Bank of Japan
The Revenge Of A Government On Its People
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2014 20:43 -0500We've written a lot about Japan lately as what happens today under the no longer rising sun is going to have such repercussions worldwide that it would be foolish not to pay attention. Moreover, there’s something about what Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda said this morning that both perfectly and painfully illustrates to what depths, economically as well as morally, the country has sunk.
Will the US Dollar Trigger Another 2008 Event?
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 11/05/2014 10:49 -0500The US Dollar is moving up RAPIDLY. Will this blow up the financial system as it did in 2008? We’ll soon find out.
ECB: Everything Can't Be
Submitted by Marc To Market on 11/05/2014 07:47 -0500What if we were as skeptical of the reports on the ECB as we are of the Fed ?
Futures Levitate On "Republican Rally"; Crude Rout Continues
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/05/2014 07:01 -0500- Albert Edwards
- B+
- Bank of Japan
- Bill Gross
- Bond
- China
- Copper
- Crude
- Equity Markets
- fixed
- Florida
- France
- Hong Kong
- Illinois
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Markit
- Monetary Policy
- Natural Gas
- Nikkei
- Non-manufacturing ISM
- OPEC
- PIMCO
- Precious Metals
- President Obama
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- Real estate
- Reuters
- Saudi Arabia
- Yen
While hardly a surprise, the spin for the latest round of overnight BOJ USDJPY-buying exuberance, which sent the pair higher by another 100 pips to a fresh 7 year high of 114.500 and just over 500 pips from the Albert Edwards "line in the sand" 120 and pushed US equity futures higher with it, has been the Republican sweep in the midterm elections which not only solidified GOP control of the House but also gave Republicans outright control of the Senate.
Japan's The Tinder That Set The World's Bad News On Fire
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2014 12:40 -0500We’ve been keeping the long lost idea of our long lost society alive by squeezing our own children wherever we can, and telling them that if they only work hard enough, they can be whoever they want to be. But they can’t, that notion is also long lost. When you keep home prices artificially high, homeowners don’t suffer as much, even if they bought at insanely high prices, but the suffering is switched to potential buyers, who remain just that, potential, while they live in their mom’s basements for years. A surefire way to kill a society while everyone’s eagerly awaiting the growth that is just around the corner and will forever remain there. Take it from your kids. Take it from somewhere else in the world. And that’s where we’re now passing a barrier: there’s no-one to take it from anymore.
"Japan's Debt Market Could Crash In Ways That Make The Collapse Of Lehman Look Like A Warm-up"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2014 10:20 -0500"In announcing that it will boost purchases of government bonds to a record annual pace of $709 billion, the central bank has just added further fuel to the most obvious bond bubble in modern history -- and helped create a fresh one on stocks. Once the laws of finance, and gravity, reassert themselves, Japan's debt market could crash in ways that make the 2008 collapse of Lehman Brothers look like a warm-up. Worse, because Japan's interest-rate environment is so warped, investors won't have the usual warning signs of market distress. Even before Friday's bond-buying move, Japan had lost its last honest tool of price discovery. When a nation that needs 16 digits in yen terms to express its national debt (it reached 1,000,000,000,000,000 yen in August 2013) sees benchmark yields falling, you've entered the financial Twilight Zone. Good luck fairly pricing corporate, asset-backed or mortgage-backed securities."
Alan Greenspan To Marc Faber: "I Never Said The Fed Was Independent"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/03/2014 22:02 -0500"I was on a panel with Alan Greenspan a week ago... I said, you mean to say that the Federal Reserve is not independent? He immediately said, Marc, I never said the Fed was independent. In other words, the Fed and the Treasury and the government is basically one and the same."
"Japan is engaged in a Ponzi scheme"
"The oil price decline is not necessarily very good for the US - if oil prices went lower, it may actually have an adverse impact on the US economy"
Bubble Exit Rule: "You Only Get Out If You Panic Before Everyone Else Does"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/03/2014 16:39 -0500The problem with what we call the Exit Rule for Bubbles - "you only get out if you panic before everyone else does" – is that you also have to decide whether to look like an idiot before the crash or an idiot after it.
Japan's Monetary Pearl Harbor
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/03/2014 15:21 -0500The Bank of Japan's surprise expansion of financial stimulus strikes me as the monetary equivalent of Pearl Harbor --not in the sense of launching a pre-emptive war (though the move does raise the odds of a global currency war), but in the sense of a leadership pursuing a Grand Strategy to the point of self-destruction because they have no alternative within their intellectual and political framework. Trying to "fix" a sclerotic, inefficient state-cartel economy by boosting inflation--the ultimate goal of Japan's Monetary Pearl Harbor-- is a self-liquidating path to destruction.
It's 2007 All Over… Except the Fed is Effectively Out of Ammo
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 11/03/2014 10:16 -0500In simple terms… we’re back in 2007, but the Fed will have very real limitations to what it can do when this bubble pops. And it will pop in the not so distant future.
Euro Suddenly Crashes On No News
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/02/2014 19:54 -0500Two weeks ago, this happened to the world's allegedly most liquid On The Run bond on no news, which subsequently sent the entire market plunging before James Bullard was forced to hint at QE4 and send the market into a short-selling spasm that has since seen it hit record highs. Now, the "stability" of the world's (formerly) most liquid market has shifted to what used to be the most liquid FX pair, the EURUSD, which moments ago, on no new whatsoever - again - imploded, plunging to the weakest level since August 2012.
Keynesian Shangri-La From Myth To Reality
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/02/2014 12:48 -0500In less than the time it takes for a chrysalis to release one of life’s remarkable transformations, many once called “capitalists” woke to find the world they once new changed into something only dreamed or told in folklore. In this new fairytale land there must certainly be a pot of gold at the end of every “rainbow.” However, one would be mistaken. For one must remember this is a “Keynesian Shangri-la” and gold here is useless. Today, at the end of these self propagated rainbows lies a Central Bank ready and willing to print as much money as one needs to see those vivid colors so plainly; only the term Technicolor® seems appropriate as a descriptor. “Markets right themselves with pain… That’s Capitalism. Back room manipulation to avoid pain only increases the severity of the pain to be felt down the road.”
Divergence Aids Dollar, but No Currency War
Submitted by Marc To Market on 11/02/2014 11:06 -0500When Calpers buys an international asset for its investors, is it intervening in the forex market on behalf of the US?
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The Experiment that Will Blow Up the World
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/02/2014 10:08 -0500Japan’s aging population needs rising prices like a hole in the head. The more “successful” Mr. Kuroda becomes in forcing prices up, the less money people will have to spend and invest. The economy will weaken, not strengthen, as a result. The advantages the export sector currently enjoys are paid for by the entire rest of the economy. moreover, even this advantage is fleeting. It only exists as long as domestic prices have not yet fully adjusted to the fall in the currency’s value. If one could indeed debase oneself to prosperity, it would long ago have been demonstrated by someone. While money supply growth in Japan has remained tame so far, the “something for nothing” trick implied by the BoJ’s massive debt monetization scheme is destined to end in a catastrophe unless it is stopped in time. Once confidence actually falters, it will be too late.
Central Bankers Would Rather Blow Up the Entire System Than Admit Failure
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 11/01/2014 11:38 -0500This is only going to usher in the next round of the Great Crisis that much faster. Only this time around, entire countries will go bust, NOT just banks.




