Archive - Aug 2013 - Story
August 5th
"Blue-Sky" Index Is Flashing Red
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2013 20:22 -0500
Nobody may wish to believe it, but, Diapason Commodities' Sean Corrigan warns, it just might be that the US economy has seen its best for this phase of the cycle. Where does that leave assets? Arguably overpriced and overbought, he believes. The VIX has swooped to a low only once briefly undercut since before the last New Era started to lose its luster in early 2007. As a result, Corrigan's "Blue Sky" index - the OEX divided by the VIX, being an inverse representation of what people perceive to be the worth of buying price protection - has jumped to the upper third of the ninety?ninth percentile of the past quarter-century's distribution; an anoxia?inducing plane only briefly exceeded just as the first rumblings of the forthcoming doom started to afflict the Boom in the March of 2007.
El-Erian Warns "Don't Be Fooled" By Europe's Tranquility
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2013 19:49 -0500
August is traditionally Europe’s holiday month, with many government officials taking several weeks off. In the process, important initiatives are put on hold until the “great return” at the beginning of September. This year, there is another reason why Europe has pressed the pause button for August. With a looming election in Germany, few wish to undermine Chancellor Angela Merkel’s likely victory. Some of the recent economic news has seemed to justify this approach. Yet no one should be fooled. This summer’s sense of normality is neither natural nor necessarily tenable in the long term. It is the result of temporary and – if Europe is not attentive – potentially reversible factors. If officials do not return quickly to addressing economic challenges in a more comprehensive manner, the current calm may give way to renewed turmoil. In essence, Europe (and the West more generally) owes its recent tranquility to a series of experimental measures by central banks; consequently, the resulting surface calm masks still-worrisome economic and financial fundamentals.
The View From Asia's Highest Skyscraper (And Second Highest In The World)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2013 19:12 -0500
China's bid to host the world's tallest building may be delayed for a while as the PBOC prints the money to complete the over-budget Sky Tower in Changsha, but that doesn't mean China can't enjoy the world's second largest building, and Asia's tallest, in the face of the 128-floor Shanghai Tower located, obviously, in Shanghai, and which stretches a massive 2073 feet from base to tip. The 'Skyscraper Index' anecdotes remain firmly ensconced throughout China (and India).
Guest Post: Trying To Stay Sane In An Insane World - Part 2
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2013 18:35 -0500- Afghanistan
- AIG
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank Run
- Bear Stearns
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Blackrock
- Bond
- Capital Markets
- Citigroup
- Consumer Credit
- Corruption
- CPI
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- Fractional Reserve Banking
- Free Money
- Gambling
- Glass Steagall
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Guest Post
- Hank Paulson
- Hank Paulson
- HFT
- Housing Bubble
- Housing Market
- Housing Prices
- Iran
- Iraq
- Japan
- John Hussman
- Krugman
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- Main Street
- Mark To Market
- Market Crash
- Meltdown
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- Michael Lewis
- Morgan Stanley
- National Debt
- national intelligence
- New York Stock Exchange
- Obama Administration
- Personal Income
- Purchasing Power
- Rating Agencies
- Real estate
- Real Interest Rates
- Reality
- recovery
- Robert Shiller
- Rolex
- Ron Paul
- Subprime Mortgages
- Too Big To Fail
- Unemployment
- Washington Mutual
- Wells Fargo
This insane world was created through decades of bad decisions, believing in false prophets, choosing current consumption over sustainable long-term savings based growth, electing corruptible men who promised voters entitlements that were mathematically impossible to deliver, the disintegration of a sense of civic and community obligation and a gradual degradation of the national intelligence and character. There is a common denominator in all the bubbles created over the last century – Wall Street bankers and their puppets at the Federal Reserve. Fractional reserve banking, control of a fiat currency by a privately owned central bank, and an economy dependent upon ever increasing levels of debt are nothing more than ingredients of a Ponzi scheme that will ultimately implode and destroy the worldwide financial system. Since 1913 we have been enduring the largest fraud and embezzlement scheme in world history, but the law of diminishing returns is revealing the plot and illuminating the culprits. Bernanke and his cronies have proven themselves to be highly educated one trick pony protectors of the status quo. Bernanke will eventually roll craps. When he does, the collapse will be epic and 2008 will seem like a walk in the park.
Beware The Rise In International Monetary Policy Tensions
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2013 18:00 -0500
As the Fed gets ready to taper ‘QE’, UBS' Larry Hatheway warns investors to brace for a period of increased international policy tension. Previously harmonized - but not coordinated - monetary policy stances will give way to conflicting objectives and new strains as adverse ‘spillovers’ occur. As Hatheway notes, we are about to rediscover several inconvenient truths. First, the Fed is the US, not the world’s, central bank. Second, international policy coordination is desirable in an interdependent world but, third, it is no more likely to materialize now than in the past. The world, it seems, is destined for a less comfortable policy co-existence in the coming few years.
Santelli Rants "All Roads Lead To The Fed"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2013 17:26 -0500
Day after day, CNBC's Rick Santelli hears analysts arguing how the economy is doing pretty well and that there is always some anecdotal fact that backs up their cognitively dissonant view with fundamentals. However, as Santelli asks (rhetorically), it always comes back to the same question, "if things are really that good, why do we still need the [Fed] training wheels on?" The answer is presumably obvious as actions ($85bn per month of POMO-provided liquidity to the 21 primary dealers) speak louder than analysts words (we promise recovery is just around the next corner.) While careful not to explicitly rebuff the exuberance of his channel's clients revenue-base, Santelli notes the oddly correlated relationship (that has time and again appeared in pixelated format on these very pages) between the Federal Reserve balance sheet and the ebbs and flows of the US equity market. As he concludes, the only (causal) transmission mechanism for the Fed's actions is via the primary dealers and implicitly the Fed is the entity that is goosing the stock market.
Guest Post: Still Waiting
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2013 16:47 -0500- AIG
- Barclays
- Bear Market
- Capital Markets
- Central Banks
- Deutsche Bank
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Guest Post
- Jamie Dimon
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- Lloyds
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- Middle East
- Monetary Policy
- Morgan Stanley
- non-performing loans
- Purchasing Power
- Quantitative Easing
- RBS
- recovery
- Serious Fraud Office
We do not inhabit a “normal” economy. We live in a financialised world in which our banks cannot be trusted, our politicians cannot be trusted, our money cannot be trusted, and – not least thanks to ongoing spasms of QE and expectations of much more of the same – our markets cannot be trusted. At some point (though the timing is impossible to predict), asset markets that cannot be pumped artificially any higher will start moving, under the forces of inevitable gravitation, lower.
US Retail Investors (Alone) 'Rotate' All-In
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2013 16:16 -0500
With revenues fading, profit margins collapsing, and only financial institutions' entire lack of transparency providing any lift in EPS, the 'great rotation' continues to provide enough cognitive dissonance to sink a boat for the asset-gatherers. The trouble, as we showed previously, is this 'rotation' is dominated by US retail investors (more specifically non-US domiciled and non-retail investors are rotating away from US equities). The US retail investor has shifted in a great-rotationary manner by the greatest amount since Feb 2000 - just as the last great bubble burst. US equities are the 3rd most over-crowded speculative long asset in the world after Crude Oil and the Brazilian Real. It seems the Fed is getting just what it wants but, just as Kyle Bass warned, "investors should be really careful doing what the central bankers want them to do."
Jeff Bezos To Buy Washington Post Newspaper And Its Publishing Assets For $250 Million
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2013 15:46 -0500Jeffrey P. Bezos to purchase Washington Post, Express, Gazette, other Greater Washington, DC papers -- deal valued at $250 million #breaking
— Reuters Business (@ReutersBiz) August 5, 2013
HFT Quote Churn "Spam" Soars To Record As Volume Plummets
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2013 15:36 -0500
Simply put, these four charts have to be seen to be believed. Presented with little comment, via Nanex, this is the 'market' we are supposed to trust...?
Lowest Volume Day Of Year Ends With Hindenburg Omen
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2013 15:18 -0500
S&P futures volume was the lowest of 2013 for a non-holiday-related day (35% below last year's volume and 40% below recent average volume). NYSE volume the second lowest of the year. Tech and Staples managed small gains on the day but homebuilders and utilities underperformed as bond yields rose 3 to 5bps on the day. The 'anxiety' in stocks showed itself with another appearance of the Hindenburg Omen (which has signaled short-term weakness in the last six months). The Russell closed green and thanks to AAPL, the Nasdaq eked out a small gain. Trannies were down 0.8% in their now-ubiquitous schizophrenic manner as 'most-shorted' names outperformed significantly. The USD slid lower from the US open ending -0.1% (with JPY strength dominant) but commodities were worse down 0.5% (WTI) to 1% (silver and gold) on the day. VIX was clubbed lower (to 11.8% - its lowest close in 5 months) right at the close to ramp stocks into the cash close.
40% Of US Workers Now Earn Less Than 1968 Minimum Wage
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2013 14:45 -0500
Are American workers paid enough? That is a topic that is endlessly debated all across this great land of ours. Unfortunately, what pretty much everyone can agree on is that American workers are not making as much as they used to after you account for inflation. Back in 1968, the minimum wage in the United States was $1.60 an hour. That sounds very small, but after you account for inflation a very different picture emerges. Using the inflation calculator that the BLS provides, $1.60 in 1968 is equivalent to $10.74 today. According to the Social Security Administration, 40.28% of all workers make less than $20,000 a year in America today. So that means that more than 40 percent of all U.S. workers actually make less than what a full-time minimum wage worker made back in 1968. That is how far we have fallen.
Uncollected Greek Taxes Rise To Record €60 Billion, One Third Of Greek GDP
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2013 14:18 -0500
While Europe, and especially Germany has been understandably "displeased" with having to provide billions in bailout upon bailout funding to Greece every year starting in 2010, all the more so following recent news that Greece has already spent some 75% of its bank bailout cash with no discernible improvement in its economy to show for it, Europes' taxpayers will unlikely be any more pleased to learn that as of the end of June, a whopping €60 billion in past due taxes (an all time record) was owed by Greek businesses and individuals to the state. This is an amount that is 20% greater than the entire external cash handed over by the Troika to keep Greek banks afloat, and represents nearly 30% of imploding Greek GDP.
How Much Is Oil Supporting U.S. Employment Gains?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2013 13:47 -0500
The American Petroleum Institute said last week the U.S. oil and natural gas sector was an engine driving job growth. Eight percent of the U.S. economy is supported by the energy sector, the industry's lobbying group said, up from the 7.7 percent recorded the last time the API examined the issue. The employment assessment came as the Energy Department said oil and gas production continued to make gains across the board. With the right energy policies in place, API said the economy could grow even more. But with oil and gas production already at record levels, the narrative over the jobs prospects may be failing on its own accord.
Cyprus Unemployment Surges 32% Year-Over-Year
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2013 13:22 -0500
With PMIs picking up across Europe, the nations' 'leaders' are spreading the good word that the worst is over (again) and its all sunshine and unicorns from here. But it's not. As Cyprus' Anastasiades glibly comments on small improvements in their capital controls - amid collapsing deposits, bluntly ignoring the reality of a record implosion in the nation's home prices, the facts for the man on the street are dismal. The number of jobless people in the smallest EU nation jumped 32% year-over-year to its highest in the 19 years data has been collected.


