B+
Guest Post: The Emperor Is Naked
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/08/2012 17:15 -0500- B+
- Bill Dudley
- Bond
- Bureau of Labor Statistics
- Capital Markets
- Central Banks
- China
- Commercial Paper
- Debt Ceiling
- default
- ETC
- European Central Bank
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- fixed
- Free Money
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Greece
- Guest Post
- Hyperinflation
- International Monetary Fund
- Italy
- Lehman
- Main Street
- Michigan
- Monetary Policy
- New York Fed
- New York Times
- Post Office
- Quantitative Easing
- Reality
- recovery
- Repo Market
- Sovereign Debt
- Unemployment
- Volatility
- Yield Curve
We are in the last innings of a very bad ball game. We are coping with the crash of a 30-year–long debt super-cycle and the aftermath of an unsustainable bubble. Quantitative easing is making it worse by facilitating more public-sector borrowing and preventing debt liquidation in the private sector—both erroneous steps in my view. The federal government is not getting its financial house in order. We are on the edge of a crisis in the bond markets. It has already happened in Europe and will be coming to our neighborhood soon. The Fed is destroying the capital market by pegging and manipulating the price of money and debt capital. Interest rates signal nothing anymore because they are zero. Capital markets are at the heart of capitalism and they are not working.
The Countdown To The Break Up Of The Euro Has Officially Begun
Submitted by ilene on 05/08/2012 10:56 -0500Yep. Now it's official.
Watch Ron Paul Hearing On "Legislation To Reform Fed And Other Alternatives"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/08/2012 10:21 -0500
We skipped the first part of today's hearing by the Ron Paul-chaired Domestic Monetary Policy and Technology Subcommittee titled “Improving the Federal Reserve System: Examining Legislation to Reform the Fed and Other Alternatives” as one of the two panelists was Barney Frank, which immediately meant it would be a complete and utter waste of time, and everyone would walk away far dumber from it, with god likely not having mercy on anyone's soul. The second part however promises to be far more interesting featuring such names as John Taylor (not the FX Concepts Taylor or the musician), Peter Klein, James Galbraith and Alice Rivlin. While everyone knows wha has to be done about the Fed, the likelihood that this will happen before the Big Reset is zero, but at least people can talk, dream and speculate. Watch the live webcast for more of the latter.
Facebook Details IPO Details, Issues Amended S-1
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2012 14:59 -0500Facebook has just released a revised S-1 filing (link) which list additional information on the IPO. Among the details:
- The IPO would value the company at as much as $74.8 billion, based on a total of 2.138 billion Class A and B shares outstanding after the offering, assuming a $35 share price. Wasn't this supposed to be $100 billion?
- Total shares offered wil be 337,415,352 at a proposed price range of $28-$35 (mid point of the range is $31.50)
- Primary shares (proceeds going to company) will be 180 million
- Selling stockholders shares will be 157.4 million: these proceeds will not go to the company
- Facebook estimates: "We estimate that our net proceeds from the sale of the Class A common stock that we are offering will be approximately $5.6 billion, assuming an initial public offering price of $31.50 per share, which is the midpoint of the price range on the cover page of this prospectus"
Military Winning War Over Pensions
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 05/02/2012 15:23 -0500Why is the Military Retirement Fund exploding higher?
China's Unsustainable PMI
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/02/2012 12:37 -0500
The last two nights we have been bombarded with headline data on manufacturing in China - one good and getting better and one bad and consistently contracting. Credit Suisse digs into the reality underlying these indices and notes three reasons why they feel the positive PMI trend is unsustainable as cutting through the "baffle-'em-with-bullshit" macro data is critical in understanding the sad reality we face. Critically, as CS conculdes, the bifurcation implies the economy is not doing entirely badly and hence the hopes of a substantial stimulus should be tempered in the near future - as should the market's optimism of a quick rebound in Chinese demand.
Lock ‘em Up | Fraud on the Court – In Re Delva: Fraudclosure, Fabrication, Bankruptcy and Lies
Submitted by 4closureFraud on 05/01/2012 19:11 -0500Filing of two different versions of the "original" endorsed note in two different courts. Say it isn't so...
The Death Of The Deadbeat Carriers, Part 2 - Apple Avoideth, Google Destroyeth
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 05/01/2012 09:25 -0500Google vs .GOV vs Apple vs Telcos: .GOV keeps old way of doing business alive for current broadband cos. Roads are expensive too, but we have found ways to build them without requiring tolls at the end of our driveways.
US Celllular Carriers Are At Risk Of Being Marginalized Into Nothingness Unless They Learn To Think Outside The Box... Yesterday
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 04/30/2012 12:52 -0500As creativity dies, so will the usefulness of the US cellular carrier.
Guest Post: What Is The Consequence Of Printing Money That Nobody Wants?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/30/2012 11:10 -0500By definition, we cannot shrink our way back to the sort of growth required to service the West's accumulated debts. Something has to give. That something will ultimately be social and political disorder on a continent-wide basis, particularly as the taxpayer becomes increasingly frustrated in his obligations to fund the rapidly growing and untenable costs of Big Government. Such disorder is almost universally feared-- by politicians, by markets, by institutions. As the London-based marcoeconomic research consultancy Capital Economics recently commented: "The last thing that the markets need right now is increased political uncertainty at the heart of Europe at a time when the economic outlook is already bleak..." The only reasonable response to this is: tough. If social and political disorder is what it takes to shift an unsustainable status quo in which vampire banks and clueless bureaucrats suck the life out of the productive economy, bring it on.
Does Quantitative Easing Benefit the 99% or the 1%?
Submitted by George Washington on 04/29/2012 01:26 -0500- Australia
- Austrian School of Economics
- B+
- Bank of England
- Bank of Japan
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Bond
- Borrowing Costs
- Brazil
- China
- David Einhorn
- David Rosenberg
- Evans-Pritchard
- Excess Reserves
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- Germany
- India
- Japan
- Karl Denninger
- Keynesian economics
- keynesianism
- Krugman
- Ludwig von Mises
- Mark Spitznagel
- Market Timing
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- Monetary Base
- Monetary Policy
- Money Supply
- New York Times
- non-performing loans
- Open Market Operations
- Paul Krugman
- Prudential
- Quantitative Easing
- Reality
- recovery
- Robert Reich
- Rosenberg
- Treasury Department
- TrimTabs
- Tyler Durden
- Unemployment
- Wall Street Journal
Forget Competing Theories … What Do the Facts Say about Quantitative Easing?
Guest Post: Wealth Inequality – Spitznagel Gets It, Krugman Doesn’t
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/28/2012 16:42 -0500
Krugmann fails to address even a single one of the arguments forwarded by Spitznagel. This is no surprise, as he has often demonstrated he does not even understand the arguments of the Austrians and moreover has frequently shown that his style of debate consists largely of attempts to knock down straw men. After appraising us of his economic ignorance (see the idea that time preferences can actually 'go negative' implied by his argument on the natural interest rate above), he finally closes a truly Orwellian screed by claiming that everybody who is critical of the Fed and the financial elite is guilty of being 'Orwellian'. As we often say, you really couldn't make this up.
Presenting The Source Of The "US-Europe Decoupling" Confusion
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/28/2012 14:21 -0500
Over the past several months, starting with the great US stock market surge back in October 2011 which was not paralleled by virtually any other index in the world (and especially not Spain which recently breached its March 2009 low), there has been a great deal of speculation that just because the US stock market was doing "better", that the US economy has by implication "decoupled" from Europe. Well, as yesterday's GDP number showed in Q1 the economy ended up rising at a pace that was quite disappointing, but more importantly, which even Goldman admits is due for a substantial slow down in the coming months. And ironically, in the past 6 months it was not the Fed, but the ECB, that injected over $1.3 trillion in the banking system. One would think that this epic "flow" of liquidity from the central bank would result in a surge in the only metric that matters to 'Austrians', namely the expansion in money (or in this case the widest metric officially tracked on an apples to apples basis - M2). One would be very wrong. Because as the chart below shows, while US M2 has soared from the 2009 troughs, money "movement" in Europe has barely budged at all.
News That Matters
Submitted by thetrader on 04/27/2012 12:22 -0500- B+
- Bank of England
- Bank of Japan
- Bond
- Borrowing Costs
- Central Banks
- China
- Commodity Futures Trading Commission
- Credit Line
- Credit Rating Agencies
- Deutsche Bank
- Dow Jones Industrial Average
- ETC
- European Central Bank
- European Union
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- Global Economy
- Greece
- Gross Domestic Product
- Housing Market
- India
- International Monetary Fund
- Ireland
- Italy
- Japan
- LTRO
- Mexico
- Monetary Policy
- Newspaper
- Nikkei
- None
- Obama Administration
- Ordos
- Poland
- Porsche
- Quantitative Easing
- Rating Agencies
- Rating Agency
- ratings
- Recession
- recovery
- Reuters
- Sovereign Debt
- Tax Revenue
- Timothy Geithner
- Turkey
- Vladimir Putin
- Volkswagen
- Wen Jiabao
- World Bank
- Yen
- Yuan
Better late than never. All you need to read.
Of Disasters Natural And Keynesian
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/26/2012 11:40 -0500The symbiosis between the Keynesian expansion of the economy and the growth of suburbs in US cities has been ably discussed by Beauregard (2006). Sprawl was driven by the flow of money, the "American dream" of owning a home in the suburbs, and facilitated by the widespread ownership of cars. The suburbs were designed with cars in mind. The growth of suburbs fulfilled two roles. Lots of houses were available for new buyers, which kept prices down; and city governments discovered that developer's fees and the new land taxes initially exceeded the maintenance cost of the new roads and infrastructure built to support them,. Unfortunately, as time passed and the infrastructure aged, soon maintenance costs exceeded tax revenues, necessitating another round of growth. Suburbs were able to maintain the required level of growth for a few decades, but we are reaching the point everywhere (it seems) where there cannot be enough new growth to maintain our crumbling infrastructure. The mindset of the "ownership society" really drove demand for housing, and the best places to expand were in the southwest, so that cities like Phoenix and Las Vegas really grew. Low interest rates plus easy money led to a bubble in house prices and an explosion of sprawl. The Austrian school of economics teaches us that easy money leads to malinvestment. Suburban growth certainly seems to qualify. Our urban sprawl malinvestment has left us with the interwoven problems of unlivable cities, financial crisis, and increased death and destruction from natural disasters.









