Global Economy
Futures Rebound On Ongoing Dollar Strength; Commodities Rise, China Slides, Greek Banks Continue Plunging
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2015 05:51 -0500- Apple
- Bond
- China
- Copper
- Creditors
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Equity Markets
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- France
- Germany
- Gilts
- Glencore
- Global Economy
- Greece
- headlines
- Ireland
- Italy
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Markit
- Monetary Policy
- Nikkei
- Price Action
- Real estate
- Reality
- recovery
- Shenzhen
- SocGen
- Standard Chartered
- Time Warner
- Trade Balance
- Yen
- Yuan
In many ways the overnight session has been a mirror image of yesterday, with the dollar accelerating its Lockhart-commentary driven rise, which curiously has pushed ES higher perhaps as a result of more USDJPY correlation algos being active and various other FX tracking pairs. Indeed, the weak yen is all that mattered in Japan, where the Nikkei 225 (+0.5%) rose amid JPY weakness, despite opening initially lower as index heavyweight Fast Retailing (-4.5%) reported a 2nd consecutive monthly decline in Uniqlo sales. Elsewhere in mirror images, China slid 1.7%, undoing about half of yesterday's 3.7% jump, and is now down for 4 of the past 5 days.
"You're Gonna Need a Bigger Boat" - Does Size Matter When It Comes To The Debt Markets
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/04/2015 18:33 -0500The reality might just be that the collective "we," and quite possibly sooner than we think, really will need a bigger boat. That is, as it pertains to the global debt markets, which have swollen past the $200 trillion mark this year rendering the great white featured in Jaws which can be equated with past debt markets as defenseless and small as a small, striped Nemo by comparison. The question for the ages will be whether size really does matter when it comes to the debt markets...
China Is Spending 11.6 Million Annual Incomes Per Day Propping Up Stocks
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 08/04/2015 10:45 -0500For years now China has been heralded as an economic miracle that will drive the global economy towards growth and eventually eclipse the US as THE superpower in the world.
"The Worldwide Credit Boom Is Over, Now Comes The Tidal Wave Of Global Deflation"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/03/2015 21:50 -0500When we insist that markets are broken and the equities have been consigned to the gambling casinos, look no farther than today’s filing by Alpha Natural Resources. Markets, which were this wrong on a prominent name like ANRZ at the center of the global credit boom, did not make a one-time mistake; they are the mistake. As it now happens, the global credit boom is over; DM consumers are stranded at peak debt; and the China/EM investment frenzy is winding down rapidly. Now comes the tidal wave of global deflation...
"This Is The Largest Financial Departure From Reality In Human History"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/03/2015 16:30 -0500- 8.5%
- Aussie
- Australia
- Bank of England
- Bear Market
- Bond
- Borrowing Costs
- Brazil
- Capital Formation
- Capital Markets
- Carry Trade
- Central Banks
- China
- Consumer Prices
- Copper
- Corruption
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- default
- Enron
- ETC
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- Fitch
- fixed
- Flight to Safety
- Fractional Reserve Banking
- Global Economy
- Greece
- Gross Domestic Product
- headlines
- Hong Kong
- Housing Prices
- India
- Insurance Companies
- Japan
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- McKinsey
- MF Global
- Milton Friedman
- Momentum Chasing
- Money Supply
- New Zealand
- Nomura
- None
- Precious Metals
- Private Equity
- Purchasing Power
- ratings
- Real estate
- Real Interest Rates
- Reality
- Recession
- recovery
- Reserve Currency
- Reuters
- Risk Premium
- Saudi Arabia
- Shadow Banking
- Sprott Asset Management
- Ukraine
- Volatility
- World Bank
- Yuan
We have lived through a credit hyper-expansion for the record books, with an unprecedented generation of excess claims to underlying real wealth. In doing so we have created the largest financial departure from reality in human history. Bubbles are not new – humanity has experienced them periodically going all the way back to antiquity – but the novel aspect of this one, apart from its scale, is its occurrence at a point when we have reached or are reaching so many limits on a global scale. The retrenchment we are about to experience as this bubble bursts is also set to be unprecedented, given that the scale of a bust is predictably proportionate to the scale of the excesses during the boom that precedes it. Deflation and depression are mutually reinforcing, meaning the downward spiral will continue for many years. China is the biggest domino about to fall, and from a great height as well, threatening to flatten everything in its path on the way down. This is the beginning of a New World Disorder…
Where Candidates Fear To Tread - Pervasive Racketeering Is Destroying America
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/03/2015 12:35 -0500In this moment of history there is an astounding lack of seriousness among people who pretend to be political heavyweights. No one so far has nailed a proper bill of grievances to the White House gate. A broad roster of dire issues facing this society ought to be self-evident. But since they are absent so far in the public discussion, here is our list of matters that serious candidates should dare to talk about (all things that a sitting president could take action on)...
Something Just Snapped: Container Freight Rates From Asia To Europe Crash 23% In One Week
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/03/2015 05:33 -0500It appears that the recent spike in shipping rates was analogous to the dead cat bounce in crude oil prices: a speculator-driven anticipation for a sustainable rebound that never took place. And now, just like with crude prices, it is all crashing down.... again. According to Reuters, shipping freight rates for transporting containers from ports in Asia to Northern Europe dropped 22.8 per cent to $400 per 20-foot container (TEU) in the week ended last Friday, data from the Shanghai Containerized Freight Index showed.
Goldman Warns "The Global Economy Is Going Round In (Smaller & Smaller) Circles"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/31/2015 19:40 -0500Amid the collapse in commodities, crashing Chinese stocks, the weakest US wage growth in US history, and a data-dependent Fed; Goldman Sachs fears the new normal is 'shorter-and-faster' business cycles with no persistence primed by monetary policies. Most wprryingly, they conclude, will short business cycles beget shorter business cycles?
The Fed's Bathtub Economics Brigade Blathers On, Part 1
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/31/2015 11:15 -0500Our monetary politburo is driving the US economy in the wrong direction. That is, toward dis-employment of its true, wealth-creating economic resources - human labor, entrepreneurial talent and market driven gains in economic factor efficiency. Contrary to this week’s self-congratulatory statement, all is not well and its not getting weller.
The 2015 Untrustworthies Report - Why Social Security Could Be Bankrupt In 12 Years
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/31/2015 09:50 -0500The so-called “trustees” of the social security system issued their annual report last week and the stenographers of the financial press dutifully reported that the day of reckoning when the trust funds run dry has been put off another year - until 2034. So take a breath and kick the can. That’s five Presidential elections away!
...Except that is not what the report really says.
Donald Trump's Soaring Popularity "Is The Country's Collective Middle Finger To Washington"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/30/2015 22:30 -0500Donald Trump’s ascendance as the early GOP front-runner is symbolic of a greater global trend: growing pushback against institutional political and economic power.
Frontrunning: July 30
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/30/2015 06:38 -0500- Second-quarter GDP seen rebounding on consumer spending, housing (Reuters)
- China Stocks Fall as Traders Puzzle Over Sudden Late-Day Swings (BBG)
- European 'alliance of national liberation fronts' emerges to avenge Greek defeat (Telegraph)
- Thomas Cook warns on earnings over Greece (MW)
- Largest Greek toy seller Jumbo warns of hit from capital controls (Kathimerini)
- Chevron and Exxon Get the Plaudits, but Some Smaller Drillers Faring Well (WSJ)
- Schäuble outlines plan to limit European Commission powers (FT)
- UBS Deal Shows Clinton’s Complicated Ties (WSJ)
Chinese Stocks Tumble In Close Of Trading "Causing Panic", US GDP To Be Revised Higher On Seasonal Adjustments
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/30/2015 05:54 -0500- 8.5%
- Bond
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Consumer Credit
- Continuing Claims
- Copper
- CPI
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Deutsche Bank
- France
- Futures market
- Germany
- Global Economy
- Greece
- Greenlight
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Jim Reid
- NASDAQ
- Nikkei
- Output Gap
- Personal Consumption
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- RBS
- Reuters
- Saudi Arabia
- Shenzhen
- Time Warner
- Unemployment
- Volatility
We start off the overnight wrap up with the usual place, China, where in a mirror image of Wednesday's action, stocks once again started off uneventful, then gradually rose in the afternoon session and meandered near unchanged territory until the last half hour, when out of the blue they tumbled to close near the day's low, some 2.2% below yesterday's closing level. What caused it? One possible catalyst came from Reuters which reported that that Chinese banks were investigating their exposure to the stock market via wealth management products and loans backed by stock as collateral.
Blame The Fed For The Commodities Slump
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/28/2015 13:41 -0500Why the big slowdown? Why is the world falling apart? Because you can’t fake an economic recovery... Instead of “stimulating” a recovery, the feds have “simulated” one.
Wall Street Still Didn't Get The Memo - China's Done, Top's In!
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/28/2015 11:46 -0500Bubblevision’s Scott Wapner nearly split a neck vessel today denouncing the US stock market sell-off. It was completely unwarranted, he thundered, because China don’t have nothin’ to do with anything. The collapse of red capitalism in China is exporting gale force deflation to the global economy, meaning that the already evident rollover of world trade is just beginning its descent. So S&P profits are not immune, not by a longshot. One of these days, perhaps soon, even Scott Wapner will get the memo.



