Archive - Aug 2013 - Story
August 20th
On The 'Obamacare Effect'; "Anecdote This," Dr. Furman
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2013 14:29 -0500
During the NBC Nightly News segment last week about one of the unintended consequences of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), Lisa Myers reported speaking with "almost 20 small businesses and other entities around the country" and that "almost all said that because of the new law, they’d be cutting back hours for some employees." But the Obama administration doesn’t see why there’s such a fuss. According to Myers: The White House dismisses these examples as “anecdotal.” The president’s top economic advisor [CEA Chair Jason Furman] told us “he sees no systematic evidence the health care law is having an adverse impact on the number of hours employees are working.” So, should we take our government’s word and dismiss the examples as anecdotal?
Merkel Has Some Words Of Encouragement... Or Is That Warning?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2013 14:06 -0500Germany's Angela Merkel visited the German concentration camp in Dachau - the first such visit by a sitting German Chancellor- where one may say, she could have picked her words a tad more wisely:
- MERKEL SAYS NATIONS SHARING A CURRENCY WILL NEVER GO TO WAR
- MERKEL SAYS 'WORTH IT' TO FIGHT FOR UNITED EUROPE
US civil war counterfactual aside, the stunned European population was confused by the implication of her words: is it that Germany will keep ploughing German funds to keep a pacifist, socialist dream alive (which is really just a front to keep Deutsche Bank and its $50+ trillion in derivatives solvent) even as hours ago her own Finance Minister admitted that a third (and certainly not last) bailout of Greece is now just a matter of time... or was it simply a warning to Greece, Cyprus and anyone else contemplating a true recovery, one which begins with their own currency, and maybe with a few Panzers crossing the border?
WTI Plunge Slams Brent Spread Up 100%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2013 13:52 -0500
The Brent-WTI spread has been generally quiet between $2 and $4 for the last month or so (after its dramatic collapse back to $0 mid July). However, as soon as European markets closed today, it appears someone was decidedly negative on WTI Crude as it accelerated lower from over $107 to under $105 - all the while Brent crude pushed higher. This squeezed the Brent-WTI spread up over 100% on the day to $5.50, retracing more than half the plunge from the FOMC/Taper talk highs around $10 in early June.
2006 Deja Vu? Mortgage Lenders Shuttered Amid Market "In A Drought"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2013 13:24 -0500
It appears the market may need to resurrect the implode-o-meter as surging mortgage rates and plunging mortgage applications are (unsurprisingly) taking their toll on the mis-allocated surge in mortgage lenders that 'market' signals encouraged. The latest, as Boston.com reports, is 1-800-East-West Mortgage which has largely suspended operations and laid off its workforce. "As rates rose, a number of people just went to the sidelines," the CEO said. The market, he added, "went into a drought." And yet, homebuilders (again unsurprisingly) remain as 'hopeful' as they have been since 2005 that all will be well.
White House Criticizes Egypt's Arrest Of Muslim Brotherhood Leader Mo Badie
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2013 13:01 -0500
It turns out the US is unhappy with the non-coupy military leaders in Egypt for arresting the leader of the Muslim Brotherhood (whose name is Mo Badie) because, according to White House spokesman John Earnest, the action "does not reflect Egypt's commitment to an inclusive political process." Maybe the US really does believe there was no coup in Egypt, and that the current military leaders actually do care about an inclusive political process. Otherwise, this statement is about as profound as the UK government busting up the Guardian's hard disks in hopes of destroying Snowden evidence.
Sandy Hook Redux? Shots Fired At Georgia Elementary School; Shooter In Custody
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2013 12:34 -0500
Here we go again.
This Selling Will Not Stand, Man: NYSE To Bust 17 Minutes Of Option Trades (When Market Dropped)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2013 12:01 -0500
As the cash equity markets opened in the US this morning, it appears a slew of options-based bearish bets were placed across a variety of stocks (starting with letters H to L). This slammed the Dow down into the red and to the all-important 15,000 Maginot Line. All was 'normal' until that critical indicator of 'wealth' finally broke 15,000 and almost instantly the exchanges went into "catastrophic error" mode which has resulted in trades from 0930ET to 0947ET on the CBOE being "busted". The exact time when the selling was under-way (so we can't have those sells being counted?). However, there is a rumor that what really drove it was Goldman losing millions on options trades (including JPM), and instead of the NYSE forcing the firm to eat its losses as it did with Knight, it decided to unwind 17 minutes of trades. These are the 'markets' in which investors are supposed to trade?
Guest Post: Charting Insolvency - Social Security And Wages
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2013 11:30 -0500
Do those collecting three times the median wage really need the same SSA benefits as those with no other retirement income? The conventional answer is that any means testing of Social Security would destroy its political popularity, but in reality such means-testing would likely affect only the top (higher-income) 10% of the populace. "We wuz promised" does not apply to "pay as you go" systems, which are extraordinarily exposed to current trends and realities. It's time for America to examine the social contract/Social Security in an era of declining full-time employment and widening income inequality. We as a nation need to prioritize the Social Security retirement income of those with no other pension incomes.
When It Rains, It Pours Radiation: Fukushima Plant Springs Worst Leak In History
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2013 11:02 -0500
Just when one though the bad news out of Fukushima would trickle down, no pun intended, if only because purely statistically it was improbable that any more bad news would leak out, here comes TEPCO which at a press conference this morning announced that "roughly 300 tonnes of radioactive water has seeped from a storage tank, marking the worst leak in more than 2½ years of efforts to contain the effects of the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami." In other words, not only is the irradiated coolant water overflowing the storage tanks, it is also leaking straight into the environment, including the surrounding soil, ocean and who knows where else.
Gold Is Flooding Out Of London To Switzerland At An Alarming Rate
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2013 10:32 -0500
This is one of those stories about the gold market that almost seems too wild to be true since the numbers are so extraordinary. According to a Reuters article from earlier today, Australian bank Macquarie has reported that gold is flooding out of London and into Switzerland at a mind-boggling rate. Specifically, 240 tons were exported in May alone and 797 tons during the first half of 2013. That means gold is being exported at a annualized run rate of 17x the 92 tons exported for all of 2012. That’s insane. Moreover, it seems a lot of that gold is being sent to Switzerland so that the 400oz bars can be melted down into different sizes that are more amenable to Asian sensibilities.
How Phil Falcone Won The Battle Against Goldman, But Lost The War (Or How Not To Manipulate Bonds)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2013 10:05 -0500
As part of the SEC's consent order with Harbinger's Phil Falcone, we learned that in addition to the previously well-known stuff Falcone was engaging in (using the fund as his taxpaying piggybank, giving preferential gating terms to "friends and family", etc), perhaps what really scuttled the once legendary hedge fund manager is what ended up being an outright war with Goldman, when back in 2006 Harbinger tried to not only take the other side of a short bet put on by Goldman, but literally squeezed Goldman and its clients into absolutely misery with the result millions in profit to Falcone and unknown losses to Goldie. And as one knows, you never fight Goldman and win, without ultimately losing everything.
JCP Plunges 10% From Open After Cramer's "Amazing Quarter" Blessing, Back To Red
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2013 09:42 -0500
When a sophisticated hedge fund manager takes a position in the most senior segment of a failing retail form's capital structure, it is not a bet on recovery: it's a bet on being long the fulcrum security in an upcoming chapter 11, or at worst, on having collateral coverage to cover your exposure in a liquidation Chapter 7... And for anyone who spent more than 2 minutes deciphering this morning's JCP results will know, the cash burn is immense and outweighs any glib PR-strewn headlines that support a positive future. In fact, even the CFO noted he did not see any major trend change in the short-term (i.e. more of the same downtrend?) Of course, that didn't stop CNBC's Jim Cramer from talking it up pre-market (to a 8.9% gain before the bell) as he exclaims in the clip below "this is an amazing quarter... I am positive, the stock will go higher." Well, 60 minutes after retail got their first chance to buy, JCP is down 9% from its open, in the red for the day, and reflecting more closely the dismal reality that credit markets remain convinced of.
Meanwhile, Europe Is Collapsing
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2013 09:08 -0500
So much for the European growth meme (see CAT's bellwether sales to the region) or the cleanest dirty shirt moving across the pond. Even as the EUR soars (breaking above 1.3450), European bond and stock markets (most notably the peripherals that have soared recently on nothing but air and rotating momo liquidity), are collapsing. Spain and Italy are down 4.2% on the week, Greek stocks have dumped 6.8% and even the core are down almost 3%. Peripheral bonds (which actually outperformed in the rally) are sliding fast with Spanish and Italian bond spreads snapping 15bps wider. Europe's VIX has surged to its highest in a month (near 20%) and credit spreads for financials and corporates continued to blow wider, with stocks catching down. This is the biggest 2-day drop in 2 months for most assets.




