B+
"Capitalism" And "Socialism" Are Most Looked-Up Words Of 2012
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/05/2012 09:48 -0500
In what is a modestly surprising development, Mirriam-Webster has reported that "socialism" and "capitalism" are the two most looked-up words of 2012, and thus, the words of the year. All we can say is, it is about time people learned the difference. And now that they know how the two differ on paper, they will get a front row seat to experience it in practice too.
The Evolution Of US And UK Central Banking: An Infographic
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/03/2012 21:50 -0500
Investors once knew: Focusing on assets without understanding monetary matters can get you into trouble. They have since forgotten this. Ironically, then, there’s great value in remembering it. As “Vermont Ruminator”, Humphrey B. Neill, wrote in The Art of Contrary Thinking: "[Money] is a study in itself and one which still confuses the great minds of the world... ...because monetary problems are not comprehended by the public or by the average businessman, “money management” will continually cross up public opinions concerning economic trends... ...If you make it a point to become posted on some of the more common practices of monetary management you will …be able to discern trends that are opposite to those commonly discussed..." This addogram delves into the evolution of the two most prominent reserve currencies of the past 350 years: The pound sterling and the dollar.
Guest Post: All I Want For Christmas Is The Truth
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/03/2012 14:48 -0500- 10 Year Bond
- Apple
- B+
- Barack Obama
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- BLS
- Bond
- Central Banks
- China
- CRAP
- FBI
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- Fox News
- Great Depression
- Guest Post
- Happy Talk
- HFT
- High Frequency Trading
- High Frequency Trading
- Kyle Bass
- Kyle Bass
- Madison Avenue
- Meltdown
- Middle East
- MSNBC
- National Debt
- None
- Obama Administration
- Obamacare
- President Obama
- Purchasing Power
- Quantitative Easing
- Reality
- Recession
- recovery
- Rupert Murdoch
- Savings Rate
- The Big Lie
- Unemployment
- Washington D.C.

We find ourselves more amazed than ever at the ability of those in power to lie, misinform and obfuscate the truth, while millions of Americans willfully choose to be ignorant of the truth and yearn to be misled. It’s a match made in heaven. Acknowledging the truth of our society’s descent from a country of hard working, self-reliant, charitable, civic minded citizens into the abyss of entitled, dependent, greedy, materialistic consumers is unacceptable to the slave owners and the slaves. We can’t handle the truth because that would require critical thought, hard choices, sacrifice, and dealing with the reality of an unsustainable economic and societal model. It’s much easier to believe the big lies that allow us to sleep at night. The concept of lying to the masses and using propaganda techniques to manipulate and form public opinion really took hold in the 1920s and have been perfected by the powerful ruling elite that control the reins of finance, government and mass media. How many Americans are awake enough to handle the truth? Abraham Lincoln once said that he believed in the people and that if you told them the truth and gave them the cold hard facts they would meet any crisis. That may have been true in 1860, but not today.
Social Security - 2012 Results
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 12/03/2012 08:09 -0500In about five years the wheels will fall off the cart.
Anatomy Of The End Game, Part 2: Variations On The Problem
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/02/2012 10:38 -0500
The natural reaction from policy makers, so far, has not surprised us. Rather than addressing the source of the problem, they have and continue to attack the symptoms. The problem, simply, is that governments have coerced financial institutions and pension plans to hold sovereign debt at a zero risk-weight, assuming it is risk-free... and just like since the beginning of the 17th century almost every serious intellectual advance had to begin with an attack on some Aristotelian doctrine, I fear that in the 21st century, we too will have to begin attacking anything supporting the belief that the issuer of the world’s reserve currency cannot default, if we are ever to free ourselves from this sad state of affairs. This problem truly brings western civilization back to the time of Plato, when there was nothing “…worthy to be called knowledge that could be derived from the senses…” and when “…the only real knowledge had to do with concepts…”. Policy makers then believe in recapitalization and coercive smooth unwinds. With regards to recapitalization, I will just say that we are not facing a “stock”, but a “flow” problem. With regards to smooth unwinds, I think it is obvious by now that the unwind of a levered position cannot be anything but violent, like any other lie that is exposed by truth. Establishing restrictions to delay the unmasking would only make the unwinds even more violent and self-fulfilling. But these considerations, again, are foreign the metaphysics of policy making in the 21st century.
30 Nov 2012 – “ What's Up? ” (4 Non Blondes, 1992)
Submitted by AVFMS on 11/30/2012 12:01 -0500Europe rather direction-less on its own. Equities still rather firmer than not; with Bonds just the same. Macro data generally rather bleak, although expectations have been put so low lately that anything about palatable will do. Peeking over the Pond to see whether Fiscal Cliff discussions could scuttle things. Here late valuations are such that numbers should be really good to get things going. So: Drifting. Chatting. Checking.
"What's Up?" (Bunds 1,38% +1; Spain 5,3% -2; Stoxx 2580 unch; EUR 1,301 +30)
Frontrunning: November 30
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/30/2012 07:31 -0500- Turns out no free lunch after all: Greeks rage against pension calamity (Reuters)
- Athens banks told of debt buyback ‘duty’ (FT)
- U.N. Gives Palestinians 'State' Status (WSJ)
- Obama's Cliff Offer Spurned (WSJ)
- Republicans Reject Obama Budget as He Sells It to Public (Bloomberg)
- Macau Gangster Who Missed Boom to Be Freed After 14 Years (Bloomberg)
- China Economic Optimism Returns in Poll as Xi Beats Hu (Bloomberg)
- Spain May Escape European Bailout, Former ECB Board Member Says (Bloomberg)... but they won't
- After a bashing, BOJ weighs "big bang" war on deflation (Reuters)
- Recession Left Baby Bust as U.S. Births Lowest Since 1920 (Bloomberg)
- Japan unveils second Y880bn stimulus package (FT)
Doug Casey: The US Is Now The United (Police) State Of America
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/29/2012 22:03 -0500
Doug Casey often gets letters from angry readers who accuse him of hating America, disloyalty, and perhaps even treason. The truth is that he loves the idea that was America. It's the United State it has become for which he has nothing but contempt. Where to begin? ...the US Constitution was essentially a coup; the delegates to what we now call the Constitutional Convention were not empowered to replace the existing government – only to improve upon the Articles of Confederation between the then-independent states. The framers of the Constitution drafted it with the notion of a national government already in place, but calmed fears of loss of state sovereignty by calling the new government the "United States of America" – a verbal sleight of hand that worked for over half a century. Then the southern states decided to exercise what these words imply, their right to leave the union... and as the government becomes more powerful, it's completely predictable that everything – including the justice system – will become ever more politicized... As great as a US citizen's risk is in the marketplace these days, the greatest single risk to their wealth and health is the government.
Market Drops As GOP Rejects Obama's "Uncompromising" Fiscal Cliff Offer
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/29/2012 17:36 -0500
Markets sold off earlier today when Boehner commented that "no substantive progress had been made" in the last two weeks, only to recover quite rapidly. The 'rejection' is now in full context as the WSJ has just reported the terms have not changed (or compromised) at all since we first discussed them two weeks ago. A $1.6tn tax increase (upfront), $50 billion economic stimulus, and most importantly (we suspect guided by the miscreant hand of Geithner) the removal of the need for congressional approval to raise the debt ceiling. Overnight futures are down 5-6 points pushing towards Boehner's intraday lows. This should throw a little light on exactly where the negotiations stand (nowhere) and how willing each party is to change and bring hope to the table for compromise (not at all). With DC this far apart still, the game for the next few weeks is not to solve the fiscal cliff but to avoid getting the blame for the cliff-dive.
The Stupidity and Folly of the Crowd: Your Guide to the Fiscal Cliff
Submitted by thetechnicaltake on 11/29/2012 13:04 -0500In other words, if they announce today what we already know –that some sort of compromise is forthcoming –then the market wouldn’t have any reason to go higher.
Frontrunning: November 29
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/29/2012 07:32 -0500- B+
- Barclays
- China
- Citigroup
- Cohen
- Copper
- Dell
- Deutsche Bank
- Exxon
- Federal Reserve
- Hong Kong
- Insider Trading
- Japan
- JPMorgan Chase
- LIBOR
- Mexico
- Morgan Stanley
- NRF
- Nuclear Power
- Obama Administration
- President Obama
- Reuters
- SAC
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Securities Fraud
- Swiss Franc
- Treasury Department
- Volkswagen
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- Wells Notice
- Wen Jiabao
- White House
- As this has been priced in since September 13, it should come as no surprise to anyone: Fed Stimulus Likely in 2013 (Hilsenrath)
- Bowles Says Fiscal Cliff Deal Unlikely by End of Year (Bloomberg)
- Argentina debt repayment order frozen (FT)
- Obama Is Flexible on Highest Tax Rates (WSJ)... not really
- Geithner deployed for fiscal cliff talks (FT)
- Audit firms Deloitte and KPMG sued in HP's Autonomy acquisition (Reuters)
- Euro-Zone Budget Proposal Is Unveiled (WSJ)
- EU Nations Clash on Thresholds for Direct ECB Oversight (Bloomberg)
- LDP leader Abe: BOJ must ease until inflation hits 3 percent (Reuters)
- SNB’s Jordan Says High Swiss Franc Burdens Many Companies (Bloomberg)
- EU to launch free trade negotiations with Japan: EU officials (Reuters)
Ayn Rand Was NOT a Libertarian
Submitted by George Washington on 11/29/2012 01:07 -0500Rand Hated Libertarians ... and Many Libertarians Despise Rand
28 Nov 2012 – “ I Thank You ” (ZZ Top, 1979)
Submitted by AVFMS on 11/28/2012 12:00 -0500Once more, not much own stuff to chew on Europe’s own. Drifting. EGBs very strong on (relative) equity weakness. Periphery starting to glow like the ZZ Top Eliminator. In absence of any strong lead, need to start thanking everyone for input and support (Mario, Ben, Angie, Chrissie… Anyone working on the Fiscal Cliff. Mariano & Mario. Wolfie...). New paradigm put into practice: nothing will ever be weak again, nothing. And watch out for FC Ping-Pong! And I Thank You!
"I Thank You" (Bunds 1,37% -6; Spain 5,31% -20; Stoxx 2547 +0,4%; EUR 1,293 unch)
Goldman Says To Sell USDJPY: "Pain Trade Is Lower"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/27/2012 08:25 -0500USDJPY has rallied 3.5% in 2 weeks on wide expectations that Abe will come into office on Dec 16 and force BOJ into aggressive monetary easing (target 2% inflation). Market as a result has seen one way demand for USDJPY higher options driving skew sharply higher to recent highs. The desk believes that there is significant risk in USDJPY in the next month given event risk (most notably Japan elections/BOJ meeting and US fiscal cliff), but the desk feel that with positions relatively stretched, holiday season looming and the long side of the equation almost solely dominated by short term spec guy that the PAIN TRADE is now likely USDJPY lower from here, at least much more so than what the vol curve currently indicates.
Europe's Latest Can-Kicking Euphoria Fading Quick
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/27/2012 07:18 -0500It wouldn't be Europe if the insolvent continent did not announce, to much pomp and circumstance, another final rescue for a broke country which was nothing but a short-termist can kicking exercise. It also wouldn't be Europe if the leaders did not do much if any math when coming up with said "rescue", and it certainly wouldn't be Europe if the initial EURphoria following such an announcement was not promptly faded. Sure enough, all three have now occurred with the EURUSD soaring to over 1.3000 in the moments after last night's soon to be obsolete announcement, only to see a gradual and consistent sell off over the next several hours, dropping to a week low of just under 1.2940 as details emerged that... there were not details. To wit, as Market News reported:
- EU COMMISSION: FUNDING FOR GREECE DEBT BUYBACK NOT WORKED OUT YET
In other words, the use of funds for the third Greek bailout has been more than detailed. The only tiny outstanding issue - the source of funds.







