Archive - Aug 26, 2013 - Story
Obamacare Enters Texas As Dallas Fed Employee Workweek Drops To 2009 Levels
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2013 09:47 -0500
11 of the 15 sub-indices for the Dallas Fed manufacturing outlook fell month-over-month with new orders, production, and finished goods notably weak. Of course, the modest headline beat will be all we hear about as the US economy makes 'progress'; but under the surface there is an even more concerning factor. While the number of employees rose modestly, the average employee workweek collapsed at its fastest pace in 2 years (and the last 2 months have dropped the most in 3 years) as it seems the Obamacare-effect smashes the workweek back to its lowest since October 2009.
Doctor Copper Has A Seizure
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2013 09:23 -0500
What a difference a day makes. On Friday, Doctor Copper was surging on the back of dismal home sales data and the hope of moar money; today, following the terrible durable goods data, the economist-metal is plunging rapidly.
Julian Assange Reveals "Google's Covert Role In Foaming Uprisings"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2013 09:11 -0500
It has been revealed, thanks to Edward Snowden, that Google and other US tech companies received millions of dollars from the NSA for their compliance with the PRISM mass surveillance system. So just how close is Google to the US securitocracy?
"Google is getting WH [White House] and State Dept support and air cover. In reality they are doing things the CIA cannot do"
That Google was taking NSA money in exchange for handing over people’s data comes as no surprise. When Google encountered the big bad world, Google itself got big and bad.
Tesla Crosses $20 Billion In Market Cap: Twice Size Of Fiat
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2013 08:53 -0500The chart below, which we are quite speechless to comment on, shows the market cap of TSLA, which will sell 35,000 cars in 2013 and must sell between 500,000 and 3,000,000 cars by 2022 to grow into its valuation (as explained before), compared to some other car companies such as Fiat, Porsche, GM, Ford and Volkswagen. So yes: Tesla may be double the market cap of Fiat, but it is less than 20% the size of Volkswagen, so there is obviously much upside still.
China 'Officially' Admits PMI Data Inaccurate
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2013 08:34 -0500
Over six weeks ago we first noted that there were problems with the industry-specific data underlying the Chinese PMI numbers when we added that "the random disappearance of data was disorienting." Fast-forward to last week and the greater-than-50 PMI print heard around the world, which provided just enough momentum ignition to warrant more optimism in world equity markets that the second-half of the year would indeed prove to be a mythical renaissance. Well, it turns out that China's official National Bureau of Statistics has admitted that "we can’t ensure all industry-specific data can reach accuracy requirements," adding that they "were concerned that some of the numbers may affect related investors and users." Translation - the data in some industries was so bad that by telling the truth, our data would have become viciously self-fulfilling for their demise. The Juncker-rule is alive and well...
Spot The CapEx Rebound (And/Or Growing Economy)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2013 08:12 -0500
... Although if one has trouble finding an upward inflection point in this chart showing the annual change in actual shipments (not cancelable orders) of non-defense capital goods excluding aircraft, we understand.
BATS And DirectEdge To Merge, Terms Not Disclosed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2013 08:11 -0500When you add High Frequency Trading exchange 263 and High Frequency Trading exchange 264 (read all about DirectEdge over the years here), you get a whole lot of happy algos. It also means that MtGox is on its way to becoming the world's most stable exchange. We now expect the market to crash in celebration. We joke, of course, but if anyone trips over the BATS extension cord that sends AAPL under $500 and the NYSE Arca and NASDAQ shutting down again, we take no responsibility. Finally, in continuing the spirit of full transparency and openness of everything HFT-related, the terms of the transaction will not be disclosed.
The "Market" Reacts To The Dismal Durable Goods Orders
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2013 07:53 -0500
The equity market seems to have shrugged off the bad-news-is-good-news meme and is deathly quiet. However, in bonds, FX, and commodity markets, things are escalating in a 'Taper-off' manner...
Durable Goods Crater On Plunge In Airplane, Manufacturing And Computer Orders: Biggest Miss Since August 2012
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2013 07:44 -0500
And so that the great CapEx spending surge is delayed once more: supposedly to H3 2013 this time. Moments ago the Commerce Department reported the latest Durable Goods numbers which were a total disaster: the headline print plunged by 7.3% on expectations of a -4.0% decline driven by a drop in Airplane orders (to be expected following last month's noted bumper Paris Air show spike as Boeing reported only 90 new plane orders compared to 273 in June). Well, airplanes orders did indeed slide by 52.3%, but it was weakness in Transportation (-19.4%) and Computer (-19.9%) orders as well as Manufacturing (-9.8%) that took the market by surprise. This was the biggest miss to expectations since August 2012.
Italy Stocks Slide As Government Crisis Deepens
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2013 07:06 -0500
The last time Italy was close to a full out collapse was in November 2011 when ECB's then-recently appointed new head Mario Draghi forced Berlusconi out following an (ECB uncontrolled) plunge in Italy bonds. It is only fitting that following Bunga Bunga's latest tax fraud conviction, and the resulting power circus, it is Sylvio who threatens Italy's government, and stability, once again.
Key Events In The Coming Week
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2013 06:56 -0500- Auto Sales
- Boeing
- Bond
- Brazil
- Case-Shiller
- Chicago PMI
- China
- Conference Board
- Consumer Confidence
- Consumer Sentiment
- Continuing Claims
- Dallas Fed
- Employment Situation Report
- ETC
- Greece
- Housing Market
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Las Vegas
- LatAm
- Michigan
- Monetary Aggregates
- Monetary Policy
- New Home Sales
- Personal Income
- Portugal
- recovery
- Richmond Fed
- San Francisco Fed
- Shadow Banking
- SocGen
- St Louis Fed
- St. Louis Fed
- Trade Deficit
- Volatility
A quiet week to send off August ahead of a deluge of key data next week and as the fateful Septembr 18 FOMC announcement approaches. Still, quite a few macro events to keep track of.
Frontrunning: August 26
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2013 06:31 -0500- Bankers Brace for Fed Wind-Down (WSJ)
- A Veteran Saudi Power Player Works To Build Support to Topple Assad (WSJ)
- Gunmen shoot at weapons experts' vehicle in Damascus: U.N (Reuters) - as long as it's not drones
- ECB Council Members Split in Jackson Hole Over Rate Cuts (BBG)
- Fed Officials Rebuff Coordination Calls as QE Taper Looms (BBG)
- As Egyptians Ignore Curfew, Talk of a U.S.-Brotherhood Conspiracy (NYT)
- Pipeline-Capacity Squeeze Reroutes Crude Oil (WSJ)
- Lawmakers Probe Willful Abuses of Power by NSA Analysts (BBG)
- Indictments Expected in Alleged Trading Code Theft (WSJ)
- India’s ONGC takes Africa gasfield stake (FT)
- Capital Flight Drains Reserves as Rupee, Rupiah Fall (BBG)
- Banks scale back rates business (FT)
New Week Starts With Another Full Market Halt
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2013 06:02 -0500- Barclays
- Bond
- Brazil
- CDS
- Central Banks
- Chicago PMI
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Copper
- CPI
- Crude
- fixed
- Gilts
- headlines
- Hong Kong
- Investment Grade
- Iran
- Japan
- Middle East
- Monetary Policy
- Money Supply
- Morgan Stanley
- NASDAQ
- New Home Sales
- New Zealand
- Nikkei
- NYMEX
- Obama Administration
- Personal Income
- President Obama
- RANSquawk
- Reality
- recovery
- San Francisco Fed
- St Louis Fed
- St. Louis Fed
Last week it was the Nasdaq, today it was the Eurex Exchange, which broke down "due to technical issues" shortly after 2 am Eastern and which was offline for over an hour. Further keeping a lid on liquidity and upward momentum is today's UK market holiday which has resulted in a driftless move lower across European stocks, following a red close in the Nikkei225. It only means that the inevitable ramp up in the disconnected from all fundamentals and reality market will have to come only during US trading hours when the NY Fed trading desk steps up its POMO-aided levitation.
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