Lehman
Days Of Crony Capitalist Plunder - The Deplorable Truth About GE Capital
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/12/2015 12:05 -0500- AIG
- American Express
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bernie Sanders
- Bond
- Book Value
- Capital Markets
- Capital One
- Central Banks
- Citibank
- Commercial Paper
- Corporate Finance
- Corruption
- Excess Reserves
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- Gambling
- GE Capital
- General Electric
- General Motors
- GMAC
- Great Depression
- Hank Paulson
- Hank Paulson
- Housing Prices
- Jeff Immelt
- Lehman
- Main Street
- Meltdown
- Milton Friedman
- Money Supply
- Mortgage Loans
- Neel Kashkari
- None
- Private Equity
- ratings
- Real estate
- Reality
- Ron Paul
- Salient
- Sheila Bair
- Student Loans
- TARP
- Treasury Department
- Yield Curve
GE’s announcement that its getting out of the finance business should be a reminder of how crony capitalism is corrupting and debilitating the American economy. The ostensible reason the company is unceremoniously dumping its 25-year long build-up of the GE Capital mega-bank is that it doesn’t want to be regulated by Washington as a systematically important financial institution under Dodd-Frank. Oh, and that its core industrial businesses have better prospects. We will see soon enough about its oilfield equipment and wind turbine business, or indeed all of its capital goods oriented businesses in a radically deflationary world drowning in excess capacity. But at least you can say good riddance to GE Capital because it was based on a phony business model that was actually a menace to free market capitalism. Its deplorable raid on the public purse during the Lehman crisis had already demonstrated that in spades.
"I’m The First To Say: I Can’t Do It" - The Energy Junk-Bond Implosion Just Claimed Its First Victim
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2015 14:47 -0500The universe of entities who have blown up in the past year trading oil and commodities is getting increasingly more crowded and includes among them such former luminaries as one-time oil trading god (if mostly in the eyes of Citigroup) Andy Hall. However, until now there not been any prominent casualties among the group of indirect investors in the energy space, those investing in the stocks or debt of energy names, and especially those most at risk from the oil price collapse: junk bond investors. That changed today when as WSJ reported earlier, Kamunting Street, which managed about $1 billion at its peak, announced it was returning capital to investors, as a result of plunging oil prices and wrong way junk bond bets tied to hard-hit energy companies which had gone sour over the past nine months.
Job Cuts In Industries "Closely-Related" To Oil Likely To Triple, Goldman Says
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2015 10:34 -0500"We find that in previous oil-sector downturns, job growth in non-energy sectors that are closely related to the oil & gas industry has declined by three to four times as much as the decline in oil & gas employment itself," Goldman says, implying we're likely to see a substantial number of cuts in the months ahead.
Recession 2.0: Abysmal Wholesale Sales Join Factory Orders In Confirming US Economic Contraction
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/09/2015 09:37 -0500Despite another data series revision by the Department of Commerce, there was no way to put lipstick on the pig of America's wholesale trade data, and as reported moments ago, the all important merchant sales for February dropped for 3rd month in a row in February, the longest stretch since the last recession. What's worse however, is that the annual pace of decline has now stretched over both January and February, confirming that 2015 is now officially a year of contraction for the US economy. As a reminder, every time this series suffers an annual decline, there is a recession.
Non-GAAP Gimmickry 101: How Alcoa Just Beat Consensus EPS
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/08/2015 15:46 -0500Some companies are notorious for buying back billions in stock in order to mask the decline in their earnings by reducing the number of shares outstanding. Alcoa, which still has a major debt overhang from the last financial crisis, is unable to do that as it simply does not have the free cash flow to dedicate to shareholder friendly activities. Instead, Klaus Kleinfeld's company is forced to resort to an even more primitive form of EPS fudging: massive quarterly EPS addbacks.
Was This It For America's "Hiring Spree"?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/07/2015 10:51 -0500As the following chart shows, whereas in the past the total number of hires tracked closely the cumulative 1 year change in jobs, this time is has failed to do so, and as the chart below shows, the hires rate has dropped sharply, and at 4.916MM was not only the lowest since August but also represents the biggest two-month drop since Lehman!
Facing A Housing Hard-Landing, Chinese Propaganda Goes All-In: "Set Positive Agenda; Boost Market Confidence"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/05/2015 11:53 -0500With China's economy facing an imminent hard-landing unless it succeeds in stabilizing its housing sector, what is China doing? The same thing that the US has been doing over the past 7 years using such traditional propaganda pathways as mainstream media and Financial TV outlets such as CNBC, however with an emphasis on real-estate instead of stocks: it has unleashed an unprecedented propaganda onslaught by its "Department of Truth" urging China's population to drop everything and back the truth up with a brand new Chinese house... or second... or third. Because unless it succeeds to get the local population to jump right back on the housing bandwagon, the hard landing beckons.
Running Out Of Accounting Gimmicks: EPS Addbacks Surge Most Since Lehman
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/05/2015 10:16 -0500The amount of non-GAAP addbacks boosting the S&P "earnings" to their latest quarterly high has never been greater. In fact, the last time the absolutely notional value of pro-forma addbacks was anywhere near this close was in the Lehman "kitchen sink" quarter, when companies took advantage of the biggest bailout in capitalist history, to square their fudged income statement and balance sheet with accounting reality, resulting in an addback that was greater than the actual GAAP print!
Valuing Gold
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/04/2015 17:30 -0500There is only one way to value gold, and that is to quantify the expansion of the fiat currency in which it is priced.
Pitchfork Populism & The Ghost Of 1937
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/04/2015 16:00 -0500- Abenomics
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Bond
- Bridgewater
- Central Banks
- Copper
- Covenants
- Creditors
- Dallas Fed
- Excess Reserves
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- Fisher
- Ford
- France
- Golden Goose
- Great Depression
- Greece
- headlines
- India
- Italy
- Japan
- Latvia
- Lehman
- Monetary Policy
- Money Supply
- Netherlands
- New York Stock Exchange
- None
- NRA
- Paul Volcker
- Purchasing Power
- Ray Dalio
- Recession
- recovery
- Renaissance
- Richard Fisher
- SWIFT
- Switzerland
- Turkey
- Unemployment
With the Fed supposedly steeling itself at last to remove a little of its emergency ‘accommodation’, it has suddenly become fashionable to warn of the awful parallels with 1937 as an excuse The Fed must not act today. We strongly refute the analogy. Instead, the real Ghost of ’37 takes the form of mean-spirited and, counter-productive 'pitchfork populism' politics and the spectre should not be conjured up to excuse the central bank from further delaying its overdue embarkation on the long road back to normality and policy minimalism.
The "Revolver Raid" Arrives: A Wave Of Shale Bankruptcies Has Just Been Unleashed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/02/2015 17:56 -0500Back in early 2007, just as the first cracks of the bursting housing and credit bubble were becoming visible, one of the primary harbingers of impending doom was banks slowly but surely yanking availability (aka dry powder) under secured revolving credit facilities to companies across America. This, in effect, was the first snowflake in what would ultimately become the lack of liquidity avalanche that swept away AIG and unleashed the biggest bailout of capitalism in history. Back then, analysts had a pet name for banks calling CFOs and telling them "so sorry, but your secured credit availability has been cut by 50%, 75% or worse" - revolver raids. Well, the infamous revolver raids are back.
Australia Wants To Tax Bank Deposits: Will The US Follow?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/02/2015 15:30 -0500If the government of Australia is concerned that their well-capitalized banking system needs a safety net and wants to tax deposits for such purpose, how in the world can we possibly expect the US and Europe, with all of their banking system risk, won’t do the same?
Stocks Jump As Crude's "Deal Or No Deal" Day Sparks Dollar Dump
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/02/2015 15:07 -0500The Economy is Imploding at a 2008-Pace… and Investors Are Record BULLISH!
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 04/02/2015 10:56 -0500And against this disatsrous backdrop… investors are completely bullish!





