Archive - Aug 19, 2015 - Story
Consumer Prices Rise At Slowest Pace Since 2014 As Airfares Plunge, Car Costs Slide, But 'Rents' Jump
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/19/2015 07:40 -0500US Consumer Prices (CPI) missed expectations MoM with a mere 0.1% rise (half the expected 0.2% rise). Core CPI (ex food and energy) rose just 0.1% - its weakest growth since Dec 2014 with the biggest drivers being a 5.6% plunge in airfares - the biggest drop since 1995 and a 0.3% surge in 'owner equivalent rents' driven by lodging. Gas prices rose for the 3rd consecutive month (unequivocally good?) but new and used car prices tumbled.
Strapped For Cash In NYC? You Can Now Sleep In A Taxi For $39 A Night
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/19/2015 07:15 -0500Who says there’s no affordable housing in NYC or San Francisco?
Frontrunning: August 19
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/19/2015 06:46 -0500- $1 trillion in Emerging Market outflows in the past 13 months (FT)
- German lawmakers back third Greek bailout (Reuters)
- Dutch government faces test in "junkie" Greece debate (Reuters)
- China c.bank offers selected banks medium term lending facility (Reuters)
- Another "expert network" busted: Promontory settles over StanChart probe (FT)
- Angola to Ship Most Crude in Four Years to Meet Asian Demand (BBG)
- Hackers dump data online from cheating website Ashley Madison (Reuters)
- Yuan’s Devaluation Brings Losses for Some (WSJ)
German Parliament Approves Third Greek Bailout, Opposing Votes Drop
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/19/2015 06:03 -0500With a Greek payment to the ECB due tomorrow, there was no doubt that Germany's parliament would ratify the Third Greek bailout, and the only question was whether political opposition to a Greek rescue would be larger or smaller than expressed in the last such Bundestag vote on July 17. Sure enough, following a speech by Schauble urging his fellow MPs to give Greece a "chance for a new start", moments ago the German parliament approved the third bailout with 454 votes for, 113 against - of which 63 were Merkel's lawmakers - and 18 abstentions.
RANSQUAWK JULY 28th-29th FOMC MINUTES PREVIEW - Participants will be looking for communication as to when the FOMC will start to normalise rates and how close US economy is to meeting the central bank's criteria
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 08/19/2015 05:59 -0500
PREVIEW: July 28th-29th FOMC minutes due at 1900BST/1300CDT
- Markets looking for clarification for a September or December lift-off after the FOMC statement did not send any overt signals
Chinese Intervention Rescues Market From 2-Day Plunge, Futures Red Ahead Of Inflation Data, FOMC Minutes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/19/2015 05:37 -0500- Bond
- Capital Markets
- China
- Consumer Prices
- Copper
- CPI
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Equity Markets
- Estonia
- fixed
- Glencore
- Government Stimulus
- Greece
- Hong Kong
- Housing Starts
- Iraq
- Italy
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Morgan Stanley
- NASDAQ
- Nikkei
- Portugal
- Precious Metals
- RANSquawk
- Real estate
- Reuters
- Reverse Repo
- Shenzhen
- Trade Deficit
- Volatility
- Yen
- Yuan
With China's currency devaluation having shifted to the backburner if only for the time being, all attention was once again on the Chinese stock market roller coaster, which did not disappoint: starting off with yesterday's dramatic 6.2% plunge, the Shanghai Composite crashed in early trading, plunging as much as 5% in early trading and bringing the two-day drop to a correction-inducing 11%, and just 51.2 points away from the July 8 low (when China unleashed the biggest ad hoc market bailout in capital markets history) . And then the cavalry came in, and virtually the entire afternoon session was one big BTFD orgy, leading to a 1.2% gain in the Shanghai Composite closing price, while Shenzhen and ChiNext closed up 2.2% and 2.7%, respectively.
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