Archive - Mar 2013 - Story
March 8th
Santelli: "Still Want That Hammer-And-Sickle On The Flag?"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/08/2013 17:01 -0500
Will we ever see 'reality' again? Judging by CNBC's Rick Santelli's one-sentence epic rant this morning of the centrally-planned farce that we are living through... Liesman: "Why would you normalize rates?" Santelli: "Are we really that far down the hole that normalizing rates after this tremendous number - the huge drop in the unemployment rate - that you guys still wanna have the hammer-and-sickle on the flag" the short answer, it appears, is 'No'. But perhaps it is Rick's seething anger in a second clip that exposes the reality of "the apologists" for the Fed and as he notes: "This whole thing is a Parlor Game and the country deserves better than Fed experimentation." Before you go home - watch these two clips (and listen)!
Every "Record" Dow Jones Point Costs $200 Million In Federal Debt
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/08/2013 16:30 -0500The past week brought us history: on Tuesday, GETCO and Citadel's HFT algos were used by the Primary Dealers and the Fed to send the Dow Jones to all time highs, subsequently pushing it to new all time highs every single day of the week, and higher on 8 of the past 9 days: a 5ish sigma event. But there is never such a thing as a free lunch. And here is the invoice: in the past 5 days alone, total Federal Debt rose from$16.640 trillion to $16.701 trillion as of moments ago: an increase of $61 billion in five days, amounting to $198,697,068 for every of the 307 Dow Jones Industrial Average points "gained" this week. Because remember: US debt is the asset that allows the Fed to engage in monetization and as a result, hand over trillions in fungible reserves to banks... mostly foreign banks.
One Word: "Brea(d)thless"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/08/2013 16:10 -0500
Another Friday, another green close (now ten in a row) as Treasuries suffer their biggest weekly yield rise in a year. Another new-er-er all-time nominal high for the Dow but Nasdaq was the winner on the week (+2.7%) against a cluster of the rest at +2.4%. Volume was sub-par at best, trade-size low, and market breadth diverged bearishly but that didn't matter. Financials, Consumer Discretionary (and builders) were the sectoral winners up around 4%. Away from stocks, things are moving quite seriously: the USD is up for 5 weeks in a row - its biggest 5-week run in 9 months (and highest in 9 months); WTI crude outperformed in commodities (despite the USD strength) back up to 6-week highs; JPY had its worst (which is good apparently) week in 23 months losing 2.5% against the USD back to almost 4-year lows; Silver and Gold had their best (and only positive) week in 5 weeks. Credit markets (like TSYs) played catch up and snapped tighter on the week (even though HYG tended to underperform). VIX did drift lower (-0.5 vols to 12.5%) but remains well north of where stocks would expect. The much-vaunted late-day ramp came as usual and lifted all the indices to their opening (post-NFP spike) highs. As a gentle reminder, the Dow is up 613 points in 9 days - that is all.
Reality Check: The Dow Jones Industrial Average Vs. Bananas
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/08/2013 15:38 -0500
The Dow Jones Industrial Average, one of the key benchmarks of the US stock market, has soundly surpassed its all-time high. And most of the investing world is toasting their collective success and celebrating the recovery. It’s a funny thing, really. Most investors only think in terms of ‘nominal’ numbers, i.e. Dow 14,000+ is 40% higher than Dow 10,000 (back in November 2009). But few think in terms of ‘real’ numbers... inflation-adjusted averages. Everyone knows that inflation exists. We can all look back on prices from the past and realize instantly how much more expensive things have become. Conversely, though, most people don’t think about the stock market like this. The reality is, though, that when you adjust for inflation, the Dow is well below its highs from over a decade ago. We thought we’d put this into a bit of perspective...
Dennis Rodman Puts The New Abnormal Into Absurd Perspective
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/08/2013 15:12 -0500
In yet another day in which no matter how good or bad (and by bad we obviously mean very good) the news is the only outcome is the now endless levitation in the DJIA, here is something out of left field. "14 time zones away" field. Because who better to explain what is "really" happening in the new grotesque, surreal, absurd abnormal, where up is down, bad is good is better, Americans engaged in combat in the US can and will be blown up by remote controled US airplanes, and absolutely everything is centrally-planned, than Dennis Rodman.
Guest Post: LNG - The Holy Grail Of Gas Investments
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/08/2013 14:46 -0500
Liquefied natural gas (LNG) technology - from LNG seaborne tankers and LNG trains to floating LNG facilities have quickly gone from concept to commercialization, opening up new possibilities in new frontiers and rendering the remote - well, much less remote. Analysts say FLNG terminals will become a major growth market within the next couple of years, as they offer more flexibility than stationary terminals. Liquefaction of natural gas is the process of super-cooling natural gas to minus 260 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 162 degrees Celsius) at which point it becomes much safer and easier to transport. After its been shipped to its destination, regasification plants at importing or receiving terminals return the fuel to a gaseous state. A lot of money is being dumped into LNG technology right now. It’s a major bet on the LNG market, but here’s why it’s solid...
Palladium Bucks Precious Metal Trend - Hits 18-Month High
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/08/2013 14:14 -0500
While gold, silver, and platinum remain held in ranges, it appears China's NDRC comments on carbon emissions and improved energy efficiency have been taken seriously enough to drive Palladium prices to 18 month highs (and notably divergent from the rest of the PM group). Palladium is now up more than twice the 215% gain in gold since Lehman and leads the PMs.
Remember Hilsenrath?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/08/2013 13:39 -0500There was a time when the Fed's unofficial mouthpiece, WSJ's Jon Hilsenrath, who eagerly and promptly put to print anything the Fed deemed worthy of leaking to the access journalist, was relevant. Perhaps the only positive side effect with the advent of QEternity, which essentially took away the "surprise function" from the Fed as everyone now knows what will happen in perpetuity or until hyperinflation arrives, whichever happens first, was making such leaks as Hilsenrath completely irrelevant. After all, when the Fed has shown its cards to everyone, even as it keeps doubling down and pulling jokers out of its sleeve, those who "share" the Fed's thoughts have become completely marginalized. Today was one of those days when Hilsy strove to regain some of his former glory releasing the Fed's his take on today's NFP, which said absolutely nothing new. Yes we know even 500K jobs created a month will not end QE, and neither will 1MM, or more: after all the US still has $1+ trillion deficits needing monetization as far as the eye can see. In fact, the only thing remotely useful in Jon's article was at the very end...
Friday Humor: Greek "Inflation"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/08/2013 12:55 -0500
According to the Hellenic Statistical Authority (ELSTAT), Greek inflation eased in January to +0.1% - its lowest in 45 years. However, as ekathimerini notes, the prices for certain goods (like food, energy, phones, medicine) rose just a little more than that, leaving us with a simple question: 'what's Greek for hedonics?'
Fitchslapped: Italy Downgraded To BBB+ (Outlook Negative)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/08/2013 12:19 -0500
The France-based ratings agency has just joined China's Dagong, and US Moody's by Fitch-slapping Italy with a BBB ratings handle. Citing four main reasons: election results which and 'non-conducive' for further structural reforms, deeper than expected recession, greater than expected budget deficits, and a weak government less able to respond to shocks. But apart from all that, as we noted earlier, Italian stocks and bonds are bid.
What A Difference For Jobs $1.2 Trillion In Debt Makes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/08/2013 12:10 -0500
The media's ecstatic read through of today's Nonfarm payroll beat can barely end: after all, a print of 236k on expectations of 165K, why that has to be great. Well, it is. Until one looks to the number from February 2012, which happens to be 271,000. And even the Keynesian will agree that February follows January, which in 2013 was a downward revised 119K. January 2012? 311,000. In other words, the first two months of 2012 saw a 582,000 increase in non-farm payrolls. In 2013: 355,000. But something else happened between February 29, 2012 and February 28, 2013... Oh yes, the US government issued some $1,198,397,883,967.30 in debt. Oh, and the Fed monetized about half of this amount, and virtually all of the Treasurys issued to the right of the ZIRP period (i.e., risky debt). To summarize: $1.2 trillion in debt buys the US.... 61% of the jobs created a year ago.
Spanish Spreads Rally To One-Year Tights As EURUSD Hits 3-Month Low
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/08/2013 11:43 -0500
At the lows, the USD had its best gain in 9 months today, but a small give back into the European close leaves EURUSD back below 1.30 having hit its lowest in three months. It seems the EUR-USD exchange rate has recoupled perfectly with the Fed/ECB balance sheet shifts. Bond spreads are tumbling amid this 'devaluation' as Spain's 10Y spread to Bunds has dropped to its lowest in a year (though Italy remains well above one-year lows). Spanish stocks also surged - up 5.5% this week! And Europe's VIX has plunged back to one-month lows. What's not to like? Oh apart from the macro fundamentals that are crashing everywhere in Europe.
Goldman Closes Spanish 5 Year Bond Long Trade Recommendation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/08/2013 11:24 -0500From Goldman: "We recommend closing long positions in 5-year Spanish bonds, one of our Top Trade recommendations for 2013. Since inception on 6 December, the position would have returned 5.5%. On 6 December 2012, we recommended going long Spanish 5-year government bonds (SPGB 5 ½ 30-July-17 – the 5-year generic at the time), with an initial target of 3.50%. On January 11, the yield fell below 3.50% and we extended the target to 3.00%. Since inception, the 5-year Spain has rallied 111bp, from an initial yield of 4.29% to 3.18% currently (mid-market)."
Spot The Non-POMO Day
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/08/2013 11:02 -0500
While correlation is not causation (and money doesn't grow on trees), the following chart may help explain today's 'surprising' weakness (for now) from the open despite the 'goldilocks' data...



