Bank of Japan
Have Central Banks Brought Us Back to 2008… or 1929?
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 07/18/2015 11:34 -0500The last time these criteria were met... stocks plunged over 90% over the next 24 months.
Japan's Economic Disaster: Real Wages Lowest Since 1990, Record Numbers Describe "Hard" Living Conditions
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/15/2015 19:00 -0500With so much attention rightly focused on China at the moment, people aren’t paying enough attention to the budding economic calamity unfolding in Japan. While “Abenomics” has succeeded in boosting the stock market and food prices, it has utterly failed to raise wages. In fact, wages adjusted for inflation have plunged to the lowest since 1990. As such, a record number of households now describe their living conditions as “somewhat hard” or “very hard.”
"The Stock Market Is Too Important To Leave To The Vagaries Of An Actual Market"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/15/2015 18:26 -0500The stock market is just too important to leave to the vagaries of an actual market now. Too much depends on good-looking numbers now. It must be guided and controlled, or else the stilts on which our global financial system balances become shakier and more visible. The market must be rendered increasingly meaningless simply because it's too meaningful to our current economic system.
Chinese Stock Plunge Resumes With 1200 Stocks Halted Limit Down; Yellen, Greek Elections On Deck
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/15/2015 05:44 -0500- Bank Lending Survey
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank of Japan
- Beige Book
- BOE
- Bond
- China
- Copper
- CPI
- Credit Conditions
- Credit Suisse
- Creditors
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Economic Calendar
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- Germany
- Global Economy
- Greece
- headlines
- House Financial Services Committee
- Housing Bubble
- Iran
- Italy
- Janet Yellen
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Monetary Base
- Monetary Policy
- NFIB
- Nikkei
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- Real estate
- Reality
- Recession
- recovery
- Shenzhen
- Testimony
- Tim Geithner
- Unemployment
- US Bancorp
- Wells Fargo
- Yen
Just when the Chinese plunge protection team (and "arrest shortie" task force) seemed to be finally getting "malicious selling" under control, first we saw a crack yesterday when the composite broke the surge of the past three days as a result of yet another spike in margin debt funded purchases, but it was last night's reminder that "good news is bad news" that really confused the stock trading farmers and grandmas, which goalseeked Chinese economic "data" beat across the board, with Q2 GDP coming solidly above expectations at 7.0%, and retail sales and industrial production both beating, but in the process raising doubts that the PBOC will continue supporting stocks.
David Einhorn Says Varoufakis "Must Not Be Familiar With The Tyler Durden School Of Negotiation"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/13/2015 18:28 -0500"Mr. Varoufakis, who kept reminding everyone that he is a professor of game theory, believed that the European leaders would prefer to make concessions now rather than manage the disruption of a Greek default. He must not be familiar with the Tyler Durden school of negotiation: the first rule of using game theory is you do not talk about using game theory. What’s more obvious is that Syriza didn’t understand what the game is."
Week Ahead Outlook (conditional)
Submitted by Marc To Market on 07/12/2015 09:33 -0500Next week's key events and data, if we can look beyond Greece and China.
Five Years Of Glorious IMF "Hockey Stick" Comedy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/09/2015 10:37 -0500Who cares about constantly being wrong right here, right now (aside from 11 million Greeks that is) when your projections keep promising that growth is always "just around the corner" as they do in the following chart showing just why the IMF has now lost all credibility not only as an bailouter of last resort (see Greece), but as a forecaster.Presenting: over five years of glorious IMF hockeysticks.
Greece is Just the First of MANY Countries That Will Be Going Belly-Up
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 07/07/2015 10:53 -0500The Big Crisis, the one in which entire countries go bust, has begun. It will not unfold in a matter of weeks; these sorts of things take months to complete. But it has begun.
The Global Template For Collapse: The Enchanting Charms Of Cheap, Easy Credit
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/30/2015 08:26 -0500Cheap, easy credit has created moral hazard and nurtured magical thinking throughout the global economy.
"When The Unwind Comes, It Comes Sharply As The Exit Door Is Tiny"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/24/2015 11:09 -0500“There are three things that matter in the bond market these days: liquidity, liquidity and liquidity. When the unwind comes, like we’ve seen in the past few months, it comes abruptly and sharply as the exit door is tiny"...
The "Smart Money" Just Sold The Most Stocks In History
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/23/2015 18:06 -0500According to BofA's Jill Hall, "BofAML clients were big net sellers of US stocks in the amount of $4.1bn, following four weeks of net buying. Net sales were the largest since January 2008 and led by institutional clients—after three weeks of net buying, institutional clients’ net sales last week were the largest in our data history."
China Soars 7% Off The Lows, Global Stocks Continue Rising On Ongoing "Greek Deal Optimism"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/23/2015 05:55 -0500- Bank of Japan
- Bank Run
- Bear Market
- BOE
- Bond
- Carry Trade
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Copper
- Creditors
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Equity Markets
- Eurozone
- Fail
- France
- Germany
- Greece
- headlines
- Italy
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Market Share
- Markit
- Monetary Policy
- New Home Sales
- Nikkei
- Portugal
- RANSquawk
- recovery
- Reuters
- Richmond Fed
- Saudi Arabia
- Ukraine
Before taking a look at Europe, an update on China. Just a few short hours ago, when looking at the bursting of the Chinese bubble where stocks were down between 3% and 5% across the board in the first post-holiday trading session after the worst week in 7 years, we said that "without assistance (levitation) from the same PBOC that just clamped down on liquidity, the China bubble has burst." And then as if by request, minutes later we got, drumroll, levitation and the stickiest stick-save by the PBOC seen in months, when the Shanghai Composite staged an unprecedented 7% surge from the lows to close 2.2% higher after tumbling as much as 5% earlier in the session. And just like that, faith in the "wealth effect" is preserved.
The Lesson In China: Don't Go Bubble In the First Place
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/20/2015 19:45 -0500What the stock bubble shows is the unthinkable degree of difficulty in trying to actually manage letting air out of any bubble in an orderly fashion. It may already be too late, as growth declines still further month by month, but stock prices go even more insane, drawing in more and more “retail” accounts and regular Chinese. In other words, the reform idea may have been impossible from the start; that the PBOC went ahead anyway, and still continues despite all that has happened, more than suggests that they now recognize the most dangerous existence is asset bubbles, far and away more important than even “necessary” growth.
"Calm Reigns" Everywhere As Greece Inches Closer To Default, China Crashes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/19/2015 05:58 -0500- Bank of Japan
- Bank Run
- Bond
- Central Banks
- China
- Copper
- Core CPI
- CPI
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- default
- Deutsche Bank
- Equity Markets
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Greece
- Head and Shoulders
- headlines
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Italy
- Janet Yellen
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Monetary Base
- Monetary Policy
- NASDAQ
- NASDAQ Composite
- Natural Gas
- Nikkei
- Norges Bank
- Norway
- OpEx
- Portugal
- Precious Metals
- Price Action
- Reality
- Reuters
- Risk Management
- Russell 2000
- Sovereign Debt
- Swiss National Bank
European shares remain higher, close to intraday highs, with the autos and travel & leisure sectors outperforming and basic resources, utilities underperforming. Meeting of finance officials to reach a deal over Greek aid ended in frustration, forcing leaders to call for an emergency summit for Monday. ECB plans to hold an emergency session of its Governing Council on Friday to discuss a deterioration in liquidity at Greek banks, three people familiar said. German airwave auction raises $5.7b to top 2010 sale. Bank of Japan leaves monetary policy unchanged as forecast. Shanghai Composite Index capped its worst weekly decline in seven years.
Stocks Could Lose 90% of Their Value in the Next Two Years
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 06/12/2015 14:11 -0500The similarities between today and the 1929 era suggest a massive crash could be appraoching.




