Fisher
Yellen Shocked After Fisher Again Reveals Fed Is Source Of Record Inequality
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/03/2014 13:49 -0500As Janet Yellen prepares to meet with President Obama this morning for the first time, it appears The Dallas Fed's Richard Fisher has planted a rather uncomfortable tape bomb for her to explain:
FISHER: QE3 WAS A GIFT TO THE RICH
So right before the Midterm elections, a week after Janet Yellen discussed inequality, she is summoned to meet with The 'fair' President to explain how her policy is keeping Obama's dream alive?
Lack Of Daily Central Bank Intervention Fails To Push Futures Solidly Higher, Yen Implosion Continues
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/03/2014 06:47 -0500- Australia
- Bank of England
- Barclays
- BOE
- Bond
- Brazil
- Central Banks
- Chicago PMI
- China
- Consumer Prices
- Consumer Sentiment
- Copper
- Crude
- Economic Calendar
- Eurozone
- Fisher
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- headlines
- High Yield
- Hong Kong
- Investor Sentiment
- Italy
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Lloyds
- Markit
- Michigan
- Monetary Policy
- Monte Paschi
- Natural Gas
- Nikkei
- Non-manufacturing ISM
- OPEC
- Personal Income
- Precious Metals
- Price Action
- RBS
- Stress Test
- Time Warner
- Trading Rules
- Ukraine
- Unemployment
- University Of Michigan
- Volatility
- Yen
- Yuan
While it is unclear whether it is due to the rare event that no central bank stepped in overnight with a massive liquidity injection or because the USDJPY tracking algo hasn't been activated (moments ago Abe's deathwish for the Japanese economy made some more progress with the USDJPY hitting new mult-year highs just shy of 113.6, on its way to 120 and a completely devastated Japanese economy), but European equities have traded in the red from the get-go, with investor sentiment cautious as a result of a disappointing the Chinese manufacturing report. More specifically, Chinese Manufacturing PMI printed a 5-month low (50.8 vs. Exp. 51.2 (Prev. 51.1)), with new orders down to 51.6 from 52.2, new export orders at 49.9 from 50.2 in September. Furthermore, this morning’s batch of Eurozone PMIs have failed to impress with both the Eurozone and German readings falling short of expectations (51.4 vs Exp. 51.8, Last 51.8), with France still residing in contractionary territory (48.5, vs Exp and Last 47.3).
3 Things Worth Thinking About
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/30/2014 14:53 -0500The question that remains to be answered is whether the economy and the financial markets are strong enough to stand on their own this time? The last two times that QE has ended the economy slid towards negative growth and the markets suffered rather severe correction...
First Sell-Side Responses To FOMC Trickle In: "This Should Be A Risk Off Trade"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/29/2014 13:31 -0500"The dove dissenting says it all," trader quips. "Fed comes in with a bit of a Hawkish tilt as it rids of key policy line around labor market..." If they are only fighting inflation now, they have less ability to enact more dovish policy. I think this should be a "risk off" trade.
Why Every Banker On Wall Street Suddenly Wants To Be Jefferies' Managing Director Sage Kelly
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/29/2014 10:20 -0500Because, allegedly, according to a divorce complaint filed by his admittedly "cocaine-snorting" estranged wife and mother of two, former UBS healthcare banker poached by Jefferies in 2009, Sage Kelly (henceforth known as the "defendant") is quite an entertaining, all around swell guy who singlehandedly would have boosted Spain's GDP by several basis points. Here are the details from her recently filed affidavit.
5 Things To Ponder: To QE Or Not To QE
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/24/2014 15:32 -0500Over the last few weeks, the markets have seen wild vacillations as stocks plunged and then surged on a massive short-squeeze in the most beaten up sectors of energy and small-mid capitalization companies. While "Ebola" fears filled mainstream headlines the other driver behind the sell-off, and then marked recovery, was a variety of rhetoric surrounding the last vestiges of the current quantitative easing program by the Fed. “You will know that the financial markets have reached peak instability and volatility when Britney Spears rings the opening bell.”
Frontrunning: October 22
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/22/2014 06:31 -0500- Apple
- B+
- Barclays
- China
- Chrysler
- Copper
- Corruption
- Credit Suisse
- CSCO
- Daimler
- Dassault Falcon
- Deutsche Bank
- E-Trade
- Erste
- European Union
- Evercore
- Falcon
- Fisher
- fixed
- GOOG
- Honeywell
- Jaguar
- JPMorgan Chase
- Keefe
- LIBOR
- Mercedes-Benz
- Michigan
- Morgan Stanley
- Natural Gas
- NHTSA
- NOAA
- Nomura
- Omnicom
- Private Jet
- Raymond James
- recovery
- Regions Financial
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Treasury Department
- Russia Loses Oil Ally in De Margerie After Moscow Crash (BBG)
- Austria's Erste denies report it has failed stress tests (Reuters)
- Sweden gets two new sightings, as hunt for undersea intruder goes on (Reuters)
- Companies Try to Escape Health Law’s Penalties (WSJ)
- Mud and Loathing on Russia-Ukraine Border (BBG)
- NOAA employee charged with stealing U.S. dam information (Reuters)
- Lower Oil Prices Seen Easing Japan’s Trade Pain (WSJ)
- Michigan becomes 5th U.S. state to thwart direct Tesla car sales (Reuters)
- Maglev Train Seen Making Washington-to-Baltimore Trip at 311 MPH (BBG)
Latest Central Bank Sticksave Halts Futures Slide, Sends E-Mini Soaring After ECB Said "Looking To Buy Bonds"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/21/2014 05:41 -0500To summarize: the S&P 500 is now almost 100 points higher from last Tuesday as the global central bank plunge protection team of first Williams and Bullard hinting at QE4, then ECB's Coeure "ECB buying to start in a few days", then China's latest $30 billion "targeted stimulus", then the Japanese GPIF hinting at a 25% stock rebalancing in the pension fund, and finally again the ECB, this time "buying of corporate bonds on secondary markets", rolls on and manages to send stocks into overdrive. Even as absolutely nothing has been fixed, as Europe is still tumbling into a triple-drip recession, as Emerging Markets are being slammed by a global growth slowdown and the US corporate earnings picture is as bleak as it gets. Because "fundamentals."
The IMF And Austrian Theory
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/17/2014 18:00 -0500Nobody in the economic intelligentsia is implying that the IMF is staffed by paranoid cranks. They continue to ignore and belittle the Austrian school. This pompous and undeserved behavior will go on until it’s too late. In the process, the ivory tower disciples of Keynes will only further prove their intellectual bankruptcy. The average person never trusted them to begin with. And things certainly won’t change now.
The Pompous Prognostications Of "Permanently High Plateau" Prophets
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2014 16:04 -0500The talking heads will be rolled out on CNBC to assure the masses that all is well. The economy is strong. Corporate profits are awesome. The stock market will go higher. Op-eds will be written by Wall Street CEOs telling you it’s the best time to invest. Federal Reserve presidents will give speeches saying there are clear skies ahead. Obama will hold a press conference to tell you how many jobs he’s added and how low the budget deficit has gone. We couldn’t possibly be entering phase two of our Greater Depression after a temporary lull provided by the $8 trillion pumped into the veins of Wall Street by the Fed and Obama. Could we?
Beware of Extremes
Submitted by Marc To Market on 10/16/2014 07:15 -0500Here is why the center will hold.
How To Blow Up OPEC In Three Easy Steps
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/13/2014 19:44 -0500We’ve landed in the next phase of what arguably started in 2007, but what you could place back many years before that, an economic system based on the fantasy that is debt driven growth, inflated by a factor of a trillion, give or take a few zeros. That system is in the process of dying. And the people who have tried to make you believe, and succeeded, that it would all be fine in the end, are now jockeying for position in the aftermath of the demise of a world built on debt. And they are the same people who built that world, profited from it to an insane degree, and want to use those profits to hang on to power in a world that will be dramatically different from the one they called the shots in. And that doesn’t bode well; it tells us violent clashes will be on the horizon.
The 5–Year Bond is Emblematic of Careless Risk Taking in Bond Markets
Submitted by EconMatters on 10/11/2014 13:25 -0500The difference between 2007 and today is back then these were largely sub-prime loans and overvalued real estate mortgages, vs, today's entire global bond market bubbles from Spain and Greece to the United States.
"Sea Of Red": US Futures Tumble, DJIA Red For The Year, DAX At One Year Low, Treasurys Under 2.30%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/10/2014 05:34 -0500- 10 Year Bond
- Bear Market
- Belgium
- Bond
- Capital Markets
- China
- Copper
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- E-Trade
- Eurozone
- Finland
- Fisher
- France
- Germany
- Global Economy
- Hong Kong
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- KIM
- Netherlands
- OPEC
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- Recession
- recovery
- Saudi Arabia
- Turkey
- Volatility
- Washington D.C.
- World Bank
- Yen
And just like that. everything is crashing. Whether it is Asia, Europe, or even US futures, an entire generation of traders are waking up to something few have seen in the past 6 years: a very rare sea of red only this time with the main difference that the perpetual backstop of all risk, the Fed and/or "Edward Quince", may not be there to halt the collapse.
The Week Ahead
Submitted by Marc To Market on 10/05/2014 11:23 -0500While the 0.001% of the world dine together and plan their next moves, here are the main events in the week ahead.




