Archive - May 28, 2014 - Story
Goldman Blames Fed For Creating "Abnormal" Trading Enviornment
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/28/2014 09:48 -0500
First it was JPM, then it was, surprisingly, none other than NY Fed chief Bill Dudley - the head of the trading desk that proudly boasts trader extraordinaire Kevin Henry, then Citi, and now joining the chorus of banks and Fed presidents blaming all that is wrong in the banking system on near record low volatility resulting in a collapse in trading is none other than Goldman Sachs, whose president Gary Cohn spoke at a Sanford Bernstein conference earlier today, said that fixed income volumes - the bread and butter of Goldman's juggernaut FICC division - are under significant pressure, and blamed low interest rates and, drumroll, the Fed's QE on the drop in volatility, summarizing the current trading environment as "Abnormal." It appears increasingly more are voicing their displeasure with the New Centrally-Planned Abnormal... but only after their balance sheets are full to the brim with some $2.8 trillion in fungible reserves.
7Y Treasury Yield Drops Below 2%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/28/2014 09:39 -0500
The plunge in yields continues and even unflappable stocks are starting to crack a little... 7Y Treasuriy yields just cracked below 2% for the first time since Nov 2013. What is perhaps most worrying for the exuberant equity market is the dramatic flattening in 2s30s today (2Y +2.5bps, 30Y -9bps on the week). Wondering why bonds keep rallying... see below...
President Obama Defends His Foreign Policy In West Point Speech - Live Webcast
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/28/2014 09:19 -0500
The West Point Military Academy Commencement address short hand: "Enjoy it now... and don't retire or get injured..." As NYTimes notes, President Obama plans to use a speech at the West Point military academy on Wednesday to lay out a foreign policy vision for his final two-and-a-half years in office, defending his approach against a wave of criticism that he has been too passive on the world stage.
France Hikes Taxes, "Wildly Inaccurate Projections" Hilarity Ensues
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/28/2014 09:04 -0500
Having suffered a dismal confidence-sapping defeat in last weekend's elections, Francois Hollande's French government is at the center of another embarrassing faux pas this morning. Somewhat famously, Hollande has raised income tax, VAT and corporation tax since he was elected two years ago... and government forecast EUR30bn of extra tax income. As The BBC reports, the actual amount gained... EUR16bn (leaving a EUR14bn black hole) and forcing The Court of Auditors to proclaim that "forecasts of tax revenue in 2013 were so wildly inaccurate that they cast doubt on its forecasts for this year." Mon Dieu... they lied?
Thank You Record Stock Buybacks: Median CEO Comp Rises Over $10 Million For First Time
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/28/2014 08:33 -0500If there was some confusion yesterday why in the first quarter, seemingly having no better capital allocation option S&P500 corporate CEOs spent a record $160 billion on stock buybacks, then the following report should explain it: According to a new study by the AP, the median pay package for a CEO rose above eight figures for the first time last year. The head of a typical large public company earned a record $10.5 million, an increase of 8.8 percent from $9.6 million in 2012, according to an Associated Press/Equilar pay study.
Goldman Warns 'Don't Expect Large QE' From ECB In June
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/28/2014 08:07 -0500
While France's Hollande demands action - amid his country's "political earthquake" this weekend - Goldman warns investors should not expect any signal that the Governing Council is pondering in earnest a large-scale asset purchase program. Goldman expects the ECB to lower policy rates by 15bp at the June meeting and the announcement of targeted credit easing measures, probably in the form of a vLTRO as Draghi warns "the potential for a negative spiral to take hold between between low inflation, falling inflation expectations and credit, in particular in stressed countries."
10Y Yield Drops To 10-Month Lows As Stocks Hit Record Highs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/28/2014 07:40 -0500
10Y Treasury yields are tumbling once again this morning to 2.48% - near the lowest level since July 2013. Stocks are not...
The Two Mega-Pain Trades: JPM Explains Why The "Big Money" Is Losing Big Money In 2014
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/28/2014 07:09 -0500According to JPM, a pair of wrong-way bets made by clients at the start of the year is partly to blame for Wall Street’s trading slowdown. Namely: the two mega-pain trades so far in 2014: being long USDJPY and short Treasurys which everyone had put on with mega-conviction at the beginning of the year, have so far in 2014 generated mega-losses for all those involved. Bloomberg quotes Pinto who said succinctly summarized that "Neither of those trades paid." He added: "Essentially you start the year with the wrong momentum, where you lose money at the very beginning, and you ended up with probably a lower risk appetite than you would have otherwise." And, as a result of actually, gasp, losing money, "Clients appear to be hesitating in placing the larger hedges that typically happen earlier in the year."
Russia Tells Kiev "It Is Ready To Provide Humanitarian Aid" To East Ukraine
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/28/2014 06:28 -0500Some were confused by the latest bout of radiosilence emanating from the Kremlin in the aftermath of both the "Chocolate King" winning the Ukraine presidential election, and the most recent escalation of fighting in self-proclaimed as independent Republic of Donetsk, in which more than 50 "separatists" were killed. This ended moments ago when the Russian foreign ministry issued a press release that it has received appeals for humanitarian aid from the "conflict zone" in east Ukraine, and that more importantly, it is is ready to the "provide the population with the required assistance." As Bloomberg adds, Russia has asked for Ukraine’s help in allowing delivery of supplies to affected areas, and that it is ready to seek approval on routes, terms of transporation of supplies, ministry says. "Given the urgent nature of the situation, Russia is counting on the fastest possible answer from Ukraine on this request,” the ministry says.
Frontrunning: May 28
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/28/2014 06:17 -0500- Apple
- B+
- Barclays
- British Bankers' Association
- Capital Markets
- China
- Detroit
- Deutsche Bank
- Dollar General
- Financial Regulation
- Ford
- General Electric
- GOOG
- ISI Group
- Market Share
- Merrill
- Monetary Policy
- Newspaper
- Nomura
- Obama Administration
- OTC
- Paul McCulley
- People's Bank Of China
- PIMCO
- Prudential
- Real estate
- Reuters
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Shenzhen
- Ukraine
- World Bank
- Yuan
- Yellen Concerned by Housing Slowdown She Has Scant Power to Cure (BBG)
- Because snow in Q1? Citigroup’s CFO Says Trading Revenue Could Slide 25% (BBG)
- Banks Raise Caution Flag on Trading (WSJ)
- The answer is yes: Hilsenrath asks if BOJ’s Kuroda Awakening to His Limits? (WSJ)
- Google Develops Prototype Cars for Fully Autonomous Driving (WSJ)
- Amazon Expects Lengthy Hachette Dispute (WSJ)
- Tencent $1 Billion Game Shows Global Hunt for Mobile Hits (BBG)
Buy Stocks, Buy Bonds, Buy Quality, Buy Trash
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/28/2014 05:44 -0500It has gotten beyond ridiculous: a few short hours ago the yield on the 10 Year bond tumbled to a fresh low of 2.49% (and currently just off the lows at 2.50%), wiping out all of yesterday's "jump" on better than expected Durables and leading to renewed concerns about the terminal rate, deflation and how slow the US economy will truly grow. Amusingly, this happened just as US equity futures printed overnight highs. Doubly amusing: this also happened roughly at the same time as Spanish 10 Year yields dropped to a record low of 2.827%, or about 30 bps wider than the US (moments after Spain announced that loan creation in the country has once again resumed its downward trajectory and a tumble in retail deposits to levels not seen since 2008). Triply amusing: this also happened just about when Germany had yet another technically uncovered 30 Year Bund issuance, aka failed auction. So yes: nothing makes sense anymore which is precisely what one would expect in broken, rigged and centrally-planned markets (incidentally those scrambling to explain with events in bond world where one appears to buy bonds to hedge long equity exposure, are directed to the minute of the Japanese GPIF pension fund which announced it would buy junk-rated bonds to boost returns - good luck to Japanese pensioners).
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