Archive - Dec 2014 - Story
December 2nd
After Abysmal Thanksgiving Spending, Cyber Monday Is Latest Dud, Rising Less Than Half 2013 Pace
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2014 08:03 -0500Prepare to hear much more of the "retail spending slowed down because the economy is just too strong" excuses today, used most hilariously by the NRF on Sunday to explain the unprecedented 11% collapse in the 2014 4-day holiday weekend spend, when pundits "justify" why Cyber Monday sales were only the latest proof the US consumer - that 70% driver of US GDP - is being crushed day after day, pardon, basking in the warm glow of America's centrally-planned golden age. Here are the facts: Internet holiday shopping rose only 8.1% on Cyber Monday yesterday, usually the busiest day for Web shopping as people return to their desks after the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday weekend. This was a big miss to expectations, and is less than half then growth posted just last year, when online sales grew at 17.5%, according to IBM.
Frontrunning: December 2
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2014 07:44 -0500- DAX’s ‘Brilliant’ Run Sends Red Flag as German Index Tops Record (BBG)
- U.S. military warned of possible Islamic State attacks at home: report (Reuters)
- Russia Faces First Recession Since 2009 as Banks Add to Oil Pain (BBG)
- Dodgy Home Appraisals Are Making a Comeback (WSJ)
- U.S. Corporate Bond Sales Pass $1.5 Trillion for Annual Record (BBG)
- Basic Costs Squeeze Families (WSJ)
- China Orders Stricter Checks on Local Debt as Sales Surge (BBG)
- Draghi Powerless on ECB Path Toward QE Without Reforms (BBG)
Stocks Rebound, Oil Resumes Slide, Ruble Tumbles As Yen Flirts With 119
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2014 07:05 -0500- Bond
- CDS
- Central Banks
- Copper
- Crude
- default
- Deutsche Bank
- Fed Speak
- Fisher
- Fitch
- fixed
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Gross Domestic Product
- headlines
- Italy
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Monetary Policy
- New Normal
- Nikkei
- Portugal
- Precious Metals
- RANSquawk
- Recession
- recovery
- Reuters
- Stress Test
- Ukraine
- Unemployment
- Volatility
- Yen
A few days of near-record crude volatility (which the CME is scrambling to reduce following 2 crude margin hikes in the past week) is giving way to the New Normal default thinking: that central banks will soon take care of everything. And sure enough, just an hour earlier, US equity futures had jumped 8 points on virtually zero volume, wiping out all of yesterday's losses, driven higher by that new "old favorite", the USDJPY, which has once again resumed its climb higher, briefly rising above 119.00 once again and sending the Nikkei and the Topix to fresh 7 year highs, perfectly oblivious to both yesterday's Moody's downgrade and now open warnings from both Eisuke Sakakibara and Goldman Sachs that further declines in the Yen will accelerate the collapse of the Japanese economy. And, since there is also zero liquidity in the market, that entire gain was also just as promptly wiped out with futures now practically unchanged from yesterday's close.
December 1st
Total US Debt Rises Over $18 Trillion; Up 70% Under Barack Obama
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2014 23:35 -0500Tensions Between US & Russia Are Worse Than You Realize – Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2014 22:30 -0500"Many reasonable analysts understand that there is a widening gap between the global ambitions of the US Administration and the country’s real potential. The world is changing and, as has always happened in history, at some point somebody’s influence and power reach their peak and then somebody begins to develop still faster and more effectively. One should study history and proceed from realities. The seven developing economies headed by BRICS already have a bigger GDP than the Western G7. One should proceed from the facts of life, and not from a misconceived sense of one’s own grandeur."
President Obama 'Fixes' Ferguson
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2014 22:29 -0500Yep that should do it...
And The Biggest Winner From The OPEC Price War Is...
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2014 22:00 -0500"This is a golden time window to acquire more strategic oil at lower costs," notes one Hong-Kong based analyst, as Bloomberg confirms what we have noted here and here, that China is emerging as the winner from OPEC’s battle with rival oil producers as the world’s biggest energy consumer stockpiles crude.
2014 Is Now The Worst Year For US Macro Data Performance Since 2008
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2014 21:30 -0500Once again the cyclical patterns in US macro data are re-emerging as extrapolated hopes fade into mean-reverting credit-impulse-hangover-driven realities. Despite all the hopes and dreams of escape velocity, cleanest-dirty-shirt-wearing economic enthusiasts, year-to-date performance of Citi's US Macro Surprise index is at its lowest level since 2008. Whether this is absolute weakness or relative weakness (versus yet more over-enthusiastic expectations) is unclear though, the Midterm election results and NFR Black Friday spending data may be a hint.
This Was The Most Valuable Company In History (Worth 10 Times More Than Apple)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2014 21:00 -0500Over four centuries ago, the Dutch East India Company made history as the world’s first IPO. Known as VOC in the Netherlands, the company was one of the most successful ventures in the last several hundred years. When adjusted for inflation, its highest market capitalization would be worth over $7 TRILLION today (i.e. ten times the size of Apple).
Putin Kills "South Stream" Pipeline, Will Build New Massive Pipeline To Turkey Instead
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2014 20:31 -0500Earlier today, in a stunning announcement, Putin revealed that the South Stream project is now finished. As the WSJ reports, "Putin said Moscow will stop pursuing Gazprom’s South Stream pipeline project that would supply natural gas to Europe with an underwater link to Bulgaria, blaming the European Union for scuttling the project." Putin is right: Europe - Austria excluded - had seen rising resistance to the South Stream in recent months. The EU is concerned that the project would cement Russia’s position as Europe’s dominant supplier of natural gas. Russia already meets around 30% of Europe’s annual needs. So what does Putin do? He signs a strategic alliance with NATO member Turkey, the only country in Europe that is anything but European and which lately has been increasingly anti-Western, to build a new mega-pipeline to Turkey instead. And the exclamation point:
TURKEY, RUSSIA AGREE TO USE LOCAL CURRENCIES IN TRADE: TRT
Or, as Obama would put it, Russia just got even more "isolated."
The World's Largest Stock Market Index Is Flashing Red
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2014 20:00 -0500With a market capitalization of around $16 trillion, the NYSE Composite Index is a massively broad equity indicator less affected by the day to day gyrations of AAPL, TSLA, BABA, or NFLX. As NewEdge's Brad Wishak remarks, the world's largest market cap equity index is painting a very different picture than that of the Dow or S&P 500...
It's Muppet-Slaughtering Time - Goldman Unveils 2015 Global Equity Themes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2014 19:00 -0500Goldman Sachs' 2015 global equity views and themes note is out and its title "The Long Grind Higher Continues" says it all... it's muppet slaughtering time...
The Fed's Biggest Nightmare: Consumers Are "Losing Faith" Their Cost Of Living Won't Keep Rising
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2014 18:30 -0500US Debt In Public Hands Doubles Under Barack Obama
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2014 18:18 -0500As noted previously, total US debt is now over $18 trillion. Here is where it gets even more surreal: debt held by the public on January 20, 2009, Obama's inauguration day, was $6.3 trillion. It is now $12.9 trillion, a 105% increase. And here, for your viewing pleasure, is Senator Barack Obama saying on July 3, 2008, that the $4 trillion in debt added by Bush was "irresponsible and unpatriotic"...





