Archive - Jan 30, 2014 - Story
Pending Home Sales See Biggest Collapse Since May 2010: Weather, Affordability Blamed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2014 10:09 -0500
Pending Home Sales collapsed 8.7% month-over-month - the worst since May 2010 - missing by the most in over 3 years. This is a 6.1% drop YoY. Sellside consensus (-0.3%) was unaware of the horrible weather in December until 13 minutes ago. Of course, analysts could never have guessed that weather could have an impact (and ths reduce their expectations) but NAR's Larry Yun notes "unusually disruptive weather" prevented buyers from looking. However, he goes on to add that "Home prices rising faster than income is also giving pause to some potential buyers." This unusually honest line from the realtor mouthpiece is notable.
Ruble Rallying On Russian Verbal "Unlimited" Intervention
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2014 09:55 -0500
Following yesterday's continued slide to record lows against the Central Bank's currency basket, the Russian Ruble is rallying this morning as Russian Central Bank chief Elvira Nebiullina jawboned the threat of renewed intervention to "smooth out" markets:
*NABIULLINA SAYS FX MKT INTERVENTIONS NEEDED FOR FIN. STABILITY; BANK ROSSII 'SMOOTHING OUT' SHARP RUBLE SWINGS
One can only hope that - despite the bank runs, a plan not to raise rates, and a canceled bond auction - Russia has more success that Turkey is "fixing" the problem of QEasy money flows. The Ruble "basket" has reverted back to pre-Turkey levels.
Goldman Lowers Q1 GDP Forecast To 2.7% Due To Inventory Impact
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2014 09:44 -0500"BOTTOM LINE: Q4 GDP grew in line with expectations, although the composition was slightly softer than expected. We start our Q1 GDP tracking estimate three-tenths below our prior assumption at 2.7%." - Goldman
And Now, Even Zimbabwe Opines On The Emerging Market Crisis
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2014 09:32 -0500Hearing that some Zimbabwean retailers, cellphone airtime vendors & even newspaper hawkers are now refusing to take the South African #rand
— Susan Njanji (@SusanNjanji) January 30, 2014
Stocks Rip; Bonds & Bullion Dip On "Bad News Is Great News" USDJPY Lift
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2014 09:16 -0500
"Not beating expectations" is the new "killing it" if today's markets are any judge. First, Facebook is up 19% ($150bn market cap). Gold and silver are being monkey-hammered in their new normal "I don't always sell gold, but when I do, I do it all at once in massive size) manner. Bond yields are pressing 3-4bps higher. The USD is surging (as JPY and EUR weakness trumps AUD strength) and that should provide the hint as to what is levitating stocks... JPY carry correlation remains extreme as the USDJPY bounce off 102 holds for now (and NKY is catching up).
Ukraine Stocks Hover At 5-Year Lows As Ex-President Warns Of Imminent "Civil War"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2014 09:01 -0500
Following discussions with Merkel, demands to de-escalate tensions from Barrose, and threats of sanctions from President Obama. Ukraine's President Yanukovych has gone on sick leave from "immense pshcological pressure." Despite his exclamations that he'll do everything for the sake of peace, he blames the opposition for "escalating the situation," which fits, rather ominously with warnings from former presdent Leonid Kravchuk. As The BBC reports, Ukraine's first post-independence president warned the country is on the "brink of civil war". While the Hyrvnia is not collapsing as much as it was (always the silver lining), money is running away from Ukraine stocks stuck at 5-year lows, bond term structure is inverted, and CDS are spiking back to recent highs over 1000bps.
Preliminary Q4 GDP Declines To 3.2% As Expected; Final 2013 GDP 1.9%, Down From 2.8% In 2012
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2014 08:52 -0500After the blistering final Q3 GDP print of 4.1% (to be revised far lower eventually), the preliminary Q4 GDP number had only one way to go, down - and sure enough it dropped to the expected 3.2% (well below Joe LaVorgna's 4.0% forecast), capping 2013 GDPat 1.9%, down solidly from the 2.8% growth recorded in 2012. "Assume a recovery..."
Initial Jobless Claims Miss; Back To Levels First Seen 6 Months Ago
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2014 08:38 -0500
The trend that was so many momentum-chasing bulls friend for so long has ended. The steady downward drift in jobless claims - all noise, debt-ceiling, winter storm, and software glitches aside - has ended. Initial claims rose 19k this week, missed expectations by the most in 6 weeks, and jumped to the same levels seen 6 months ago. The Labor Department says "nothing unusual" about this week's data but noted one state 'estimated' claims last week. Total benefit rolls dropped by 16k this week (back under 3 million) as emergency claimants remains "0". For those of the "seasonals are to blame" persuasion... this is the worst start to the year since the financial crisis...
Socialists Furious As Denmark Lets Goldman Have The Dong
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2014 08:24 -0500
Yesterday we reported that Goldman's attempt to buy an 18% stake in Dong Energy, the world's biggest operator of offshore wind farms, while largely preapproved by Danish politicians, had met with solid resistance by the broader population, which had started a petition to block the sale, signed by nearly 200,000 as of yesterday. Alas, despite the valiant effort by the population to keep the energy company - with 68% of the population polled as being against the deal - the country's politicians, certainly with no palms greased by the world's biggest depositor-insured hedge fund - just let Goldman have the DONG. As Bloomberg reports, "a majority in Denmark’s parliament will let Goldman Sachs Group Inc. proceed with its purchase of a stake in state-owned utility Dong Energy A/S, according to a senior lawmaker in the ruling Social Democrat Party."
Baltic Dry Index Collapses 50% From December Highs To 5-Month Lows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2014 08:13 -0500
We are sure it's just a storm in a teacup; just a brief interlude before the IMF's ever-changing forecast for global trade growth picks right back up again and demand to ship dry goods surges back to the inventory stuffed levels of Q4. But, for now, the Baltic Dry Index (admired when it's rising, ignored when it drops) has collapsed by over 50% from its December highs and is back to August lows.
Where UPS' 2013 Cash Went
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2014 07:59 -0500"For the year ended Dec. 31, UPS generated $5.3 billion in free cash flow, producing a net income-to-cash conversion ratio of more than 120%. The company paid dividends of $2.3 billion, an increase of nearly 9% per share over the prior year, and repurchased more than 43 million shares for approximately $3.8 billion."
Frontrunning: January 30
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2014 07:47 -0500- AIG
- American International Group
- Bank of England
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Bill Gross
- Bitcoin
- China
- Citigroup
- Cohen
- Copper
- Demographics
- Deutsche Bank
- European Union
- Federal Reserve
- Fisher
- GOOG
- Housing Market
- Illinois
- International Energy Agency
- JetBlue
- Keefe
- Las Vegas
- Lloyds
- Market Conditions
- Market Share
- Merrill
- Morgan Stanley
- Motorola
- Natural Gas
- Pershing Square
- PIMCO
- President Obama
- Prudential
- Rating Agencies
- Raymond James
- RBS
- Reuters
- Risk Management
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- SAC
- Sears
- Spansion
- Spectrum Brands
- Testimony
- Time Warner
- Turkey
- Ukraine
- Only time will define Bernanke's crisis-era legacy at Fed (Reuters)
- Record Cash Leaves Emerging Market ETFs (BBG)
- Investors Look Toward Safer Options as Ground Shifts (WSJ)
- Fed Policy Makers Rally Behind Tapering QE as Yellen Era Begins (BBG)
- Rating agencies criticise China’s bailout of failed $500m trust (FT)
- Russia to await new Ukraine government before fully implementing rescue (Reuters)
- U.S. readies financial sanctions against Ukraine: congressional aides (Reuters)
- Companies resist president’s call for minimum wage rise (FT)
- Secret Swiss Funds at Risk as Italy’s Saccomanni Visits Bern (BBG)
- Top Democrat puts Obama trade deals in doubt (FT)
- Erdogan to Give Rate Increase Time Before Trying Other Plans (BBG)
Following Failed Turkish Central Bank Intervention, Verbal Diarrhea Follows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2014 07:24 -0500Yesterday's epic failure of central bank intervention when both Turkey and South Africa hiked rates only to see their currency initially bounce then collapse, is long forgotten, and early today, the USDTRY once again traded to the rather unstable level of 2.30 and threatened with yet another rout, before verbal intervention out of Russia managed to soothe nerves on edge around the EM world. What followed out of Turkey, however, was an epic verbal diarrhea from both the government and the central bank, which firmly proves the nation on the Bosphorus truly has no idea what it is doing. Here is the evidence.
Markets Flailing As Bipolar EM Sentiment Lurches From One Extreme To Another
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/30/2014 07:10 -0500- B+
- Bank Lending Survey
- Barclays
- Bloomberg News
- Bond
- Borrowing Costs
- CDS
- Central Banks
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Copper
- CPI
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- Equity Markets
- Eurozone
- Exxon
- Gallup
- Germany
- Greece
- headlines
- Ireland
- LatAm
- Market Sentiment
- Markit
- Money Supply
- Nikkei
- RANSquawk
- Shadow Banking
- Sovereigns
- Unemployment
- Volatility
And so following yet another Fed taper, coupled with another disappointing manufacturing data point out of China, emerging markets did their thing first thing this morning and all the most unstable EM currency pairs - the TRY, the RUB, the ZAR and the HUF - all plunged promptly in the process pushing down the USDJPY which as become a natural carry offset to EM troubles, only to rebound promptly. Specifically, USDTRY blew out 400 pips to 2.3010 highs after which it bounced, and has now stabilized around 2.27, well above the Turkish central bank intervention level, USDZAR is back down to 11.2120 after hitting five-year highs of 11.3850, the Ruble also plunged after which it jumped on speculation of Russian central bank intervention, while futures are tracking even the tiniest moves by USDJPY and pushing the Emini which is trading in a liquidity vaccum by a quarter point for ever 2 or pips. And with all news overnight shifting from bad to worse (keep an eye on declining German inflation now) it goes without saying, that EM central banks around the world now are desperately trying to keep their currencies under control: which is why the market's jitteryness is only set to increase from here on out.
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