BOE
Unprecedented Global Monetary Policy As World Trade Volume Craters
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/02/2012 13:02 -0500
With the IMF cutting its global growth forecasts and signs of slowing evident in the dramatic contraction in World Trade Volume in the last few months, it is perhaps no surprise that the central banks of the world have embarked upon what Goldman Sachs calls an 'Unprecedented Alignment of Monetary Policy Across Countries'. Our earlier discussion of the European event risk vs global growth expectations dilemma along with last night's comments on the impact of tightening lending standards around the world also confirms that this policy globalization is still going strong and is likely to continue as gaming out the situation (as Goldman has done) left optimal CB strategy as one-in-all-in with no benefit to any from migrating away from the equilibrium of 'we all print together'. Perhaps gold (and silver's) move today (and for the last few months) reflects this sad reality that all your fiat money are belong to us, as nominal prices rise (but underperform PMs) in equities (and risky sovereigns and financials).
2012: The Year Of Hyperactive Central Banks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/31/2012 13:03 -0500Back in January 2010, when in complete disgust of the farce that the market has become, and where fundamentals were completely trumped by central bank intervention, we said, that "Zero Hedge long ago gave up discussing corporate fundamentals due to our long-held tenet that currently the only relevant pieces of financial information are contained in the Fed's H.4.1, H.3 statements." This capitulation in light of the advent of the Central Planner of Last Resort juggernaut was predicated by our belief that ever since 2008, the only thing that would keep the world from keeling over and succumbing to the $20+ trillion in excess debt (excess to a global debt/GDP ratio of 180%, not like even that is sustainable!) would be relentless central bank dilution of monetary intermediaries, read, legacy currencies, all to the benefit of hard currencies such as gold. Needless to say gold back then was just over $1000. Slowly but surely, following several additional central bank intervention attempts, the world is once again starting to realize that everything else is noise, and the only thing that matters is what the Fed, the ECB, the BOE, the SNB, the PBOC and the BOJ will do. Which brings us to today's George Glynos, head of research at Tradition, who basically comes to the same conclusion that we reached 2 years ago, and which the market is slowly understand is the only way out today (not the relentless bid under financial names). The note's title? "If 2011 was the year of the eurozone crisis, 2012 will be the year of the central banks." George is spot on. And it is this why we are virtually certain that by the end of the year, gold will once again be if not the best performing assets, then certainly well north of $2000 as the 2009-2011 playbook is refreshed. Cutting to the chase, here are Glynos' conclusions.
Daily US Opening News And Market Re-Cap: January 25
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/25/2012 08:28 -0500The advance reading of Q4 UK GDP released today came in at -0.2%, slightly below expectations, however many market participants had feared a worse outcome for the indicator, allowing the GBP to pare the losses made in the lead-up to the GDP announcement. The Bank of England minutes released today have shown that the MPC unanimously agreed to keep the UK rate at 0.5%, and maintain the volume of the APF, however they also revealed that some MPC members saw the need for further QE in the future. Despite higher than expected German IFO Business Climate data this morning, European indices are trading in negative territory, with technology and financial stocks suffering the highest losses. This has seen asset reallocations into safe havens, which has seen Bunds outperform for the morning.
Frontrunning: January 25
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/25/2012 07:16 -0500- Allen Stanford
- Apple
- Barack Obama
- BOE
- Bond
- China
- Consumer protection
- European Central Bank
- Federal Tax
- Finland
- Germany
- Global Economy
- Greece
- Hungary
- International Monetary Fund
- Italy
- Meltdown
- Money Supply
- Netherlands
- NYSE Euronext
- ratings
- RBS
- Recession
- Reuters
- Romania
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Sovereign Debt
- Steve Jobs
- Toyota
- Trade Deficit
- World Bank
- Yen
- Angela Merkel casts doubt on saving Greece from financial meltdown (Guardian)
- Germany Rejects ‘Indecent’ Call to ECB on Greece, Meister Says (Bloomberg)
- Obama Calls for Higher Taxes on Wealthy (Bloomberg)
- Fed set to push back timing of eventual rate hike (Reuters)
- Recession Looms As UK Economy Shrinks By 0.2%, more than expected (SKY)
- King Says BOE Can Increase Bond Purchases If Needed to Meet Inflation Goal (Bloomberg)
- When One Quadrillion Yen is not enough: Japan's first trade deficit since 1980 raises debt doubts (Reuters)
- Sarkozy to quit if he loses poll (FT)
- U.S. Shifts Policy on Nuclear Pacts (WSJ)
- ECB under pressure over Greek bond hit (FT)
Weekly Recap And Key Events In The Coming Week
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/22/2012 20:18 -0500The market will look for any signal on the pace of discussions over the ESM pre-funding details and the fiscal compact. Flash PMIs in the Eurozone and the IFO will also be key to watch given market fears over the activity impact of tight fiscal policy linked to the Eurozone fiscal crisis. Attention will likely shift to the US this week. Q4 GDP will likely exceed 3% mostly due to one-off drivers and less so due a genuine pick-up in final demand in our view. The FOMC statement and press conference are unlikely to lead to a change in US monetary policy. However, we will be focusing on the publication of the FOMC participants’ views of appropriate policy (specifically the path for the federal funds rate and guidance for the size of the balance sheet going forward). In addition, President Obama will give his State of the Union speech Tuesday night.
$10 TRILLION Liquidity Injection Coming? Credit Suisse Hunkers Down Ahead Of The European Endgame
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/17/2012 13:03 -0500
When yesterday we presented the view from CLSA's Chris Wood that the February 29 LTRO could be €1 Trillion (compared to under €500 billion for the December 21 iteration), we snickered, although we knew quite well that the market response, in stocks and gold, today would be precisely as has transpired. However, after reading the report by Credit Suisse's William Porter, we no longer assign a trivial probability to some ridiculous amount hitting the headlines early in the morning on February 29. Why? Because from this moment on, the market will no longer be preoccupied with a €1 trillion LTRO number as the potential headline, one which in itself would be sufficient to send the Euro tumbling, the USD surging, and provoking an immediate in kind response from the Fed. Instead, the new 'possible' number is just a "little" higher, which intuitively would make sense. After all both S&P and now Fitch expect Greece to default on March 20 (just to have the event somewhat "priced in"). Which means that in an attempt to front-run the unprecedented liquidity scramble that will certainly result as nobody has any idea what would happen should Greece default in an orderly fashion, let alone disorderly, the only buffer is having cash. Lots of it. A shock and awe liquidity firewall that will leave everyone stunned. How much. According to Credit Suisse the new LTRO number could be up to a gargantuan, and unprecedented, €10 TRILLION!
How Safe Are Central Banks? UBS Worries The Eurozone Is Different
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/16/2012 01:34 -0500With Fed officials a laughing stock (both inside and outside the realm of FOMC minutes), Bank of Japan officials ever-watching eyes, and ECB officials in both self-congratulatory (Draghi) and worryingly concerned on downgrades (Nowotny), the world's central bankers appear, if nothing else, convinced that all can be solved with the printing of some paper (and perhaps a measure of harsh words for those naughty spendaholic politicians). The dramatic rise in central bank balance sheets and just-as-dramatic fall in asset quality constraints for collateral are just two of the items that UBS's economist Larry Hatheway considers as he asks (and answers) the critical question of just how safe are central banks. As he sees bloated balance sheets relative to capital and the impact when 'stuff happens', he discusses why the Eurozone is different (no central fiscal authority backstopping it) and notes it is less the fear of large losses interfering with liquidity provision directly but the more massive (and explicit) intrusion of politics into the 'independent' heart of central banking that creates the most angst. While he worries for the end of central bank independence (most specifically in Europe), we remind ourselves of the light veil that exists currently between the two and that the tooth fairy and santa don't have citizen-suppressing printing presses.
Bob Janjuah Ushers In The New Year: "Here We Go Again!"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/10/2012 08:09 -0500Bob Janjuah, despite never leaving, is once again back, even if he really has nothing new to say: "Western policy makers, at the national and G20/IMF level, still seem to have no response to solvency problems other than printing more money, loading on more debt, and hoping that "time" sorts it all out. In other words, the extension of ponzi schemes which are being used to cover up our lack of competitiveness and real productivity growth through the use of money debasement and leverage....Apologies to all for not telling you anything new or very different. One day, when we collectively abandon the neo-communist experiment in the West that relies on more debt and printing money in order to maintain the status quo, then I will hopefully have a different and far more positive view of the years ahead. I look forward to this time. But for now, expect more of the same as in 2011. And I know it's a few weeks early, but as I am unlikely to write anything for at least a month, Kung Hei Fat Choi. The year of the dragon will soon be upon us."
Frontrunning: January 10
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/10/2012 07:23 -0500- Italy Is Biggest Risk to Euro, Says Fitch (WSJ)
- Greek Bailout in Peril (WSJ)
- Swiss Currency Test Looms for SNB’s Jordan in Race to Replace Hildebrand (Bloomberg)
- Daley to Depart as Obama Shifts Strategy From Compromise to Confrontation (Bloomberg)
- BOE Stimulus Expansion May Not Be Enough to Revive U.K. Recovery, BCC Says (Bloomberg)
- Geithner in China to Discuss Yuan, Iran (Bloomberg)
- China Won’t See Hard Landing in 2012, Former PBOC Adviser Yu Yongding Says (Bloomberg)
- Measures to boost China financial markets (China Daily)
- Obama Panel to Watch Beijing (WSJ)
Key Events In The Following Week
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/08/2012 14:18 -0500The meeting between Merkel and Sarkozy on Monday is likely to be the main focus of next week, as well as continued debate of the Greek PSI. Overall, this process is likely to push the EUR lower in the next couple of weeks, while the missing details for better fiscal policy coordination are getting negotiated. On the macro side, IP in Germany will have slowed by 0.2% mom in November and consensus expects the aggregate Euro-zone IP to have contracted by the same amount. But we also get November IP in many other places, including the UK and India. Already released over the weekend, Chinese money supply data has been stronger than expected and the amount of new loans issues in December is clear evidence of policy easing.
Bill Gross Exposes "The New Paranormal" In Which "The Financial Markets And Global Economies Are At Great Risk"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/04/2012 07:50 -0500- Bank of England
- Bill Gross
- BOE
- Bond
- Central Banks
- Commercial Paper
- Creditors
- default
- European Central Bank
- Federal Reserve
- Fractional Reserve Banking
- Great Depression
- Iran
- Japan
- Lehman
- LTRO
- Meredith Whitney
- MF Global
- New Normal
- PIMCO
- Reality
- Sovereign Debt
- Sovereigns
- Unemployment
- Volatility
- Yield Curve
In his latest letter, Bill Gross, obviously for his own reasons, essentially channels Zero Hedge, and repeats everything we have been saying over the past 3 years. We'll take that as a compliment. Next thing you know he will convert the TRF into a gold-only physical fund in anticipation of the wrong-end of the "fat tail" hitting reality head on at full speed, and sending the entire house of centrally planned cards crashing down. "How many ways can you say “it’s different this time?” There’s “abnormal,” “subnormal,” “paranormal” and of course “new normal.” Mohamed El-Erian’s awakening phrase of several years past has virtually been adopted into the lexicon these days, but now it has an almost antiquated vapor to it that reflected calmer seas in 2011 as opposed to the possibility of a perfect storm in 2012. The New Normal as PIMCO and other economists would describe it was a world of muted western growth, high unemployment and relatively orderly delevering. Now we appear to be morphing into a world with much fatter tails, bordering on bimodal. It’s as if the Earth now has two moons instead of one and both are growing in size like a cancerous tumor that may threaten the financial tides, oceans and economic life as we have known it for the past half century. Welcome to 2012...For 2012, in the face of a delevering zero-bound interest rate world, investors must lower return expectations. 2–5% for stocks, bonds and commodities are expected long term returns for global financial markets that have been pushed to the zero bound, a world where substantial real price appreciation is getting close to mathematically improbable. Adjust your expectations, prepare for bimodal outcomes. It is different this time and will continue to be for a number of years. The New Normal is “Sub,” “Ab,” “Para” and then some. The financial markets and global economies are at great risk."
Another Currency Runs Out: BOE Introduces "Collateral Term Repo Facility" To Deal With Sterling "Shortages"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/06/2011 11:56 -0500When yet another central bank, in this case the BOE, proactively uses the word "shock" in relation to funding deficiency (in this case the GBP) if even with the phrases "contingency" and "there is currently no shortage" a brief week after the global central bank cartel did the same to assure the world of USD funding availability, it may be time to wonder i) just how bad is the global FX crunch in any currency (EUR most certainly included - see near record ECB deposit facility usage), ii) just how broken is the shadow banking system - as a reminder with Lehman it was money markets (a major component of shadow liquidity), now it is repo (smaller, but still critical component of shadow banking) that is failing and iii) when will this crisis escalate to the next logical step?
Knee Jerk Responses To BOE "Aggressive" QE Expansion
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/06/2011 06:27 -0500Reuters summarizes the immediate responses from Wall Street on the BOE's surprising and substantial QE expansion.
Gold Nears $1,900 - Venezuela Formally Requests Gold Holdings Held By BOE Ship By Sea
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/22/2011 06:55 -0500The dumb money continues to warn that gold and silver are bubbles. Their simplistic bubble thesis is based almost exclusively on the nominal US dollar price and recent price movements and on the assumption that (to paraphrase) ‘gold has gone up in price a lot - therefore it is a bubble’. There is a continuing failure to look at the important supply and demand fundamentals of the gold and silver markets which leads to unsound reasoning and irrational conclusions. There is also a failure to adjust for inflation. There is little knowledge of the very small size of the physical bullion markets vis-à-vis the stock, bond, currency and other markets. There is also very little knowledge of financial, economic and monetary history and a continuing ignorance regarding ‘investment 101’ which is diversification.
Today's Eurobank Rates Decisions: BOE Unchanged; ECB 25 Bps Hike
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/07/2011 05:57 -0500Today, the ECB will probably raise the benchmark rate to 1.5 percent, while the Bank of England will leave rates and its bond purchase program unchanged, according to economists. Per Reuters, "concern about the pace of economic recovery looks set to persuade the Bank of England to keep interest rates at rock-bottom not just this week but for months to come. UK interest rates have stood at 0.5 percent since March 2009, when a deep recession and the threat of deflation prompted central banks around the world to slash rates to record lows. Since then, inflation in Britain has returned as a force to be reckoned with. Consumer prices are rising more than twice as fast as the BoE would like, but it has been reluctant to tighten monetary policy when the government's massive fiscal tightening is already crimping growth. "The Bank can do nothing about inflation over the next six months, and will not try to," said Paul Mortimer-Lee, chief global economist at BNP Paribas. While the European Central Bank looks set to raise rates this month -- its second move since April -- all 70 economists polled by Reuters last week predicted that the BoE's key rate would stay at 0.5 percent." So with inflation at 4.5%, double the target rate, there is speculation the BOE may even commence another round of QE: "Minutes to the meeting observed that "the current weakness of demand growth was likely to persist for longer than previously thought". And several policymakers -- not just arch-dove Adam Posen -- considered that more quantitative easing could be warranted in the future if growth remained weak. Most economists, however, believe printing more money is unlikely short of a disorderly Greek debt default or similar financial crisis. "Many investors remain wary about QE and the monetary policy committee might find it difficult to sell the idea to markets with the current rate of inflation so far above target," said Philip Shaw at Investec." There is no such fear at the ECB yet: after all that particular bank's monetizations occure via separate CDOs and SPVs. Yet if Trichet does not do the expected 0.25% hike, look for the EURUSD to tumble at least 150 pips.



