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Archive - Aug 27, 2013 - Story

Tyler Durden's picture

Selloffnado: Perfect Macro Storm Clobbers Stocks





An ugly day all around...

30Y Treasury yield - biggest 4-day yield compression in 15 months
Dow Transports - biggest single-day loss in ~5 months (2nd worst in 11 months)
Nasdaq - 2nd worst day in 10 months
AAPL - worst day in 3 months (2nd worst day of 2013)
USDJPY - biggest gain in JPY in 10 weeks
WTI - biggest single-day gain in 10 months
Financials - worst day in 10 months

In no particular order: Weak (and strong) US data (good or bad news?), War, Taper (Treasuries 'special'), Debt Ceiling, German elections, New Fed Chairman, imploding developing markets and collapsing global currencies... (S&P 500's first close <100DMA in 2013) it is on... (oh and S&P 500 futures 2nd biggest volume day in 2 months)

 

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Guest Post: The Immense (And Needless) Human Misery Caused By Speculative Credit Bubbles





Financialization and the Neocolonial Model of credit-based exploitation leave immense human suffering in their wake when speculative credit bubbles inevitably implode.

 

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Meet Saudi Arabia's Bandar bin Sultan: The Puppetmaster Behind The Syrian War





Yesterday the Telegraph's Evans-Pritchard dug up a note that we had posted almost a month ago, relating to the "secret" meeting between Saudi Arabia and Russia, in which Saudi's influential intelligence chief Prince Bandar bin Sultan met with Putin and regaled him with gifts, including a multi-billion arms deal and a promise that Saudi is "ready to help Moscow play a bigger role in the Middle East at a time when the United States is disengaging from the region", if only Putin would agree to give up his alliance with Syria's al-Assad and let Syria take over, ostensibly including control of the country's all important natgas transit infrastructure. What was not emphasized by the Telegraph is that Putin laughed at the proposal and brushed aside the Saudi desperation by simply saying "nyet." However, what neither the Telegraph, nor we three weeks ago, picked up on, is what happened after Putin put Syria in its place. We now know, and it's a doozy.

 

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On The Looming Federal 'Helium' Reserve Cliff (No, Really!)





The US has been stockpiling helium in ‘The Federal Helium Reserve’ (no, really) – an underground reservoir near Amarillo – since it was built in 1929. There is also a processing plant and 450 miles of pipelines. The US produces about 75% of the world’s helium, with half of that stored in the aforementioned reserve. Although helium is abundant, it is not economically feasible to capture and extract it from the atmosphere. The problem is that the Congress passed ‘The Helium Privatization Act’ in 1996, which stated that the government would effectively end sales from the reservoir once its debt was paid off. And this is expected to happen in, um, early October.

 

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Uncle Sam Comes Callin', Asks Jamie Dimon For Another $6 Billion





The US is demanding a sum of $6 billion - the total loss associated with the "London Whale" debacle - in compensation for JPMorgan's mis-selling of mortgage-backed-securities. The FT reports that, unsurprisingly, the bank is resisting the payment, which would be its single biggest penalty in a catalog of expensive run-ins with US authorities and one of the largest post-crisis settlements by any bank. The FHFA said the bank falsely claimed that loans backing $33bn of mortgage-backed securities complied with underwriting guidelines and that it "significantly overstated the ability of the borrowers to repay their mortgage loans". It seems, perhaps, it is time to trade in the old jewelry for some new Kremlin cufflinks (the enemy of your enemy is your friend?)

 

 

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S&P 500 Futures Lose Critical Technical Level





For the first time since the most recent rally began in November, S&P 500 futures have retested (and broken below) the 100-day moving average within days of a previous break (without making new highs). It would appear the BTFD mentaliity is less exuberant with war and a tapering Fed in the background. And for those great rotators... 30Y yields are at 2 week lows...

 

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America's Schizophrenic Consumer





As with all propaganda - be it war-mongery, politics, or economics - one can always find some data 'fact' to support your opinion. Presented with little comment - a tale of two consumer confidences...

 

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Asmussen/Merkel Double Whammy





Just when the world thought Europe was the new cleanest dirty shirt, ECB's Asmussen and Germany's Merkel have opened the can of European worms once more. First Asmussen...

  • *ASMUSSEN SAYS ECB IS NOT AN ECONOMIC ALL-PURPOSE WEAPON
  • *ASMUSSEN SAYS OMT PROGRAM LEGALLY POSSIBLE (a year later, still not sure?)
  • *ASMUSSEN SAYS GERMANY 3Q WILL BE 'SOMEWHAT WEAKER' THAN 2Q

and then Merkel...

  • *MERKEL SAYS GREECE SHOULDN'T HAVE BEEN LET INTO EURO AT ENTRY
  • *MERKEL SAYS SCHROEDER RESPONSIBLE FOR `FALSE' GREECE DECISION

So that would appear to be it for those hoping for her to soften her stance post-elections... and remember Greek debt is soaring once again.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Stocks Plunge Breaks Below 'FOMC Minutes' Lows





It seems time to call Liesman and Cramer for their advice... US equities are in freefall, down 2-3% from yesterday's highs (with high-flying NASDARK and Trannies underperforming) and breaking below the lows printed following the less-than-dovish FOMC minutes of last Wednesday. Gold ($1420), Silver ($24.60), and WTI ($108.75) are at the day's highs (and multi-month highs) and US Treasury yields are fading rapidly - with the long-end notably lower in yield from the FOMC minutes. The USD remains under pressure as JPY carry-unwinds dominate flows. It seems the great unrotation is at hand... as the S&P tests down to its 100DMA.

 

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How The Times Have Changed: CIA Files Prove America Helped Saddam Use Chemical Weapons





Remember all of the propaganda ahead of the USA’s “democracy unleashing” invasion of Iraq in 2003. It went something like this: “We have evidence that Saddam Hussein has stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction, and even worse he has a histroy of using them, even against his own people!” Well unsurprisingly, Mr. Hussein had a little help from his friends. The United States of America. Let’s bear this in mind as our Noble Peace Prize winning President attempts to involve us in another unconstitutional war based on the fact that chemical weapons have been used. The message is clear: one man's propaganda bogeyman is another (CIA supported) man's mustard gas.

 

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Treasury Sells $34 Billion In 2 Year Notes In Lackluster Auction





There was some anticipation heading into today's 2 Year auction, which as disclosed previously, represented the first drop in nominal issuance by $1 billion from the prevailing 2 Year size over the past several years, when as a result of reduce budget funding needs "only" $34 billion was auctioned off instead of the $35 billion recent average. Yet despite the tiny reduction in nominal, the auction was hardly a blockbuster, and if anything it was rather lackluster, with the high yield pricing at 0.386%, better than the 0.389% When Issued but certainly above July's 0.336%. The Bid to Cover also posted a modest improvement, from 3.08x last to 3.21x, however this was well below the TTM average of 3.53x. As can be seen on the chart below, auction BTC levels have been declining consistently since peaking in late 2012. Finally, the internal breakdown was generally as expected, with Directs taking down 26.1%, higher than post last month's 16.37% and the TTM average of 21.2%, Dealers holding on to 54.6% of the auction and Indirects ending up with just 19.30%, the lowest such allocation since January of this year.

 

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Did Hollande Just Solve France's Record Unemployment Problem?





Noting that "everything suggests the Syrian regime used chemical weapons," France's President Hollande this morning stated

*HOLLANDE SAYS SYRIAN CHEMICAL ATTACK REQUIRES RESPONSE and FRANCE IS READY TO PUNISH USE OF CHEMICAL WEAPONS

Perhaps this is subtle way to solve his nation's economic problems (just ask Krugman). French jobseekers just hit another all-time high; and following the utter failure of the Mali incursion to raise Hollande's popularity, perhaps he will reinstate the draft (for the millions of unemployed), invade, and then promptly surrender (leaving oil-rich Syria with the problem?)

 

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Real-Time East Mediterranean Marine Traffic Tracker





Right now, ship traffic around Syria, and especially around the port city of Latakia and Tartus (where the Russian naval base is located), is normal as can be seen on the real-time map of naval traffic in the Mediterranean courtesy of Marine Traffic. If and when (supposedly Thursday if NBC is to be believed) the US finally launches the Tomahawks, expect a prompt evacuation of the triangle between Lebanon, Turkey and Cyprus. Or maybe in advance, especially if some of the more "strategic" tankers get advance notice things are going down. Keep an eye on real-time Mediterranean traffic courtesy of the map below.

 

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Entire Treasury Belly Now Trading "Special"





Between a renewed demand for the relative geopolitical 'safety' of US Treasuries and the dismal US macro data starting to renew 'hopes' that the Taper will be delayed, the scarcity of high-quality collateral and plunging liquidity (thanks to the Fed's ongoing envelopment of the US bond market) has once again driven the 'belly' of the US Treasury market to trade 'special'. As Stone & McCarthy notes, repo has been tightening up overall, and the 2-year, 5-Year, 7-year, and 10-year are all also trading with negative handles this morning, with the 7-year getting more special ahead of this week's auction. This 'specialness' will once again raise concerns about the Fed having 'broken' the market (and as we noted here) may be further ammo to scare Bernanke straight (encouraging some degree of Taper in the Treasury buying even if the consensus believes economically we can't withstand it).

 

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On The Global QE Exit Crisis





The global economy could be in the early stages of another crisis. Once again, the US Federal Reserve is in the eye of the storm. As the Fed attempts to exit from so-called quantitative easing (QE) – its unprecedented policy of massive purchases of long-term assets – many high-flying emerging economies suddenly find themselves in a vise. The Fed insists that it is blameless – the same absurd position that it took in the aftermath of the Great Crisis of 2008-2009. As in the mid-2000’s, there is plenty of blame to go around this time as well. The Fed is hardly alone in embracing unconventional monetary easing. Moreover, the collapsing 'developing economies' all have one thing in common: large current-account deficits. A large current-account deficit is a classic symptom of a pre-crisis economy living beyond its means – in effect, investing more than it is saving. The only way to sustain economic growth in the face of such an imbalance is to borrow surplus savings from abroad. That is where QE came into play...

 
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