Archive - Aug 5, 2014 - Story
Non-Manufacturing ISM Soars To 9-Year Highs Months After Hitting 4-Year Lows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2014 09:10 -0500US Services PMI fell from June's 61.0 level to 60.8 (slightly below the flash print of 61.0 suggesting modest weakness in the latter end of the month) ending a two-month streak of post-weather exuberance as new orders and jobs data slowed, and Markit warns "growth may have peaked." Factory Orders rose 1.1% for the biggest beat in 9 months. ISM Services smashed expectations and surged to Nov 2005 highs (from 4-year lows just 4 months ago - volatile?) with most sub-indices improving except new export orders fell to 4-month lows.
Central-Planners Fail To Herd Money Market Funds Into Overpriced Stocks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2014 08:39 -0500Sadly for the central planners, while they succeeded in the first part of their plan, namely getting investors to flee from money market funds, they failed in getting the money to flow into the desired asset class: stocks. Instead, money market funds are rushing at an unprecedented pace into that other most hated by the Fed, after precious metals of course, asset: Treasurys. Most hated because declining yields disprove all the propaganda about an improving economy as they do, or at least did, imply deflation down the road: hardly the stuff robust 3%+ recoveries are made of.... But before we declare victory over central planning, don't forget that the "regulators", the Fed and the SEC, are already contemplating the next step: recall that as we reported in June, "the Fed is preparing to impose "exit fee" gates on bond funds, in what, the official narrative goes, is an attempt to prevent a panicked rush for the exits. Of course, this is diametrically opposite of what the truth is."
Greek Bonds Tumble To 2-Month Lows As Troika Gives Up And Goldman Downgrades Periphery
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2014 08:02 -0500Greek 10Y yields, up 6 days in a row, have surged in the last few days to 2-month highs (bond price lows). The significant shift in sentiment appears related to two main factors. First, The Independent reports that Europe is considering pulling Troika (its economic oversight committee) - which has been likened to German Nazi occupation - out of Greece, forcing local politicians to come up with their own reforms by the start of 2015 (which clearly the market is not believing). Perhaps even more concerning is Goldman Sachs shift to neutral on European peripheral bonds, warning that "at current spread levels we think there is not enough of a buffer for investors to take credit risk in intermediate and long-dated peripheral sovereign bonds." Time for some more 'whatever it takes' we think.
First British Minister Resigns Over "Morally Indefensible" Gaza Policy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2014 07:45 -0500While in the US there has been nothing but political propaganda and a constant Obama defense of John Kerry over his disastrous, to date, handling of the deteriorating situation in the middle east, in the UK the internal discord has finally moved beyond merely posturing and has claimed the first political career, when overnight a minister in the Foreign Office, Baroness Warsi, announced she has resigned from the government, saying its policy on the crisis in Gaza is "morally indefensible", is not in Britain's national interest and will have a "long term effect on our reputation internationally and domestically".
No Fly Zone: Russia Plans Airspace Blockade For European Flyovers In Sanction Retaliation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2014 07:22 -0500Russia has been quiet, too quiet, since the EU and US unleashed their latest set of sanctions. However, as military drills and troop build-ups occur on Ukraine's borders, Reuters reports that Russian Prime Minister Medvedev is considering a significant retaliation, "any unfriendly measures by the EU, including those in the area of air transportation, we’ll be studied and won’t remain without a response." Russian business daily Vedomosti quoted unnamed sources as saying the foreign and transport ministries were discussing possible action which might force EU airlines into long and costly detours and put them at a disadvantage to Asian rivals by restricting or banning European airlines from flying over Siberia on busy Asian routes. Costs? Over $1.3bn for every months for Lufthansa, BA, and Air France...
Second Ebola Patient Arrives In US: Complete Ebola News Summary
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2014 07:05 -0500All the latest news on the worst Ebola epidemic in history sourced over the past 24 hours.
Frontrunning: August 5
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2014 06:41 -0500- AIG
- Apple
- Australia
- B+
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Berkshire Hathaway
- China
- Detroit
- DRC
- Fail
- France
- Gannett
- General Motors
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Greenlight
- Hong Kong
- India
- Israel
- Japan
- KKR
- Markit
- Medical Records
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- national security
- Natural Gas
- New Normal
- Newspaper
- Portugal
- Private Equity
- Raymond James
- RBS
- recovery
- Reuters
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Time Warner
- Verizon
- Yuan
- Second Ebola patient to arrive in U.S. on Tuesday (Reuters)
- Ebola Drug Made From Tobacco Plant Saves U.S. Aid Workers (BBG)
- Egypt plans to dig new Suez Canal costing $4 billion (Reuters)
- Apple Buybacks Pay Most Ever as CEOs Spend $211 Billion (BBG)
- DeMark Says Sell China Stocks Now After World’s Best Gain (BBG)
- Investors Stung by Losses After Exiting Struggling Property Fund in China (WSJ)
- B.A. in BTFD: MIT May Consider Granting Degrees in Less Than Four Years (BBG)
- Too late, money's already been spent: GPIF Needs Overhaul Before Asset Changes, Shiozaki Says (BBG)
- Oh look, another "truce": Israel withdraws troops, 72-hour Gaza truce begins (Reuters)
Weak Chinese And European Macro Data Briefly Halts Futures Levitation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2014 06:10 -0500It is unclear how much of this morning's momentum-busting weakness in futures is the result of China's horrendous Service PMI, which as we reported last night dropped to the lowest print on record at the contraction borderline, but whatever low volume levitation was launched by the market after Europe's close yesterday may have fizzled out if only until Europe close (there is no POMO today). Still, futures may have been helped by yet another batch of worse than expected European data, namely the final Eurozone PMI prints, which in turn sent the EURUSD to day lows and the offsetting carry favorite USDJPY to highs, helping offset futures weakness. Because in the New Normal there is nothing like a little bad macro data to goose the BTFATH algos...
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