France
Commodity Convergence And Debt-Equity Divergence
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/06/2012 16:39 -0500
Equities traded their lowest volume of the week (-19% from yesterday alone). The NFP print this morning provided ammunition for some vol early on but as we drifted into the European close, risk assets in general were pushing lower. Unlike the last few days the circa-Europe-close dip-and-rip only occurred in the equity market today as the USD stayed near its highs and TSYs near their low yields of the day (and high yield credit near its wides of the day) as stocks took off back into the green and meandered either side of VWAP for the afternoon. It seems odd that the afternoon's divergence between TSYs and stocks was not accompanied by Gold or USD weakness (QE hopes) and in fact as we got into the last few minutes, stocks started to push back lower on much larger average trade size but was trapped between VWAP and unchanged on the day. Gold outperformed on the week (+3.4%) just inching out Silver and Oil as they appeared to converge on a 3x beta of the USD 'appreciation' of around 1.2% this week. Treasuries rallied 4-6bps and the curve flattened overall as we saw duration reduction in corporate bonds (with highest quality names (Aaa-Aa3) being net sold). DXY stayed above 81 as the EURUSD scrambled back above 1.27 (down an impressive 1.85% on the week). AUD was the only major to gain relative to the USD on the week (and very marginally). Finally, we saw VIX dropping and stabilize and implied correlation diverged and rose this afternoon which combined with the divergence in risk assets suggests stocks are short-term overdone at best.
Greece’s Extortion Racket Maxed Out
Submitted by testosteronepit on 01/06/2012 00:39 -0500Troika inspectors will leave angry again. But this time, the Prime Minister put the nuclear option on the table....
How To Prevent Bailouts, Bank Runs & Other Fun Things To Do With Your Hard Earned Dollars
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 01/05/2012 13:20 -0500
An informal conversation about bank runs, bailouts and the best way to prevent them.
Goldman Remains Cautious On Europe As Negative Feedback Accelerates
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/05/2012 12:40 -0500
As seems obvious from the market's reaction over the last week, European problems are not solved by short-term liquidity band-aids. In fact, as Goldman notes this week, the same economic and political risks remain even if some funding relief has been put in place. With sovereigns and financials leading one another to new lows since the LTRO, the negative feedback loops remain in full force. Given the difficulties on the road ahead – and significant ongoing differences across governments on how to resolve them – the risk of political miscalculation or errors is unfortunately still very clear. In the limit, those instabilities could still put the union on a path towards a break-up. Economic weakness in the meantime will intensify the challenges for the weaker sovereigns.
European Close Prompts Rally For 3rd Day
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/05/2012 11:55 -0500
The New Year has ushered in a new pattern for the market - or perhaps has clarified an old one. The last 3 days has seen European credit markets notably underperform equity markets but stage a significant rally around the equity close each day. This rally then flops into US markets. Today was no different from yesterday - EURUSD leaked lower (holding under 1.28 here) all through the European day session - the question is whether we will see the same stability we saw during yesterday's US afternoon session in FX which will enable the equity strength to hold. We suspect not given that broad risk assets (CONTEXT) has notably not participated in the equity markets pull higher so far. At the same time as Europe closed, with financials massively underperforming, US financials were breaking out as XLF went green and BofA broke above $6. Volumes are above yesterday but below Tuesday for this time of day - still notably low on a medium-term basis. TSYs have been very volatile this morning but European sovereigns have been on a one-way path wider all day - closing near their wides. Commodities are lower (USD strength) but Gold is holding up relatively best for now - well above $1600.
Guest Post: Iran & the Strait of Hormuz: Bad Bluff or Good Gamble?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/05/2012 10:54 -0500Was Iran born to bluff, or is it really much closer to building a nuclear weapon than anyone really knows? Now that the Islamic Republic has made its intentions clear, one has to assume that it has given away a certain measure of strategic surprise. If it really wants to get the most that it could – militarily – from an attack on tankers moving through Hormuz, it should have never even raised it as a possibility. By discussing it, we figure Iran has given the US “notice” that it might not have had in the event of an attack from the blue. Weren’t the maneuvers in the Straits (by Iran) enough to raise the question without raising alert conditions from the West and from Israel?
Frontrunning: January 5
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/05/2012 07:32 -0500- ECB Cash Averts ‘Funding Crisis’ for Italy, Spain (Bloomberg)
- Bailout talks in Greece ‘crucial’, Premier says (WSJ)
- Spain sees €50bn of new bank provisions (FT)
- Fed says expand Fannie, Freddie role to aid housing (Reuters)
- France’s Borrowing Costs Rise at Bond Sale (Bloomberg)
- Europe worries linger after French auction (Reuters)
- PBOC Suspends Bill Sale as Money Rates Rise Before Holiday (Bloomberg)
- Turkey warns against Shi'ite-Sunni Cold War (Reuters)
- New capital rules for banks ‘delayed to 2H’(China Daily)
French Auction Fails To Sell Max Projected As Bid-To-Cover Plunges
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/05/2012 05:13 -0500
UPDATE: EURUSD is moving to new lows for the day now at 1.2831
French 10Y bond spreads had widened almost 50% (from 100bps to 149bps) in the last week of trading ahead of this critical auction and the EURUSD is over 200pips lower. The auction results are in and it is not a total disaster but the bid-to-cover dropped significantly to its lowest since October 2010 and they missed their maximum target.
- *FRANCE SELLS TOTAL EU7.963B VS MAX TARGET EU8B OF BONDS
- *FRANCE SELLS EUR4.02 BLN 3.25% 2021 BONDS; YLD 3.29%
- *FRANCE SELLS EUR690 MLN 4.25% 2023 BONDS; YLD 3.5%
- *FRANCE SELLS EUR1.088 BLN 4.75% 2035 BONDS; YLD 3.96%
- *FRANCE SELLS EUR2.165 BLN 4.5% 2041 BONDS; YLD 3.97%
- *FRANCE SELLS 2021 BONDS AT AVE. YIELD 3.29% VS 3.18% DEC. 1
- *FRANCE 2041 BOND BID-TO-COVER 1.82 VS 2.26 AT DEC. 1 SALE
- *FRANCE 2021 BOND BID-TO-COVER 1.64 VS 3.05 AT DEC. 1 SALE
EURUSD is leaking a little lower and 10Y French spreads are widening modestly but the initial reaction is unimpressive for now.
Euro Slumps To 15 Month Lows As BTPs Crack 7% Yield
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/05/2012 04:45 -0500
UPDATE: EFSF said to get EUR4bn of orders for 3Y issue is providing some cover (at what rate? We offer to buy 1tn at 300% yield...)
With plenty of time left until France unleashes its supply (and a dismal consumer confidence print earlier), there is a plethora of notable market moves: Unicredit is halted down 7.9% (seems to be the culprit for the initial risk-off turn in Europe), but Deutsche Bank is down over 5% on liquidity problem rumors, EURUSD traded under 1.2850 at its lowest level since September 2010, 10Y Italian bonds have pushed well above 7% yields and 510bps spread to Bunds as Unemployment rises to 8.6%, Belgian 10Y yields are over 4.5% - highest in 3 weeks, and the rest of European Sovereigns are all leaking wider (near wides of the year). Risk assets (CONTEXT) broadly are under pressure but ES (the S&P 500 e-mini futures contract) is holding off yesterday's early morning lows for now. Commodities are all dropping fast with Gold (actually outperforming in this slide) back at $1615, Oil at $102.50, and Copper approaching $340. Treasuries are bid but trading in line with Bunds' movements so far in general. Some chatter of ECB buying in the last few minutes is stabilizing things a little here.
California’s High-Speed Rail To Nowhere
Submitted by testosteronepit on 01/04/2012 21:08 -0500And once again, US taxpayers are asked to create high-level jobs overseas. Contenders: Germany, Japan, France, and China....
On Austerity, Unrest, And Quantifying Chaos
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/04/2012 12:05 -0500
Politically speaking, austerity is a challenge. While we would expect that governments imposing spending cuts on their voting public may face electability issues, in fact, a recent paper from the Center for Economic Policy Research finds that there is no empirical evidence to confirm this - i.e. a budget-cutting government is no less likely to be re-relected than a spend-heavy government. However, what the CEPR paper does find as a factor in delaying austerity is much more worrisome - a fear of instability and unrest. The authors found a very clear relationship between CHAOS (their variable name for demonstrations, riots, strikes and worse) and expenditure cuts. As JPMorgan notes, austerity sounds straightforward as a policy, until the consequences bite. It remains unclear that the road Europe is taking is less costly in the long run, in economic, political and social terms. The history of Europe over the last 100 years shows that austerity can have severe consequences and outcomes and perhaps most notably, the independent variable that did result in more unrest was higher levels of government debt in the first place. Judging from France's Noyer's recent jab at Britain's credit rating, at a time of increasing budgetary pressures and declining growth, there may also be limits to European solidarity.
Santa Rally Is Over: French Spreads Blow Out To Late November Levels; Shanghai Composite Already Down On The year
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/04/2012 08:19 -0500Remember when the world was watching the OAT-Bund spread with bated breath every day in late November until the Fed came in and reliquifed the world with a "half off blue light special" on the OIS+100 bps? Well, it's time to get your OAT tracker out, because quietly the OAT-Bund spread has blown out back to 145 bps, the widest it has been since late November when the world was ending, and before even the S&P announcement it would downgrade France (which incidentally we have not forgotten about - how is that "ASAP after the December 9 summit" thing going for you guys?). Whether the market is pricing in the downgrade or merely noticing that French banks were forced to dump a record amount of US debt in the last month as only Zero hedge has pointed out so far is unknown. What is known is that the Santa rally int eh EURUSD and for Europe lasted all of one day. Which is more than can be said about the Shanghai Composite: it is already down for the year on its first day of trading.
Frontrunning: January 4
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/04/2012 07:29 -0500- Iowa result leads to GOP confusion (FT)
- Romney ekes out Iowa caucus victory (FT)
- MF Global sold assets to Goldman before collapse (Reuters)
- China’s Wen Jiacao sees ‘relatively difficult’ first quarter (Bloomberg)
- German Scandal Adds to Pressure on Merkel (WSJ)
- US mortgage demand fell at year-end, purchases sag (Reuters)
- Bank worries hit Europe stocks, euro down (Reuters)
- Martin Wolf: The 2012 recovery: handle with care (FT)
- SNB Chief’s Wife Defends Dollar Trades (Bloomberg)
- China Home Prices Slide Amid Reserve-Ratio Speculation (Bloomberg)
Guest Post: Eight Simple Truths You Need To Know About 2012
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/03/2012 12:50 -0500History is full of other examples of once proud nations that, facing problems for decades (or even centuries), completely unwound in a matter of years. The Ottoman Empire. The Ming Dynasty. Feudal France. The Soviet Union. Bottom line, when the real change comes, it comes very, very quickly. Think about the pace of change these days. It’s quickening. Europe is a great case study for this– when concerns about Greece first surfaced, European leaders were able to contain the damage. There was disquiet, but it soon dissipated. Fast forward to today. We can hardly go a single day without a major, market-rocking headline. And European politicians’ attempts to assuage the damage have a useful half life that can be measured in days… sometimes hours now. Like the Ottomans, the Soviets, the Romans before them, Western civilization is entering the phase where its rate of decline will start looking like that upside-down hockey stick.






