Brazil
Pam was so Big she.....
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 03/17/2015 16:24 -0500Tens of millions of people will be affected one way or the other.
America's European "Allies" Desert Obama, Join China-led Infrastructure Bank
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/17/2015 10:27 -0500It appears the sea of de-dollarization has reached the shores of Europe. With Australia and UK having already moved in the direction of joining the China-led AIIB, The FT reports that France, Germany, and Italy have now all agreed to join the development bank as 'pivot to Asia' appears to be Plan B for Europe. As Greg Sheridan previously noted, "the saga of the China Bank is almost a textbook case of the failure of Obama’s foreign policy," but as The FT concludes, the European decisions represent a significant setback for the Obama administration, which has argued that western countries could have more influence over the workings of the new bank if they stayed together on the outside. As Forbes notes, this leaves Obama with 3 uncomfortable options...
The 5 Most Crowded Trades on Wall Street: Part 2
Submitted by EconMatters on 03/17/2015 09:53 -0500The Bond bubble is not only an overcrowded trade, a bubble of historic proportions but it will cause the entire crash of the financial system.
California Is Turning Back Into A Desert And There Are No Contingency Plans
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/16/2015 21:45 -0500Once upon a time, much of the state of California was a barren desert. And now, thanks to the worst drought in modern American history, much of the state is turning back into one. Back in early 2014, California Governor Jerry Brown declared a drought emergency for the entire state, but since that time water usage has only dropped by 9 percent. That is not nearly enough. The state of California has been losing more than 12 million acre-feet of total water a year since 2011, and we are quickly heading toward an extremely painful water crisis unlike anything that any of us have ever seen before.
The Week The Fed Loses "Patience" - Previewing This Week's Main Events
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/16/2015 07:52 -0500- Australia
- BOE
- Brazil
- China
- Claimant Count
- Consumer Confidence
- Continuing Claims
- Core CPI
- CPI
- Czech
- Eurozone
- Germany
- Hong Kong
- Housing Market
- Housing Starts
- India
- Italy
- Japan
- Market Conditions
- Mexico
- Monetary Policy
- NAHB
- New Zealand
- Norway
- Philly Fed
- Poland
- Switzerland
- Testimony
- Trade Balance
- Turkey
- Ukraine
- Unemployment
- United Kingdom
- Volatility
This week's main event will be the FOMC announcement on Wednesday at 2:00 pm and the subsequent press conference, the conclusion of the March 2-day Fed meeting, in which it is widely expected that Yellen will announce the end of the Fed's "Patience" with an economy in which resurgent waiters and bartenders continue to skew the job market even if it means consistently declining wages for 80% of the US labor force. Here is a summary of what else to expect this week.
Thousands Crowd Brazil's Streets: Demand Military Intervention & Rousseff Resignation, Impeachment
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/15/2015 12:24 -0500It appears the 'people' are growing more and more dissatisfied with their corrupt and greedy leaders across the world. As we noted recently, Brazil's economy is imploding, consumer sentiment is at record lows, and with the Petrobras scandal providing a glimpse at just how deep the corruption might go, Brazilians are revolting. Hundreds of thousands are crowding the streets in several regional Brazilian capitals, dominated ironically by the middle and upper classes. Demands for "Dilma Out" and "Impeach Dilma" are also interspersed with calls for a quasi-coup and "military intervention."
Why The Dollar Is Rising As The Global Monetary Bubble Craters
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/13/2015 12:54 -0500The inevitable death of the dollar may have been delayed. The reason is simply that the other three big economies of the world - Japan, China and Europe - are in even more disastrous condition. Worse still, their governments and central banks are actually more clueless than Washington, and are conducting policies that are flat out lunatic - meaning that their faltering economies will be facing even more destructive punishment from policy makers in the days ahead. The current malignant monetary regime does not merely imply that the Wall Street casino is a dangerous place for your money. No, it screams get out of harms’ way. Now!
From Yellen Put To Yellen Massacre
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/12/2015 07:27 -0500- Apple
- BIS
- BLS
- Bond
- Brazil
- BRICs
- Carry Trade
- Central Banks
- China
- Corruption
- CRAP
- Crude
- default
- European Union
- Evans-Pritchard
- Federal Reserve
- Hong Kong
- Janet Yellen
- Lehman
- Market Crash
- Market Share
- Monetary Policy
- Morgan Stanley
- Quantitative Easing
- Recession
- recovery
- Smart Money
- Stress Test
- Yen
- Yuan
- Zurich
Yellen has created a narrative about the US economy, especially the (un)employment rate, and with the narrative is now firmly in place, Yellen and her stooges can claim they have no choice but to hike In short, Janet Yellen will go down into history as the person responsible for what may be the biggest economic crash ever, or at least delivering the final punch of the way into it, a crash that will make the rich banks even much richer. And there is not one iota of coincidence in there. Yellen works for those banks. The Fed only ever held investors’ hands because that worked out well for Wall Street. And now that’s over. Y’all are on the same side of the same trade, and there’s no profit for Wall Street that way.
Goldman Blames Weather For Stronger Oil Prices, Sees WTI Sliding Back To $40
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/09/2015 07:03 -0500As we noted over the weekend when we showed a simple contango math calculation by SocGen according to which storage costs imply another 20% drop in Brent prices, now none other than Goldman - which has been oddly bearish on oil over the past few weeks - says that its Brent forecast remains at $40/bbl for two simple reasons: i) the global inventory glut is set to resume and ii) it's the weather's fault there has been a slowdown in the crude build-up.
A Day In The Life Of A Falling BRIC
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/05/2015 13:14 -0500It’s not that long ago, in 2001, that Jim O’Neill, then still with Goldman Sachs, coined the term BRICs, for the fast emerging markets of Brazil, Russia, India and China. O’Neill saw a global power shift from the west to these four nations happening. Fast forward to today, and we see Russia under multiple attacks, including economic ones, from the west, as India just announced the second rate cut this year and China is attempting controlled demolition of the possibly biggest financial bubble in the history of the world. And Brazil? If anything, it’s falling even faster off its pedestal than the other three nations.
Canary Meet Coal Mine: Miami Condo Sales Are "Cooling Down"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/04/2015 21:30 -0500We have “early signs of new demand slowing” while “construction pricing is busting budgets beyond feasibility” in a market where “speculation abounds” in land pricing. When framed against a very unfavorable foreign exchange dynamic for the market’s most important buyers, the situation really couldn’t get much more precarious.
Nasdaq 5,000 Is Different This Time... But Not In A Good Way!
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/04/2015 14:29 -0500So today what is different is not the Wall Street spiel that Nasdaq is anchored by the likes of Apple rather than Webvan. Since the two days of March 9 and 10 in the year 2000 when the Nasdaq closed over the 5,000, the financial markets have been converted into central bank managed gambling halls and the global economy has bloated beyond recognition by 15 years of non-stop financial repression. Back then, a few hundred stocks were wildly over-valued based on monetizing eyeballs; now the entire market is drastically overvalued owing to the false financial market liquidity generated by $14 trillion of central bank asset monetization - mostly public debt - since the turn of the century. As a result, the global financial system and economy are orders of magnitude more fragile and vulnerable to collapse than they were 15 years ago.
The Next Empire
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/02/2015 20:30 -0500Throughout history, political, financial, and military leaders have sought to create empires. Great Britain owned the 19th century but lost its empire due largely to costly wars. The US took over in the 20th century and, like Rome, rose as a republic, with minimal central control, but is now crumbling under its own governmental weight. Invariably, the last people to understand the collapse of an empire are those who live within it. Americans remain hopeful that the dramatic decline is a temporary setback from which they will rebound...Not likely.
US Will Never Gain Oil Market Crown, IEA Chief Says
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/02/2015 12:36 -0500No matter how much oil the United States produces over the next few years, it will never become the next Saudi Arabia in the global oil market, according to Fatih Birol, the new executive director of the International Energy Agency (IEA). What's especially interesting about this forecast is that it directly contradicts what Birol said only three months ago, and he gave no explanation for his change of mind. “The United States will never be a major oil exporter. Their import needs are getting less but the US is not becoming Saudi Arabia,” Birol told the conference. “Their production growth is good to diversify the market but it will not solve the world’s oil problems.”
The Best And Worst Performing Assets In February And YTD
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/02/2015 07:55 -0500The best performing asset overall in 2015? Well, just tell Putin "spasibo"...





