Archive - Sep 2013 - Story

September 10th

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Italy And France "Hard" Data Dashes Hopes From Europe's "Soft" PMI Data





The talking-heads remain stuck in repeat mode over European PMIs and how that means the hot-money should be buying peripheral stocks with both hands and feet; but as we discussed in detail here, relying the "rough" survey-based PMI data as an indicator of future economic strength is a mistake. With transmission mechanisms gummed up, hope is not enabled to translate into activity and overnight we got confirmation of that sad new reality from Italy (which saw its GDP miss expectations, shrinking by more than expected), and France (which saw Industrial Production miss expectations topping the worst 3 month slide in 10 months). It seems once again that faith does not triumph over reality and Europe is indeed stuck in the quagmire that unemployment rates, loan delinquencies, and credit creation would suggest. Of course, we are sure we'll be told to wait just another quarter for the hope to filter into reality... just keep waiting, and hoping.

 

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Dow Jones To Kick Out Losers From Index: Alcoa, Hewlett, BofA Out; Replaced With Goldman, Nike And Visa





In what has become an unspoken tradition for the Dow Jones, which maintains its upward bias by kicking out underperformers and replacing them with the investor darlings du jour, we just learned that as part of its next three-for-three rebalancing, the first since 2004, the DJIA will kick out such recent losers as Alcoa, Hewlett Packard and Bank of America, and will be replaced with Goldman, Nike and Visa:

  • ALCOA, BANK OF AMERICA, HEWLETT-PACKARD TO LEAVE DJIA
  • GOLDMAN SACHS, VISA, NIKE TO JOIN DJ INDUSTRIAL AVERAGE
  • CHANGES WERE PROMPTED BY THE LOW STOCK PRICE OF THE THREE COMPANIES SLATED FOR REMOVAL

What, no inclusion of Apple, Tesla or Netflix? Also, for those keeping track, there are now 10 "industrials" in the 30 company index that make, well, nothing. And how soon until the entire DJIA becomes one daily rebalanced ETF, which has as constituents only stocks that have traded up 5% or higher on the prior trading day?

 

Tyler Durden's picture

And Now Talking Back The Talking Back As Carney Says Obama Will Seek Support For Strikes Tonight





Any potential goodwill from Plan B, namely that the Syrian attack may be delayed, if not cancelled, may have been put in doubt following the latest statement from Obama's spokesman Carney who said in a MSNBC interview that:

  • OBAMA WILL BE SEEKING SUPPORT FOR SYRIA STRIKE TONIGHT: CARNEY

That said, Plan C also gives Obama the "out" of reconciliation, and making it seem that it will have been Obama, the great Pacifier, who managed to talk back hostilities from the edge of World War III:

  • CARNEY SAYS `INTENSE' TALKS WITH ALLIES CONTINUE ON SYRIA
  • CARNEY SAYS THERE'S `SOME POTENTIAL PROGRESS' IN DIPLOMACY
  • CARNEY SAYS RUSSIA PLAN `POTENTIAL DIPLOMATIC BREAKTHROUGH'

In short: the chaos continues as Obama scrambles for a political solution that does not make it seem like the latest attempt to punish Syria would have crashed and burned not only in Congress but on the international arena as well.

 

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JPMorgan Balance Sheet Update: Record $500 Billion In Prop Trading Dry Powder





In the aftermath of the JPM CIO prop trading blunder, the firm disclosed that the capital used for risky bets such as attempting to corner the IG or HY markets was the result of excess deposits over loans, which at that time stood at $423 billion, resulting in $323 billion in CIO invested and non Marked-to-Market "Available for Sale" securities. Following yesterday's CFO update on the state of the mortgage market, which we recapped here, and which warned how the recent spike in rates would impact the firm's balance sheet, the firm also provided an updated snapshot of its balance sheet as of June 30, broken down by core capital components. We now know that in the one year period since the London Whale blunder, the firm's available "dry powder" which can be invested in any type of AFS security, or in stocks, or bonds, or any other risk asset for that matter, has now risen to a record $497 billion, the result of a record $1203 billion in deposits offset by just $706 billion in loans, or what we assume is a record low 60% loan-to-deposit ratio.

 

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Frontrunning: September 10





  • Obama Shrinking Second-Term Hastened by Syria Opposition (BBG)
  • Obama says Russian proposal on Syria a potential 'breakthrough' (Reuters)
  • Poll Finds Support Fading for Syria Attack (WSJ)
  • France to Introduce Resolution Aimed at Dismantling Syria's Chemical Arsenal (WSJ)
  • Apple to Unveil IPhones Seeking End to Year of Struggles (BBG)
  • Verizon Plans Largest Debt Sale Ever: Proceeds From Deal, Expected to Raise $20 Billion, Would Fund Venture Buyout (WSJ)
  • Shipping Rates Seen at 2010 High on Record Ore to China (BBG)
  • Ads coming to Twitter: Twitter makes its largest acquisition, a mobile ad company (FT)
  • Houses on fire as fighting erupts in southern Philippines (Reuters)
  • Banks Seen at Risk Five Years After Lehman Collapse (BBG)
 

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Syria, China Define Overnight Sentiment For Second Consecutive Day





For the second day in a row, better than expected Chinese "data" set sentiment across the board when following an improvement in its trade data (even as crude oil imports dropped to an 11 month low), last night China reported a better than expected August Industrial Production print of 10.4%, compared to 9.7% for July, and higher than the 9.9% expected. This was driven by a pick up in Chinese M2, which rose from 14.5% to 14.7% Y/Y, as the PBOC has once again resuming what it does best, injecting liquidity into the system, even if said liquidity no longer makes its way into the proper channels, as new CNY loans missed the expected CNY730bn, rising to 711.3bn for August. Elsewhere, not all was good on the Industrial Production front, following a French miss of -0.6% on expectations of a rebound to +0.5%, as well as a miss in mfg production of -0.7%, down from -0.4% and below the expected 0.7%. This, in parallel with Moscovici once again saying the 2013 deficit will be "slightly higher than 3.7%" means that just like in 2012, and with German economic metrics continuing to contract, as the periphery stages a modest rebound it is the core that threatens Europe's stability once again. Finally, and since in Europe everything is ultimately funded by current account positive Germany either directly or via TARGET2, the recent Italian economic strength, which also means a bounce in imports, meant that Italian TARGET2 liabilities (through which Germany indirectly funds Italy's current account deficit) are once again back at a 4 month high. And so the cycle repeats.

 

September 9th

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Ron Paul Warned 'Warmongers' A Year Ago: "Leave Syria Alone"





In June 2012, Ron Paul warned the 'warmongers' in Congress of the "plans, rumors, and war propaganda for attacking Syria and deposing Assad." In an ironic twist, he also notes, "this past week however, it was reported that the Pentagon indeed has finalized plans to do just that. In my opinion, all the evidence to justify this attack is bogus. It is no more credible than the pretext given for the 2003 invasion of Iraq or the 2011 attack on Libya." The following speech may well be 15 months old, but is as relevant - if not more - than ever ahead of Obama's pleas tomorrow.

 

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The Looming Shutdown Of Japan's Nuclear Power





Japan commissioned the country's first nuclear power plant in 1966 and nuclear power has been a staple of the country's energy strategy since the 1970s. But when the last active reactor at the Ohi plant shuts down for scheduled maintenance on Sept. 15, Japan will be without nuclear power for the first time since May 2012.

 

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Is The New York Fed Blaming "Beers" For The Tulip-Mania Bubble?





In yet another in our series of taxpayer-funded Federal Reserve research that has achieved so much over the years, the New York Fed blog has released its perspectives on the Tulip-mania bubble of 1633-37. Hot on the heels of SF Fed's Williams comments that bubbles can only be seen in rear view mirror and then of course - and that there's always an exogenous factor to blame' - in the case of tulips, the New York Fed cites "beers" as the catalyst since 'shares' were exchanged in pubs... Ironically then, it seems even 380 years ago, the only thing that mattered was liquidity.

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Syria 101: The Ultimate Infographic





In a world in which "social media" is used by the US State Department to justify a way, it was only a matter of time before the ultimate Syrian social media-friendly infographic would appear. Here it is...

 

Tyler Durden's picture

Meanwhile, In "Algos-Gone-Wild" Corn Futures...





Once the Dec 2015 Corn futures started the overnight Globex session, a 1-lot algo appears to have gone into berserker mode this evening. With a 5-sigma range already and the bids and asks stretching 'oddly', just another example of the 'efficient' markets we are told to trust every day...

 

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US Equity Trading Volume Hits Fresh 15-Year Low





The apathy is deafening...

 

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McCain Says Take The Deal; Assad Warns It's Obama's Problem: "We'll Do Anything To Prevent Another Crazy War"





The first clips from Charlie Rose's interview with Assad are being released and given the Russia-Syria discussions, Obama's skepticism, and now John McCain's 'dubious support' for "the US getting on board with Russia's proposal for Syria to hand over its chemical weapons," we thought this brief view of Assad's response was telling...

 

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JPMorgan Warns: Increasing Rates Have "Reduced The Remaining Refinance Opportunity By More Than 50%"





About an hour ago, Bank of America served the latest indication that the US housing "recovery" (also known as the fourth consecutive dead cat bounce of the cheap credit policy-driven housing market in the past five years) may be on its last breath. Namely, the bank announced that it will eliminate about 2,100 jobs and shutter 16 mortgage offices as rising interest rates weaken loan demand, said two people with direct knowledge of the plans and reported by Bloomberg. In some ways this may be non-news: previously we reported, using a Goldman analysis, that up to 60% of all home purchases in recent months have been, which of course shows just how hollow the "recovery" has been for the common American for whom the average home has once again become unaffordable. However, judging by an update presentation given earlier today by the CFO of none other than JP "fortress balance sheet" Morgan, things are rapidly going from bad to worse for the banking industry as a result of the souring mortgage market for which, absent prop trading, loan origination is the primary bread and butter.

 
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