Global Economy
The QE End-Game Decision Tree: Not "If" But "When" Central Banks Lose Control
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/02/2015 18:42 -0500"Not 'IF' but 'WHEN central banks lose control?' The global financial repression pushed investors to invest cash in risky assets, such as property and equity. The scale of global policy interventions is trumping all fundamental factors for now. Investors should keep in mind that the road is never straight and next month should be full of potentially disruptive events impacting sharply overcrowded assets and trades. History shows that such misallocation of resources creates bubbles that can last before fully blowing; the question is not if, but when."
Presenting Never-Ending QE In One Easy Flowchart
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/02/2015 17:35 -0500Because we know the mechanics of the currency war and the endless loop of competitive easing can be a bit confusing at times, we present the following simplified, circular flow chart from Morgan Stanley which should serve as a helpful guide to the never ending "beggar thy neighbor" loop.
Is The Stock Market Now "Too Big to Fail"?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/02/2015 08:26 -0500By turning the health of the economy into a reflection of the stock market, the Status Quo has made the stock market into the one bellwether that matters. In effect, the stock market is now integral to the economy as a measure of sentiment and evidence that all is well with the economy as a whole.
Gold Coin Sales Surge 306% YoY In August, Silver Sales More Than Double
Submitted by GoldCore on 09/02/2015 07:46 -0500Stocks in Asia and Europe have fallen sharply again this morning and gold remains robust on safe haven demand
Bill Gross: "Go To Cash"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/02/2015 07:29 -0500The global economy’s finance based spine is so out of whack that it is in need of a major readjustment. Cash or better yet “near cash” such as 1-2 year corporate bonds are my best idea of appropriate risks/reward investments. The reward is not much, but as Will Rogers once said during the Great Depression – “I’m not so much concerned about the return on my money as the return of my money.”
"The Biggest Problems We Face Is That We’re All Flying Blind To A Large Degree" Warns Deutsche Bank
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/02/2015 07:06 -0500"One of the biggest problems we face is that there is no historical template for current global market conditions so we’re all flying blind to a large degree. Never before have so many of the most important countries in the world printed so much money and left base rates at near zero for so long. Also never before has the largest economy in the world tried to start a slow process of reversing said extraordinary policy. So there is no road map for this journey, only educated (hopefully) predictions."
It's The Fed, Stupid; Why Kuroda And Draghi Are No Match For Quantitative Tightening
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 21:15 -0500"Worryingly, EM capital flows are already significantly undershooting the projection from the hawkish scenario. The less constructive view is that the Fed balance sheet simply matters far more for EM, with liquidity provided by the ECB and BoJ a poor compensation for the Fed’s retrenchment. The hawkish scenario of Fed stopping reinvestment next year would suggest that EM flows can get weaker, while even a more dovish scenario of a constant Fed balance sheet would not be enough to lift inflows again."
Circling The Drain....
Submitted by dazzak on 09/01/2015 20:45 -0500Wax on Wax off,risk on today risk off tomorrow.....things could spiral out of control rather quickly
The "Great Accumulation" Is Over: The Biggest Risk Facing The World's Central Banks Has Arrived
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 18:10 -0500"The current secular shift in reserve manager behavior represents the equivalent to Quantitative Tightening, or QT. This force is likely to be a persistent headwind towards developed market central banks’ exit from unconventional policy in coming years, representing an additional source of uncertainty in the global economy. The path to “normalization” will likely remain slow and fraught with difficulty."
ConocoPhillips Fires 10% Of Global Workforce, Warns Of "Dramatic Downturn" To Oil Industry
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 14:06 -0500Where the great oil crash hits close to home for most Americans, is when firms such as Houston based ConocoPhillips announce that the E&P giant is about to terminate 10%, or 1,800 people, of its global workforce, in the next several weeks as it copes with low oil prices. "Our industry is undergoing a dramatic downturn, which has caused us to look at our future workforce needs. As we have assessed the implications of lower prices on our business, we’ve made the difficult decision that workforce reductions will be necessary.”
ABN Amro Warns There Is A 40% Chance Mario Draghi Expands ECB QE "As Soon As This Week"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 13:41 -0500Just two days before the September 3 ECB governing council meeting and press conference, ABN Amro released the genie from the bottle, when its head macro strategist Nick Kounis said the he now sees "a much bigger risk that the ECB will step up QE as soon as this week’s meeting. We see this probability at around 40%, so it is an increasingly close call.
Two-Thirds Of Global PMIs Deteriorate In August
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 08:06 -0500First the good news: of the 28 global regions that have reported PMIs so far (the US Markit PMI is due later today), 18 posted a print of over 50, or indicating manufacturing expansion.
Now the bad news: more than two-thirds of PMIs in August deteriorated compared to July suggesting that while the global economy is not in a recession yet, absent some dramatic improvement, a global economic contraction is just around the corner.
Global Trade In Freefall: South Korea Exports Crash Most Since 2009
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 07:07 -0500While the market's attention overnight was focused on China's crumbling manufacturing and service PMI, data which was already hinted in the flash PMI reports earlier in August, the real stunner came not from China but from South Korea, which last night reported an unprecedented 14.7% collapse in exports, far worse than the -5.9% consensus estimate, and more than 4 times worse than July's 3.4%. The number is critical because not only do exports account for about half of South Korea's GDP but because it also happens to be the first major exporting country to report monthly trade data. That makes it the perfect barometer of global trade flows, or as the case may be, the canary in the global trade coalmine. It also confirms what we reported just one week ago when we said that "Global Trade Is In Freefall."
Gold Up 3.5% In August, Stocks Fall 6% to 12%
Submitted by GoldCore on 09/01/2015 06:32 -0500Gold rose 3.5% in August as stocks globally saw sharp falls on growing concerns about the Chinese and the global economy.
Gold Set for Best Month Since January as Stock Market Rout Lifts Safe Haven
Submitted by GoldCore on 08/31/2015 08:05 -0500Premiums on silver coins have risen again - from 22% on Friday to 28% today.




