Archive - Oct 15, 2015 - Story
Treasury's Lew Brings Debt Deadline Forward, "Urges" Congress To Raise Debt Limit
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/15/2015 08:14 -0500“The trend in our projected net resources has continued to be negative," warns Treasury Secretary Lew forcing the administration to move up the deadline for the end of extraordinary measures from Nov 5th to Nov 3rd.
Rents Are Soaring BLS Admits, As Core CPI Comes In Hottest In Over A Year
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/15/2015 08:07 -0500While the September Consumer Price Inflation report was in line with expectations, with the headline CPI declining -0.2% in the month - the biggest monthly drop since January - and unchanged from a year ago, just as consensus predicted, it was all about the core CPI where attention was focused, and especially one item: rent, which rising at 3.7% Y/Y is now the hottest it has been since the fall of 2007.
Empire Fed Misses Again As New Orders Collapse To 5 Year Lows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/15/2015 07:45 -0500After collapsing in August and unable to get up in September, October's Empire Fed bounced very modestly from -14.67 to -11.36 (but missed expectations for the 7th month of the last 8). This is the first time since 2009 that Empire Fed has printed below -10 3 months in a row putting The US firmly in recession territory, the underlying components were ugly with New orders crashing at the fastest pace since Nov 2010. Employees tumbled (as did inventories, although the plunge slowed) with prices received plumbing new cycle lows. In other words, total disaster... time to hike rates.
Initial Jobless Claims Plunge To 42 Year Lows, Despite Surging Job Cuts
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/15/2015 07:35 -0500The yawning gap between job cuts (surging most since 2009) and initial jobless claims (hovering near 42 year lows) continues to grow as initial jobless claims collapse 7k this week to 255k - the lowest since 1973. Bear in mind, Goldman's explanation that jobless claims are useless in this part of the business cycle..."this does not signal a booming labor market."
Goldman Suffers Terrible Quarter After FICC, Prop Trading Revenues Plunge; Banker Comp At Five Year Lows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/15/2015 07:02 -0500Once again, Jefferies' one-month early glimpse at Wall Street trading revenues proved to be spot on. After the boutique mid-market banks reported a total collapse in fixed income trading revenues (which ended up negative following massive charge offs), everyone was looking at the biggest hedge fund among the TBTF banks - Goldman Sachs - to see just how bad the trading environment really is. The answer came moments ago, and the answer is bad. Very bad.
Frontrunning: October 15
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/15/2015 06:39 -0500- China economic growth seen slowing despite policy easing (Reuters)
- FBI, Justice Department Investigating Daily Fantasy Sports Business Model (WSJ)
- Obama to slow pace of withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan (Reuters)
- Corporate America's Epic Debt Binge Leaves $119 Billion Hangover (BBG)
- Islamic State battles insurgents as Syria army prepares assault (Reuters)
- Why Hillary Clinton Can’t Win by Going After the NRA (BBG)
Valeant Stocks Tumbles 9% After Company Confirms It Has Received Federal Subpoenas
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/15/2015 06:12 -0500Back on September 28, when the specialty biotech drug scandal was just getting started and leading to a biotech bear market, Valeant stock suddenly plunged $50 leading to massive losses for its top holder Bill Ackman when it was revealed that House democrats had requested a Valeant subpoena. To be sure, the company promptly made it clear that an official subpoena had not actually been sent, just that some politicians were demanding one. That changed overnight when Valeant issued a press release providing an "update regarding government inquiries", in which we learn that the subpoena is now official.
Futures Surge As ECB Bankers Resort To Verbal Intervention, Suggest More QE Needed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/15/2015 05:56 -0500- Afghanistan
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Beige Book
- Bond
- Central Banks
- China
- Citigroup
- Continuing Claims
- Copper
- CPI
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Equity Markets
- France
- Futures market
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- M2
- Monetary Policy
- Natural Gas
- Nikkei
- Philly Fed
- RANSquawk
- Real Interest Rates
- Richmond Fed
- Unemployment
- Volkswagen
- Wells Fargo
Aside from Chinese monetary data, it was a relatively quiet session in which traders were focusing on every move in the suddenly tumbling USD, and parsing every phrase by central bankers around the globe, as well as the previously noted piece by Fed mouthpiece Jon Hilsenrath which effectively ended the debate whether there will be rate hikes in 2015. Adding to the overnight froth were ECB speakers first Ewald Nowotny and then Spain's Restoy, who said that euro-area core inflation "clearly" below goal, remarks which were immediately assumed to signal increasing pressure to boost stimulus, and which promptly translated into even more weakness in EUR and equity strength, pushing US futures up about 15 points from yesterday's close.
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