Archive - Jan 2014 - Story
January 8th
Yields Jump Most In 7 Weeks, Back To 3.00%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2014 11:24 -0500
Today's 6.5bps surge in 10Y Treasury yields is the largest since November 20th as the Dow slides and USD rises on the back of better-than-expected ADP jobs data implying moar taper. With 10Y back to 3.00% (2.9987% to be accurate), mortgage rates are once again on the rise (despite the recent drop in yields); though for now, Treasury yields remain lower in yield on the year.
One Week Into 2014, UK Royal Mint Runs Out Of Gold Coins
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2014 11:02 -0500
Just 2 day safter their release, The U.K.’s Royal Mint said it ran out of 2014 Sovereign gold coins “due to exceptional demand.”
*U.K. ROYAL MINT SAYS RUNS OUT OF 2014 SOVEREIGN GOLD COINS
*ROYAL MINT SAYS EXPECTS TO HAVE COIN STOCK AGAIN BY END OF JAN.
The mint added "Since the dip in the price of gold we have seen increased demand for our gold bullion coins from the major coin markets, and this presently shows no sign of abating."
Holiday Shopper Traffic Tumbles 14.6% As Online Sales Miss Expectations
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2014 10:44 -0500"It's the weather's fault."
Prepare to hear this excuse a lot more in the coming days as one after another expectation of the "any minute now" economic rebound is missed. In today's instance we find that holiday retail sales, on which the punditry placed so much hope to finally show a recovering consumer, rose 2.7%, however offset by a plunge in store foot traffic, which tumbled by a whopping 14.6% according to ShopperTrak and wildly missing expectations of a 1.4% decline, a far cry from 2012's 2.5% increase.
Bitcoin: The Sexiest Non-Solution Of All Time?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2014 10:25 -0500
If Americans in particular want to pursue any solution to the threat of globalism or dollar collapse, they are going to have to start with themselves, and the community around them. Online trade is the last thing they should be worried about. Only when neighborhoods, towns, and counties become producers and self suppliers will they be safe from financial instability. Only when those same communities band together for mutual aid and self defense will they be safe from tyrannical political entities. Bitcoin accomplishes nothing in either of these categories, making it possibly the most popular non-solution for liberty to date. Bitcoin is consistently touted as a superior option to precious metals as a way to decouple from central bank fiat. Under examination, though, it appears to me that bitcoin is instead a deliberate distraction away from gold and silver, and other tangible solutions; in other words, we believe it to be a form of controlled opposition.
Retail Sales Point To Continuing "Struggle Through" Economy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2014 10:01 -0500
Retail sales are not currently indicating that the consumer is about to "drop kick" a game winning field goal in the coming year. While the consumer is definitely "not dead," as evidenced by increased leverage in the recent credit reports, they are also not currently in the position to substantially increase demand five years into an economic recovery. Our perception is that the "struggle through" economy is likely to remain in 2014 which will disappoint the economic bulls.
Approval Of EU Leadership Plunges To Record Low In Spain, Greece
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2014 09:57 -0500No surprises here: hours after we reported that youth unemployment in Spain soared to fresh record highs (surpassing the already nosebleeding number of jobless people under 25 in Greece), here comes Gallup with a poll showing the approval rating of the (unelected) EU Leadership across the peripheral countries. And while there was a slight uptick in approval among respondents in Italy - the country that has so far benefited the most from the Italian central banker at the helm of the ECB - the EU's lack of approval just rose to all time highs in the two countries that continue to see their youth employment hopes crushed by the European experiment, with approval in Spain sliding to 27% (from 55% in 2010), while Greece, plunged to only 19%, which makes one wonder: just who has an interest in keeping Greece in Europe?
PREVIEW: BoE and ECB Rate Decision - 8th January 2014
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 01/08/2014 09:56 -0500What To Expect From Today's FOMC Minutes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2014 09:29 -0500
The minutes of the December FOMC meeting will be released at 2 PM ET on Wednesday, January 8. As BofAML notes, the minutes give a platform to those outside the voting majority on the FOMC to express their disagreements with the current policy stance. Typically, that has meant that the minutes sound more hawkish than the FOMC statement or speeches by the voters. Also remember that much of the discussion in the minutes is based on old news: the US economy has shown mostly stronger data since the December 18th FOMC decision to taper by $10 bn as of January 1.
Silver Turns Red For The Year
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2014 09:04 -0500
With 10Y Treasury yields pressing up agaist 3.00% once again (and equities shrugging off the taper-confirming news from ADP), precious metals are under pressure. Despite a few positive days, the last two have seen silver give back all 2014 gains and push back into the red for the year. Gold remains modestly green (still outperforming stocks for now).
Japan Calls China "Voldemort", China Responds With "Darkest Devil"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2014 08:57 -0500
The war of words (and deeds) is once again escalating between China and Japan. As we detailed last night, this has been a long time coming and as Reuters reports today took a further turn for the worse. In an op-ed in Britain's Daily Telegraph, the Chinese ambassador to Britain, Liu Xiaoming, wrote last week: "If militarism is like the haunting Voldemort of Japan, the Yasukuni shrine in Tokyo is a kind of horcrux, representing the darkest parts of that nation's soul." Liu's commentary was followed by another published on Sunday by his Japanese counterpart, Keiichi Hayashi, in the same newspaper, headlined: "China risks becoming Asia's Voldemort". As was noted, "Five thousand years of traditional virtues have been turned into this?"
Market's Kneejerk ADP Response: More Taper
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2014 08:34 -0500
Equity markets appear wholly dissatisfied with this morning's 'good' news and are unsure whether this taper-on data is confidence-inspiring or liquidty-sapping. The ADP print appears to confirm a hgher probability of another $10 billion taper. Bond yields jumped higher, the USD jumped higher, gold dropped, and stocks are limping to the day's lows...
ADP Payrolls Add 238K Jobs In December On Construction Surge, Highest Print Since November 2012
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2014 08:29 -0500
Unless ADP is forced to revise its December print following the BLS report on Friday (which in keeping with the baffle with BS tradition should be a major disappointment), the Fed will have no choice but to taper by another $10 billion at the next opportunity, because moments ago ADP, which for all intents and purposes is merely noise until it has revised its data to comply with Nonfarm Payroll reports, announced that in December, some 238K jobs were added in the US, well above the 200K expected, and the highest monthly print since November 2012.
Extreme Cold Leads To 9 Deaths, Forces Escaped Inmate To Turn Himself In
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2014 08:10 -0500
The polar vortex came, saw, and is on its way out, and now comes the time for the damage report. As Reuters reports, "At least nine deaths have been reported across the country connected with the polar air mass that swept over North America during the past few days. Authorities have put about half of the United States under a wind chill warning or cold weather advisory.... Homeless shelters and public buildings took in people who were freezing outside. Daniel Dashner, a 33-year-old homeless man who typically sleeps under a bridge on Milwaukee's south side, said he opted to seek a spot at a shelter on Monday night. "Usually if I have four or five blankets, I can stay pretty warm, but when that wind is blowing, I don't care how many blankets I have, the wind blows right through me," he said, as temperatures dropped to minus 6 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 21 degrees Celsius)." On the other hand, there was some levity in the newsflow, when as AP reported, an escape inmate opted for the familiar warmth of prison and turned himself in.
Spain Youth Unemployment Rises To Record 57.7%, Surpasses Greece
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2014 07:49 -0500There has been much speculation recently about some immaculately conceived Spanish economic recovery. And while it has certainly sent the local Ibex stock market soaring, we fail to see any indication of such a recovery, at least in official economic data. The latest example being, of course, today's European unemployment for November, which at the Euroarea level remained flat at 12.1%, which also is the all time record high following a prior revision. However, what is more troubling is that according to the official European statistics keeper, Spanish unemployment in November was 26.7%: tied for the all time high seen in October and hardly an indicator of some imminent economic renaissance. There is, of course, always December - that month in the New Normal when hiring really picks up. But where things get really bad is when one looks at Spain's youth unemployment. At 57.7% in November, nearly two in three Spaniards under 25 had no job, and the nail in the coffin for the "recovery" is that this rate is now well above the latest update from Greece, where the youth unemployment was "only" 54.8% as of September.
Frontrunning: January 8
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2014 07:24 -0500- After Hours
- Alan Mulally
- Andrew Cuomo
- Apple
- BAC
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Barclays
- Bond
- Brazil
- China
- Citigroup
- Comcast
- Credit Suisse
- CSCO
- Deutsche Bank
- Eurozone
- Ford
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Hershey
- Honeywell
- International Monetary Fund
- Ireland
- JPMorgan Chase
- Keycorp
- Kraft
- Merrill
- Mexico
- Morgan Stanley
- NASDAQ
- New York Times
- People's Bank Of China
- Private Equity
- Raymond James
- RBS
- recovery
- Reuters
- Same-Sex Marriage
- Sears
- Transocean
- Turkey
- Unemployment
- Unemployment Benefits
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- Yuan
- Zurich
- Here comes JPM's next multibillion legal reserve: Federal Probe Targets Banks Over Bonds (WSJ)
- Mulally Bows Out of Microsoft CEO Race, Staying at Ford (BBG)
- United States sending more troops and tanks to South Korea (Reuters)
- Eurozone unemployment sticks at record high (FT)
- China-Japan 'Voldemort' attacks up ante in propaganda war (Reuters)
- Alternative Lenders Peddle Pricey Commercial Loans (WSJ)
- John McAfee: glad Intel dropping name from security software (Reuters)
- Jobless Benefits Bill Stays Alive Amid Talks on Offsets (BBG)
- Chicago Colder Than South Pole as Frigid Air Clamps Down (BBG)
- Former Miss Venezuela shot dead in attempted robbery (Reuters)





