Archive - Sep 28, 2015 - Story
Commodity Carnage Continues Amid Fears Of Glencore Liquidation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/28/2015 07:23 -0500Despite a relatively unchanged US Dollar, commodities across the board are under significant (and seemingly coordinated) pressure this morning. It appears that the key selling began as Europe opened and the carnage in massive commodity group Glencore began to materialize. Glencore CDS is now above 700bps (up 154bps today) and stocks down almost 30% today...
Dying Petrodollar Ripples Through Markets As Asset Managers Bemoan Loss Of Saudi Bid
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/28/2015 07:11 -0500"It was our Black Monday. The big question is when will they come back, because managers have been really quite reliant on Sama for business in recent years."
Frontrunning: September 28
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/28/2015 06:50 -0500- Headline winner: "Read Beyond Massive Job-Cuts Headlines: Labor Market Is Fine" (BBG)
- And speaking of lies: The More Yellen Talks Up Inflation, the Less Traders Believe Her (BBG)
- How Some Investors Get Special Access to Companies (WSJ)
- Victorious Catalan separatists claim mandate to break with Spain (Reuters)
- Russia seizes initiative in Syria (Reuters)
- Former VW boss Winterkorn investigated for fraud (Reuters)
- Investors Pull Back From Junk Bonds (WSJ)
US Futures Resume Tumble, Commodities Slide As Chinese "Hard-Landing" Fears Take Center Stage
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/28/2015 05:47 -0500- Barclays
- Bear Market
- Bond
- Budget Deficit
- Carl Icahn
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Consumer Sentiment
- Copper
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Dallas Fed
- default
- Equity Markets
- Eurozone
- France
- Gilts
- Glencore
- Hong Kong
- Japan
- Michigan
- NASDAQ
- Nikkei
- NYMEX
- Personal Income
- Primary Market
- RANSquawk
- University Of Michigan
- Volatility
- Volkswagen
- Yuan
It was all about China once again, where following a report of a historic layoff in which China's second biggest coal producer Longmay Group fired an unprecedented 100,000 or 40% of its workforce, overnight we got the latest industrial profits figure which plunging -8.8% Y/Y was the biggest drop since at least 2011, and which the National Bureau of Statistics attributed to "exchange rate losses, weak stock markets, falling industrial goods prices as well as a bigger rise in costs than increases in revenue." In not so many words: a "hard-landing."
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