judge Rakoff Says: "Blame The Government"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2013 21:27 -0500- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bear Stearns
- Collateralized Debt Obligations
- Counterparties
- Department of Justice
- Enron
- ETC
- Fannie Mae
- FBI
- Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission
- Freddie Mac
- Insider Trading
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- None
- ratings
- Reality
- Recession
- recovery
- Securities Fraud
- Subprime Mortgages
- WorldCom

Five years have passed since the onset of what is sometimes called the Great Recession. While the economy has slowly improved, there are still millions of Americans leading lives of quiet desperation: without jobs, without resources, without hope. Who was to blame?
"The government, writ large, had a hand in creating the conditions that encouraged the approval of dubious mortgages. It was the government, in the form of Congress, that repealed Glass-Steagall, thus allowing certain banks that had previously viewed mortgages as a source of interest income to become instead deeply involved in securitizing pools of mortgages in order to obtain the much greater profits available from trading. It was the government, in the form of both the executive and the legislature, that encouraged deregulation..."
- Judge Jed Rakoff
Jim Rogers: "This Is Absolute Insanity"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2013 20:41 -0500
"It's not just the Fed, it's central banking," Jim Rogers exclaims to Reuters in this brief clip, "this is absolute insanity." As the world's central banks, for the first time in history "try to debase their currencies," simultaneously, Rogers cautions, "the world's floating around on a huge artificial sea of liquidity." Rogers goes on to explain that he doesn't expect Bernanke to taper and fears that Yellen won't either but hopes that she "knows that this is going to cause problems when they stop producing so much money." His ominous warning, eventually "it's going to dry up.. and when it dries up, we're all going to pay the price for this madness."
About The "Gas Prices Are Low" Meme
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2013 20:06 -0500
Much has been made recently of the 'implicit' tax cut that a sliding gas price is providing for the beaten-down, confidence-sapped, credit-using consumer. Sure enough, gas prices are at their lows of the year. But, unfortunately, recency bias is our enemy once again since the price of regular gas is still 8.5% above its average since the crisis began - and that with miles-driven still slumping. Not quite as 'tax-cut'-inspiring when viewed that way...
China Opens Largest Private Gold Vault With Capacity For $82 Billion Worth Of Precious Metal
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2013 18:56 -0500In the Chinese bastion of capitalism, where there is demand, there will be supply. And in this case, the supply of gold storage is to be found in the Shanghai Free Trade Zone, where the physical gold ends up in custodial limbo as it is not considered "imported" by China. In fact, the gold is theoretically in no man's land and as such can be reexported out of China, or sent deeper into the mainland, to China's banks or private buyers, on a whim. Of course, all that is on paper. If and when the Communist Party says "enough" all the gold in the FTZ would be "reappropriated." Bloomberg reports, that a gold vault that can store 2,000 metric tons, double China’s projected consumption this year, opened in Shanghai this month as owner Malca-Amit Global Ltd. seeks to benefit from rising demand in Asia’s largest economy.
"It's Not Just Harder To Get A Job - It's Harder To Get A Good Job"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2013 18:25 -0500
For many in the US, as WSJ reports based on the bifurcated 'recovery' in the US, the recession never ended, "we're still in it... it feels like like we're still in it and it's getting worse." Simply out, America's jobs recovery is proceeding on two separate tracks - a pattern that is persisting far longer than after past economic rebounds and lately has been growing worse. For those with decent jobs, wages are rising, albeit slowly, and job security is the strongest it has been since before the recession. But many others - the young, the less educated and particularly the unemployed - are experiencing hardly any recovery at all. As we have vociferously explained, hiring remains weak, and the jobs that are available are disproportionately low-paying and often part-time.
Guest Post: Meet One Of The Victims Of The "Economic Recovery"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2013 17:43 -0500
Have you ever cried yourself to sleep because you had no idea how you were going to pay the bills even though you were working as hard as you possibly could? You are about to hear from a single mother that has been there. Her name is Yolanda Vestal and she is another victim of Obama's "economic recovery". Yes, things have never been better for the top 0.01 percent of ultra-wealthy Americans that have got millions of dollars invested in the stock market. But for most of the rest of the country, things are very hard right now.
Quote Of The Day: Is Larry Fink Confused?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2013 17:10 -0500This morning has seen a plague of talking-head-based soundbites propagated through the mainstream media as 'fact' and actionable. One that caught our eye, from none other than "largest asset manager in the world" Larry Fink of Blackrock, simply beggared belief:
- *FINK SAYS JAPANESE INVESTORS QUESTIONING INVESTING IN U.S. DEBT
As we recently noted, the Japanese bond market is now dead (for all intent and purpose) but a glance at the following chart of credit reality suggests those Japanese investors might stop to reflect a little on their own reality...
The Biggest Threat To Minimum Wage Restaurant Workers Everywhere?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2013 16:34 -0500As we have pointed out previously, in the context of corporations that have given up on growing the top line (as virtually all free cash goes into stock buybacks and dividends and none into growth capex), and in pursuit of a rising bottom line, employee wages are the one variable cost that corporations will touch last of all. But what's worse, these same unionized employees have zero negotiating leverage. Perhaps nowhere is this more visible than in the recent strategy of smoothie retailer Jamba Juice, which in order to battle a 4% drop in Q3 same store sales has decided to radically transform its entire retailing strategy by getting rid of labor, cheap, part-time or otherwise, altogether. Presenting the biggest threat to minimum-wage restaurant workers everywhere: the JambaGo self-serve machine that just made the vast majority of Jamba's employees obsolete. Coming soon to a fast-food retailer near you.





