Archive - Feb 18, 2014 - Story
3 Dead In Ukraine Riots; Police "Impose Order By All Means Envisaged"; Tell All Women To Leave - Live Feed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/18/2014 09:46 -0500Despite the ongoing efforts of the rest of the world to ignore what is rapidly escalating into a potential pivot point in global geopolitics, Ukraine has gone from bad to worse in the last few hours with 3 dead and hundreds injured:
- *UKRAINE RIOT POLICE AMASS ON PERIMETER OF INDEPENDENCE SQUARE
- *KIEV SUBWAY SYSTEM SHUT DOWN, INTERFAX SAYS
- *UKRAINE OPPOSITION: ALL WOMEN SHOULD LEAVE INDEPENDENCE SQUARE
- *UKRAINE RIOT POLICE DISMANTLING BARRICADES APPROACHING MAIDAN
The riot police have been told to 'impose order by all means envisaged' and it appears they are rapidly moving towards that goal.
Ron Paul Asks Of The Fed: "When Will This Madness Stop?"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/18/2014 09:30 -0500
Last week, Federal Reserve Chairman Janet Yellen testified before Congress for the first time since replacing Ben Bernanke at the beginning of the month. Her testimony confirmed what many of us suspected, that interventionist Keynesian policies at the Federal Reserve are well-entrenched and far from over. Isn't it amazing that the same people who failed to see the real estate bubble developing, the same people who were so confident about economic recovery that they were talking about “green shoots” five years ago, the same people who have presided over the continued destruction of the dollar's purchasing power never suffer any repercussions for the failures they have caused?
Empire Manufacturing Misses; Plunges Most In 18 Months
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/18/2014 08:41 -0500
Winter storms and cold weather dominated much of January and somehow Empire State managed its greatest beat in a year; however, we are sure the weather will be blamed for the biggest miss in 3 months for the data in Feb (printing 4.48 vs expectations of 8.5). New Orders tumbled from 10.98 to -0.21; inventories plunged, and expectations for the average work week and future Capex spend expectations collapsed to their lowest since July 09.The drop from January's exuberance is the largest in 18 months.
Wave Goodbye To Europe's Sterilized Monetization: Welcome "Unsterilization"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/18/2014 08:12 -0500Nearly two months ago, when we commented on the recent string of unprecedented failures by the ECB to sterilize its legacy bond buying operation, the SMP, we commented that "judging by the feverish pace of purchases of every peripheral bond available, is this merely just another indication how little the ECB cares about sterilization, and is just a hint at an upcoming full-blown and unsterilized bond monetization about to be launched by Mario Draghi?" Sure enough at the subsequent February 6 ECB meeting Mario Draghi hinted as much when he said that among the things the ECB was looking at was precisely the "de"sterilizing of the SMP program. However, one stumbling block was getting the Bundebsbank's tacit approval to proceed with this plan which would make the ECB's bond monetization mirror that of the Fed where bonds are purchased on an unsterilized basis. And, as expected, overnight the Bundesbank threw in the towel on sterilization, meaning that the SMP will no longer be sterilized with an announcement divulging just this likely as soon as the next ECB meeting.
Frontrunning: February 18
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/18/2014 07:46 -0500- Apple
- Australia
- Bank of England
- Barclays
- Bitcoin
- Capital One
- Carl Icahn
- China
- Citigroup
- Comcast
- Credit Suisse
- Deutsche Bank
- Empire State Manufacturing
- European Union
- fixed
- Germany
- GOOG
- Housing Market
- India
- Keefe
- Las Vegas
- LIBOR
- Lloyds
- Medical Records
- Merrill
- Mexico
- Morgan Stanley
- national security
- Natural Gas
- New Century
- News Corp
- Nomination
- non-performing loans
- People's Bank Of China
- Raymond James
- Real estate
- Reserve Fund
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Switzerland
- Time Warner
- Ukraine
- Wells Fargo
- White House
- Yuan
- Carl Icahn wins again: Actavis to Buy Forest Labs for $25 Billion (WSJ)
- ECB governing council member attacks German court ruling on OMT (FT)
- China Tackles $1 Trillion Data Gap as Xi Changes Metrics (BBG)
- FX Traders Facing Extinction as Computers Replace Humans (BBG)
- BOJ Boost to Loan Programs Signals Room for More Easing (BBG) - actually no it doesn't as it was "factored in"
- Four killed in Thai clashes; PM to face charges over rice scheme (Reuters)
- Goodbye unsterilized SMP: Bundesbank Backs Measure to Boost Funds in Banking System (WSJ)
- Iranian Hacking to Test NSA Nominee Michael Rogers (WSJ)
- Ukraine Clashes Leave Dozens Wounded as Putin Resumes Bailout (BBG)
Futures Flirt With Unchanged Despite BOJ's "Surprising", If Completely Factored-In, Announcement
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/18/2014 07:10 -0500- Bank of Japan
- Barclays
- BOE
- Bond
- Central Banks
- China
- Copper
- CPI
- Crude
- default
- fixed
- Germany
- headlines
- Housing Market
- Hungary
- Italy
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- LIBOR
- Monetary Base
- Monetary Policy
- NAHB
- Nikkei
- Obama Administration
- POMO
- POMO
- President Obama
- Prudential
- recovery
- Reverse Repo
- Volatility
- World Gold Council
- Yuan
The key event overnight was the monetary policy announcement by the BOJ in which its kept it QE unchanged while the Board decided by unanimous vote to double the scale of two funding facilities, namely the Stimulating Bank Lending Facility and Growth-Supporting Funding Facility and to extend the application period for these facilities by a year. Both facilities are designed to stimulate the provision of funding to Japanese banks, allowing them to borrow from the BoJ at a fixed rate of 0.1%pa, for a period 4 years now, instead of 1-3 years previous. Some are arguing that by expanding its funding programmes but not changing its asset purchase targets, the BoJ has signalled its intention to ease policy whilst preserving firepower for extra stimulus in coming months when a sales-tax hike is due to kick-in. The result was a surge in both the Nikkei and USDJPY. The problem, and confirmation that once again the market is now a bunch of cluless automatons unable to analyze even one sentence below the headline level, is that as Goldman explained overnight, the "surprise" announcement was already fully factored in.
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