Central Banks
Here's How To Trigger A Bank Run
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/30/2015 18:00 -0500What should the rational investor do in an environment of ongoing financial repression? If you wanted to trigger a bank run, this is certainly how you might go about it.
2015: The Last Christmas In America
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/30/2015 16:30 -0500The game of enabling more debt by lowering interest rates and loosening lending standards is coming to an end. Debt is not a sustainable substitute for income, and households are increasingly waking up to this realization. Say good-bye to Christmas, America, and debt-based spending in general--except, of course, for the federal government, which can always borrow another couple trillion dollars on the backs of our grandchildren.
The Lull Before The Storm - An Ideal Chance To Exit The Casino, Part 1
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/30/2015 15:40 -0500Last night’s Asia action brought another warning that the global deflation cycle is accelerating. Iron ore broke below $40 per ton for the first time since the central banks kicked off the world’s credit based growth binge two decades ago; it’s now down 40% this year and 80% from its 2011-212 peak. This implosion of demand cannot be remedied with another round of central bank money printing because the world is already at peak debt. Accordingly, global corporate profit cycle is heading into a deep downturn, just as the equity markets go into a final spasm of levitation based on a handful of big cap stocks.
The IMF Confirms Yuan Inclusion In SDR Basket At 10.92% Weight, Above JPY And GBP
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/30/2015 12:03 -0500The IMF’s Executive Board decision today means that the yuan will be included in the SDR basket from Oct. 1, 2016, effectively anointing the yuan as a major reserve currency and represents recognition that the yuan’s status is rising along with China’s place in global finance. The weight in the basket will be 10.92%, larger than JPY and GBP. However, as politically-motivated as this decision may have been, now comes the hard part for China.
Gold Demand in China Heading For Record and Reserves Increase 14 Tonnes In October
Submitted by GoldCore on 11/30/2015 10:52 -0500While gold prices continue to languish in the doldrums and are on course for their worst month since 2013, global demand and especially Chinese retail, investor and official demand continues to remain very robust. Indeed, China looks likely to see a new record demand for gold annually again in 2015.
An Angry Trader Rages: "There Is Nothing Normal About It"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/30/2015 08:20 -0500"All global events have been reduced to monetary policy events, i.e., buy the dip opportunities. France’s CAC-40 sold off the two trading days before the recent horror. It was a solid buy the following Monday. By always protecting risk-takers, the authorities are complicit in trivializing issues that need an all hands on-deck response. Bad news is good news has metastasized into an even baser concept"
BTFD "Is Coming To An End" JPM Warns, As It Lowers Equity Allocation Most In 6 Years
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/30/2015 07:57 -0500"We think that the equities risk-reward will be less attractive than it was in the past few years. We reduce our equities OW in a balanced portfolio to a minimal one, at 5% vs benchmark, the lowest we have had since the current upcycle started. The long period of indiscriminately buying any dip might be coming to an end."
Futures Rebound On Latest Chinese Intervention, Renewed Hopes For "Moar From Mario"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/30/2015 06:49 -0500- Australia
- Barack Obama
- Barclays
- Bill Gates
- Black Friday
- BOE
- Bond
- Brazil
- Central Banks
- Chicago PMI
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Copenhagen
- Copper
- CPI
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Dallas Fed
- Danske Bank
- Equity Markets
- European Central Bank
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- headlines
- High Yield
- International Monetary Fund
- Iran
- Janet Yellen
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Monetary Policy
- Nikkei
- OPEC
- Reserve Currency
- Saudi Arabia
- Shenzhen
- Turkey
- Volatility
- Volkswagen
- Yuan
Without a rerun of last Friday's Chinese stock market rout, European traders could focus on what "really matters", namely how much of the ECB's upcoming 20 bps rate cut and €20 billion QE expansion (with Commerzbank saying Draghi may even hint at Europe's QE3) is priced in, and whether the ECB's actions are just modestly priced in, or more than fully, and just how big the "sell the news" event will be.The result: the Euro falls to a new 7 month low, the dollar spot index hits a new all time high, and European stocks and US futures stage another remarkable overnight comeback on the usual low volume levitation and central bank intervention.
The Best Insurance Policy Ever Written.........Bar None (pardon the pun)
Submitted by Bruno de Landevoisin on 11/29/2015 15:31 -0500- The best performing asset class of this Millennium is gold, by a country mile.........
As Market Awaits "Santa" Draghi, The ECB Is "Chasing Its Own Tail"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/29/2015 11:01 -0500“If the ECB merely does on 3 December what is effectively priced by the market, we could collectively wake up on 4 December feeling a bit deflated, like a child discovering on Christmas day that his parents ‘only’ gave him what he/she had asked for, without the ‘little extra’ that would have kept him/her smiling all day long."
Serial Bubbles Mean Serial Crashes... and the Next One Will Dwarf 2008
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 11/29/2015 10:53 -0500Forgotten what 2008 was like? What's coming will be far worse.
Will Next Week Be The Start Of The Crash Of The US Dollar?
Submitted by Secular Investor on 11/29/2015 07:07 -0500The IMF will decide if it's 'Game Over' for the reserve status of the Greenback...
Which Assets Have Priced In A Chinese Economic Collapse? Barclays Explains
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/28/2015 12:48 -0500If we assume that China’s hard landing can and will get hard-er-er, it’s worth asking which assets and currencies have priced in a further deceleration in the world’s engine of global growth and trade. Barclays has more on what’s expensive and what’s cheap vis-a-vis persistent deterioration in the Chinese growth story.
Why China Hit The Panic Button On Metals Traders (In 1 Simple Copper Chart)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/27/2015 15:30 -0500Within the last week China appears to have hit the panic button with regards the seemingly unstoppable collapse of commodity prices. First, desperate Chinese producers began to demand a QE-for-commodities bailout; then, following the well-trodden (and failing) path of China's equity market maipulation, authorities began to crackdown on "malicious" commodity short-sellers. So why now? Why focus attention on the commodity markets? Perhaps this chart holds the key...
One by One the Central Banks Are Losing Control
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 11/27/2015 11:00 -0500The fact of the matter is that despite public opinion, there are problems that are so big that the Central Banks cannot fix them. We’ve seen this in Switzerland and China and now in Europe. It will be spreading to other countries in the near future.






