Archive - Jul 20, 2015 - Story
California Regulators Slap Farmers With Record $1.5 Million "Water-Taking" Fine
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2015 15:48 -0500In what seems a lot like a strawman for just how much they can pressure the population, AP reports California water regulators proposed a first-of-its-kind, $1.5 million fine for a group of Central Valley farmers accused of illegally taking water during the drought. This would be the first such fine for holders of California's oldest (most senior) claims to water, and follows suits from the farmers to the government arguing their 'law changes' are illegal.
IBM Revenue Collapse Is Now Worse Than During Peak Of The Financial Crisis
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2015 15:23 -0500The reason IBM stock is currently sliding and dragging down the broader Dow Jones future with it is that with Q2 revenues of $20.8 billion, the company not only missed expectations, but was a plunge of 13.4% from a year ago: a drop that surpasses the biggest revenue drop recorded during the peak of the financial crisis! This is also 13 consecutive quarter of declining Y/Y revenues.
$550 Million Gold Futures Notional Dumped After Close - Back Below $1100
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2015 15:15 -0500Minutes after the cash equity close, gold prices tumbled, having leaked lower all afternoon, breaking back below $1100. Overnight flash crash lows were $1080.
Commodities Plunging To 2002 Level Sends "Investors" Rushing To Safety Of Overpriced Tech Megacaps
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2015 15:02 -0500Deja Vu: The Return Of The 4-Horseman Of Tech
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2015 14:55 -0500"Giddy up! The Four Horsemen of Tech", July 17, 2015 - "Google, Apple, Amazon, and Facebook -- helped push the Nasdaq to an all-time high Friday morning."
"Cramer's Four Horsemen Of Tech" - September 25, 2007 "Apple, Research in Motion, Google and Amazon.com are up 31% as a group since he recommended them back on June 6. Despite the market being down today, each of these four stocks hit new highs."
"The Four Horsemen Of The New Economy" - October 2, 2000 "More than any other collection of companies, Oracle, Sun Microsystems, EMC, and Cisco Systems represent the building blocks of Net business."
Last Night's Gold Slam So Furious It Halted The Market Not Once But Twice, And The Funniest "Explanation" Yet
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2015 14:35 -0500Yesterday, just before the Chinese market opened, precious metals but mostly gold, flash crashed in milliseconds with a violent urgency never before seen. We documented the unprecedented event last night, but for those who missed it, the following chart from Nanex clearly lays out just how sudden the "out of nowhere" selling was, which led to not one but two 20-second halts in the gold futures market spaced out precisely 30 seconds apart as a result of a Velocity Logic (or lack thereof) event.
If Everything Is Fine, Why Are 20% Of All Chinese Shares Still Halted?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2015 14:35 -0500115 Years Of Context For The Current Equity Exuberance
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2015 14:00 -0500
Ashley Madison Hacked: America's 37 Million 'Cheaters' About To Be Exposed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2015 13:42 -0500Large caches of data stolen from online cheating site AshleyMadison.com have been posted online by an individual or group that claims to have completely compromised the company’s user databases, financial records and other proprietary information (including profiles with all the customers’ secret sexual fantasies). The hacker group "The Impact Team" manifesto concludes, "too bad for those [37 million] men, they’re cheating dirtbags and deserve no such discretion."
Can U.S. Nuclear Plants Operate For 80 Years?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2015 13:40 -0500The nuclear industry in the United States has been at a standstill for several decades. After an extraordinary wave of construction in the 1960s and 1970s, the nuclear industry ground to a halt. Operating nuclear reactors for 80 years may be feasible, but wear and tear cannot only raise safety questions, but constant maintenance can make them economically unviable. Cracks can form in plants as they age, forcing the plant offline. The cost of repairs have already forced some power plants offline for good. The San Onofre plant in California, for example, was shut down by Southern California Edison after the bill to repair leaks ballooned. Duke Energy closed a reactor at its Crystal River power plant in Florida as repair costs got out of hand. Such incidents could be more frequent in the years ahead. But if the industry gets its way, some plants could operate well beyond their current 60-year licenses.
Greek "Scarecrow" To Terrorize Spanish, Portuguese Elections
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2015 13:15 -0500"While the hardcore of Podemos voters will read the outcome as an even stronger need to change the economic and political order in Europe, the more undecided voters will probably look twice at the Greek economy — held in stasis by bank holidays and capital controls — before risking voting for Podemos," Bloomberg says.
Trump Hits A Bump
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2015 12:50 -0500Unfortunately, Trump’s antics will make it only more difficult to hold a sane debate about taking that time-out from immigration. So, one alternative is an insane debate about it, one based on sheer grievance and gall rather than the responsibilities of governance. We've feared for many years that we are all set up to welcome a red-white-and-blue, corn-pone Nazi political savior type. We don’t think Donald Trump is it. But he will be a stalking horse for a far more skillful demagogue when the time comes. There’s a fair chance that the wheels will come off the banking and monetary system well before the 2016 election. Who knows who or what will come out of the woodwork before then.
WTI Crude Tumbles Below $50 - 3 Month Lows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2015 12:42 -0500But the recovery... demand... growth... front-month WTI Crude just broke beloe $50 for the first time since April...
Deflationary Boom 2.0 - Commodity Index Crashes To 13 Year Lows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2015 12:27 -0500The Bloomberg Commodity Index tumbled once again today, hitting its lowest level since 2002. Stocks did not. We have seen this kind of 'deflationary' boom before... and it did not end well...
Wall Street's Incessant Rose-Colored Glasses
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2015 11:59 -0500The power, if not necessarily the Truth, resides primarily with the bulls right now or at least it does in certain parts of the market. The NASDAQ broke out last week to new highs but the S&P 500 and even the more speculative Russell 2000 did not. The market’s advance continues to narrow, to concentrate among fewer and fewer names. Bulls will tell you that this is just a pause and the advance will broaden out. And if enough people believe that and there isn’t any convincing reason to sell, they might be right for a while. But at some point the rose colored glasses will come off and someone might wonder aloud why Celgene paid $7 billion for a company with trailing 12 month revenue of $4.5 million. Someone might wonder why Netflix is worth $48 billion and CBS is only worth $27 billion with more than twice the revenue, better margins, a higher ROE and the ability to produce positive cash flow. Until then it’s just a dream within a dream and somebody keeps hitting snooze on the alarm clock.




