Archive - Jun 15, 2015 - Story
Happy 800th Birthday Magna Carta: A Tax Revolt Against Government Abuse
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/15/2015 11:26 -0500As with all historical events, you must always understand the context of the era in which an event takes place. True, King John (1166–1216) was forced to sign the Magna Carta on June 15, 1215 at the demands of the elite barons. The reason for that was rather important – the common man was not taxed, only the rich. At the core of this entire issue was a tax revolt over the abuse of government.
Russia Condemns "Aggressive" US Weapons Deployment; Will Send Troops To Protect Border
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/15/2015 11:05 -0500The Russian Defense Ministry is out condemning NATO plans to store heavy weapons in Eastern Europe, calling it "the most aggressive step by the Pentagon and NATO" since the Cold War and conjuring up memories of a bygone bipolarity.
ECB Government Debt Monetization Slows Most Since First Week Of May
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/15/2015 10:42 -0500Perhaps just to confirm that Coeure's infamous leak had nothing to with seasonality and everything to do with micromanaging Bund yields, in the latest ECB weekly report, we learned that after purchasing €13 billion in sovereign debt under its PSPP program, in the week ended June 12 this number dropped to just €10.6 billion, a 18% drop from the past week, and a 22% drop from a month ago. This was also the lowest weekly purchase amount since the first week of May.
Gold & Silver Prices Spike As Europe Closes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/15/2015 10:41 -0500After a quiet sideways session, just as European markets closed, gold and silver prices have surged on heavy volume...

On The Floridian Clod & Hillary Is The New Nixon
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/15/2015 09:44 -0500"...a bigger bundle of platitudes and insincerities has not been served up since the heyday of Nixon. As the politicians are so fond of saying these days, make no mistake, Hillary is the New Nixon."
Our Phantom Economy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/15/2015 09:36 -0500A "Pivotal" Week (But No Time For Cowboys)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/15/2015 09:23 -0500It is fair to say, Bloomberg’s Richard Breslow dares to say - without being trite, that this really is a very interesting pivotal week we are heading into. The FOMC trying to thread the needle of moving on, keeping everyone calm and keeping a wary eye on a geopolitical landscape that isn’t getting better. Greek negotiations that layer existential questions of problem resolution paralysis on top of default and Grexit. And let’s not forget MERS, Turkey coalition issues, Hong Kong bomb makers, Ukraine and meaningful MPCs given Kuroda’s comments, CHF wariness and NOK economic projections. Feels to me like Act 4 of Macbeth, “Double, double toil and trouble.” Lots of predictions, forecasts and pronouncements, but what will it all really mean and should we beware what we ask for?
Homebuilder Optimism Soars To 10 Year Highs Amid Rising Rates, Slumping Consumer Sentiment
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/15/2015 09:09 -0500We assume Hovnanian's CEO was not asked as part of this survey. NAHB's Sentiment index jumped the most in 2 years to its highest since November 2005. Everything in every cohort rose exuberantly on the heels of a pick up in sales. We have little color to add to this aside to note rates have been rising and just exactly what use is a self-referential confidence survey for an industry (more than any other) that is wholly reliant on confidence for its future revenue growth?
Summarizing The State Of Greek Negotiations
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/15/2015 08:56 -0500It's quite simple really. Here is Draghi:
- DRAGHI SAYS BALL LIES SQUARELY IN CAMP OF GREEK GOVERNMENT
And moments before this statement, here was the Greek government:
- GREEK GOVT AWAITS INVITATION BY CREDITORS TO TALKS: STATEMENT
QED
Dow Dumps Into Red For 2015, Bond Yields Plunge
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/15/2015 08:38 -0500No opening ramp? Something is different as Draghi refuses to step in and save the day (for now)...
US Industrial Production Weakest Since January 2010, Flashes Recessionary Red Flag
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/15/2015 08:27 -0500US Industrial production has missed expectations for 4 of the last 5 months (not seen outside recession) and has not seen notable MoM gains for 6 months in a row (not seen outside recession). Against expectations of a 0.3% gain, IP dropped 0.2% in May (not what the meteorconomists were hoping for). Without the over-stocking of motor vehicles, the number would have been a total disaster as Autos rose 1.&% MoM (the only industry to gain) but the 7.9% plunge in drilling/servicing at oil/gas wells is "unequivocally bad." At 1.37% YoY growth, this is the weakest industrial production since January 2010. Minor upward revisions stalled the MoM drop streak but US factory output has now fallen YoY 6 months in a row (not seen outside recession) for the biggest drop in over 4 years.
Mario Draghi Speaks Live In Brussels - Live Webcast
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/15/2015 08:20 -0500While not the much anticipated ECB announcement from this Wednesday which may resolve the Greek impasse with one brief press release, here is a live transcript of Mario Draghi speaking at the European Parliament's committee on economic and monetary affairs, in which we expect the topic of Greece to make a prominent appearance.
Grexit Contagion Uncontained: Peripheral Bond Risk Surges As Greek Banks Collapse
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/15/2015 07:47 -0500Despite weeks of reassurances and repetitions that Grexit is "contained" - it's not! Bond spreads for Portugal, Italy, and Spain are blowing out (now up 35-50bps in the last 2 days). While Draghi desperatly soaks up selling pressure, Spanish bond yields have surpassed US yields for the first time since October. But while bonds are turmoiling (Bunds/TSYS -5-7bps, everything else ugly), the real carnage is in Greece. Greek bank bonds are pushing to new record lows and the broad ASE is down over 13% from last week's exuberant surge when Greece was fixed again (based on a Reuters headline rumor).
US Empire Fed Manufacturing Survey Plunges To Lowest Since January 2013 As Inventory Optimism Crashes By Most Ever
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/15/2015 07:38 -0500Empire Fed Manufacturing has now missed expectations for 8 of the last 9 months. June's -1.98 print (against hopes for a post-weather bounce to 6.00 from 3.09) is the lowest since January 2013. With only 26% of respondents saying conditions had improved, New orders tumbled, Prices Received slid, shipments dropped and inventories fell... but employment and workweek increased? What hope for the future - less! General Business conditions 6-month ahead fell for the 2nd consecutiuve month with th emost crucial aspect being a total and utter collapse in future inventories from 3.13 to -17.31
Europe Warns Of "State Of Emergency" As Greek Stalemate Drags On
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/15/2015 06:36 -0500With talks between Greece and creditors at what appears to be an intractable stalemate, Germany's EU Commissioner warns that a "state of emergency" could leave Greeks without energy and medicine. Meanwhile, PM Alexis Tsipras has pledged to defend democracy "in the place where it was born."


