Archive - Jan 31, 2014 - Story
Alternative Asset Managers Fueling Credit Bubble, US Regulator Warns
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/31/2014 09:33 -0500
This isn’t the first time in recent months we have heard serious warnings of a new and potentially quite dangerous credit bubble. Recall back in September, when Blackstone’s head of private equity proclaimed that “we are in the middle of an epic credit bubble... the good times will not last forever” Well they should know, because according to the article below from Reuters, the OCC believes Blackstone and many other private equity firms are the “alternative asset managers” directly responsible for its creation.
Real Disposable Income Plummets Most In 40 Years
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/31/2014 09:11 -0500
We may not know much about "Keynesian economics" (and neither does anyone else: they just plug and pray, literally), but we know one thing: when real disposable personal income drops by 0.2% from a month earlier, and plummets by 2.7% from a year ago, the biggest collapse since the semi-depression in 1974, something is wrong with the US consumer.
Americans Burned Through $46 Billion In Savings To Fund December Purchases: Savings Rate Lowest Since January 2013
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/31/2014 08:48 -0500If there was any confusion where the funding for what little shopping spree Americans engaged in during December, it should all go away now. While the street was expecting a 0.2% increase in both personal income and personal spending in the month of December, what it got instead was a flat print in income (i.e. unchanged from November) while spending (mostly for non-durable goods) spiked by 0.4% meaning there was a 0.4% funding hold that had to be filled somehow. That somehow we now know is personal savings, which tumbled from a revised 4.3% to 3.9% - the lowest since January 2013, only back then incomes would rise for the rest of the year driven by the 30% increase in the S&P "wealth effect." This time, with the Fed now tapering QE, the only way is down for both the "wealth effect" and Personal Incomes... and thus Personal spending, that majority component of US GDP. Finally, this data means that according to the BEA in December US consumers funded some $46 billion in spending through burning down their savings.
Equity Funds Have Largest Weekly Outflow In Over Two Years
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/31/2014 08:21 -0500
There is one major problem when the entire market is a rigged casino (by both the Fed and HFTs), favoring degenerate gamblers over traditional investors: at the first whiff of trouble everyone bails. Or as BofA politely puts it, "Typically flows follow returns and this week was no exception." In the past week, trouble whiffed, and the degenerate gamblers, loaded up to the gills with record margin debt hightailed it out of the casino, leading to the largest weekly equity fund outflow in over two years! Add some record leverage to the equity withdrawal, continued EM turbulence, ongoing Japanese deflation exports, oh and of course the ongoing Fed taper which has been solely responsible for all S&P gains since 666, and suddenly you have all the ingredients for a broad market crash.
Here We Go: Wal-Mart Cuts Guidance, Blames Foodstamps, Weather
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/31/2014 08:02 -0500
That didn't take long. Moments ago the world's largest retailer (sorry AMZN) WoeMart (sic) just confirmed what everyone who is not an economist knows - the US consumer is barely alive. The reasons: cut in foodstamps, and of course, the weather: "“Despite a holiday season that delivered positive comps, two factors contributed to lower comp sales performance for the 14-week period for Walmart U.S. First, the sales impact from the reduction in SNAP (the U.S. government Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) benefits that went into effect Nov. 1 is greater than we expected. And, second, eight named winter storms resulted in store closures that impacted traffic throughout the quarter."
Frontrunning: January 31
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/31/2014 07:53 -0500- Apple
- B+
- Bank of England
- Barclays
- Best Buy
- Bill Gates
- Chicago PMI
- Citigroup
- Consumer Sentiment
- Credit Suisse
- CSC
- Debt Ceiling
- Detroit
- Deutsche Bank
- E-Trade
- European Union
- Ford
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- GOOG
- Japan
- JetBlue
- Keefe
- Lloyd Blankfein
- Mexico
- Miller Tabak
- Morgan Stanley
- Motorola
- Personal Income
- President Obama
- Private Equity
- Raymond James
- recovery
- Reuters
- Saks
- Serious Fraud Office
- Toyota
- Wells Fargo
- Even Obama's fans has turning on him: "The Decline and Fall of 'Hope and Change'"
- European Stocks Drop, Head for Worst January Since 2009 (BBG)
- Euro-Area Inflation at 0.7% Builds Rate Pressure on ECB (BBG)
- Japan’s Inflation Accelerates as Abe Seeks Wage Gains (BBG)
- Unpossible - this is the USSA: Detroit Debt Proposal Favors Pension Funds (WSJ)
- Keystone Report Said Likely to Disappoint Pipeline Foes (BBG)
- YHOO still pretending someone cares about it: Yahoo says detected hacking attempt on email accounts (Reuters)
- How Google's Costly Motorola Maneuver May Pay Off (WSJ)
- Mexico Surpassing Japan as No. 2 Auto Exporter to U.S. (BBG)
Futures Tumble As "Deflation Monster" Rages In Europe; EMs Continue To Rumble
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/31/2014 07:04 -0500- B+
- Barclays
- Bond
- Central Banks
- Chicago PMI
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Consumer Prices
- Copper
- Core CPI
- CPI
- Crude
- default
- Deutsche Bank
- Equity Markets
- Eurozone
- fixed
- headlines
- Hong Kong
- Hungary
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Iran
- Japan
- M3
- Michigan
- Nikkei
- Personal Income
- RANSquawk
- Recession
- Turkey
- Unemployment
- Volatility
The wild volatility continues, with markets set to open well in the negative wiping out all of yesterday's gains and then some, only this time the catalyst is not emerging market crashing and burning (at least not yet even though moments ago the ZAR weakened to a new 5 year low against the USD and the USDTRY is reaching back for the 2.30 level) but European inflation, where the CPI printed at 0.70%, dropping once again from 0.8%, remaining under 1% for the fourth straight month and missing estimates of a pick up to 0.9%. Perhaps only economists are surprised at this reading considering last night Japan reported its highest (energy and food-driven) inflation print in years: so to explain it once again for the cheap seats - Japan is exporting its "deflation monster", Europe is importing it. It also means Mario Draghi is again in a corner and this time will probably have to come up with some emergency tool to boost European inflation or otherwise the ECB will promptly start to lose credibility - is the long awaited unsterilized QE from the ECB finally imminent?
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