Housing Bubble
Will The Oil Patch Bust Trigger Recession?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/22/2015 10:16 -0500This seemingly inexhaustible credit line is now drying up, with severely negative consequences for oil producers with debt that's coming due. The row of dominoes swaying unsteadily in these stiff winds won't take much to topple.
The Song Remains The Same
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2015 08:21 -0500We love reading quotes from Hussman in 2000 and 2007. The air is getting pretty thin up here. A stock market driven by Google, Apple, Netflix and a few other tech darlings with no earnings does not make a market. Time is running out for the bulls. The same morons on CNBC ridiculed and scorned his facts then and they scorn and ridicule him now. Do we trust Jim Cramer and Steve Liesman or John Hussman? Guess.
The San Francisco “Housing Crisis” Gets Ugly
Submitted by testosteronepit on 07/20/2015 08:18 -0500Two sides separated by the money line.
We Need A Crash To Sort The Wheat From The Chaff
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/20/2015 07:32 -0500The only way to sort the wheat (real collateral based on enterprise value) from the chaff (phantom collateral created by central banks' speculative bubbles) is for a crash to force price discovery and the cramdown of losses.
How Student Loans Create Demand For Useless Degrees
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/18/2015 17:15 -0500Last week, former Secretary of Education and US Senator Lamar Alexander wrote in the Wall Street Journal that a college degree is both affordable and an excellent investment. He repeated the usual talking point about how a college degree increases lifetime earnings by a million dollars, “on average.” That part about averages is perhaps the most important part, since all college degrees are certainly not created equal. In fact, once we start to look at the details, we find that a degree may not be the great deal many higher-education boosters seem to think it is.
China's Three Bubbles And What Could Cause Them To Burst
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/18/2015 09:45 -0500Unholy Alliance: Blythe Masters Named Chairman Of Subprime Auto Lender
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/15/2015 17:51 -0500Today, an unholy alliance was born when Blythe Masters, the mother of the credit default swap and former member of the fabled "Morgan Mafia" was named chairman of Santander Consumer, the largest subprime auto lender in the US.
Auto Loan Rejection Rate Falls To Lowest Level On Record
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/15/2015 16:15 -0500Amid record auto loan ABS issuance, record loan terms, and record high average payments, it's no secret that the market for auto loans in the US has become dangerously stretched. Now, the NY Fed is out with what is perhaps the most shocking statistic yet on just how "darn easy" it is to get a car loan
Chinese Stock Plunge Resumes With 1200 Stocks Halted Limit Down; Yellen, Greek Elections On Deck
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/15/2015 05:44 -0500- Bank Lending Survey
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank of Japan
- Beige Book
- BOE
- Bond
- China
- Copper
- CPI
- Credit Conditions
- Credit Suisse
- Creditors
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Economic Calendar
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- Germany
- Global Economy
- Greece
- headlines
- House Financial Services Committee
- Housing Bubble
- Iran
- Italy
- Janet Yellen
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Monetary Base
- Monetary Policy
- NFIB
- Nikkei
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- Real estate
- Reality
- Recession
- recovery
- Shenzhen
- Testimony
- Tim Geithner
- Unemployment
- US Bancorp
- Wells Fargo
- Yen
Just when the Chinese plunge protection team (and "arrest shortie" task force) seemed to be finally getting "malicious selling" under control, first we saw a crack yesterday when the composite broke the surge of the past three days as a result of yet another spike in margin debt funded purchases, but it was last night's reminder that "good news is bad news" that really confused the stock trading farmers and grandmas, which goalseeked Chinese economic "data" beat across the board, with Q2 GDP coming solidly above expectations at 7.0%, and retail sales and industrial production both beating, but in the process raising doubts that the PBOC will continue supporting stocks.
The Crony Capitalist Pretense Behind Warren Buffett's Banking Buys
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/12/2015 18:05 -0500- 8.5%
- Alan Greenspan
- B+
- Berkshire Hathaway
- Bond
- EuroDollar
- Fail
- Global Economy
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Gordon Gekko
- Great Depression
- Greece
- Housing Bubble
- Italy
- Lehman
- Michael Lewis
- Milton Friedman
- New York Times
- None
- TARP
- Treasury Department
- US Bancorp
- Wall Street Journal
- Warren Buffett
- Wells Fargo
When Warren Buffet put $5 billion in Berkshire Hathaway funds into Goldman Sachs the week after Lehman failed, amidst total turmoil and panic, it appeared from the outside a high risk bet. Buffet had long tried to portray himself as a folksy engine of traditional stability, investing only in things he could understand, so jumping into a wholesale run of chained liabilities may have seemed more than slightly out of character. We have no particular issue with Buffet making those investments, only the pretense of intentional mysticism that surrounds them. The reason the criticism of crony-capitalism sticks is because this was not Buffet's first intervention to "save" a famed institution on Wall Street. If Buffet's convention is to stick with "things you know" then he has been right there through the whole of the full-scale wholesale/eurodollar revolution.
Why Janet Is Lost: Her Favorite Charts Show 'JOLTing' Disconnects
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/09/2015 10:55 -0500Janet Yellen’s reputed favorite jobs measure, the JOLTS (Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey) reported blockbuster record job openings in May. But look beneath the headlines and you will see just how distorted and maladjusted the US job market is.
China's "Sweet & Sour" Plunge Protection Lessons From 1987
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/09/2015 07:02 -0500In the wake of China's unprecedented attempt to rescue its collapsing equity markets, Deutsche Bank is out with a history lesson for Beijing where officials can learn some "sweet and sour" lessons from the crash of '87.
Disorderly Collapse - The Endgame Of The Fed's Artificial Suppression Of Defaults
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/07/2015 16:40 -0500Nobody apparently learned much from the whole bubble-bust affair as banks and financial firms are at it again, this time in corporate debt. The artificial suppression of default, in no small part to perceptions of those bank reserves under QE (just like perceptions of balance sheet capacity pre-crisis), has turned junk debt into the vehicle of choice for yet another cycle of “reach for yield.” In the past two bubble cycles, we see how monetary policy creates the conditions for them but also in parallel for their disorderly closure. It isn’t money that the FOMC directs but rather unrealistic, to the extreme, expectations and extrapolations. Once those become encoded in financial equations, the illusion becomes real supply.
Ragin' Contagion: When Debtors Go Broke, So Do Mercantilist Exporters
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/07/2015 13:45 -0500Despite endless assurances that the Greek debt crisis is contained, the reality is that the ragin' contagion of debt crises will spread not just to other deeply indebted nations but to the mercantilist economies that depend on selling goods to borrowers. Strip out the borrowing, and you strip out most of the customers for German, Dutch and Chinese goods.
There's Something Wrong With The World Today (Hint: 1995)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 06/25/2015 16:30 -0500Trillions upon trillions in “stimulus” and the FOMC is left, pathetically, fighting for the distinction of “it’s not as bad as it looks.” That would seem to make this the most costly economic age ever conceived, with global implications that are just now starting to be felt as whatever faith was leftover from 2008, wrong or right, wears off all over the world. That is a highly combustible deficiency, since the longer the global economy remains disorientated the more likely it is to experience not just recession but, since this is all still so leveraged (even more poorly this time), something potentially worse.




