Archive - Dec 2013 - Story
December 6th
Spot Today's Odd One Out
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 16:20 -0500
Presented with one comment... fundamentals...
Last Ditch Buying Frenzy Fails To Make It 9 Weeks In A Row Of Gains
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 16:13 -0500
Despite every effort to sell as much JPY as possible to lift stocks and create the best run for the S&P since 2004, the algos failed (by pennies) but with solid gains nevertheless just to disprove all the good news is bad news believers - for now. While the NASDAQ managed a green close on the week (though underperformed today), stocks couldn't quite make it all back today but broke the 5-day losing streak. Treasuries ended the day unchanged and 10-13bps higher on the week. The USD dollar lost considerable ground this week (-0.5%) but it was safe-haven Swissy that stood out as the last 4 days are the best run in 5 months. Gold and Silver ended the week -2% or so and despite the intraday swings relatively flat today. All-in-all, stocks and JPY carry were in charge today as bonds and commodities were not playing at all. VIX dropped the most in 2 months back under 14% as the front-end drop removed the inversion.
Hindenburg Omen Spotted
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 15:32 -0500
While not the end-of-the-world that its name indicates, the confusion (highs, lows, advancers, decliners, and momentum) required to create a "Hindenburg Omen" means markets are not as gung-ho as the headlines might suggest. The last 2 Hindenburg Omens this year saw notable corrections (of course only to be un-corrected higher on the waves of liquidity).
Car And Student Loans Account For 95% Of All Consumer Credit Issued In Past Year
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 15:24 -0500Today's consumer credit report did not tell us anything we didn't already know: in October, total consumer credit rose by $18.2 billion, the most since May 2013, with the usual massive historical revisions. However, of this $18.2 billion, $13.9 billion was non-revolving credit, while revolving (credit card) debt rose by $4.3 billion. Which means revolving credit is still a woefully low $856.8 billion, or well below the $1.02 trillion when Lehman failed, even as credit issued mostly by Uncle Sam to fund car purchases and liberal educations, has exploded. Finally, and most troubling, in the past year over 95% of all consumer credit has been used to purchase rapidly amortizing cars and even more rapidly amortizing college educations.
Guest Post: Obamacare Is A Catastrophe That Cannot Be Fixed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 15:01 -0500
Obamacare is a catastrophe that cannot be fixed, because it doesn't fix what's broken in American healthcare. It is a phony reform that extends everything that makes the U.S. healthcare unsustainable sickcare.
Bitcoin Slammed As Baidu Suspends Payments Due To "Fluctuations"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 14:21 -0500
Bitcoin is being sold aggressively on heavy volume as this headline hits:
*BAIDU SUSPENDS BITCOIN PAYMENT ACCEPTANCE ON VALUE FLUCTUATION
This is one of the reasons Citi and BofAML noted as 'disadvantages' and it seems Baidu agrees (for now). Remember when Baidu "accepted" Bitcoin in Oct it was trading at USD150 - it has rallied 8x since then...
SEC Officially Above The Law: Prosecutors Decline To Charge SEC Employee For Violating Internal Rules
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 14:03 -0500Two weeks ago we wrote of SEC compliance examiner (yes, compliance examiner) Steven Glichrist who was arrested for being non-compliant with the SEC's ethics requirement to disclose his financial holdings. "New York-based SEC employee Steven Gilchrist was charged with three counts of making false statements regarding the nature of his personal financial holdings. As WSJ reports, the 48-year-old compliance examiner at the agency, allegedly certified that his stock holdings were in compliance with the agency's ethics rules, when in reality he had held shares of six companies that agency staffers are barred from holding. The SEC is "very disappointed that an employee allegedly made false statements to conceal prohibited holdings after being told by our ethics office to divest." Fast forward to today when we learn that not only was the SEC not disappointed when another SEC employee was found to have flouted virtually the same rules, but that, inexplicably, federal prosecutors decided not to prosecute.
The Fed Turns 100: A Survey of the Critics
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 13:21 -0500
End America’s central bank because it caused the crashes of 2008, 1987, and 1929 and will blunder again. That’s what many critics are saying about the Federal Reserve System (the Fed), which turns 100 on December 23. They note that on the Fed’s watch America has endured numerous bubbles, crashes, and inflationary cycles that have greatly devalued the dollar. The Fed, they say, has caused or aggravated several crashes. “If you say the goal of the Fed was to prevent calamities, then you have to say that it has been a failure,” says William A. Fleckenstein. “History and current experience,” Joe Salerno adds, “reveal to us that groups endowed with a legal monopoly over any area of the economy are prone to use it to the hilt to enrich themselves, their friends and allies.”
Meanwhile, Bitcoin Is Sliding...
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 12:06 -0500
Along with the USD and JPY, Bitcoin is having a bad day. For the second time, following a 'touch' of the Gold, Bitcoin has fallen dramatically in the day after. Volume is also relatively heavy. It would seem that this drop in USD BTC has compressed the "arb" against China BTC to zero (from over $100 earlier in the week). USD BTC $940, China BTC 5771 (USD equiv. $946)
Japan Secures Final Passage Of Secrecy Bill - Designed by Kafka & Inspired By Hitler?!!
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 11:46 -0500
Shinzo Abe secured final passage of a bill granting Japan’s govt sweeping powers to declare state secrets. The Bill won final approval of the measures at about 11:20 p.m. Tokyo time after opposition parties first forced a no-confidence vote in Abe’s govt in the lower house. The first rule of the pending Japan’s Special Secrets Bill is that what will be a secret is secret. The right to know has now been officially superseded by the right of the government to make sure you don’t know what they don’t want you to know. It might all seems like a bad joke, except for the Orwellian nature of the bill and a key Cabinet member expressing his admiration for the Nazis, "just as Germany needed a strong man like Hitler to revive defeated Germany, Japan needs people like Abe to dynamically induce change."
JPM: "Smells A Little Like Tapering"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 11:41 -0500JPM's chief US economist Michael Feroli smells the November jobs report, smells the Fed's balance sheet, and concludes "smells a little like tapering."
Quote Of The Day: The 7% Target, Er, Threshold
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 11:20 -0500As equities celebrate today's better than expected jobs report (for now), apparently comfortable in the knowledge that it's good-enough-but-not-too-good, we are reminded that just six short months ago, none other than the Fed chairman himself uttered these crucial words during his June 19th press conference:
"...when asset purchases ultimately come to an end the unemployment rate would likely be in the vicinity of 7%"
So here we are at 7.0%... and no taper in sight as excuse after excuse is rolled out for keeping the floodgates open. Whocouldanode? This appears to right up there with "subprime is contained", "nobody really understands gold", and "tapering is not tightening." But still we are supposed to give great credibility to their forward guidance?
On The CIA's Role In Nelson Mandela's 1962 Arrest
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 11:08 -0500
While we don't want to detract in any way from the world's mourning the passage of one of 20th century's most luminary personalities, we can't help but be confused by the hypocrisy exhibited by certain members of the US government. The reason: it was none other than the US government-controlled Central Intelligence Agency that was instrumental in Nelson Mandela's 1962 arrest that resulted in his 27 year imprisonment on Robben Island.
The Real US Unemployment Rate: 11.5%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 10:34 -0500Applying a realistic labor force participation rate to the unemployment rate series, shows that the real US unemployment rate is now 11.5%, a 4.5% difference from the reported number, and the second highest ever, only better compared to October's 4.7%.





