Archive - Oct 7, 2014 - Story

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The "Dash-For-Trash" Is Over, Goldman Flip-Flops





Just a month ago, Goldman Sachs' head progonsticator David Kostin went full bulltard, telling clients to buy high-beta, high-momentum stocks because (paraphrasing) "hedge funds suck" and will need to play catch-up. Today, his tune has changed. The "dash-for-trash" meme has outperformed dramatically in the last few years as Fed experimentation breathed life into the zombie-est weak-balance-sheet companies and traders rode that artificial wave. However,as Kostin notes, tightening financial conditions have the greatest impact on firms with high leverage and weak balance sheets; and thus, with the Fed more biased towards tightening than loosening (and the market discounting that), the "dash-for-trash" is over (as we noted in July).

 

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President Obama "Has Given Up" On Big Issues, Panetta Fears





Just hours after President Obama dined at a $10,000-per-plate fundraiser in Washington, former Obama administration CIA Director and Defense Secretary Leon Panetta lamented with MSNBC's Andrea Mitchell how "there is a feeling that the president has given up on the big issues facing this country." The problem, Panetta explains, is Obama "approaches things like a law professor," when he should be "rolling up his sleeves." With allies like that, who needs ISIS?

 

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Small Caps Slammed To 12 Month Lows; Russell Down Over 7% In 2014





Stocks close not "off the lows"

 

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US To Unveil New Ebola-Related Travel Bans As WHO Admits More Cases "Unavoidable"





Just hours after the World Health Organization warned "It is quite unavoidable, that [Ebola] incidents will happen in the future because of the extensive travel both from Europe to the affected countries and the other way around," CDC Director Tom Frieden announced that:

U.S. TO ANNOUNCE FURTHER TRAVEL MEASURES VS EBOLA IN DAYS: CDC

This merely confirms all suspicions and our earlier note that 'air traffic is the driver' of global contagion.

 

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Student And Car Debt Exponential; Credit Card Debt Declines





The summer rebound is well and truly over, and the latest nail in the short-lived rebound came moments ago when the Fed reported that in August, consumer credit rose by only $13.5 billion: only because it was far below the $20 billion expected and a plunge from the $26 billion surge in July, since revised far lower to $21.6 billion. Worse, revolving credit actually declined in the month by just over $200 million, its first decline since February. But don't worry: while US consumers put their credit cards on ice, they had no problems continuing to borrow like drunken sailor when it comes to car and student loans, which rose to a new record high of $2.366 trillion, an increase of $13.7 billion, which still was the lowest monthly increase since January.

 

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Maybe Tepper Should Stick To Stocks





Just over a month ago, business media went manic when none other than David Tepper announced that it was "the beginning of the end of the bond market rally." His word is truth and thus the world bid stocks, offered bonds and all was well in the world of status quo believers for a day or two... but then reality hit again and macro fundamentals, and collateral shortages, and so on... and now Treasury yields have broken below the Tepper-yield lows (with the 30Y -16bps from the 'end' of the bond bubble)... perhaps the hedge fund momentum master should stick to stocks - at least they are risk-free... oh wait.

 

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The Reason Behind The Latest Emerging Market Freakout, In Two Charts





Confused by the most recent collapse in Emerging Markets, which if it hasn't approached the tumble experienced in the first Taper Tantrum, will do so soon enough? Don't be. The following two charts should put everything in perspective and yes, it has nothing to do with the soaring US Dollar (because said surge will end soon enough once everyone grasps that Fed QE is coming right back) and everything to do with the slowdown in Chinese credit creation.

 

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Deutsche Bank's Shocking Admission: "QE In Europe Will Be Ineffective"





Absent fiscal policy or other "animal spirit"-boosting initiatives, there is very little left for the central bank than to push yields and the currency lower. QE in Europe will be ineffective, but it will happen anyway - it is the only tool the ECB has to protect its mandate.

 

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Defense Department Admits US Troops In Liberia Will "Come In Contact" With Ebola-Infected Individuals





With boots-on-the-ground heading to Liberia to help 'manage' the anarchic dystopia that a frightened nation has become, General David Rodriguez (Commander, US Africa Command) held a briefing today to explain US troops' role:

QUESTION: Will they be in contact with individuals or just specimens? - RODRIGUEZ: They come in contact with the individuals.

Of course this was followed by a stream of qualifiers that all protection possible will be taken (just like the nurses in Madrid?)

 

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30 Year Yield Tumbles To May 2013 Lows As 3 Year Paper Sells In Blistering Auction





Moments before today's first of the week auction of $27 billion in 3 Year paper concluded, the yield on the 30 Year was sliding, breaching the lows of 2014. Which obviously led most to suspect that demand for the 3 Year would be blistery. And sure enough, it was, with the yield on the paper pricing a whopping 0.9 bps through the 1.003% When Issued at 0.994%, and printing under 1% once again, after surpassing 1% in September which was also the highest yield since May 2011. The internals were very strong as well, with the Bid to Cover of 3.423 jumping from September's 3.171, the highest since February's 3.450. Indirects took down 35.5% of the auction despite China's holiday, which left 47% for dealers and 17.4% for Directs, just modestly below the 18.8% TTM average.

 

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Why Volume Matters





 

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Spain Warns "Something Went Wrong" As Suspected Ebola Cases Rise In Madrid





Despite being described by Spain's public health director as "a national jewel," the head of Spain's Nursing Council warns "something went wrong" in the health care system's protocols. As RT reports, Spanish health officials have 4 patients interned including infected initial nurse, her husband, and a 2nd nurse (male). Furthermore, 22 more possible Ebola cases are under surveillance having had direct contact with the infected nurse during her vacation after being infected (officials have said they 'don't know' how she became infected with the deadly virus). Images within the hospital show "irregularities" and make-shift isolation units and an insider account said "I do not want to create social alarm, but explain what is still a reality everyday for a few months of nursing staff at the ICU.". One researcher noted "air traffic is the driver.," and added ominously, "it's just a matter of who gets lucky and who gets unlucky."

 

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Japan Admits It Has Entered A Triple-Dip Recession





The Cabinet Office revised down its economic assessment to “signaling a possible turning point” from “weakening” for the first time since April, as the 7-month average sign for the coincident CI changed, and the change swung by more than 1 standard deviation in the reverse direction. According to the Cabinet Office, such a change in assessment provisionally indicates a likelihood that the economy has already fallen into recession. This is effectively akin to the government acknowledging that the economy is in recession.

 

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European Stocks Slide Below Key Support Level





As Europe's triple-dip recession arrives, European stocks are breaking bad...

 

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Bundesbank Blasts Draghi's QE, Fears "Monetary Policy Is Hostage To Politics"





"The concept of an independent central bank clearly focused on price stability is neither old-fashioned nor outdated," exclaimed Bundesbank head Jens Weidmann. As The WSJ reports, he criticized the European Central Bank’s decision to buy private-sector bonds and signaled his fierce opposition to purchasing government bonds, underscoring his reluctance to back additional stimulus measures to combat weakness in the eurozone economy. "There is a risk of monetary policy, especially in the euro area, being held hostage by politics," Mr. Weidmann said, tying fiscal policies together through ECB bond purchases “is a dangerous path,”

 
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