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One Minute News Summary

Tyler Durden's picture




 

US:  The markets have a nervous tone ahead of today’s jobs report, where expectations have been elevated since the ADP report on Wednesday.  With the expectations set very high and the diffusion of expectations very broad, the number should be a market moving event no matter the result.  Treasuries rallied significantly yesterday on fears from Europe and a move towards less risky assets globally – despite the headwinds that a large job print could cause with respect to rates.  Policy rates and inflation expectations are a potential flood that is being held back by a lackluster jobs market.  The assumption is that the Fed will turn hawkish (and apparently admit to inflation pressures or succumb to bubble fears) if jobs data are bullish.  We still believe the Fed is likely to let things run for a while on policy rates given the difficulties in trying to revisit stimulus if the exit is too early.

Europe:  With the release of the EU paper yesterday that puts bondholder losses firmly on the table for European credits, the markets sold off markedly.  Sovereign credit widened throughout the region and for the first time in a while, haircuts seemed to be viewed with questions of “how much” rather than “if and when”.  Further, the idea that future sovereign credit issuance (the post 2013 idea) will be par assets when values now trade at depressed levels is an invalid pretence.  The idea that the credit risk will change markedly in a few years has not been policy proven, and without such changes, there is no difference between the bonds now and the ones that will be issued.  German trade surplus narrowed in November as the current account came in at €12B v €15.5BE and November Retail Sales disappointed at -2.4% v 1.0E. 

Asia:  China reiterated the importance of the Euro in its reserves portfolio, which underscores the importance of Europe as a trading partner for China – a country that is in the midst of trying to engineer a soft landing and grow domestic demand following a loan led expansion over the past two years.  Fitch stating the Aussie flood impacts should be manageable. 

From Brian Yelvington of Knight Capital

 

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Fri, 01/07/2011 - 08:57 | 855547 unwashedmass
unwashedmass's picture

the only real question here is how big a lie will they have the nerve to try and pull off?

 

Fri, 01/07/2011 - 09:09 | 855565 youngman
youngman's picture

So if you are a legitimate bond investor in Europe....know knowing that you are going to take a haircut..what interest rate will you require to buy a new bond knowing that you will only get paid back partially....hmmmm..many questions...no answers...

Fri, 01/07/2011 - 09:19 | 855583 topcallingtroll
topcallingtroll's picture

It's going to be a huge year in US stocks, even though this still might be a bear market rally.

Fri, 01/07/2011 - 09:28 | 855596 scratch_and_sniff
scratch_and_sniff's picture

Im positioned kamikaze style for a disappointment, even though i will be happy if the number is huge(seriously).

Fri, 01/07/2011 - 09:31 | 855607 scratch_and_sniff
scratch_and_sniff's picture

i love it when a plan comes together...

 

Fri, 01/07/2011 - 11:32 | 856118 Bartanist
Bartanist's picture

As far as news goes, this seems pretty significant.

http://www.koreaherald.com/business/Detail.jsp?newsMLId=20110106000844

So, a few options in the US:

a) Google is raided and prosecuted in the US.

b1) The US does nothing, which essentially say that the US knew exactly what Google was doing with "street view" and approved of having a non-US government based intelligence gathering operation collecting data on private citizens.

b2) The US does nothing, which essentially says that Google is really part of the US government and spying on people through not only their web usage, but also Street View snooping on private networks.

c) Google, because it is powerful, is quietly told to stop it or at least stop making it obvious and there is either a denial of any wrong doing or just the typical ignoring all questions of wrong doing and silencing of lawsuits. There would obviously be no prosecution because Google management is part of the club and sponsored by it.

Fri, 01/07/2011 - 12:26 | 856376 GoinFawr
GoinFawr's picture

"The US does nothing, which essentially say that the US knew exactly what Google was doing with "street view" and approved of having a non-US government based intelligence gathering operation collecting data on private citizens."

Hell, and not just domestic citizens either, google did this anywhere that white, unmarked vans are allowed to travel. Canada complained too; Guegull shrugged. If you're big enough it's always better to ask for forgiveness than permission as a rule, I guess.

Say, they are going after Julian Assange under the espionage act, I wonder if CSIS could go after Guegull under their version?

 

 

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