Archive - Jan 2014 - Story
January 3rd
Spot When Bernanke Started Speaking
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/03/2014 14:59 -0500
Looks like he's still got it... (or the NY Fed Trading desk wanted to send him off with a smile on his face...)
Live Stream Of Ben Bernanke's Swan Song: "Looking Back, Looking Forward"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/03/2014 14:37 -0500
Ben Bernanke will momentarily speak at the American Economic Association symposium in Philadelphia. His speech is titled "Looking Back, Looking Forward" and can be found at the end of this post. Watch what may be his last speech live.
Guest Post: Debunking Real Estate Myths – Part 1: House Price Indexes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/03/2014 14:09 -0500
Real estate bubble, sub-prime mortgages, securitized products and their derivatives were largely responsible for the ultimate collapse, leading us to the economic conditions of today. Policy makers and investors alike were, and still are, basing their actions on a false set of commonly accepted myths.
Window Dressing On, Window Dressing Off... Amounting To $140 Billion In Two Days
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/03/2014 13:18 -0500
If what happened in the last days of 2013 was indeed merely reverse repo-assisted window dressing, then we would expect the that first days of 2014 should see a comparable collapse in the magnitude of the Fed's reverse repo operations. Sure enough, as the chart below shows, this is precisely what has happened following today's far more modest $56.7 billion reverse repo operation conducted among 50 bidding counterparties and the Fed, of course.
Physical Gold Demand Soared As Gold Price Tumbled In 2013
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/03/2014 12:45 -0500
Sales of gold coins are booming even as the precious metal's price is falling (and it's not just central banks). Despite gold futures 28% drop in 2013 (its worst since 1981), the WSJ reports that demand for gold coins shot up 63% to 241.6 metric tons in the first three quarters of 2013.
The "Record Recovery", At Least For Porsche
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/03/2014 12:19 -0500While the non-luxury auto-manufacturers suffered from a case of cannel-stuffed constipation in December, Luxury brands appeared to do very well thank you Mr. Bernanke:
- *PORSCHE REPORTS RECORD SALES IN '13 21% RISE OVER '12
- *PORSCHE CARS NORTH AMERICA DEC. SALES UP 10%
As the company notes, it "exceeded 40,000 sales for the first time in the history of Porsche in the US," as the 911 sold 10,442 units and Cayenne 18,507 units.
A World Drowning In Fatties: 1.5 Billion Of The World's Adults - One In Three - Are Obese Or Overweight
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/03/2014 11:54 -0500
While it will hardly come as a surprise that in the age of pervasive, accessible and cheap pink slime fast food, more people than ever are obese, the actual numbers may be a shock to most. Conveniently, quantifying the world's obesity epidemic is precisely what the London-based Overseas Development Institute has done with a just released report titled Future Diets (pdf link). Its findings are stunning: more than a third of all adults in the world - 1.46 billion to be exact - are obese or overweight.
Stocks Fade To Red As Oil Dumps And Gold Jumps
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/03/2014 11:39 -0500
As Europe closes, the 'recovery' in US equities has faded to red for the majors (though Trannies and all the high-beta momos are still in the green thanks to JPY just not wanting the party to stop - for now) seeimngly led by AAPL's plunge to its 50DMA. This morning's jerk higher appears as much about BTFD catch up for Trannies than anything else. Bonds sold off modestly but the USD continues to surge (led by EUR weakness after ugly loan creation data). WTI crude (and Brent) is tumbling further - back at $94.50 - but gold is surging back to yesterday's highs at around $1236. VIX is stable for now around 14% as stocks rotate back to play catch-down.
75% Of Spaniards Don't Believe Rajoy's "Economic Recovery" Meme
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/03/2014 11:07 -0500
With unemployment stuck at record highs and loan delinquencies surging (as we discussed here, here and here), it is hardly surprising that El Economista reports that more than two-thirds of Spaniards do not believe the "recovery" promised by Prime Minister Rajoy has been created. While Cramer ignorantly confidently espoused this morning that Spain is recovering (and with Spanish stocks and bonds back near pre-crisis levels), a massive 75% of the Spanish people believe their personal situation will be the same or worse in 2014.
GM Misses Sales Expectations, Blames Weather; Ends Year With Most Ever December "Channels Stuffed"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/03/2014 10:38 -0500Moments ago, GM, now fully non-government backstopped (and perhaps because of), reported adjusted US vehicle sales of 230,157, a decline of 6.3% from the 245,733 cars delivered a year earlier, on expectations of a 1.5% increase in sales. As Kurt McNeil, VP of US sales, announced "“December started a little slow but sales were stronger later in the month, especially in the week between Christmas and New Year’s. We didn’t make any big changes to our ‘go-to-market’ strategy during the month, which is to offer competitive incentives and market aggressively, and we are carrying good momentum heading into January." GM also was quick to put blame on wintry weather in December - fear not though, they won't be the last. It was unclear just how substantial GM's incentives were in a month in which below margin inventory liquidation was the name of the game for all retailers: we expect to learn soon. But perhaps the most interest datapoint in today's release, and one which may explain why GM's sales missed, was that the car's near record channel stuffing, which as we reported last month had soared in the past three months at a record pace, and was just shy of its all time high, saw a modest decline from 780K to 748K. Still, the latter number was still the highest ever December GM dealer inventory for the month of December in the restructured company's history.
French President Hollande Needs A Friend
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/03/2014 10:00 -0500
Having just completed his 75% millionaires tax and seen at the center of a what is likely to be a confiscatory "wealth tax" across Europe, Volkskrant shows that it is not just French President Hollande's people that see him as the least popular ever, but the world's leaders also...as no one will shake his hand...
No Waking From Draghi's Monetary Nightmare: Eurozone Credit Creation Tumbles To New All Time Low
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/03/2014 09:39 -0500
Today the ECB just announced the latest set of undead monetary statistics for November. To nobody's surprise, even though M3 posted the tiniest of possible annual increases, rising from 1.4% to 1.5% (3% below the ECB's 4.5% reference value which it considers consistent with its price stability mandate), loan creation to the private sector declined once again, this time dumping to -2.3% from a revised -2.2%. As the WSJ reports what we have said for the past year, "The deepening decline increases pressure on the central bank to embark on further measures to stimulate lending, analysts said."
JPMorgan Reveals That Stocks Are More Expensive Now Than At Their 2007 Peak
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/03/2014 09:16 -0500
As we warned was likely to happen back in February of 2013 (given the typical trajectory of earnings expectations through a year), JP Morgan has confirmed that the S&P 500 is now more expensive on a forward P/E basis than it was at its peak in October 2007. So, despite the self-referential bias of each and every talking head asset-gatherer on mainstream media's denial, stocks do not offer value here... no matter how many TINAs or BTFATHs you hear...
Sign Of The Top? Hedge Fund Hiring Junior Bitcoin Execution Trader
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/03/2014 08:34 -0500
With Bitcoin having almost completed another double off the Dec 17 lows, it is hardly surprising that the fast-money volatility-chasing world of 2-and-20-ers is reaching out for a Bitcoin Execution Trader. The San Francisco hedge fund is hiring a "Junior" position, which suggests they already have a "senior" trader who has got tired of trading the digital currency 24 hours a day and is looking to offload the 24x7x365 duties to a lower-level employee with "strong analytic skills" and who is "willing to work odd hours including weekends and late nights/early mornings."




