Federal Reserve
House Passes Fed Transparency Bill; Obama Will Veto
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/19/2015 12:14 -0500Moments ago, the in a 241-185 vote, the House passed passed H.R. 3189, aka Fed Oversight Reform and Modernization Act. The bill would make changes to how the Fed conducts monetary policy and regulatory activities and would direct the Fed to take a rules-based approach to interest rate decisions; require audits of more Fed functions such as monetary policy; and place restrictions on its emergency lending powers. In other words, everything that the banks that are direct and indirect stakeholders in the Fed would fight to the death to prevent.
"This Isn't Going To End Well" - Junk Bonds Under Pressure
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/19/2015 11:52 -0500There are seemingly always “good reasons” why troubles in a sector of the credit markets are supposed to be ignored – or so people are telling us, every single time. Some still recall how the developing problems in the sub-prime sector of the mortgage credit market were greeted by officials and countless market observers in the beginning in 2007. Meanwhile, the foundation of the economy continues to look rotten (the newest round of Fed surveys has begun with another bomb and other manufacturing-related data continue to disappoint as well). This isn’t going to end well, if history is any guide.
This Is How GOLD Acted During Past Rising Rate Cycles
Submitted by Secular Investor on 11/19/2015 09:38 -0500Presenting 8 charts that proof Wall Street pundits are (mostly) WRONG...
If The Economy Is Fine, Why Are So Many Hedge Funds, Energy Companies And Large Retailers Imploding?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/19/2015 09:12 -0500If the U.S. economy really is in “great shape”, then why do all of the numbers keep telling us that we are in a recession? In 2008, stocks didn’t crash until well after the U.S. economy as a whole started crashing, and the same thing is apparently happening this time around as well.
The World's First Cashless Society Is Here - A Totalitarian's Dream Come True
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/18/2015 19:30 -0500Central planners around the world are waging a War on Cash because, as Ron Paul so eloquently put it "the cashless society is the [government]’s dream: total knowledge of, and control over, the finances of every single [citizen]." It is perhaps ironic then that Sweden, which became the first country in Europe to issue paper money in 1661, is probably going to be the first in the world to entirely eliminate it.
European Union Challenged From Right And Left, "Maybe Too Much To Endure"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/18/2015 17:40 -0500Fed Whisperer Confirms December Liftoff Still A Go, But Flight Path Won't Be Steep
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/18/2015 14:14 -0500"Federal Reserve officials meeting last month anticipated it “could well be” time to raise short-term interest rates at a December policy meeting after keeping them pinned near zero for seven years. Fed officials thus decided to change the wording of their Oct. 28 policy statement to ensure their options were open for a move in December, according to minutes of the October meeting released Wednesday with the regular three-week lag."
Fed's Lacker Admits Fed Is "Market" Data-Dependent
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/18/2015 11:31 -0500"I am now reasonably satisfied the market situation has settled down... So I am comfortable with moving off zero soon..."
"People Are Voting With Their Feet": PIMCO No Longer EM Bond King As Fund's AUM Tumbles 62%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/18/2015 11:15 -0500Amid souring bets on Brazil and the general malaise across EM, PIMCO has been dethroned as the king of emerging market bonds. A fund run by Ireland-incorporated Stone Harbor has overtaken PIMCO's EM Local Bond Fund as the world's largest emerging market fixed income fund by AUM as rollercoaster bets on Brazil and the departure of both El-Erian and Gross weighs on investor sentiment.
The Poisonous Cocktail Of Main Street Woes And Federal Reserve Liftoff
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/18/2015 09:36 -0500Sure, the stock market had a great October with the Dow Jones Industrial Average jumping by 8.5%, but the disconnect between Wall Street and Main Street is too stark to ignore, and the Federal Reserve is about to pop the easy-money financial bubble.
Global Stocks Tread Water After Two Consecutive Terrorist Scares; Oil Rises, Industrial Metals Tumble
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/18/2015 07:03 -0500- Bank of Japan
- Bloomberg News
- Bond
- Carlyle
- China
- Copper
- CPI
- Creditors
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Equity Markets
- European Central Bank
- Federal Reserve
- France
- Germany
- Glencore
- Greece
- headlines
- High Yield
- Housing Market
- Housing Starts
- India
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- LBO
- Monetary Policy
- Monsanto
- NAHB
- NASDAQ
- New Zealand
- Nikkei
- Price Action
- Recession
- Yield Curve
If this weekend's gruesome terrorist attack on Paris ended up being hugely bullish for stocks, then two subsequent events, a stadium-evacuation scare in Hannover (where Angela Merkel was supposed to be present) and a raid in north Paris which left several dead in the ongoing manhunt against the alleged ISIS mastermind, appear to have but some question into if not stocks then algos whether a rising wave of terrorist hatred across Europe is truly what central bankers need to unleash more QE. That said, we expect the current weakness to last only until the traditional USDJPY carry ramp pushes stocks traditionally higher.
The Fed's Failed Communication Strategy - More Than Half Of FedSpeak Is "Not Useful"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/17/2015 21:00 -0500Having recently shown The Fed to go 6 for 6 in a day of FedSpeak failures to spark animal spirits, it appears this is actually not so unusual for some members of The Fed. As WSJ found, when it comes to watching the Federal Reserve, it’s a good idea to keep an eye on Atlanta and San Francisco but for 9 of the policy-makers, economists rank their 'FedSpeak' as less than useful... with soon-to-be-replaced Kockerlakota the least useful Fed speaker of all...
Economists' Models Are Losing Their Grasp On The Real State Of The Economy
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/17/2015 14:20 -0500Economists have been consistently over-estimating the strength of the economy this year. The magnitude of their misses is not particularly worrisome but volatility measures and the recent record number of consecutive negative readings are suggesting that economists’ models are losing their grasp on the state of the economy.
Buyout Bubble Bursts As Banks Pull Carlyle's 'Biggest LBO Of The Year' Bond Deal Amid Soaring Costs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/17/2015 12:10 -0500Ten years after Symantec paid $13.5bn for Veritas, Carlyle Group agreed in August to buy the data-storage business for just $8 billion (the biggest LBO of the year). Of course, the buyout deal made sense when the cost of funding was negligible and The Fed had your back but, as Bloomberg reports, amid soaring borrowing costs, banks have pulled the $5.5 billion debt offering for Veritas signaling a clear end to the reach-for-yield, nothing is a problem, bond market's risk appetite.. and if 'growthy' deals like this are being killed, what does that say for distressed bets on Energy M&A deals?
Five reasons the Fed can’t raise rates
Submitted by Sprott Money on 11/17/2015 05:58 -0500Once you examine the finer details, it quickly becomes clear that there are five key reasons that the Fed is unlikely to raise rates anytime soon.




