B+
Bob Janjuah - "Central Banks Are Attempting The Grossest Misallocation And Mispricing Of Capital In The History Of Mankind"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/18/2012 06:45 -0500"The bottom line is simple: The Fed and the ECB are directing and attempting to orchestrate the grossest misallocation and mispricing of capital in the history of mankind. Their problem is that their actions have enormous unintended and even (eventually) intended consequences which serve to negate their actions in the shorter run, and which could create even bigger problems than we currently face in the near future. Kicking the can is not a viable policy for us now. The private sector knows all this, consciously and/or sub-consciously, which is why I feel these current policy settings are doomed to fail. Having said all that, the one area which for some reason still holds onto hope that Draghi and Bernanke can still perform feats of "magic" is the financial market, which central bankers assume, rely on and are happy to encourage Pavlovian responses. The reality here though is that even financial markets are, collectively, either sensing or assigning a half-life to the "positives" of central bank debasement policies, which to me means that even markets are only suggesting a short-term benefit from the latest policy actions. This is not what Draghi and Bernanke are hoping for, but in order for them to see the half-life outcome averted they know that we need to see major political and structural real economy reforms which somehow make Western workers competitive and hopeful again. The track record of the last four to five years inspires very little confidence that we will see such great necessary reformist strides taken anytime soon."
Guest Post: The Fed Has Failed, Failed, Failed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/17/2012 09:45 -0500
The unleashing of QE3--unlimited money-printing in support of the financial Status Quo-- is proof the Fed has failed, failed, failed. If anything the Fed has done in the past four years had actually had a positive consequence in the real economy, Bernanke would have identifed that policy and expanded it in a measured response. Instead he went all-in, emptying the Fed's toolbox in one big dump: unlimited money-printing, unlimited propping of the mortgage market, unlimited support of low Treasury rates and three more years of zero-interest rate policy (ZIRP). Here is the translation of the Fed Chairman's public comments: whatever. Did you see any of his testimony? It was painfully obvious that either 1) he was sky-high on Ibogaine or 2) he was just going through the motions, duly enunciating PR "cover" that he finds tiresome to repeat and impossible to say with any sincerity or conviction. His body language and delivery said: "You think I believe this canned shuck and jive? Get real, chumps."
Bernanke's Lying Through His Teeth and Not A Single Pundit/Analyst/Banker Has Called Him On It!!
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 09/14/2012 10:58 -0500Liar, Liar, Fed on Fire!!! Why no one else has called this thinly vieled bailout out is truly beyond me. Well, the retail and consumer discretionary sector will feel the heat if everyone believes Bernanke and I end up being right... again!
US Totalitarianism Loses Major Battle As Judge Permanently Blocks NDAA's Military Detention Provision
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/12/2012 21:43 -0500Back in January, Pulitzer winning journalist Chris Hedges sued President Obama and the recently passed National Defense Authorization Act, specifically challenging the legality of the Authorization for Use of Military Force or, the provision that authorizes military detention for people deemed to have "substantially supported" al Qaeda, the Taliban or "associated forces." Hedges called the president's action allowing indefinite detention, which was signed into law with little opposition from either party "unforgivable, unconstitutional and exceedingly dangerous." He attacked point blank the civil rights farce that is the neverending "war on terror" conducted by both parties, targetting whom exactly is unclear, but certainly attaining ever more intense retaliation from foreigners such as the furious attacks against the US consulates in Egypt and Libya. He asked "why do U.S. citizens now need to be specifically singled out for military detention and denial of due process when under the 2001 Authorization for Use of Military Force the president can apparently find the legal cover to serve as judge, jury and executioner to assassinate U.S. citizens." A few months later, in May, U.S. District Judge Katherine Forrest ruled in favor of a temporary injunction blocking the enforcement of the authorization for military detention. Today, the war againt the true totalitarian terror won a decisive battle, when in a 112-opinion, Judge Forrest turned the temporary injunction, following an appeal by the totalitarian government from August 6, into a permanent one.
12 Sep 2012 – “ Yes Sir, I Can Boogie " (Baccara, 1977)
Submitted by AVFMS on 09/12/2012 11:03 -0500Whatever... Final sign off by Germany and an ESM start-up session for 08 Oct.
Yes, Sir, I Can Boogie.
Spanish aid “not urgent, given actual market levels”…
No Boogie?
Frontrunning: September 12
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/12/2012 06:31 -0500- Alan Mulally
- Apple
- B+
- BAC
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank of England
- Blackrock
- China
- Citigroup
- Cohen
- CPI
- Deutsche Bank
- Dollar General
- Ford
- France
- Germany
- Iran
- Italy
- Jana Partners
- Japan
- JPMorgan Chase
- KKR
- Merrill
- Morgan Stanley
- ratings
- Reuters
- Sonic Automotive
- The Economist
- Unemployment
- United Kingdom
- Verizon
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- Germany Can Ratify ESM Fund With Conditions, Court Rules (Bloomberg)
- Obama Discusses Iran Nuclear Threat With Netanyahu (Bloomberg)
- Stocks, Euro Gain as Court Allows ESM; Irish Bonds Climb (Bloomberg)
- U.S. cautions Japan, China over escalating islands row (Reuters)
- Draghi alone cannot save the euro (FT)
- 'New York Post' Runs Boldest Anti-Obama Ad Yet (Bloomberg)
- Another urban legend: Fish Oil Pills Don’t Fix Heart Ills in 24-Year Data Review (Bloomberg)
- Troika Says Portugal’s Program is ‘On Track’ (Bloomberg)
- Russia Wants to Steer Clear of 'Gas War' (WSJ)
- U.S. Said Set to Target First Non-Bank Firms for Scrutiny (Bloomberg)
- Wen Says China’s Policy Strength Will Secure Growth Targets (Bloomberg)
- UK faces clash with Brussels on City (FT)
Text Of German Constitutional Court Judgment Striking Down Application For Temporary Injunction
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/12/2012 05:40 -0500Below is an extract of the full statement whose summary kept everyone up this morning, most certainly the headline reacting algos, and which the robots so far seem to like more than dislike.
Art Cashin Remembers 9/11
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/11/2012 08:54 -0500"...the only smiles you see in Wall Street are on the photocopied photos of the missing that family and friends have taped to walls, mailboxes and lampposts. It may take a long time for smiles to naturally return to Wall Street. It may take a long while to find those criminals who took our smiles and our friends. But, we will have patience. As our President said – "We will not tire. We will not falter. We will not fail!"
Frontrunning: September 11
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/11/2012 06:34 -0500- Germany says U.S. debt levels "much too high" (Reuters)
- Netanyahu ramps up Iran attack threat (Reuters)
- Burberry plummets by most ever, slashes guidance, rattles Luxury-Goods Industry as Revenue Growth (Bloomberg)
- FoxConn Again Faces Labor Issue on iPhones (NYT)
- Southern whites troubled by Romney's wealth, religion (Reuters)
- China's Xi not seen in public because of ailment (Reuters)
- Another California muni default: Oakdale, Calif., Restructuring Debt, Planning Rate Raise After Default (Bond Buyer)
- Spain's PM expects "reasonable" terms for any new aid (Reuters)
- Bernanke Proves Like No Other Fed Chairman on Joblessness (Bloomberg) - Ineffective like no other?
- John Lennon’s Island Goes on Sale as Irish Unpick Property Boom (Bloomberg)
NYSE Reports 50% Drop In August Stock Trading Volume
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/10/2012 08:13 -0500Last August, a 400 point move in the DJIA was the norm. This August, a 50+ point drop in the second coming of the "Balls to the Wall" DJIA was the green light for sheer market panic. While unknown if it is the cause, or effect, of this collapse in volatility, the NYSE just reported that August cash volumes imploded by exactly 50% from last year, one thing is certain: for banks, which no longer make money on net interest margin courtesy of ZNIRP, and $1.6 trillion in inert reserves, the bulk of which are used to buy TSYs, then promptly repo them back to the Fed and use the cash proceeds to buy 200x+ P/E stocks, imploding stock volumes mean only one thing - a collapse in revenues and profits, terminations of entire divisions, collapse in tax revenues for the US Treasury, an increase in deficit, the need for more debt issuance, and a green light for the Fed to monetizing even more supply. And just to avoid the noise from "unseasonal" Y/Y comparisons, in August total ADV dropped by 12.6% from July. ETF volume imploded by two thirds from last year, and 14% from last month. Cue the financial earnings forecast reductions ahead of Q3 results.
"It Is Really Disheartening That This White House Did Not Have A Plan B" - A Preview Of The Next Debt Ceiling Crisis
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/09/2012 10:37 -0500
As of Friday, total US debt subject to the limit was $16.006 trillion, or $387 billion below the latest and greatest official debt ceiling. In the past 3 months the US has been raising debt at a slower pace than usual precisely for this reason. Debt issuance will now pick up at far faster pace as the trendline mean reversion reasserts itself. It means that sometime over the next few months, and certainly before the end of the year, the US debt ceiling will be breached (with all the usual tactics employed to delay this event from happening as much as possible, including resuming the pillaging of various government retirement funds) as the Treasury itself warned. It also means that either just before or just after the presidential election, the topic of the debt ceiling will be once again upon us. As a reminder, the reason why the market plunged back in August of 2011 is because as the GOP proved unwilling to compromise, suddenly everyone, led by Tim Geithner, realized just how close to a failed auction, read endgame, the US was, and the dire need for a wake up call became paramount. Furthermore as is well-known, the only stimulus Pavlovian politicians react to is a market collapse, which not only instills the fear of the "401(k)" god falling to earth, but lights up the switchboards as concerned "voters" suddenly realize that all their mark-to-Bernanke's market "wealth" may disappear in a puff of smoke. It is now, courtesy of Bob Woodward, that we learn just how close we came. And since the polarity and discord in Congress after the election, already at record levels, will soar to new all time highs after November, it is safe to say that the debt ceiling debacle deja vu is coming, and this time it will make the first one seem like child's play.
On Sub-Zero and Decoupling
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 09/09/2012 10:26 -0500Who in their right mind would buy any government bonds today?
Suddenly, Nobody In Europe Wants The ECB Bailout
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/08/2012 12:57 -0500
It took the ECB a year of endless behind the scenes Machiavellian scheming to restart the SMP program (which was conceived by Jean-Claude Trichet in May 2010, concurrent with the first Greek bailout). The markets soared with euphoria that this time will be different, and that the program which is a masterclass in central planning paradox, as it is "unlimited" yet "sterilized", while based on "conditions" none of which have been disclosed, and will somehow be pari passu for new bond purchases while it retains seniority for previous purchases of Greek and other PIGS bonds, will work - it won't, and the third time will not be the charm as we showed before. Yet it has been just 48 hours since the "bailout" announcement and already Europe is being Europe: namely, it turns out that nobody wants the bailout.
AUD.USD: Is Optimism about to Shift?
Submitted by Burkhardt on 09/07/2012 17:17 -0500Where does the AUD.USD go from here?
Guest Post: Is Anybody Else Tired Of Buying And Owning Stuff?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/07/2012 10:56 -0500There is so much stuff floating around America that we end up with stuff we didn't buy or even ask for--old laptops, bicycles (abandoned on our property, left by neighbors moving away, left to us by elderly neighbors who passed on, etc.) and clothing, to mention but a few of of the things that we have "inherited." I make a point to be a "good citizen" by taking outdated printers, modems and other electronics to the recycling yard; others aren't so civic-minded, as proven by the piles of high-tech detritus that litter street corners and dumpsites around the nation. When the university students leave town in May, dumpster after dumpster is filled with broken Ikea furniture and old mattresses, many of recent vintage. It isn't worth hauling any of it home. They will buy more future-landfill at Ikea when they settle down somewhere else. My new mantra is "please don't give us anything we won't consume in a few days."






