Lehman
2008 Chart Comparison.
Submitted by thetrader on 01/13/2012 16:12 -0500Has the market managed "sucking" in the dumb money?
Is Europe A "Lehman-Like Symptom Of Faulty Globalized Finance"? Bank Of America Thinks So
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2012 09:38 -0500For months in a row, the core propaganda meme seeking to drag lambs into the ponzi, has been one of "ignore Europe - it is irrelevant." Naturally this "narrative" was primarily spread by expendable C-grade media elements whose careers will promptly terminate once this latest episode of artificial "decoupling" is over, as we have been warning for months (at a cost to the S&P of over 200 points). And judging by today's US Trade Balance, which came in at a whopping $47.8 billion on expectations of $45 billion, the widest gap since June, which was driven due a plunge in European exports as the European economy is shriveling in the grips of what is about to be a doozy of a recession, it may be time to polish those resumes as the inevitable decoupling approaches with every passing hour. Yet one of the best comments on what Europe really means for the world comes from none other than Bank of America. While we have discussed previously that BAC is doing its best to crush the market and to precipitate QE3, thus like everyone else, always having an agenda in its message, what it is saying is spot on. And it is as follows: "Europe matters, according to the most oft-heard arguments, because of its size and the euro’s reserve currency status. The Euro area’s systemic relevance (both in trade and financial terms) means that its governance crisis is a global menace. This narrative portrays Europe as a self-contained shock emitter, with the rest of the world cast as innocent bystander. Rather, much like the Lehman bust, the current Euro area crisis may be a symptom of faulty globalized finance. Europe is rightly being held to account for fiscal mismanagement, but there may be bigger cracks in the background." Spot on, and it gets even worse, which we urge everyone who still doesn't grasp the linkages between Europe and the US to read on.
Why Do Zombie Banks Hate Writing Off Bad Loans? Jonathan Weil Explains
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2012 15:43 -0500Wonder why all bank earnings over the past 3 years are fake? Wonder why few if any banks ever dare to take major write offs and represent the true nature of their financials? Wonder no longer: Bloomberg's Jonathan Weil explains.
The Biggest Threat To The 2012 Economy Is??? Not What Wall Street Is Telling You...
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 01/12/2012 11:13 -0500- Bank Run
- Bear Stearns
- Bond
- Central Banks
- China
- Commercial Real Estate
- Crude
- European Central Bank
- Fail
- fixed
- Fox News
- France
- Germany
- Global Economy
- Greece
- Group Think
- Iran
- Italy
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- MF Global
- national security
- Newspaper
- OPEC
- PIMCO
- Real estate
- Reality
- Recession
- recovery
- Reggie Middleton
- Repo Market
- SocGen
- Sovereign Debt
- Volatility
- WaMu
Imagine pensions not paying retiree funds, insurers not paying claims, and banks collapsing everywhere. Sounds like fun? I will be discussing this live on RT's Capital Account with the lusciously locquacious Lauryn Lyster at 4:30pm.
Iran Launches New Military Exercise, This Time Along Afghanistan Border
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/07/2012 11:29 -0500
While the aftermath of the first 10 day Iranian wargame in the Straits of Hormuz is still lingering, especially in the price of oil, and the world is bracing itself for parallel exercises between a joint US-Israel operation and a concurrent Iranian effort in the weeks ahead, Iran is not waiting and has already started a brand new military exercise, this time inland and far closer to a key US strategic asset - Afghanistan (and its poppies). From Reuters: "Iran launched a military manoeuvre near its border with Afghanistan on Saturday, the semi-official Fars news agency reported, days after naval exercises in the Gulf increased tensions with the West and pushed up oil prices. Mohammad Pakpour, commander of the Revolutionary Guards' ground forces, said the "Martyrs of Unity" exercises near Khvat, 60 km (40 miles) from Afghanistan, were "aimed at boosting security along the Iranian borders," Fars reported." Naturally, this "reason" is bogus. That said, at this point we are at a loss as to which country it is that is desiring a military escalation more, because both sides appear hell bent on moving past the foreplay stage. Regardless, the whole situation is starting to smell more and more like the summer of 2008 when crude would move up in $5 increments on flaring tensions between Israel and Iran, coupled with Goldman predictions of near-quadruple digit Brent, only to have the entire energy complex implode in the aftermath of Lehman. The recent decoupling of oil from all other risk indicators (oil higher is not a good thing for the economy) is vaguely reminiscent...
First I set CNBC on F.I.R.E., Now It Appears I've Set Sell Side Wall Street on F.I.R.E. As Well!!!
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 01/06/2012 08:22 -0500We dont' need any water, let the mo@#$#%ker burn!
Bonanzas Don't End Well
Submitted by South of Wall Street on 01/05/2012 18:45 -0500The Shale Bonanza has the setup for implosion
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.
Bill Gross Exposes "The New Paranormal" In Which "The Financial Markets And Global Economies Are At Great Risk"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/04/2012 07:50 -0500- Bank of England
- Bill Gross
- BOE
- Bond
- Central Banks
- Commercial Paper
- Creditors
- default
- European Central Bank
- Federal Reserve
- Fractional Reserve Banking
- Great Depression
- Iran
- Japan
- Lehman
- LTRO
- Meredith Whitney
- MF Global
- New Normal
- PIMCO
- Reality
- Sovereign Debt
- Sovereigns
- Unemployment
- Volatility
- Yield Curve
In his latest letter, Bill Gross, obviously for his own reasons, essentially channels Zero Hedge, and repeats everything we have been saying over the past 3 years. We'll take that as a compliment. Next thing you know he will convert the TRF into a gold-only physical fund in anticipation of the wrong-end of the "fat tail" hitting reality head on at full speed, and sending the entire house of centrally planned cards crashing down. "How many ways can you say “it’s different this time?” There’s “abnormal,” “subnormal,” “paranormal” and of course “new normal.” Mohamed El-Erian’s awakening phrase of several years past has virtually been adopted into the lexicon these days, but now it has an almost antiquated vapor to it that reflected calmer seas in 2011 as opposed to the possibility of a perfect storm in 2012. The New Normal as PIMCO and other economists would describe it was a world of muted western growth, high unemployment and relatively orderly delevering. Now we appear to be morphing into a world with much fatter tails, bordering on bimodal. It’s as if the Earth now has two moons instead of one and both are growing in size like a cancerous tumor that may threaten the financial tides, oceans and economic life as we have known it for the past half century. Welcome to 2012...For 2012, in the face of a delevering zero-bound interest rate world, investors must lower return expectations. 2–5% for stocks, bonds and commodities are expected long term returns for global financial markets that have been pushed to the zero bound, a world where substantial real price appreciation is getting close to mathematically improbable. Adjust your expectations, prepare for bimodal outcomes. It is different this time and will continue to be for a number of years. The New Normal is “Sub,” “Ab,” “Para” and then some. The financial markets and global economies are at great risk."
Exposing American Banks' Multi-Trillion Umbilical Cord With Europe
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/03/2012 10:36 -0500
One of the reports making the rounds today is a previously little-known academic presentation by Princeton University economist Hyun Song Shin, given in November, titled "Global Banking Glut and Loan Risk Premium" whose conclusion as recently reported by the Washington Post is that "European banks have played a much bigger role in the U.S. economy than has been generally thought — and could do a lot more damage than expected as they pull back." Apparently the fact that in an age of peak globalization where every bank's assets are every other banks liabilities and so forth in what is an infinite daisy chain of counterparty exposure, something we have been warning about for years, it is news that the US is not immune to Europe's banks crashing and burning. The same Europe which as Bridgewater described yesterday as follows: "You've got insolvent banks supporting insolvent sovereigns and insolvent sovereigns supporting insolvent banks." In other words, trillions (about $3 trillion to be exact) in exposure to Europe hangs in the balance on the insolvency continent's perpetuation of a ponzi by a set of insolvent nations, backstopping their insolvent banks. If this is not enough reason to buy XLF nothing is. Yet while CNBC's surprise at this finding is to be expected, one person whom we did not expect to be caught offguard by this was one of the only economists out there worth listening to: Ken Rogoff. Here is what he said: "Shin’s paper has orders of magnitude that I didn’t know"...Rogoff said it’s hard to calculate the impact that the unfolding European banking crisis could have on the United States. “If we saw a meltdown, it’s hard to be too hyperbolic about how grave the effects would be” he said. Actually not that hard - complete collapse sounds about right. Which is why the central banks will never let Europe fail - first they will print, then they will print, and lastly they will print some more. But we all knew that. Although the take home is the finally the talking heads who claim that financial decoupling is here will shut up once and for all.
Reggie Middleton on CNBC StreetSigns Sees 2012 As Reluctant/Manipulated Continuation of Q1 2009
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 01/03/2012 07:42 -0500The iconoclastic outcast being called in to shake things up a little. I'll appear on CNBC @2:30 with my outlook for 2012. I'm not shy about my track record & here's what I'll have to say.
ECB's Balance Sheet Now Far Bigger Than Fed's, More Levered Than Lehman, PIIGS Exposure Up 50% In 6 Months
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/20/2011 08:31 -0500While well-known to most, what may be lost on all those calling for the ECB to commence outright printing, is that as today's Bloodmberg chart of the day shows, the ECB's balance sheet is not only far greater than the Fed, at $3.2 trillion compared to $2.9 trillion for Ben Bernanke, but at 30x leverage, has the same risk as Lehman did at its peak. However, one major distinction between the Fed and the ECB is that while the Fed continues to be shrouded in almost impenetrable secrecy on an absolute basis, it is transparent as a wet t-shirt competition during Spring Break at Panama City Beach compared to the ECB. From Bloomberg: "Without information on the quality of assets on the ECB’s balance sheet or how far it’s willing to allow leverage to increase, investors may doubt the bank’s ability to prop up the financial system, and demand higher yields to buy some countries’ bonds, he said. "Sovereign spreads could rise again if investors become uncomfortable with ECB leverage without a fully detailed rescue package,” said Tyce. “The ECB is providing liquidity and confidence to the banking system, yet all the while its own leverage and balance sheet size is hitting new highs. It seems likely that the market will begin to watch the rising leverage with interest and growing concern."
Goldman, et. al. Suffer From The Same Malady That Collapsed Lehman and MF Global, Worlds 1st and 8th Largest Bankruptcies!
Submitted by Reggie Middleton on 12/12/2011 12:48 -0500There is NEVER just ONE roach!!!
Market Snapshot: Flip Flop.... Update - And Plunge On Bond Purchases, IMF, Lehman Comments
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/08/2011 09:03 -0500
Update 2: Draghi just killed IMF lending proposal - "lending money to IMF to buy Euro bonds is not compatible with the treaty" - EURUSD now in free fall.
Update: two additional comments, i) that the ECB is not the IMF, and that lending to the IMF would be very complex legally, and ii) that the liquidity situation is comparable to post Lehman have sent everything plunging to overnight lows. Lastly, Draghi just kicked the ball in Europe's court. This is about to get very ugly fast.
It was all going so well until Draghi dropped the coded 'less' bond purchases 'no bazooka' bomb-shell at which EURUSD, BTPs, European bank stocks, and ES all stalled instantly and started to revert to pre-Dragozel levels. BTPs are holding up the best for now, though almost entirely retraced, but a 1% up and down roundtrip in ES was enough for many to see the schizophrenic market at its best.
We Just Had A "Rerun" Of Bear Stearns: When Is Lehman Coming?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/07/2011 08:05 -0500
As the attached chart showing USD liquidity swap line usage by the ECB, or more specifically by European banks, we have now seen a surge to levels last seen in August 2009. However, more importantly this is where the usage was for the first time after the failure of Bear Stearns, and when everyone thought all had been fixed... until Lehman came. We are there now, in other words, we have just experienced a behind the scenes Bear-type event. What is disturbing is just how fast the rate of change was this time around compared to before, when it took months to get to $50 billion. Now, it was one week. When "Lehman v2.0" hits and it will hit, the next step function in the Fed's global bailout will be so big and so fast, it will induce vertigo.





