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Archive - Aug 1, 2013 - Story

Tyler Durden's picture

Manufacturing ISM Smashes Expectations, Surging To 2011 Levels As Construction Spending Plunges





Readers may recall that in our commentary to yesterday's Chicago PMI disappointment we had a simple prediction "What this means for the ISM is not exactly clear due to the long-running tradition of baffle with BS, but on the surface it is hardly optimistic... which likely means ISM will explode higher." Sure enough, to no surprise at all, it just did with the headline ISM manufacturing print for July exploding from 50.9, trouncing expectations of 52.0 with the biggest beat in two years, and hitting 55.4, driven mostly by a surge in production which rose from 53.4 to a ridiculous 65.0, the highest since 2004. And while virtually all of the key subindices in yesterday's Chicago PMI dipped, today it is the opposite, with New Orders (+6.4), Employment (+5.7) and Deliveries (+2.1) all posting increases. Humorously, while Chicago PMI said Prices Paid exploded, today the ISM refuted that and indicated Prices Paid dropped to lowest in a year. One just has to laugh at the Chinazation of US economic data.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Scramble To Exit Housing Market Peaks With "American Homes 4 Rent" IPO Pricing At 44% Discount





Two months ago we first observed the scramble by various hedge funds, in this case Blue Mountain, to take advantage of the peak sentiment in housing, and specifically rental housing (which just hit an all time high as reported previously) by rushing to capitalize on recent investments and dump exposure to the witless public. Specifically, we envisioned the then just announced IPO of the aptly named American Homes 4 Rent (yes, with a "4" not "for"), also known as AMH, which however came at precisely the wrong time for the market: just as mortgage rates were soaring and Colony American Homes postponed its own parallel IPO. Two months later, with the market about to pass 1700 and fears about the housing market put back in the shelf despite a glaringly obvious collapse in mortgage demand, these IPOs are back and with a vengeance, although now reflecting a far more subdued, tapered if you will, view about the house leasing sector. Not surprisingly, AMH priced overnight, selling 44.1 million shares at a price at the bottom of the $16-18 range to raise a total of $706 million: a 44% discount to the $1.25 billion suggested in the prospectus filed back in June.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

S&P 500 Hits 1,700 (Rising At A 140% Annualized Rate)





After spending the last two weeks in a 20 point range, the S&P 500 has finally passed the all-important 1,700 level after the Fed's directionless statement was trumped by Hilsenrath's confirmation that the Taper 'may' be delayed and the late-day collapse in stocks was trumped by a 'miracle' from China and this morning's promises from Draghi. After its initial spurt off the 6/24 un-taper lows, the S&P surged at a wonderful 200% annualized pace but the sideways oscillation of the last few days has dragged that extrapolated performance exuberance down to a mere 140% annualized. As a reminder, there is a buyer (retail) for every seller (professional); what could possibly go wrong? It seems 'on hold' is the new BTFATH (and sell bonds).

 

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Guest Post: Canada Threatens U.S. With Oil Trains If Keystone XL Not Built





On 6 July, a Montreal, Maine & Atlantic train carrying 72 tank cars filled with oil exploded after its brakes apparently failed, sending it rolling into the small Quebec town of Lac-Megantic, where it derailed and then exploded. In the conflagration that followed, an estimated 47 people were killed. Whether Canadians like it or not, the use of such trains has soared in recent years. Now, in a breathtaking display of chutzpah, the Canadian ambassador to the U.S. is warning President Obama if he does not approve the controversial Keystone XL pipeline, then he can expect similar oil trains and even trucks to enter the U.S..

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Initial Claims Beat, Lowest Since Jan 2008





Good news appaears (for now) to not be bad news for stocks but it is bad news for bonds as they sell-off modestly on the best beat in initial claims in 3 months and the lowest absolute (pre-revision next week) level since January 2008. The highest insured unemployment rates in the week ending July 20 were in Puerto Rico (4.9), New Jersey (3.6), Connecticut (3.5), Alaska (3.4), California (3.4), Pennsylvania (3.4), New Mexico (3.2), Nevada (2.9), Virgin Islands (2.9), Illinois (2.8), New York (2.8), Oregon (2.8), and Rhode Island (2.8). So these are pre-recessionary levels of jobless claims and extended claims continue to slide (and Challenger this morning was positive) - but how does this exuberant job situation fit with the dismal economic data? Perhaps this?

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Mario Draghi's ECB Press Conference - Live Webcast





Following his decision to leave rates unchanged, the investing public can only buy-first and hold their breath for some hint at more fragmentation-beating, collateral-easing, negative-rate hinting 'promises' from the most important man in the world for today.

*DRAGHI SAYS ECB EXPECTS RATES TO STAY LOW FOR EXTENDED PERIOD
*DRAGHI SAYS EURO AREA GROWTH RISKS REMAIN 'ON THE DOWNSIDE'
*DRAGHI SAYS WEAK LOAN DYNAMICS REFLECT STAGE OF BUSINESS CYCLE
*DRAGHI SAYS ESSENTIAL FOR FRAGMENTATION TO DECLINE FURTHER
*DRAGHI SAYS COUNTRIES SHOULD STEP UP STRUCTURAL REFORM PROCESS

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Edward Snowden Leaves Moscow Airport, Gets 1 Year Russian Asylum





 

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ECB Keeps Rates Unchanged As Expected





Despite some whispers that Mario Draghi may finally engage in a rate cut (that 1.33 EURUSD is hardly boosting European exports, although in a world in which central banks can just print "trade" who cares about FX rates), the ECB just delayed the inevitable easing by yet another month.

 

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Citi Downgrades JCPenney To Sell Anyway, Cuts Price Target From $20 To $11





Yesterday's NYPost story about JCP CIT-related credit problems may or may not have been a plant (by a persuasive billionaire nemesis - who knows...) but Citi's Deborah Weinswig isn't hanging around to find out either way, and moments ago slashed its JCP price target from $20 to $11, and cut its rating from Neutral to Sell.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: August 1





  • Headlines only idiots, Schrodinger and Goebbels could love:
    • China Manufacturing Gauge Shows Unexpected Strength (WSJ)
    • China's factory activity shrank for a third straight month in July to its lowest level in nearly a year as new orders fell (Reuters)
  • For nuns and analysts alike, bank commodity earnings are a mystery (Reuters)
  • US spying comes under fresh attack (FT)
  • Summers Backed Yellen for Fed Before Rivals Now Prove More Alike (BBG)
  • Good Luck Leaving Your Wireless Phone Plan (WSJ)
  • Spain's Rajoy says he was wrong to trust treasurer in party funding scandal (Reuters)
  • Shell's Profit Falls on Shale Write-Down (WSJ)
  • Why Rand Paul and Chris Christie went to war  (Politico)
  • Sony Returns to Profit Aided by TV Business (WSJ)
 

Tyler Durden's picture

Overnight Levitation Is Back On Hopes Of Draghi Hopium Salvage





Crashing Australian and a miss in South Korean PMIs, following days of weak Japanese data, and a divergence in the official and HSBC Chinese manufacturing indicators to a 15 month high (HSBC PMI sliding to 11 month low) was just the bad news Asian market needed to break out higher from the recent range and thanks to the return of overnight USDJPY levitation as well as a modest reverse repo liquidity injection by the PBOC overnight, not only did the Nikkei and Shanghai rise 3% and 1.8% respectively, but US futures are right back to where they were before yesterday's dramatic turnaround in the market following a strongly dovish FOMC statement and just shy of the 1700 once more. As for Europe, while there a smattering of noise following the release of final PMIs which did not change the preliminary picture much (Spain 49.8, vs 50.6 exp; Italy 50.4 vs 49.8 exp; France 49.7 vs 49.8 exp; Germany 50.7 vs 50.3 exp) it is all up to the ECB today to preserve the myth of a European improvement coupled with a EUR currency at or near multi-month highs.

 

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JC Penney Denies NY Post Story About CIT Vendor Credit Cut





If yesterday was the worst day in years for Bill Ackman following the surge in his proclaimed mega short HLF and the plunge in his beloved JC Penney, today may just redeem Pershing Square's P&L at least slightly following a company press release that denies the report published yesterday by the Post alleging CIT had cut its factoring ties with JCP vendors.

 

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