Archive - Jun 21, 2013 - Story
Hilsen-Ramp Off In Credit And Bonds
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/21/2013 13:57 -0500
Bond markets were slow to react to the Hilsenramp - forced by equities it seems in the short-range - but have now reversed their gains. Credit markets stopped believing about 30 minutes ago. Are equity markets, having trod water around VWAP for a while, now ready to revert back to a world absent the WSJ reporter... or primed for a melt-up into OPEX?
Is This The Chart That Scared Bernanke Straight?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/21/2013 13:22 -0500
With the confusion over Bernanke's comments - "have no fear as the economy is bad enough that the Taper will never come" confused with "the economy is picking-up and that's great so we don't need the Fed anymore" - one has to ask, as we have numerous times, is there another reason for the Fed to start the ball rolling on the Taper talk? In the last few weeks, the Treasury market's yields have risen notably but much more critically, the fails-to-deliver has surged. This critical indicator of both collateral shortages and technical carry trade unwinds is a little-discussed indicator of just how broken the market is thanks to the overwhelming ownership of the Fed. It's getting worse - as Barclays warns, the weakness in bonds is feeding on itself as more people want to short and so the need to borrow from the Fed (as dealer inventory is so low) increases and raises the cost (special-ness) of that short. Simply put, the main reason the Fed is tapering has nothing to do with the economy and everything to do with the TBAC presentation (rehypothecation and collateral shortages) and that the US is now running smaller deficits!!!
The Most Miserable States
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/21/2013 13:00 -0500
While arguments will likely flare over just how 'miserable' the occupants of Louisiana are relative to those of Minnesota, based on Bloomberg's quantification of 'misery' these two states are the most and least miserable in our Union. Based on thirteen factors, ranging from child poverty rates to pollution, income inequality, and mental health it seems New Mexico and West Virginia are moving up the most miserable ranks most rapidly year over year.
Recent Graduates Have Saved A Negative 13% Down-Payment On Their First Home
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/21/2013 12:31 -0500
Considering the median price of a home in the US is $208,000 according to NAR, the average student debt balance is the equivalent of a 13% down payment. In other words, two-thirds of recent graduates have saved a negative 13% down payment toward their first home. Of course, these are the same people that the bulls are counting on for household formation, population growth, job creation and other equally irrelevant arguments for strong housing demand in the future. Take a look at the table below and tell us if you are still optimistic.
Hilsenrelevant Still? Fed Mouthpiece Unleashed To Save The Day Again
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/21/2013 12:04 -0500
The 'Hilsenramp' is here. As US equities look set to test previous all-time highs and important support (100DMA), the mouthpiece of the Fed proved his worth:
*WSJ's HILSENRATH: Analysis: Overlooked 'Dovish' Signals In Bernanke Press Conference
*WSJ's HILSENRATH - Analysis: Markets Might Be Misreading The Fed's Messages
Apparently, everyone messed up - there is nothing but good news for the money-printing-addicts. Hilsenrath's "New York Fed" sources have yet to leak the 2013 year-end price target for the S&P 500 (though we expect that next).
"We Want Fairness. There Is No Fairness If You Do Not Let Us Cheat"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/21/2013 11:29 -0500
To find what is perhaps the best analogy of the mentality behind today's global capital markets and the perhaps the entire US economy as well, one has to travel to Zhongxiang in Hubei province, where a university entrance exam for 800 students did not go quite as expected. Telegraph reports: "When students at the No. 3 high school in Zhongxiang arrived to sit their exams earlier this month, they were dismayed to find they would be supervised not by their own teachers, but by 54 external invigilators randomly drafted in from different schools across the county. In short: everyone was hoping to continue a historical tradition and simply cheat, but the proctors finally and shockingly pulled the plug. End result: hundreds of test takers who had no idea what to do when the system is not rigged. "Outside, an angry mob of more than 2,000 people had gathered to vent its rage, smashing cars and chanting: "We want fairness. There is no fairness if you do not let us cheat."
European Stocks Plunge To Worst Week In 13 Months
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/21/2013 10:53 -0500
European equity markets closed down for the fifth week in a row for the first time since Summer 2011's European crisis. The 3.75% loss on the week in the broad (S&P 500 equivalent) Bloomberg Europe index is the biggest drop in 13 months to close the week unchanged on the year. Italy and Spain were the worst performers - down around 4.5% to 5% on the week - even as sovereign spreads held in only 9bps wider on the week. Europe's VIX surged to 24% - its highest close in 4 months. Greece's problems are emerging once again - smashing the EUR down over 2% in the last 3 days - its worst drop in 11 months as GGBs (and Greek stocks) plunge.
10Y Treauries Hit 2.50% - Highest Since Debt Ceiling Crisis
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/21/2013 10:37 -0500
While the headlines will note the 2.50% level's importance (given its highest rate since the August 2011 debt crisis), it is the belly (5Y and 7Y) that is being crushed.
Equities Rolling Over As Treasury Belly Punching Continues - Post-POMO Update
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/21/2013 09:48 -0500
UPDATE: As POMO ended, Treasuries took a rapid leg higher in yields (and equities gave up their bounce)...
The overnight 'China didn't explode and Japanese stocks gapped higher magically' rally in stocks is gone... The selling continues - even as Treasuries remain a little more quiet than the last few days. Bonds are seeing 5Y and 7Y (the belly) still sold even as the long-dated 30Y is modestly bid. Homebuilders are getting monkey-hammered - now down 9.5% from pre-FOMC levels. There was some bid in HY (CDS) credit this morning but chatter is that we are seeing the much-warned-about selling of high-yield bonds (as opposed to lifting of hedges alone) - which perhaps explains the moves in longer-dated Treasuries as spread-based money managers unwind. Oil prices are rolling over fast as the USD rallies on the back of EUR weakness (Greece among other things) but Gold and Silver are bouncing. Financial CDS are now wider on the year - dramatically dislocated from financial stocks. It seems the 100DMA (1567) and previous all-time highs (1576) are the next supports.
Every Asset That Depends On Cheap, Abundant Credit (Housing, Bonds, Stocks) Is Doomed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/21/2013 09:34 -0500
Four words: financialization, debtocracy, diminishing returns. The entire global economy, developed and developing nations alike, is now dependent on cheap, abundant credit for everything: for "growth," for asset inflation, and ultimately for central state deficit spending, which props up all the cartels, rentier arrangements, fiefdoms and armies of toadies, lackeys, apparatchiks and embezzlers that suck off the Status Quo. The wheels fall off the entire financialized debtocracy wagon once yields rise.There's nothing mysterious about this.
Why Spain And Italy Are Like Cyprus, Slovenia, And Greece
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/21/2013 08:36 -0500
The "XXXXX is not YYYYY" jokes aside, Europe's union of nations is beginning to separate increasingly between the haves and the have-nots. The sad truth, as Bloomberg's Niraj Shah notes, is that recession/depression has pushed Spanish and Italian GDP-per-capita below the EU average in purchasing power terms - just like Cyprus, Slovenia, and Greece. Irish GDP per capita was 29% above the average, while Greek and Portuguese per capita output were 25% below. Output per head for the EU ranged between 47% (Bulgaria) and 271% (Luxembourg) of the average. With today's news that retroactive ESM recaps are unlikely, the banking-sovereign symbiosis of Spain and Italy will increasingly come under pressure and with productivity so dismal, there is little hope for now.
The Japanese Surge Injection Team
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/21/2013 07:55 -0500
PPT is so 2008... now it is all about the SIT - for all those times when the best selling defense is a buying offense.
The Party Is Over
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/21/2013 07:43 -0500
We are astounded with the number of people saying that the Fed didn't say anything new. These people must be living in Borneo and far out into the jungle. The Fed came out and said as clearly as any Fed has ever said; "We are going to unwind the trade." Yes, sure, there was the usual huff and puff about a change in market conditions could change our viewpoint but that is not relevant. What was relevant is that the Fed stated and quite clearly that, "The party is over." Because we live in a global economy we will now also get impacted by China and Europe. The flow of money had protected our shores but now we will be exposed and the recession in Europe and the growth rate in China, probably around a real 3.5%-4.0%, is going to come bouncing into America. Liquidity has been the one and only god and the Fed has now told you that this god is going to close up shop.
Greek Bonds Plunge As Ruling Coalition Partner Pulls Out, Withdraws Ministers
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/21/2013 07:27 -0500
As reported yesterday, Greece has stormed right back to the top of the crisis charts, not only due to the previously reported news that the IMF may be withholding further payments until Greece finally gets its house in order (three years later one can forget this will happen), but because as a result of the fallout surrounding the national broadcaster ERT, the coalition government is now in tatters. Moments ago any hopes that some political stability may be preserved were crushed following news that the Democratic Left official Vassilis Economou, who spoke libe on Greek Skai TV which is still in operation, said the party decided to withdraw its ministers from the coalition govt of Prime Minister Antonis Samaras. And there goes the fake sense of calm that has permeated the south of Europe ever since last summer's nail-biting Greek elections, which concluded in the best possible way for Germany. This time around, however, the last thing Merkel needs two months ahead of her reelection is a resurgence in the peripheral crisis, timed perfectly to coincide with the end of the carry trade, which will mean only the ECB is left to pick up the pieces.



