Archive - Sep 3, 2015 - Story
Initial Jobless Claims Jumps Most In 2 Months - Unchanged Since End Of QE3
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/03/2015 07:37 -0500Initial jobless claims have risen for 5 of the last 6 weeks with the last week showing a 12k rise to 282k. This is the biggest weekly rise in 2 months and raises the claims print overall to 2-month highs. Perhaps most remarkable is that initial jobless claims are now back up to unchanged since the end of QE3.
Mario Draghi's Panic Button, Birthday Presser - Live Feed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/03/2015 07:27 -0500DRAGHI SAYS ISSUE SHARE LIMIT FOR QE RAISED TO 33% FROM 25%
ECB CUTS EURO-AREA INFLATION FORECASTS FOR 2015-2017
Mario Draghi holds court (on his birthday, no less) in a closely watched post-meeting presser as markets hope collapsing inflation expectations, heightened volatility, EM chaos, and China turmoil will be enough to force the ECB's hand.
For The Average American, A Modest 10% Correction Is Now A "Market Crash"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/03/2015 07:25 -0500
Total 2015 Job Cuts To Be Biggest Since 2009: Challenger
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/03/2015 07:06 -0500Moments ago Challenger reported August job cuts, which at 41,186 were a 60% drop from the 115,730 reported last month (the highest since September 2011), which however was driven by a one-time mass layoffs last month in military staffing. Putting August in its correct perspective, the number was 2.9% higher than the same month a year ago, when 40,010 planned job cuts were announced. So far in 2015 employers have announced 434,554 job cuts: that is up 31 percent from the 332,931 planned layoffs in the first eight months of 2014. What is worst, and what reveals the true picture of the economy, is that with monthly totals averaging 54,319, 2015 job cuts are on track to exceed 650,000 for the yeajesusr, which would be the highest year-end tally since 2009 (1,272,030).
ECB Keeps Rates Unchanged, Focus Turns To Draghi Press Conference
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/03/2015 06:48 -0500As expected, there was no change in the ECB's three key interest rates, with the main refi, lending and deposit rates staying where they were at 0.05%, 0.30% and -0.20%, respectively.
In Risky Move, Riksbank Holds Rates But Warns Will Cut If ECB Boosts QE
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/03/2015 06:39 -0500Riksbank won’t be passive if ECB makes big changes in its policy, Riksbank Governor Stefan Ingves says at press conference.
Frontrunning: September 3
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/03/2015 06:32 -0500- U.S. Treasury's Lew says China will be held accountable on currency (Reuters) ... but not Japan
- Bank of Japan Not Convinced of Need for Further Easing (WSJ)
- Stocks Advance With Commodities on Signs of European Revival (BBG)
- IMF Says China Slowdown, Other Risks Threaten Global Outlook (WSJ)
- Xi Says China No Threat, Announces Military Cuts at Parade (BBG)
- China holds massive military parade, to cut troop levels by 300,000 (Reuters)
- Migrants leave Budapest for Austrian frontier; pressure builds for EU action (Reuters)
All Eyes On The ECB: Fearful Markets Pray Mario Draghi "Panicks"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/03/2015 06:01 -0500All eyes will be on Mario Draghi on Thursday as expectations for something big from the former Goldmanite have grown over the past two weeks. More specifically, some now think the odds of QE expansion have increased considerably in light of collapsing eurozone inflation expectations, the incipient threat of some $1 trillion in QE-offsetting EM FX reserve draw downs, turmoil in China's financial markets, heightened volatility across the globe, and chaos in emerging markets from LatAm to AsiaPac.
With China's Market Chaos Offline, Futures Levitate On ECB Easing Hopes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/03/2015 05:48 -0500- Asset-Backed Securities
- Aussie
- Beige Book
- Bond
- Carry Trade
- Central Banks
- China
- Continuing Claims
- Copper
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Donald Trump
- Equity Markets
- Eurozone
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- Greece
- High Yield
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Market Manipulation
- Markit
- Natural Gas
- Nikkei
- NYMEX
- recovery
- Trade Balance
- Unemployment
- Volatility
With China closed today, the usual overnight market manipulation fireworks out of Beijing were absent but that does not meant asset levitation could not take place, and instead of the daily kick start out of China today it has been all about the ECB which as we previewed two days ago, is expected - at least by some such as ABN Amro - to outright boost its QE, while virtually everyone else expects Draghi to not only cut the ECB's inflation forecast, which reminds us of the chart which in March we dubbed the biggest hockeystick ever (we knew it wouldn't last) but to verbally jawbone the Euro as low as possible (i.e., the Dax as high as it will get) even if the former Goldmanite does not explicitly commit to more QE.
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