Archive - May 2013 - Story
May 7th
JOLTS Jolts Jobs Report Cheerleaders, Implies Worst Job Growth Since September 2010
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/07/2013 11:49 -0500
The biggest surprise from the JOLTS report is not in any of the standalone series, but in the time progression of the Net Turnovers number, which is simply the total new hires less total separations. Historically, the Net Turnover number tracks the total monthly nonfarm payroll change (establishment survey) on a almost tick for tick basis. Not this time. In fact as the chart below showed, the upward revised March NFP number to 138K, which preceded the even more optimistic, and much cheered April print of 165K, which sent the S&P and the DJIA soaring to new all time highs on Friday, not only did not get a confirmation, but in fact the JOLTS survey for Net Turnovers - which came at only 46K in March compared to a revised 138K jobs added per the establishment survey - implied that the real NFP number in March should have tumbled to a level last seen in September of 2010!
This Is Your S&P; This Is Your S&P Without Tuesdays
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/07/2013 11:02 -0500
Since the mid-November lows, the S&P 500 has gained a remarkable 268 points on the back of faith, hope, and Bernanke/Kuroda charity. But perhaps what is more mind-numbing is that this efficient market has given us more than 50% of those gains on Tuesdays. With 17 up-days in a row, Tuesday is the Monday dip-buyers dream. Since 1/18, absent Tuesdays, the S&P 500 has gone nowhere. Maybe Bob Geldof needs to write a new song for the US investor "I do like Tuesdays", or at least a slightly revised cover version of the Bangles' "Manic Tuesday".
The Real Cypriot "Blueprint" - How To Confiscate $32 Trillion In "Offshore Wealth"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/07/2013 10:19 -0500
The Cypriot deposit confiscation has come and gone (and in a parallel world in which the global Bernanke-put never existed and in which bank shareholders were not untouchable, this is precisely how real-time bank restructurings should have taken place), but fears remain that the country's "resolution" mechanism will be the template for future instances of "resolving" insolvent banks. That may or may not be the case: the only way to know for sure is during the next European bank bailout, but one thing is certain - Cyprus was certainly a template when it comes to how a world full of insolvent sovereigns (all engaged in currency warfare), where easing, quantitative or otherwise no longer works to boost the economy, will approach what is the last chance for monetary replenishment - taxation of financial assets, just as we warned first back in 2011. Specifically, Cyprus showed the "template" for confiscating Russian oligarch billionaire "ill-gotten", untaxed cash, which many in Germany demanded should be the quid for ongoing German-funded quo. And here's the rub. There is more where said "ill-gotten" cash has come from. Much more... $32 trillion more.
Soros Vs Sinn: To 'Eurobond' Or To Save The Euro
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/07/2013 10:03 -0500
The debate rages... Soros: "The euro crisis has already transformed the European Union from a voluntary association of equal states into a creditor-debtor relationship from which there is no easy escape. The creditors stand to lose large sums should a member state exit the monetary union, yet debtors are subjected to policies that deepen their depression, aggravate their debt burden, and perpetuate their subordinate position. As a result, the crisis is now threatening to destroy the EU itself. That would be a tragedy of historic proportions, which only German leadership can prevent." Sinn: "Soros is playing with fire... Many investors echo Soros. They want to cut and run – to unload their toxic paper onto intergovernmental rescuers, who should pay for it with the proceeds of Eurobond sales, and put their money in safer havens... Soros does not recognize the real nature of the eurozone’s problems. The ongoing financial crisis is merely a symptom of the monetary union’s underlying malady: its southern members’ loss of competitiveness... His accusation that Germany is imposing austerity is unfair. Austerity is imposed by the markets, not by those countries providing the funds to mitigate the crisis."
Guest Post: Bernanke's Neofeudal Rentier Economy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/07/2013 09:37 -0500
Federal Reserve Chairman Bernanke is a Reverse Robin Hood, robbing from the lower 95% and giving to the financier class. It's worth understanding the mechanisms of this wealth transfer: in essence, the Fed extends low-cost credit (i.e. "free money") to the financier class which then uses this free money to buy rentier assets, that is, assets that generate economic rents for the owners, who add no value and create no wealth. This is of course the neofeudal model. Goebbels would approve of the Fed's masterful propaganda campaign: rob the bottom 95% to benefit the financier class, all the while piously proclaiming that its policies were aimed at increasing employment for the bottom 95%. In terms of propagandistic chutzpah, it doesn't get any better than this. Congratulations, Bernanke, Yellen, et al.
Bill Gross To Bernanke: "Thanks Chairman! Got Any More?"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/07/2013 09:03 -0500Gross: Dow hits 15,000 & PIMCO’s internal Corp & Hi Yield Index hits all-time yield lows. Thanks Chairman #Bernanke! Got any more?
— PIMCO (@PIMCO) May 7, 2013
Kenya's Njuguna Ndung'u Shows Australia How It's Done, Cuts Rate By 100 Bps Due To "Increase In Economic Confidence"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/07/2013 08:39 -0500Following on the widely telegraphed rate cut by the Australian central bank overnight to a record low 2.75%, here comes a truly surprise move out of the Kenya Central Bank, and its Governor Njuguna Ndung'u whose central bank just showed the world how it's really done:
- KENYA CENTRAL BANK CUTS BENCHMARK RATE TO 8.50% FROM 9.50%
- KENYA CENTRAL BANK SAYS CONFIDENCE IN ECONOMY HAS INCREASED
As long as the confidence is there... Incidentally, the expectations, by those who have nothing better to do than forecast what the Kenya central bank will do, was for a mere 25 bps cut. We expect the credit carry traders out of Niarobi to scramble for yield in places like Greece, now that their cost of funding has dropped by over 10%. The good news for those doing the inverse trade, and looking to trade Kenyan Eurodollar futures, or the "Kenyo-dollar" as the case may be, is that there still is a long way to go before all time lows rate lows are taken out.
The Reality-Is-Perception Gap
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/07/2013 08:20 -0500
With retail stocks surging on the back of the any-minute-now recovery (justified by the might of the Federal Reserve printing press), we thought it perhaps useful to consider just how great things are in the retail sales space. Given the non-stop accelerating rise in the equity prices, retail sales must be accelerating or must have turned up green-shoot-like? Well not so much. As the following chart shows, while retail sales (ex-food) is still rising modestly YoY, it is doing so a decelerating pace (as income growth stagnates and discretionary income slumps). But for now, all we must believe is the market knows best (until, 2008-like) it doesn't.
A Hard Look At Europe
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/07/2013 08:02 -0500
In the beginning there were a handful of core nations equal in partnership and full of the excitement of a new venture. Much of the esprit was a desire to band together and compete against the United States for economic dominance and world power. Now we find the EU headquarters no longer staffed by equals but a useful front for Berlin which resides in another country. This point is critically important to understand. Yes, sure, the Germans will smile and nod and give way on agricultural supplements and on fishing rights and trivial matters but when it gets down to it and the decision is important; Berlin will have its way. The fact that the equity markets have done fabulously and that the interest rates for European sovereign debt have done remarkably well all rest on one thing and one thing only; the creation of money and a massive amount of it. Europe, and the rest of the world for that matter, has been transformed by the printing of money. The dislocation between economies and markets is huge and the glue is the twenty-four seven machinations of the printing presses. Politicians in Europe and America have taken a back seat to the heads of the world's central banks. Lastly, as I stare out at the horizon, you should understand the German viewpoint of the State. You win by being in control and control must always be exercised and never relinquished.
French Industrial Production Confirms Hollande's Triple-Dip Fears
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/07/2013 07:32 -0500
French industrial production came in considerably lower than expected overnight. France's output fell 2.5% YoY against an expectation of a mere 1.4% drop and manufacturing production dropped 4.9% YoY - almost its worst since the crisis. This data confirms what we have discussed in detail (here and here) that France is heading for a depression. After the briefest of renaissances in Q3 2012, the Gallic nation now looks set for a triple-dip recession, further stretching the core of an already tense European Union. The last few days have seen 10Y French debt yields increase a little (+17bps off the lows) but they remain (much as the rest of Europe) near record lows.
No Recovery Here Either: Home Renovation Spending Plummets To 2010 Levels
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/07/2013 07:17 -0500
One of the widely accepted misconceptions surrounding the so-called "housing recovery" fanfared by misleading headlines such as this "Remodeling activity keeps up positive momentum", which in reality has merely turned out to be a housing bubble in various liquified "flip that house" MSAs (offset by continuing deteriorating conditions in those places where the Fed's trillions in excess reserves have trouble reaching coupled with ongoing foreclosure stuffing), is that "renovation spending", the amount of cash spent to upgrade and update a fixer-upper, has surged. Sadly, this is merely the latest lie about the US economy: as the attached chart showing renovation spending in the past 6 months, it has absolutely imploded, confirming that not only is a broad housing recovery a myth (instead of localized pockets of bubbly liquidity here and there), but that the US home-owning household is now more tapped out than at any time in the past two years.
Paulson Gold Fund Down 27% In April
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/07/2013 06:34 -0500
Curious who the biggest casualty of last month's forced precious metal take down is? It may very well be John Paulson, who has systematically been blown out of all his concentrated positions in the past few years, and who, according to Bloomberg, just lost a record 27% in one month in his gold fund, and down 47% so far in 2013. If anything, it may explain the ongoing collapse in GLD holdings as he (among others) is forced to continue liquidating. The good news is that one levered players such as Paulson are finally blown out, there is hope that only far more rational, "non-weak handed" players remain at the table.
Frontrunning: May 7
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/07/2013 06:24 -0500- AIG
- Apple
- Australia
- Baidu
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bitcoin
- Blackrock
- Bond
- China
- Colony Capital
- Corporate Finance
- Credit Suisse
- Deutsche Bank
- Federal Deficit
- Fitch
- Ford
- General Motors
- Germany
- GOOG
- Hertz
- Jamie Dimon
- JPMorgan Chase
- Market Conditions
- Mercedes-Benz
- Merrill
- Mexico
- Miller Tabak
- Motorola
- Natural Gas
- OPEC
- People's Bank Of China
- Private Equity
- recovery
- Reuters
- Securities Fraud
- Third Point
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- Yuan
- Microsoft prepares U-turn on Windows 8 (FT), Microsoft admits failure on Windows 8 (MW), After Bumpy Start, Microsoft Rethinks Windows 8 (NYT)
- China reports four more bird flu deaths, toll rises to 31 (Reuters)
- Republicans shift stance on US budget (FT)
- NYC Tallest Condo Corridor Gets New Entrant With Steinway (BBG)
- U.S. Says China's Government, Military Used Cyberespionage (WSJ)
- China rejects Pentagon charges of military espionage (Reuters)
- Bank of China Cuts Off North Korean Bank (WSJ)
- Libya defense minister quits over siege of ministries by gunmen (Reuters)
- London Recruiter Says City Job Vacancies Rose 19% (BBG)
- Colleges Cut Prices by Providing More Financial Aid (WSJ) or, said otherwise, loans
- Jeweler agrees to plead guilty in KPMG insider-trading case (LA Times)
Surprising German Factory Orders Bounce Offset ECB Jawboning Euro Lower; Australia Cuts Rate To Record Low
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/07/2013 05:57 -0500- Aussie
- Australia
- Australian Dollar
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank of Japan
- Bond
- Carry Trade
- CDS
- Central Banks
- China
- Citigroup
- Consumer Credit
- Copper
- Credit Default Swaps
- Crude
- default
- European Central Bank
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- France
- Germany
- headlines
- High Yield
- Hong Kong
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Loan Officer Survey
- Market Conditions
- Markit
- New Normal
- Nikkei
- Portugal
- President Obama
- SocGen
- Trade Balance
- Unemployment
- White House
The euro continues to not get the memo. After days and days of attempted jawboning by Draghi and his marry FX trading men, doing all they can to push the euro down, cutting interest rates and even threatening to use the nuclear option and push the deposit rate into the red, someone continues to buy EURs (coughjapancough) or, worse, generate major short squeezes such as during today's event deficient trading session, when after France reported a miss in both its manufacturing and industrial production numbers (-1.0% and -0.9%, on expectations of -0.5% and -0.3%, from priors of 0.8% and 0.7%) did absolutely nothing for the EUR pairs, it was up to Germany to put an end to the party, and announce March factory orders which beat expectations of a -0.5% solidly, and remained unchanged at 2.2%, the same as in February. And since the current regime is one in which Germany is happy and beggaring its neighbors's exports (France) with a stronger EUR, Merkel will be delighted with the outcome while all other European exporters will once again come back to Draghi and demand more jawboning, which they will certainly get. Expect more headlines out of the ECB cautioning that the EUR is still too high.
May 6th
The Story Of Inequality In The US: Past, Present And Future
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/06/2013 21:35 -0500
In this far-reaching documentary, we are first treated to a history lesson from the early 80s to the present day - a story of lust, debt, and largesse; from Reagan deficits to cell phones to day trading to real estate... and then 2008 is explained (as reality started to peek through). The clip projects the next few years - from failed bond auctions to QE9 and social unrest - "but it doesn't have to be this way," the narrator notes. 'Breaking Inequality' is about the corruption between Washington and Wall Street that has resulted in the largest inequality gap in the history of America. It is a film that exposes the truth behind the single event that occurred back in the early 70's that set us off on this perilous journey that we are currently on. No country in the history of the world has ever remained a super power without a middle class and the road we are currently traveling doesn't include this all-important segment of the population. The old saying "As goes the middle class... so goes the nation" holds true even more today than ever.


