Archive - Sep 2013 - Story
September 24th
Consumer Confidence Drops Most In 6 Months To 4 Month Low
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/24/2013 09:11 -0500
Following UMich confidence's biggest miss on record, the Conference Board misses expectations printing at its lowest since May 2013 as the last data was revsied higher. This is the largest MoM drop since March. Crucially, the headline index was saved by a surge in the "present situation" as expectations for the future plunged. As a reminder, Consumer Confidence has an awkward 4 year 4 month pattern of dysphoria to euphoria (though at progressively lower levels) and today's data merely confirms that the cycle of exuberance may have been broken.
President Obama Addresses The UN - Live Webcast
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/24/2013 09:02 -0500
This should be fun. With Rouhani in the house, Nobel-Peace-Prize-winner President Obama will address the oh-so-supportive-of-his-wars United Nations this morning. As AP reports, seeking to build on "diplomatic opportunities" is expected to signal his openness to discussions with Iran (even a wink in his direction would work since there has been no face-to-face contact in 30 years). Also high on Obama's agenda at the U.N. was rallying Security Council support for a resolution that would establish consequences for Syrian President Bashar Assad's regime if it failed to adhere to a U.S-Russian plan to turn over its chemical weapons. And we wonder if he'll mention them nasty Republicans wanting to shut his government down?
The Unstoppabull "Housing Recovery": Despite Bankruptcy Detroit Home Prices Soar To Five Year High
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/24/2013 08:38 -0500
If anyone had reservations about the monthly Case-Shiller report, or at least the logic in the methodology used by the S&P data collectors, we present Exhibit A, which should solidify any such doubts. Below we show Detroit "home prices", which according to the just announced July NSA data, soared even higher, to level of 90.8, which just happens to be a 17% increase Y/Y, and the highest print since August 2008. Bankruptcy? Pfft - who cares when the government is funding Blackstone REO-to-Rent made-to-flip purchases.
July Case-Shiller Housing Index Misses For Third Month In A Row, Pace Of Increase At 10 Month Lows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/24/2013 08:21 -0500There was something for everyone in the just released July Case-Shiller house price index. On one hand, on a year over year basis, the NSA Composite 20 city index rose 12.39% in July, up from 12.07% in June, and in line with expectations of a 12.40% increase. This was the highest annual price increase since the start of the great financial crisis. On the other hand, the same Composite-20 Index increased by just 0.62% in July on a SA M/M basis, missing expectations of a 0.80% increase, and down from the 0.88% increase in June. This was the third consecutive miss on a M/M basis, and while the Case-Shiller index continues to still rise, the momentum as can be seen in the chart below, is starting to fade, with the monthly increase posting at the lowest rate since September of 2012 when the rise was 0.52%.
Goldman Promptly Jumps On The Bullish AAPL Momentum Bandwagon, Hikes Price Target To $560
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/24/2013 07:56 -0500Whether or not AAPL's reported sales are accurate or merely the latest manifestation of channel stuffing is irrelevant: what matters to the sellside is that upside momentum, at least for a few days, seems to be back in the biggest tech stock and the immediate result is quite predictable - the sellside resumes piling in and selling their axed exposure to clients. In other words, they are coming out with increased price targets on the stock, most notable this morning from Goldman which just hiked its AAPL target from $530 to $560.
Credit Suisse Closing "Non-Super Rich", "Risky" Client Accounts
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/24/2013 07:35 -0500
In a move that clearly seeks to distance the second largest Swiss bank from potentially "risky" or just not that profitable (read "rich or super rich") accounts, Credit Suisse announced today that it plans to close some clients' accounts as it focuses on high-value customers in some countries and pulls out of others altogether. The development is somewhat ironic: while banks around the world scramble to obtain ultra cheap funding, of which deposits are currently the cheapest alternative, Credit Suisse is saying to people, thanks but no thanks, we don't want your money. Then again, perhaps this is an admirable stance by the bank. It certainly is preferable to CS eagerly accepting every last Swiss Franc only to pull a Cyprus in a few months (indicatively speaking) and "bailing in" said money. It does however pose the question: has CS found an alternative method of funding its assets now that it is actively deleveraging, and if so what, and who is the source?
Major 7.8 Magnitude Earthquake, 5.9M Aftershock Shakes Pakistan, India
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/24/2013 07:01 -0500
A few minutes ago headlines hit that as a result of a strong earthquake, buildings shook in Delhi, India. Moments later, the USGS confirmed that a major 7.8 magnitude earthquake with an epicenter 9 miles below the Awaran/Balochistan region in Pakistan had struck, some 43 miles NNE of Awaran, and close to the India border. It is unclear yet if the two quakes were the same although it seems likely. Reuters had this preliminary report: "An strong earthquake struck remote western Pakistan on Tuesday and was felt in the Indian capital of New Delhi where buildings shook. The United States Geological Survey said that a 7.8 magnitude quake struck 145 miles southeast of Dalbandin, in Pakistan's western province of Balochistan."
This Deutsche Bank-er Is Skeptical Of AAPL's Sales Report
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/24/2013 06:48 -0500"As an anecdotal aside it was interesting that Apple yesterday reported above consensus iPhone sales on the first weekend of the new launches. When I upgraded in a phone shop on Friday there was no queue, a load left in stock and a number of extra staff put on who were standing around doing nothing. They said they all arrived early to handle the queues, only to find that their first customer didn't arrive until 30mins after opening. So my experience seemed to be different from the rest of the world as Apple climbed +4.97% yesterday after the impressive sales numbers and also guidance at the top of the range from the company on revenues and gross margins." - Deutsche Bank's Jim Reid
Frontrunning: September 24
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/24/2013 06:28 -0500- Apple
- B+
- Barclays
- Barrick Gold
- Boeing
- China
- Chrysler
- CIT Group
- Citigroup
- Cohen
- Credit Suisse
- Creditors
- Detroit
- EchoStar
- Ford
- France
- Hong Kong
- Insurance Companies
- Intelsat
- Iran
- ISI Group
- JPMorgan Chase
- Keefe
- KKR
- Lennar
- LIBOR
- Monte Paschi
- Morgan Stanley
- New York Post
- Obamacare
- Raymond James
- Real estate
- Reuters
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- Whiting Petroleum
- Yuan
- Iran Icebreaker Set at U.N. (WSJ)
- Chrysler Feud Triggers IPO Filing (WSJ)
- JPMorgan Chase, 12 More Banks Said to Be Sued Over Libor (BBG)
- Regulator sues Morgan Stanley, eight others over faulty securities (Reuters)
- Monte Paschi Seen Boosting Cost Goals to Meet EU Demands (BBG)
- Here we go again - "not enough funds": CFTC chair Gary Gensler warns on fund cuts to police derivatives (FT)
- Congress Fuels Private Jails Detaining 34,000 Immigrants (BBG)
- KKR, Sycamore looking to buy Jones Group this week (NYPost) - take with lots of salt
- Fiat rethinks alliance with Chrysler after IPO filing (Reuters)
- Young Invincibles Caught in Crossfire Over Obamacare Cost (BBG)
- Mayfair Office Squeeze Spawns New London Real Estate Hubs (BBG)
Ongoing Deterioration In Core Europe Pushes Dollar Higher, Risk Lower
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/24/2013 06:03 -0500Everything was proceeding according to central-plan with a gradual rise in risk and a decline in the USD until 4 am Eastern, when the German IFO Business Climate data was released and missed across the board (107.7 vs Exp. 108.0; Current assessment 111.4 vs Exp. 112.5; Expectations 104.2 Exp.104.0), reminding everyone now that Merkel is cemented for the near future, the immediate prerogative for Europe is to get the EUR lower, one way or another. A returning bid to the dollar also has pushed 10 Year yields under 2.70%, while once again sending various EM currencies sliding, and bringing back cross asset volatility to a world whose Sharpe ratio over the past several months has plummeted into negative territory. Increasing concerns about a government shutdown (misplaced) will likely prevent a solid bid from developing under markets.
September 23rd
Is This The Start Of China's Gold Miner Buying Spree?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/23/2013 22:51 -0500
Back in October of 2012, Hugh Hendry proposed a very simple investment thesis: '"I am long gold and I am short gold mining equities. There is no rationale for owning gold mining equities. It is as close as you get to insanity. The risk premium goes up when the gold price goes up. Societies are more envious of your gold at $3000 than at $300. And there is no valuation argument that protects you against the risk of confiscation. And if you are bullish gold why don’t you buy gold ETFs, gold futures or gold bullion." Since then, anyone who listened to Hendry has made a substantial double digit return (yes, one can make double digits returns on gold even when gold is sliding: such is the "magic" of long gold, short GDX pair trades). However, following a massive, 50%+ selloff, there comes a time when even gold miner stocks become attractive to those with deep pockets filled with reserve fiat. For someone like China, that time may be now. The WSJ reports that China's largest gold company, China National Gold Group Corp., has talked to Ivanhoe Mines "about buying a stake in or asset from the company."
Guest Post: Bitcoin: As Good As Gold?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/23/2013 20:54 -0500
Only a few years back, the majority of people were saying that the dollar was as good as gold. Today, even those who insist that fiat currencies are not only safe, but the only means by which commerce can reasonably occur, are admitting that they are getting a bit nervous regarding the assurance that their own currency will not be either somehow confiscated or grossly devaluated. But there is a new currency arising - Bitcoin - and it promises, like banknotes before it, to solve all the problems of currencies. Just as paper gold is proving not to truly exist, except as a promise by financial institutions, and fiat currencies are also teetering on the edge, there is every reason to believe that the latest in “theoretical” currencies may disappear at some point in the future. However, as they have throughout millennia, precious metals will continue to shine in all corners of the globe.
German Coalition Negotiations: Key Players To Watch
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/23/2013 20:35 -0500
After a surprisingly manic election night the focus in Germany now shifts to the tricky task of forming a government. As Open Europe explains, many options remain possible. Merkel looks unlikely to gain a majority on her own while the FDP and AfD are certainly out of the Bundestag. This leaves a Grand Coalition, a CDU/CSU and Greens coalition or (as a very, very longshot) some form of SPD-Greens-Die Linke (Red-Red-Green) coalition or alliance which could still mathematically have a majority. Little progress is expected before the end of the week, with the SPD holding a small party conference on Friday where it will determine its strategy for the negotiations. SPD Chancellor Candidate Peer Steinbrück has already said that the “ball is now in Merkel’s court”, suggesting he expects her to propose the terms of any Grand Coalition. Meanwhile, Greens leader Jürgen Trittin has said that, while open to negotiations over a coalition with Merkel, the chances of finding an agreement are “extremely limited”.
Fund Warns US Oil To Surge Above Global Benchmark On Cushing Shortage
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/23/2013 20:06 -0500
With WTI crude oil prices hovering at record levels for this time of year, the spread to Brent crude has bounced from zero as Syria started up to around $4.50. At the time time we noted the plunge in the spread was as much related to US infrastructure and technical issues as the war premium and now Pierre Andurand, manager of one of this year's most successful commodity hedge funds, believes US crude will trade at a premium to the Brent benchmark within weeks, counter to the expectations of many in the market. As The FT reports, the ex-Goldman trader is known for taking bold positions, and while not commenting in specific trades, he noted "In order for Cushing inventories to stop drawing and start building, I think WTI [the US benchmark] should be at a premium to Brent [the global benchmark]," within weeks.
Housing "Recovery" Endgame Escalates
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/23/2013 19:38 -0500
Och-Ziff were perhaps a little early but used the last 10 months to unwind their real estate and exit the landlord business as the hedge-fund sponsored echo-bubble in housing rolled over into the mainstream. "American-Homes-4-Rent"'s IPO suggested a scramble to exit. With 60% of home purchases now being cash-only (explains the ongoing and massive layoffs in the mortgage business not just due to rate-driven weakening of demand), it is therefore a concern when one of the biggest funds playing in this space - OakTree Capital - announces plan to exit the buy-to-rent trade - selling roughly 500 fully-leased homes. As Reuters notes, it is yet another indication that early investors are looking to cash-out on the "recovery" in U.S. housing prices. Who will be left holding the bag this time?



