Bond
The Calm Before The Storm?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2015 08:20 -0500The Fed has worked overtime since the 2008 crisis to produce a stability, a sense of normalcy in the economy and markets. It is a stable equilibrium now but almost any minor shock could change that dynamic for the worse and quickly. Widening credit spreads, Treasuries and gold outperforming stocks indicate that some parts of the market are already preparing for the storm. Stocks are about the only asset yet to batten down the hatches. If this is the calm before the storm, stock investors are about to get swept overboard.
China's Glencore: State-Owner Miner And Steel Trader Avoids Default With Last Minute Bailout
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2015 07:55 -0500While the macro watchers were keenly awaiting China's macroeconomic data dump on Sunday night, which was far worse than reported (as we will show shortly), a just as notable development was taking place in China's microeconomic world, where as the FT reported on Sunday, China's state-owned SinoSteel, the country's second largest importer of iron-ore, and a major miner and steel trader (yes, another commodity trader) was "poised to default on its bonds this week, the latest test of whether Beijing is willing to impose market discipline on national champion companies."
Wall Street's Latest Bounce - Ostrich Economics At Work
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2015 07:51 -0500It is more evident than ever that the world economy is heading into a deflationary conflagration, but today’s generation of house trained bulls wouldn’t recognize a warning if it slapped them upside their horns. They refused once again last week to exit the casino because they got another signal from Hilsenramp that the Fed is on “hold” until at least next March. Call it Ostrich Economics. But do it quick. Those side-effects are coming to the casino some day real soon.
Frontrunning: October 19
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2015 06:58 -0500- Great News: China’s GDP Growth Beats Forecasts as Stimulus Supports Spending (BBG)
- Oh wait, maybe not: China GDP: Deflategate Comes to Beijing (WSJ)
- Actually, definitely not: Shanghai rebar falls to record low after weak China GDP (Reuters)
- But who cares: European Shares Gain on Earnings as Bonds Drop, Metals Decline (BBG)
Futures Flat As Algos Can't Decide If Chinese "Good" Data Is Bad For Stocks, Or Just Meaningless
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2015 05:58 -0500- Australia
- Bond
- Central Banks
- China
- Consumer Sentiment
- Copper
- CPI
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Deutsche Bank
- Equity Markets
- fixed
- Flattener
- General Electric
- Germany
- Global Economy
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- High Yield
- Housing Market
- Jim Reid
- Michigan
- Morgan Stanley
- NAHB
- Nikkei
- Reality
- Saudi Arabia
- Structured Finance
- Trading Strategies
- Turkey
- University Of Michigan
- Wells Fargo
The key overnight event was the much anticipated, goalseeked and completely fabricated Chinese economic data dump, which was both good and bad depending on who was asked: bad, in that at 6.9% it was below the government's 7.0% target and the lowest since Q1 2009, and thus hinting at "more stimulus" especially since industrial production (5.7%, Exp. 6.0%) and fixed spending also both missed; it was good because it beat expectations of 6.8% by the smallest possible increment, and set the tone for much of Europe's trading session, even if Asia shares ultimately closed largely in the red over skepticism over the authenticity of the GDP results. Worse, and confirming the global economy is now one massive circular reference, China accused the Fed's rate hike plans for slowing down its economy, which is ironic because the Fed accused China's economy for forcing it to delay its rate hike.
The World Hits Its Credit Limit, And The Debt Market Is Starting To Realize That
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2015 20:36 -0500
"The Bankers Have Gone Through This Before. They Know How It Ends, And It’s Not Pretty"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2015 20:18 -0500Oil companies have sold $61.5 billion in stocks and bonds since January as oil prices have tumbled. However, the fees geneated are a tiny fraction of the bank's real exposure to the energy sector, at over $150 billion. So have the banks learned their lesson? "The bankers have gone through this before,” says Oscar Gruss’s Meyer. “They know how it works out in the end, and it’s not pretty." Then again, perhaps banks are just sailing on an ocean of liquidity allowing them to postpone the day of Mark to Market reckoning, especially since this time, everyone is in it together....
China Has Lost Control of Its Markets… Who Is Next?
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 10/18/2015 11:29 -0500China is just the latest Central Bank to lose control. Is the Fed next?
NIRP Goes To Nippon: Japan Auctions 1 Year Paper At Most Negative Yield On Record
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/17/2015 14:58 -0500What is surprising about Japan is that unlike most of Europe, which has opted to adopt a Negative Interest Rate Policy, or NIRP, is that Japan whose monetary policy became a basket case years ago - Japan is currently on QE10 - it still hasn't thrown in the "all-in" towel and announced negative rates. This may have officially changed yesterday, when in an auction that flew deep under the radar, Japan sold 1 Year (not 3 Month) Bills at the most negative yield in history, or -0.0418%, nearly doubly more negative the -0.0252% yield on the September 16 auction.
Guest Post: The False East/West Paradigm And The End Of Freedom
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2015 21:25 -0500It was clear what was about to happen in Syria only because we understood one important fundamental – that there are no “sides” in any modern conflict, only proxies fighting on a global chessboard controlled by the same elitist interests. Syria represented a perfect catalyst for a planetary scale conflict triggered between East and West in a way that could divert attention from internationalists. Modern war, whether through kinetics or economics, is almost always theater designed to distract and terrorize the masses, which are the true target of any conflagration.
How To Survive The "Deep State"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2015 20:15 -0500"Not everyone went down with The Titanic..."
QE "Barbell" Returns: Biggest Junk Bonds Inflow In 8 Months; Most Gold Buying In 7 Weeks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2015 07:45 -0500The cross asset whiplash events, coming at a furious pace unseen since 2009, continue, and while the late September surge driven by a historic short squeeze served to massively boost equities, other risk assets were also impacted. Case in point: junk bonds, which after becoming one of the most unloved asset classes in 2015 due to their exposure to energy assets, took advantage of the latest vicious squeeze in crude, and notched their biggest inflow in 8 months, even as gold just saw its biggest "QE-on" buying in the past 7 weeks.
Buying Panic Fizzles As Option Expiration Looms
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2015 05:54 -0500- Bond
- Carry Trade
- China
- Citigroup
- Cleveland Fed
- Consumer Sentiment
- Copper
- Core CPI
- CPI
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Eurozone
- fixed
- General Electric
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- headlines
- High Yield
- Honeywell
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Market Share
- Michigan
- Middle East
- Monetary Policy
- NASDAQ
- New Zealand
- Nikkei
- NYMEX
- OpEx
- Philly Fed
- Turkey
- University Of Michigan
- Yen
- Yuan
In the absence of any key economic developments in the Asian trading session, Asian stocks traded mostly under the influence of the late, pre-opex US ramp momentum courtesy of another day of ugly economic data in the US (bad econ news is good news for liquidity addicts), closing solidly in the green across the board, led by China (+1.6%) and Japan (+1.1%) thanks in no small part to the latest tumble in the Yen carry trade, which mirrored a bout of USD overnight weakness. And since a major part of the risk on move yesterday was due to Ewald Nowotny's comments welcoming more QE, news from Eurostat that Eurozone CPI in September dropped -0.1% confirming Europe's deflation continues, should only be greeted with even more buying as it suggests further easing by the ECB is inevitable.
EM FX Party's Over: Dollar Rallies In Early Asia Trading As China's Bond Bubble Gathers Pace
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/15/2015 20:17 -0500After two days of relative USD carnage in and across the emerging and asian FX markets, early AsiaPac trading this evening is seeing that trend revert with the Ringgit, Rupee, and Lira sliding. After-hours gains in US equity futures have been erased, despite USDJPY's continued BoJ-aided push higher (though it seems 119.00 is the new ceiling for now). China's government bonds remain extraordinarily bid (outperforming TSYs by almost 60bps in the last few weeks) with yields dropping to 6-year-lows, as corporate bond bubble fears rotate modestly back to govvies. Aussie miners are under pressure with Iluka Resources getting hammered on "excess capacity" warnings.
Oct 16 - Fed's Dudley: Uncertainty about China creates uncertainty about US outlook
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 10/15/2015 17:14 -0500News That Matters
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