Archive - Aug 2013 - Story

August 9th

Tyler Durden's picture

Guest Post: Credit Outbids Cash = Resource Wars





There are real-world consequences to over-issuing credit and currency. Eventually this leads to a bidding war for trust: Whose credit/cash will be trusted to retain its purchasing power? There is a grand irony here, of course; as issuers of credit/cash attempt to debase their currency to boost their exports, their debased currency buys fewer real-world resources.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

If You Build It, They Won't Come... And In China They Are Now Leaving





When it comes to the programmed, centrally-planned Chinese economy, the academics who pre-determine the daily lives of over one billion citizens and report randomly generated gibberish when they have to validate to the world the success of their macro experiment, go straight and by the textbook. The same theoretical textbook taught in every Keynesian class which says "if you build it, they will come." Alas, as even the WSJ has discovered, when it comes to China, if you build it, they are no longer coming... and are in fact leaving.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Deja BTFD





Since mid-July, the S&P 500 is practically unchanged having ebbed and flowed on lower and lower volumes. But one thing that is very clear in the last few weeks, investors seem to have been conditioned to sell early and BTFD late... The question we have is (given the S&P is approaching its worst week of the year), when everyone 'knows' this is the strategy, when does it become self-defeating?

 

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Guest Post: Chesapeake Gives Up On New York Fracking





It hasn’t been a great year for Chesapeake Energy, just coming down from a management meltdown and now giving up on its leases in New York over the state’s ban on high-volume fracking. It’s a battle that’s been on for two years over thousands of acres of natural gas leases in New York, where fracking has been banned for five years. The problem was that the landowners leased the acreage to Chesapeake before the advent of hydraulic fracturing, and now they don’t want these leases extended under the original terms, according to a report by Reuters. The report says that Chesapeake has now notified the landowners that it is giving up the fight, and that the decision should be finalized next week. But there’s more to this than a simple court case...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Edward Snowden Is No Longer In Moscow





A shroud of mystery has surrounded American whistleblower Edward Snowden's whereabouts since he received temporary asylum in Russia last week, but migration authorities have let slip that he is not in Moscow... "We don't have these records. I don't have any such information. He's not in Moscow."

 

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The Definitive Fund Flows Heatmap: 10 Years Of Capital Flows





Those seeking the definitive, one-stop fund flow heatmap covering the key paper asset classes over the past 10 years, are advised to bookmark this page.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Gold Collateral Situation: "It's Very Complicated"





... what has been different about the current negative GOFO episode is that while in the past GOFO spiked negative and promptly reverted to normal, short-end GOFO rates (1-3 Month) have been negative now for the longest period on record: 25 consecutive work days. And it's only getting worse: after the 6 Month GOFO rate also slid below 0% in mid-July, only to recover positive for the next two weeks, as of today it has again turned negative for the second day in a row while the short-end procurement situation has gone from bad to worse.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

From JCPanic To JCPandemonium





While outlining the ridiculous spectacle of the last 24 hours news flow on JCPenney is useful for some, a step back to view this charade for what it is - a hedge fund manager massivley under-water, a company careening into bankruptcy, a board desperate to show it has any relevance, and a most senior creditor (Goldman Sachs) chomping at the bit to securitize the firm's T-Shirts and small appliances... the entire 'bounce' from yesterday has been retraced as Ackman and JCP's board fling insults at each other... JCPanic has been downgraded to JCPandemonium... on its way to JCPoof...

 

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Whom Does Bill Gross Read?





 

RANSquawk Video's picture

RANsquawk Weekly Wrap - 9th August 2013





 

Tyler Durden's picture

7th Time Was Not The Charm, S&P Tests 1,700 And Dumps





For the 7th time in the last day or so, the S&P 500 has tested up to the magical 1,700 level and failed. With JPY once against strengthening as carry unwinds re-escalate, we wait breathless for a deja deja deja vu repeat of the last 3 days post-European close rampfest...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

France: From The Sublime To The Ridiculous





France is the odd duck on the Continent. It is neither a petulant member of the Southern European financial disasters nor a member of the Northern European banner of austerity nations. France, as we discussed here and here, is the swing country in Europe. It waives about with the wind depending upon the subject. The bonds of France trade just behind those of Germany. While we are sure the portfolio managers on the Continent require diversification. Where the market is pricing French bonds now may turn out to be a rather serious mistake in judgment.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Stock Market Bubbles And Record Margin Debt: A (Repeating) History Of Ignoring All Warnings





It is well-known that as part of the S&P500's ascent to new records, investor margin debt has also surged to all time highs, surpassing for the past three months previous records set during both prior, the dot com and the housing, stock market bubbles. And as more attention has shifted to the topic of speculator leverage once more, inquiries into the correlation between bets upon bets and stock performance are popping up once more, in this case in a study by Deutsche Bank titled "Red Flag! - The curious case of NYSE margin debt." Of particular note here is a historical comparison of margin-debt warnings that have recurred throughout history but especially just before major stock bubble crashes, such as in the period 1999/2000, 2007/2008 and of course today, which have time and again been ignored. Here is what was said then, what is being said now, and what is ignored always.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

What They Really Think: Anti-US Hostility Soaring In Egypt





While we have previously exposed the less than exuberant perspective of many Egyptians towards the US, it now seems the torrent of anti-US hostility has reached such large proportions that the mainstream media is forced to admit report it. As the WSJ reports, a headline in a major Egyptian state newspaper this week referred to the proposed U.S. envoy to Egypt as the "Ambassador of Death." Posters in Cairo's Tahrir Square, a center of pro-government rallies, depict President Barack Obama with a beard and turban, exclaiming his "support for terrorism." The moves, WSJ adds, highlight the depth of public distrust of U.S. policies, and draw from a "reservoir of anti-Americanism and conspiratorial theories". Of course, after yesterday's revelation of the staged Muslim Brotherhood riots, nobody really knows just where US-Egyptian sentiment really lays but it seems fair to say that it is not improving.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Did Retail Investors Just Fold?





After BTFATH in June, and being rotated into by the professionals in early July, it would appear that the apparent 'greater fools' are heading for the exits now. As we noted here, the 'retail' buyer of what the institutions were selling suggested things were getting a little too exuberant but as TD Ameritrade's Investor Movement Index shows that the retail investor is now a net seller of equities. Their proprietary index is now at its lowest level for 2013 and the last few days in stocks suggest the institutional sellers have run out of willing 'at any cost' great rotating equity buying 'greater-fools' (despite the mainstream media's call for moar BTFATH). Between Monday's record-breaking 'quote spam' and the JPY carry unwind occurring, we await the next call for Mr. Bernanke (or Kuroda) to get back to work.

 
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