Archive - Sep 2013 - Story
September 13th
Benghazi, One Year Later
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/13/2013 08:40 -0500
Sept. 11, 2013, marked the anniversary of the attack on the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi, Libya, that left four U.S. diplomatic employees - including Ambassador Chris Stevens - dead. The anniversary saw new attacks in the eastern Libyan city, this one against a Libyan Foreign Ministry building (and this morning's awful attack in Afghanistan). The anniversary and recent attacks prompt a look at how the security situation in Benghazi has evolved over the past year, and at how the United States has tackled security issues worldwide since the consulate attack.
Something Is Wrong With This Picture: Record Restaurant Workers, Sliding Restaurant Sales
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/13/2013 08:16 -0500
For those interested in seeing a standout example of the resource misallocation resulting from 5 years (and running) of central planning, we present the following pair of data sets: restaurant workers, which in August just hit an all time high of 10.4 million, and restaurant retail sales, which moments ago we found continued to slow on a year over year basis, and at this pace in a few months, will postits first Y/Y decline since early 2010.
CBOE Breaks (Again)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/13/2013 07:54 -0500The last time CBOE suffered an outage similar to this, it led to the NASDARK debacle and 3 hours of radio silence from the largest (and most liquid) exchange in the world:

Retail Sales Miss, Ex-Auto Virtually Unchanged; Building Materials, Clothing Sales Decline
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/13/2013 07:46 -0500The all important retail sales report, the final economic data point before next week's taper announcement, has just come and it was a disappointment, printing at just 0.2% for the month of August, down from an upward revised 0.4% in July, and below the 0.5% expected. Excluding the government loan-funded autos and volatile gas sales, retail sales barely rose, increasing at the lowest possible pace, or 0.1%, and below the expected 0.3% rate, and well below the revised 0.6% from July. General merchandise stores went so far to post a -0.2% dip. However, the most notable number is likely the -0.9% drop in building and garden material sales, which is a screeching halt to the recent upward bias in home renovation, and further evidence that the recent cheap-credit fueled housing bubble has finally popped. As for clothing retailers: with a -0.8% drop in August, don't expect a rebound any time soon. So much for retail strength. But hey: at least consumers have stocks they can buy... at all time highs.
White House Shoots Down Nikkei's Summers Trial Balloon
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/13/2013 07:10 -0500Earlier today, when we observed the overnight "news" floated by Japan's Nikkei we cautioned that the Nikkei is best known not for breaking news but for floating trial balloons. In other words, the report was merely leaked to gauge the market response. Sure enough, the response was gauged, and here comes the official news, shooting down this latest trial balloon.
- White House Is Saying Reports In Japanese Press That Obama Is Set To Name Larry Summers Are Wrong - Dow Jones
Sure enough, any modest USD strength accumulated on the overnight rumor, is now being promptly unwound.
The Best And Worst Performing Assets Since Lehman Are...
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/13/2013 07:03 -0500
No surprises here: Silver and Gold are the best, Banks and Greece - worst.
Frontrunning: September 13
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/13/2013 06:37 -0500- B+
- Barclays
- Blackrock
- Bond
- China
- Chrysler
- Citigroup
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- CSCO
- Dell
- Deutsche Bank
- Evercore
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Lehman
- Merrill
- NASDAQ
- national security
- Nationalism
- Natural Gas
- Nikkei
- Obama Administration
- PIMCO
- Real estate
- recovery
- Reuters
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Transocean
- Verizon
- Wall Street Journal
- Zurich
- U.S., Russia to push for new Syria peace talks (Reuters)
- Elite Syrian Unit Scatters Chemical Arms Stockpile (WSJ)
- Obama to nominate Summers as Fed chief: Nikkei (Reuters)
- Boehner Wants Joint Talks on Debt, Budget (WSJ)
- House Republicans go for broke in fiscal battles (Reuters)
- Pimco, BlackRock Together Received More Than a Quarter of Verizon's $49 Billion Bond Deal (WSJ)
- Insane financial system lives post-Lehman (Gillian Tett)
- JPM to add $2.5 billion to its litigation reserves in the second half of the year (WSJ)
- Goldman’s Zurich offices visited over working-hours complaint (FT)
Friday 13th Markets Jolted By News Summers Appointment Coming As Early As Next Week
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/13/2013 06:00 -0500- 10 Year Bond
- Bank of England
- Bond
- Bond Volume
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Copper
- Crude
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Gilts
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- headlines
- Investment Grade
- Israel
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Michigan
- Monetary Policy
- Morgan Stanley
- Newspaper
- Nikkei
- Obamacare
- President Obama
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- recovery
- Reuters
- Steny Hoyer
- University Of Michigan
- Verizon
- Volatility
- White House
Overnight asset classes got a jolt following a report by Nikkei that Obama was moving toward naming Summers the next Fed chairman, citing “several close US sources,” pushing stocks modestly lower in Europe, with bond yields higher. According to the report, Obama is to name Summers as next Fed chairman as early as late next week, after the Federal Open Market Committee meeting. Otherwise, risk is still digesting the news of the confidential Twitter IPO, as it is becoming quite clear that some of the largest names (Hilton also announced yesterday) are seeking to cash out in the public markets. Is this the top?
Three Killed In Attack On US Consulate In Afghanistan
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/13/2013 05:29 -0500
Two years after insurgents attacked the main U.S. embassy and NATO headquarters in the heart of Kabul, killing at least nine people in a battle lasting several hours as attackers fired from a partially constructed building, and one year after the infamous Benghazi consulate attack which resulted in the deaths of Americans, overnight yet another attack was staged against US property in Afghanistan, this time the US consulate in Herat, western Afghanistan's main city, where detonated a powerful bomb outside the front gates and launching a gunbattle with security forces. At least three people were killed, however none of them Americans. The attack began at about 6 a.m. (0150 GMT). A Reuters witness said he saw flames in front of the compound rising from the wreckage of the vehicle and could hear the gunbattle as the attack unfolded.
September 12th
Harry Reid Proclaims: "The Anarchists Have Taken Over"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/12/2013 21:33 -0500
"We’re diverted totally from what this bill is about. Why? Because the anarchists have taken over. They’ve taken over the House and now they’ve taken over the Senate... People who don’t believe in government - and that’s what the Tea Party is all about - are winning, and that’s a shame." - Harry Reid on the Senate Floor earlier today.
The best thing about inept, crony, powerful politicians is that when they realize they are losing the battle for the hearts and minds of the public they simply don’t know what to do. We suppose it’s also anarchic to want to not start World War III, right Harry? Enjoy!
Nigel Farage Slams Barroso's European "Disaster"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/12/2013 21:01 -0500
Following Barroso's State of the EU speech, we thought it useful to reflect on the true state of the EU. Nigel Farage's recent tirade slamming "Communist" Barroso's pro-bureaucrat policies are poignant as he exclaims the "disaster" that the EU has become for the poor and unemployed. To further color this rant we note Charles Gavekal's recent note on why Europe's still broken as worthless IOUs are 'transferred' around the union and "no one really knows who is going to take the final loss." Perhaps it is The Hamiltonian's summary of the structural problem (an interlocking set of European political, bureaucratic, media, academic and financial elites) and the sad fact that history suggests a crisis deferred is a crisis magnified.
Last Time We Checked, "Hope" Still Isn't A Strategy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/12/2013 20:32 -0500
Equity markets have to explaining to do, regardless of where you think they are heading. As ConvesrgEx's Nick Colas notes, if bullish, riddle me this: are stocks just going to hop-skip-jump over Fed tapering, U.S. budget battles, a new Federal Reserve Chair, Syria, Greek bailout 3.0, German Elections, and other near term speedbumps? Last time we checked "hope" still isn’t a strategy. And for the bears: Colas asks, how has that been working out for you over the last week of boa constrictor-like squeezes higher? Not so good. In the following note, Colas takes an out-of-the-box approach to explaining the recent rally by looking at some new academic work on the subject of stress. As it turns out, stress is only harmful if you believe it is. Maybe markets have 'learned' that lesson and view all these potential stomach-churning headlines as annoyances, rather than existential crises-in-waiting.
On A Taper "Relief-Rally", Moar "Boots On The Ground", And "European Instability"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/12/2013 19:59 -0500
An increasing cacophony of prognosticators are of the status-quo sustaining belief that stock and bond prices will rally next week when the Fed announces the taper. As Scotiabank's Guy Haselmann notes, the thinking goes that alleviation of the uncertainty will cause a "relief rally." However, as Haselmann notes, since the Fed has provided 5 years’ worth of massive stimulus that has launched asset prices to record highs, the commencement of the withdrawal process is significant... and any relief rally that ensues next Wednesday should be sold. His thoughts extend from Indonesian central bank's dilemma to European political instability, and the next stage of the Syrian crisis...
2008 to 2013: Picturing Crisis, Recovery, And Change
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/12/2013 19:35 -0500
Starting with the day Lehman Brothers collapsed, Bloomberg Businessweek examines the financial crisis as it affected the lives of the people who created it, tried to stave it off, protested it, profited from it, and lost everything to it.
Goldman Expects $10-15bn Taper And Fed Walking-Back From Employment Thresholds
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/12/2013 19:02 -0500
With bonds and stocks rallying (and the USD dropping) notably in the last few days, one could be forgiven for believing the Taper is off but Goldman's baseline forecast remains for a $10bn reduction in asset purchases - probably all in Treasuries - and $15bn is possible (though recently mixed labor data may choke that a little) and a strengthening of forward-guidance. As they note, the current redction in uncertainty (or rise in complacency some might say) has the potential to offset the tightening in financial conditions, barring another major outbreak of DC strife in the run up to the debt ceiling in late October/early November. However, what is most notable is Goldman's expectation that the Fed will start walking-back its unemployment-rate threshold as it has been clearly shown not to be a good catch-all indicator of broad economic and labor market performance. So it's data-dependent - but the data is unreliable at best and false at worst.



