High Yield
Late-Day Buying Panic Saves Stocks From Worst Start To January In 84 Years
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/04/2016 17:33 -0500Pretend To The Bitter End
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/04/2016 14:45 -0500- Afghanistan
- Bernie Sanders
- Bond
- BRICs
- China
- Corruption
- CRAP
- Detroit
- Donald Trump
- ETC
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Ford
- France
- Germany
- Global Economy
- Goldilocks
- Great Depression
- Greece
- High Yield
- Iran
- Iraq
- Israel
- Italy
- Japan
- KIM
- Middle East
- NASDAQ
- Nicolas Sarkozy
- Nomination
- North Korea
- Portugal
- Racketeering
- Reality
- recovery
- Saudi Arabia
- SWIFT
- Turkey
- Ukraine
There’s really one supreme element of this story that you must keep in view at all times: a society (i.e. an economy + a polity = a political economy) based on debt that will never be paid back is certain to crack up. Its institutions will stop functioning. Its business activities will seize up. Its leaders will be demoralized. Its denizens will act up and act out. Its wealth will evaporate. Given where we are in human history - the moment of techno-industrial over-reach - this crackup will not be easy to recover from. Things have gone too far in too many ways. The coming crackup will re-set the terms of civilized life to levels largely pre-techno-industrial. How far backward remains to be seen.
Byron Wien's Reveals Top 10 Predictions: Expects Stocks To Decline After Predicting 15% Rise In 2015
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/04/2016 12:53 -0500"The United States equity market has a down year. Stocks suffer from weak earnings, margin pressure (higher wages and no pricing power) and a price- earnings ratio contraction. Investors keeping large cash balances because of global instability is another reason for the disappointing performance."
What Really Happened In 2015, And What Is Coming In 2016...
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/04/2016 10:36 -0500A lot of people were expecting some really great things to happen in 2015, but most of them did not happen. But what did happen? A global financial crisis began during the second half of 2015 threatens to greatly accelerate as we enter 2016. This is what the early stages of a financial crisis look like, and the worst is yet to come.
Three Reasons Stocks Will Crater in 2016
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 01/04/2016 07:37 -0500The sources of growth for US corporates have all dried up. Stocks have yet to adjust to this, but when they do it’s going to be an all out collapse.
Happy New Year: Global Stocks Crash After China Is Halted Limit Down In Worst Start To Year In History
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/04/2016 06:46 -0500- Australia
- Bond
- Carry Trade
- Chicago PMI
- China
- Circuit Breakers
- Copper
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Equity Markets
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Ferrari
- fixed
- Flight to Safety
- Germany
- headlines
- High Yield
- India
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Iran
- Jim Reid
- KIM
- Markit
- Meltdown
- Middle East
- NASDAQ
- Nikkei
- RANSquawk
- Saudi Arabia
- Shenzhen
- Swiss Franc
- Yen
- Yuan
It all started off relatively well: oil and US equity futures were buoyant on hopes Iran and Saudi Arabia would break out in a bloody conflict any minute boosting the net worth of shareholders of the military industrial complex, and then, out of nowhere, like a depressed China in a bull shop, the "mainland" crashed the party and it all well south very, very quickly...
The Battle Between Manufacturing And Services
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/03/2016 14:00 -0500As we start the new year, there is a debate raging within the market. No the debate isn’t whether there is weakness in the manufacturing economy, that is taken as a given, especially after Friday’s awful Chicago Purchasing Manager number of 42.9. Instead, the debate boils down to this: 'bears' believe the manufacturing economy and the service economy act in conjunction with each other – that one cannot turn, without the other; 'bulls' view each segment of the economy as relatively independent and they highlight the size of the service economy relative to the manufacturing. The answer lies in the missing cog - the 'wealth' economy.
"Tread Lightly" - 2016 Technical Outlook
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/02/2016 17:20 -0500Wall Street forecasts for 2015 were largely wrong across the board. Now we have no problem with anybody being wrong, but wwhat we do take issue with is that Wall Street largely insisted on staying wrong even though the facts were changing in 2015. The only thing that really changed was the narrative, i.e. “well if earnings are down so what then markets go up because fund managers have to chase performance”. And hence you end up with overly optimistic forecasts not based on reality. But Wall Street is in the business of selling supply to the public. If there was one key trading lesson to draw from 2015 it is this: Ignore the noise and focus on the technicals.
A "Witch's Brew" Bubbling In Bond ETFs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/02/2016 12:00 -0500We believe the Credit Cycle has turned and with it will come some massive unexpected shocks. One of these will be the fall out in the Bond Market, centered around the dramatic growth explosion in Bond ETFs coupled with the post financial crisis regulatory changes that effectively removed banks from making markets in corporate bonds. It is a ‘Witch’s Brew’ with a flattening yield curve bringing it to a boil.
A Year Of Living Technically: Charting The Markets Of 2015
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/01/2016 15:30 -0500- Advance-Decline
- B+
- Baltic Dry
- Bond
- CRB
- CRB Index
- Dow Jones Industrial Average
- Fail
- Fibonacci
- Gold Bugs
- High Yield
- MACD
- Market Internals
- NASDAQ
- Nasdaq 100
- NASDAQ Composite
- Reality
- Rydex
- Smart Money
- SPY
- Swiss Franc
- Swiss National Bank
- Technical Analysis
- Testimony
- Unemployment
- Value Line
- Volatility

Red Or Green For The Year: Decision Time For US Markets On Last Trading Day Of 2015
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/31/2015 07:05 -0500It has come down to this: a year in which the US stock market (led by a handful of shares even as the vast majority of stocks has dropped) has gone nowhere, but took the longest and most volatile path to get there, is about to close either red or green for 2015 based on what happens in today's low-volume session following yesterday's unexpected last half hour of trading "air pocket" which brought the S&P back to unchanged for the year.
Time For Torches & Pitchforks: The Little Guy Is About To Get Monkey-Hammered Again
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/30/2015 22:15 -0500The prospect that the leaders of our monetary politburo are about to be tarred and feathered by economic reality might be satisfying enough if it led to the repudiation of Keynesian central planning and a thorough housecleaning at the Fed. Unfortunately, it will also mean that tens of millions of retail investors and 401k holders will be taken to the slaughterhouse for the third time this century. And this time the Fed is out of dry powder, meaning retail investors will never recover as they did after 2002 and 2009.
Hedge Funds Dropping Like Flies: Doug Hirsch's Seneca Capital Closing After 20 Years
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/29/2015 15:49 -0500Another hedge fund has decided to call it quits, this time chess-afficionado Doug Hirsch's event-driven $500 million Seneca Capital, which according to Bloomberg is returning outside capital today.
Howard Marks Warns "Investor Behavior Has Entered A Zone Of Imprudence"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/28/2015 17:00 -0500"Security prices are not low. I wouldn’t say high, but full. So people are thinking cautiously but they’re acting bullish and they’re behaving in a pro-risk fashion. While investor behavior hasn’t sunk to the depths seen just before the crisis, in many ways I feel it has entered the zone of imprudence... The market is not an accommodating machine. It will not go where you want it to go just because you need it to go there."
Schizophrenic 2 Year Auction Results In Huge Short Squeeze Despite Slumping Fundamentals
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/28/2015 13:16 -0500When the When Issued data hit minutes ahead of the auction pricing, we were expecting a number well through the 1.073% When Issued.This is precisely what happened as the Treasury confirmed moments ago when it announced it had sold $26 billion in 2 Year notes at a yield of 1.056%, a whopping 1.7 bps through the When Issued: just like that, the short squeeze worked again.




