Black Swan
David Stockman Warns, They Don't Ring A Bell At The Top
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/15/2014 19:07 -0500Needless to say, this relentless expansion of the bubble eventually kills off the bears, the skeptics, the prudent and even the militantly incredulous. Undoubtedly, that is where we are now because the global economic news has been uniformly negative since the October dip, yet the market has resumed its relentless melt-up. Under such circumstances, therefore, it is well to remember that we are in the middle of the greatest central bank fueled inflation in recorded history, and that this insidious inflation has been channeled into financial assets owing to the arrival of peak debt everywhere around the world. But that is the Achilles heel of the game. As the bubble takes on ever greater girth, it becomes increasingly susceptible to a negative shock to confidence.
"Turn Those Machines Back On" - The Day The Bond Market Died (If Only For A Few Minutes)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/10/2014 10:34 -0500while the algos would have been delighted to let October 15 slide into the collective memory made obsolete by a constantly rising market (because investors are only truly angry when the market plunges not when it surges) just as the regulators made a mockery of their fiduciary responsibilities in the aftermath of May 6, and now markets are more fragile than ever as HFTs comprise the vast majority of all trades, some appear to be complaining and even, gasp, asking questions how it is possible that the $12 trillion US Treasury market traded like an illiquid Pink Sheets pennystock, or worse, the Nikkei.Here is the WSJ with some of the complaints: “It starts moving faster and faster, and you can’t point to anything."Actually, yes you can.
Central Planners Are In A State Of Panic
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/07/2014 10:06 -0500The central planners are in a state of fear and panic. They are trying everything and anything to create market validation for their policies, watching with trepidation as their favored economic metrics fail to respond to all of their frenzied efforts. They are so far over the tips of their skis right now that there's nothing they won't do. By the time a central bank is behaving as recklessly as Japan, it's time to edge towards the exit, because the chance of a flash fire in the building has grown uncomfortably high. That is, instead of providing comfort, these most recent moves should invoke greater worry for those of us alert enough to see them for what they are: acts of panic.
Does this Black Swan look like a Grey Goose?
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 11/04/2014 18:14 -0500In the previous 125 years of the Global economy, no two events overshadow the system fragility of the financial system as the economic woes of the 1920’s and 1930’s and the crisis of 2008.
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Things That Make You Go Hmmm... Like The Swiss Gold Status Quo Showdown
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/28/2014 20:52 -0500- B+
- Black Swan
- BOE
- Brazil
- Central Banks
- China
- Cliff Asness
- Consumer Prices
- Gold Bugs
- Greece
- Housing Bubble
- Housing Market
- Housing Prices
- Jim Chanos
- Krugman
- Monetary Policy
- Netherlands
- Newspaper
- Paul Krugman
- Precious Metals
- Purchasing Power
- Rick Santelli
- Swiss Franc
- Swiss National Bank
- Switzerland
- Zurich
The Swiss establishment has been reliant upon the public’s ignorance, but now they are up against a formidable opponent in Egon von Greyerz. Not only that, but they can clearly see that, as elsewhere around the world, the public is fast becoming disenchanted with the status quo; and that is potentially very dangerous for these people. What is important to understand here is that if the initiative passes it will be part of the Swiss constitution IMMEDIATELY - as some are suggesting. This means that the government and parliament cannot touch it. Only another referendum can change it. This is proper democracy for you. The closer we get to the vote on November 30, the bigger this story is going to become, and the bigger it becomes, the higher the chance that the yes vote wins. Should that happen, it will undoubtedly set off alarm bells throughout the gold market, as yet more physical gold will need to be repatriated and another sizeable, price-insensitive buyer will enter the marketplace.
When Confidence Crumbles
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2014 17:36 -0500The confidence in the people who are supposedly, as well as supposed to be “in charge” is doing more than just dwindling. It’s crumbling in Humpty Dumpty like fashion. For no matter how they try – it too may never go back together. Once confidence wanes, or is lost, regaining it can be just as monumental of a task than the actual crisis itself.
Crash 2014?
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 10/16/2014 15:29 -0500Is It Fair to compare this sell off to the Great Recession of 2008 and 2009?
When 'The American Dream' Meme Fails
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/13/2014 21:57 -0500Welcome to the diminishing returns of the global economy. How long do we pretend that all the refugees are welcome to come here, bleeding from their eyes and noses, as their dreams of laying sod for $6-an-hour or slaughtering chickens for the greater glory of Colonel Sanders collide with the diminishing returns of yet another Elon Musk sales pitch for the blessed denizens of Palo Alto aspiring to Godhood.
The Calm Before The Storm In The Gold Market
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/10/2014 18:43 -0500Physical gold is being accumulated and used in exchanges but very discretely as of now. The geopolitical and economic environment in the last few months was in my view the calm before the storm. Both the economic and political environments are uncertain and will surprise the complacent markets.
Prepared? When Ebola hits your town you will want to be antifragile.
Submitted by hedgeless_horseman on 10/02/2014 13:38 -0500Stop trying to predict what exactly the Black Swans will be (not likely), when a Black Swan will arrive at our doorstep (less likely), and start trying to be more antifragile
RX For Revisionist Bunkum: A Lehman Bailout Wouldn’t Have Saved The Economy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/30/2014 21:37 -0500Here come the revisionists with new malarkey about the 2008 financial crisis. No less august a forum than the New York Times today carries a front page piece by journeyman financial reporter James Stewart suggesting that Lehman Brothers was solvent; could and should have been bailed out; and that the entire trauma of the financial crisis and Great Recession might have been avoided or substantially mitigated. That is not just meretricious nonsense; its a measure of how thoroughly corrupted public discourse about the fundamental financial and economic realities of the present era has become owing to the cult of central banking. The great error of September 2008 was not in failing to bailout Lehman. It was in providing a $100 billion liquidity hose to Morgan Stanley and an even larger one to Goldman. They too were insolvent. That was the essence of their business model. Fed policies inherently generate runs, and then it stands ready with limitless free money to rescue the gamblers. You can call that pragmatism, if you like. But don’t call it capitalism.
The Bill Gross Effect: German Stocks, European Bonds, & US Credit Markets Are Plunging
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/26/2014 08:23 -0500Black Swan? Having seen liquidations of a relatively small fund yesterday send the NASDAQ down 2% and credit reeling, world bond and stock markets are reacting aggressively to Bill Gross' move from PIMCO. German stocks (PIMCO's parent Allianz is the 7th largest stock in DAX) are tumbling, European peripheral bond spreads are pushing wider (major holdings of PIMCO) and US credit markets are getting smashed (PIMCO is a major player in CDS markets and obviously a huge holder of US corporate debt) and concerns spread of redemptions triggering the kind of liquidity suck out we described yesterday.
5 U.S. Banks Each Have More Than 40 Trillion Dollars In Exposure To Derivatives
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/25/2014 20:11 -0500When is the U.S. banking system going to crash? We can sum it up in three words. Watch the derivatives. It used to be only four, but now there are five "too big to fail" banks in the United States that each have more than 40 trillion dollars in exposure to derivatives.
The Black Swan Of Scotland
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/10/2014 20:00 -0500Billions of dollars have already been lost in just a few days, since everybody realized the UK may actually split up. Many more billions will be lost in the coming week, as measures of volatility go through the roof. Neither the Yes side nor the No side have gone into this thing terribly prepared; there are a zillion questions surrounding the independence issue that won’t be solved before the vote takes place. Passports, currencies, central banks, monetary unions, there’s too much even to mention. Somewhere, emanating from the old crypts and burrows in which Britain was founded, we fear a hideous force may emerge to crush the Scottish people’s desire for self-determination, if only because that desire is a major threat to some very rich and powerful entities who found themselves as unprepared as Downing Street 10.
The Underbelly Of Corporate America: Insider Selling, Stock Buy-Backs, Dodgy Profits
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/02/2014 10:02 -0500The hollowing out of corporate strengths to enable short-term profiteering by the handful at the top leads to systemic fragility. No shock is needed to bring down these fragile corporate structures: existing debt and the slightest tremor of global recession will be enough to topple the rickety facade.




