Archive - Dec 2013 - Story
December 6th
Healthcare.gov's Latest Glitch: Unusable Medicaid Data
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 10:17 -0500
Just when you thought it was safe to step back into the water of the "fixed" Obamacare website, another glitch, this time in sending data on Medicaid, has The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services writing a memo to the 36 states using the federal website last week acknowledging the information wasn't being transferred automatically and saying another system was being developed to send it. Potentially affecting tens of thousands of Medicaid recipients, ABC reports, "Essentially, if you're a consumer on healthcare.gov, it will tell you you're eligible for Medicaid and the state agency will take care of it, but there's no real way for the state Medicaid agency to know anything about it." The information, according to AP, is incomplete with regard to verifying eligibility and as South Carolina's HHS Director notes, "it's going to be a gigantic logistical mess."
Consumer Confidence Surges; Beats By Most On Record
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 10:04 -0500
Of course, why not. University of Michigan Consumer Confidence jumped from 75.1 to a preliminary 82.5 beating expectations by the most on record. While we remain below the July 2013 highs, current conditions soared to the highest since May and the economic outlook spiked to the highest since August. This is the biggest absolute improvement in current conditions since December 2008.... and that ended well eh?
Peak Smog: Shanghai Orders Cars Off Roads As Pollution Literally Off The Charts
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 09:44 -0500
“It’s horrible out there,” notes one resident as an orange-level haze alert, the second highest, remained in effect broadly across China and, as Bloomberg reports, the heavy fog shrouding Shanghai caused widespread flight cancellations and sent the air quality index surging past 500 to the “beyond index” category. “The pollution is worse today and the fog is getting heavier,” another noted, and despite the WHO concerns that outdoor air pollution can cause lung cancer, he is "not prohibiting my kids from going outside because we have to learn to grow up in all kinds of environment. But they are definitely wearing face masks.” The government has ordered 30% of government-used vehicles off the road and industrial companies to reduce or halt production.
Jobs Added By Industry: Education, Transportation And Retail Winners; Information And Finance Losers
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 09:26 -0500
Curious where the November jobs gains and losses were, broken down by industry? The chart below should explain it all.
Gold Gets Jobs Leak Early Again?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 09:12 -0500
It wouldn't be a non-farm-payrolls (or for that matter any government report) without the ubiquitous "early" move in precious metals before the report is given to the general public. As Nanex shows, Gold's price moved in a 'correct' downward (taper-on) way on the "good" news that jobs are 'improving' 7 seconds before the report hit...
"Good" News Sends Markets Into Schizophrenic Dysphoria
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 08:57 -0500
Stocks initial knee-jerk "good news is bad news" reaction was a 0.5% plunge in prices and the rest of QE-sensitive assets also reacted in a "taper" way with gold dropping, USD soaring, and bond yields spiking. But the USD strength implied JPY weakness and that just provided the momo ignition for carry traders to lift stocks 1% straight up as the heads-I-win, tails-you-lose trade continues. Gold has retraced some of its losses but the USD and bonds are stil under pressure as the US open approaches.
Biggest Drop In Personal Income Since Feb 2010 Can't Stop Borrowers Spending, While Savings Rate Plunges
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 08:48 -0500
US personal income fell 0.1% MoM - missing the +0.3% expectations by the most since September 2011 - but that didn't stop spending which modestly beat expectations at +0.3%. The drop in incomes is the largest (absent the 2012 year-end debacle) since February 2010. Given the disparity, it is hardly surprising that the savigs rate dropped to its lowest since June. So unsaving is the route to freedom once again as borrowing helps drive durable good spending up 0.77%
November Payrolls Rise By 203K, Higher Than Expected; Unemployment Rate Drops To 7.0%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 08:34 -0500
Last month, the expected NFP print was 120K, instead we got 204K. Today, the expectations was 185K, while the print, was almost an identical 203K, even as last month's was revised modestly lower to 200K. The unemployment rate dropped from 7.3%, which was also below the 7.2% expected, to only 7.0%. The unemployment rate was derived from a drop in the number of unemployed from 11.3K to 10.9K, while the labor force rose from 153.8K to 155.3K, which also led to a modest bounce in the labor force participation rate which rose from a 35 year low of 62.8% to 63.0%.
Charting Today's 30K "Make Or Break" Payroll Difference In "Seasonally Adjusted" Context
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 08:10 -0500
Today's nonfarm payroll number critical "make or break" margin, as estimated earlier by Deutsche Bank's Jim Reid, is a tiny 30K: "anything above +200k (net of revisions) will lead to a further dip in risk as taper fears intensify and anything less than say +170k will probably see a decent relief rally after a tricky week for markets." Goldilocks of course will be the expected 185K but what economists forecast rarely if every happens. So it is likely that what the BLS reports will either be good for the economy and horrible for market, or vice versa. So we decided to put this 30K in context. The charts below show both the average and the annual seasonal adjustment between the unadjusted and the final, adjusted nonfarm payroll print. In the past decade, the average November seasonal adjustment is the highest of all months, amounting to 1.165 million jobs! In other words, the 30K critical difference will fit nearly 40 times in just what the BLS' Arima X 13 smoothing simulator adjusts the actual print by in order to get what it believes is the appropriate trendline, ignoring entirely that in the New Normal all historical seasonal adjustments are no longer applicable.
Complete Jobs Report Preview: NFP Exp. 185K, Unemployment Rate Exp. 7.2%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 07:44 -0500- HSBC 165K
- Goldman Sachs 175K
- Bank of America 175K
- JP Morgan 180K
- Citigroup 180K
- Deutsche Bank 185K
- UBS 190K
- Barclays 200K
Frontrunning: December 6
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 07:27 -0500- Australia
- B+
- Barrick Gold
- Bitcoin
- Boeing
- Bond
- China
- Citigroup
- Comcast
- Crack Cocaine
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Dell
- Dollar General
- Exxon
- Ford
- General Motors
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Hong Kong
- Ireland
- JCPenney
- Jeff Immelt
- Joe Biden
- Market Share
- McKinsey
- Natural Gas
- Private Equity
- RBS
- recovery
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Saab
- SAC
- Sears
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Tax Revenue
- Time Warner
- Transparency
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- Yen
- Yuan
- Nelson Mandela: 1918-2013 (Reuters)
- South Africans Flock to Nelson Mandela’s Home to Mourn His Death (BBG)
- Hillary Clinton or Joe Biden? Obama says won't choose between them for 2016 (Reuters)
- Fukushima water tanks: leaky and built with illegal labor (Reuters)
- Sears Holdings Files to Spin Off Lands' End Business (WSJ)
- Way cleared for landmark global trade deal (FT)
- U.S. Oil Prices Fall Sharply as Glut Forms on Gulf Coast (WSJ)
- German Factory Orders Decline in Sign of Uneven Recovery (BBG)
- FCC Unlikely to Bless a Comcast-TWC Deal: Regulator (WSJ)
Futures Pushed Higher On Weaker Yen, But All Could Change With Today's "Most Important Ever" Jobs Number
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 06:58 -0500- B+
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bond
- Brazil
- Capital Formation
- Carry Trade
- China
- Citigroup
- Consumer Confidence
- Copper
- CPI
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- Deutsche Bank
- fixed
- Germany
- Gilts
- headlines
- Iran
- Janet Yellen
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- LTRO
- Michigan
- Monetary Policy
- Nikkei
- Personal Income
- RANSquawk
- Rate of Change
- Reuters
- Switzerland
- Unemployment
- Unemployment Benefits
- Yen
The latest "most important payrolls day of all time" day is finally upon us. Of course, this is a ridiculous statement: considering that the average December seasonal adjustment to the actual, unadjusted number is 824K jobs, it will once again be up to the BLS' Arima X 13 goal-seeking, seasonal adjusting software to determine whether the momentum ignition algos send stocks soaring or plunging, especially since the difference between up and down could be as small as 30K jobs. As Deutsche Bank explains: " today's number is probably one where anything above +200k (net of revisions) will lead to a further dip in risk as taper fears intensify and anything less than say +170k will probably see a decent relief rally after a tricky week for markets. Indeed yesterday saw the S&P500 (-0.43%) down for a fifth day - extending a sequence last seen in September." And then consider that nearly 30 times that difference comes from seasonal adjustments and it becomes clear why "farcial" is a far better definition of labor Friday.
Japanese Bonds Tumble Most In 3 Months As Ito Says GPIF Should Cut Holdings
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2013 00:11 -0500
JGB Futures prices are dropping in a manner eerily reminiscent of the May period of debacle before the BoJ started to regain control. The catalyst for today's biggest bond price drop in 3 months is Takatoshi Ito's comments demanding the Government Pension fund starting greatly rotating from bonds to stocks: "Now is the right time to sell, while the BOJ is buying.”
*JAPAN'S GPIF NEEDS TO START SELLING BONDS, SHOULD REDUCE LOCAL BONDS TO AS LITTLE AS 35%, RAISE JAPAN STOCK HOLDINGS TO 18% NOW, ITO SAYS
Stocks bounced higher initially but are losing most of those gains as bonds hit low prices of the session (and fears re-arise that the BoJ is not in total control after all). As we warned before, the JGB market is "dead" for all intent and purpose and there is simply not enough liquidity to support any significant selling pressure. JGB 10Y Yields are the highest since Oct 1st.
December 5th
As Fast Food Workers Go On Strike In 100 Cities, Applebees Unveils The "Waiter Terminator"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/05/2013 22:55 -0500
Today, in the latest escalation by minimum paid restaurant workers who demand greater wages, Fast-food workers and labor organizers are set to turn out in support of higher wages in cities across the country Thursday and walkouts are planned in 100 cities, with rallies set for another 100 cities. While it's not clear what the actual turnout will be, how many of the participants are workers and what impact they'll have on restaurant operations, it is possible that your 99 cent lunch may be delayed or outright cancelled today. While they are of course free to act as they choose, they may want to reconsider since in the very near future you may not even have the option of choosing, as it will be done for you. Earlier this week, restaurant chain Applebees unveiled what may soon be the "Waiter Terminator."
Food Poverty In The UK Has Reached "Public Health Emergency" Levels
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/05/2013 22:01 -0500
This tragic story emanating from the UK just doesn’t seem to go away. Probably because it’s true. The food crisis across the pond first came to our attention in earnest back in October when the Red Cross announced it was set to provide food aid to the UK for the first time since World War II. The latest twist to this unacceptable saga comes via a letter send by a group of doctors and senior academics from the Medical Research Council and two leading universities to the British Medical Journal calling it a “public healthy emergency” and accusing the government of covering up the problem by delaying a report on the subject.


