Market Conditions
Latest China Bailout Rumor Crumbles As EFSF Pulls Bond Due To "Market Conditions", France-Bund Spread At Record
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/02/2011 06:24 -0500
Once again the desperation level is high as seemingly the core driver of overnight strength was a rumor that China would inject €700 billion in the EFSF, coupled with the even more desperate expectation that in a few short hours Ben will launch the LSAP version of QE: something that is virtually impossibly unless stocks drop to triple digits, and a fact that the market with its constant attempts at Fed frontrunning makes practically impossible. Yet this was good enough to tighten the all critical Italy-Bund spread to 422bps overnight (recall it hit the catastrophic 455 bps yesterday). However some news since then have put a major damper on sentiment, notably another recessionary data point from Europe, where the October Manufacturing PMI printed at 47.1 on expectations of 47.3, and German unemployment posting a rare disappointing miss printing +10K on consensus of -10k. Yet the nail in the coffin for today's European action was that the EFSF, which as we noted already reduced its €5 billion Irish bailout package to €3 billion on subpar market demand, pulled the entire issue citing the trusty old fallback "market conditions" confirming that not only is the latest China bailout rumor a complete fabrication yet again (as explained both here and here). What is more troubling is that the EFSF has set off on its path to raise €1 trillion+ with an epic failure and an inability to raise even €3 billion. That realization has finally spread to the market and not only is the Italy-Bund spread back to morning wides at 438, but, just as disturbing, the French-Bund spread is back to all time wides of 123 bps! That the European interbank liquidity market just collapsed again with ECB deposit facility usage hitting a three week high of €229 billion, coupled with Euribor-OIS spread jumping +6 bps in a week to 0.86% and just off the 3 year highs of 0.89%, is certainly not helping things. Look for more mayhem out of Europe as the G-20 meeting slowly unwinds over the next day, and the complete lack of organization in Europe is exposed for all to see all over again.
Zynga To Delay IPO Due To "Market Conditions"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/29/2011 09:00 -0500Nobody could have seen this coming. From Reuters: "Zynga, the social games maker may delay its plans for an initial public offering until November because of poor market conditions, the New York Post newspaper reported late on Sunday. The New York Post, citing two sources with knowledge of Zynga's plans, said the company hoped its shares would be listed as soon as possible but is "no longer in a rush because of the rocky stock markets." Another source close to the company said its public debut could be delayed until November but the company will know more after Labor Day, the newspaper said." Maybe Zynga can just find some of those sophisticated buyers of Sino Forest stock who were betting on a dead cat bounce, or all of those distressed funds who were bidding up the bonds at 50. If that fail, it can just approach the Sovereign Wealth Funds which bailed out the biggest (pro forma) Greek and American bank for a few days.
Price Discovery Era Coming To An End As Spain, France, Belgium, Greece Extend Short Selling Ban "Due To Market Conditions" (Update: And Italy)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/25/2011 11:08 -0500Kiss the free market goodbye. Spain's and France's regulator have both just announced that the short selling ban, which was supposed to expire tomorrow, has now been extended until the end of September 30, and November 11, respectively. Add to this Belgium and Greece whose regulators announced they will lift its own short selling ban "when conditions allow", or some time in October, in and we can pretty much be confident that the European market rout seen earlier is due to someone leaking the news that price discovery in Europe is now officially over.
More "Market Conditions": GM Stock Sale May Be Delayed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/12/2011 09:02 -0500First the AIG refiling, which may be pulled if the offering price has to be at a loss for the Treasury (below $29) and now:
- GM STOCK SALE MAY BE DELAYED UNTIL MID-AUG. OR SEPT.: NY TIMES
It seems market conditions now are any pullback in the Russell 2000 more than 1%
POMO Extended Until 12:05 PM, Monetization Market Conditions, And Primary Dealers Permitting
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/16/2011 10:33 -0500Confirming that the Fed's Weimar monetization practices are entirely dependent on the market, and that POMO can only proceed if the Plunge Protection Team does its job, the earlier cancelled POMO has been rescheduled for 12:05 pm now that the PPT-Citadel team is on the line and grinding ES like it is the new chick at Hustler Club. In other news, going forward, the terrorist will win if and when the bond market crashes at 10:59 am, which sends the entire Sack-Frost monetization model out of line. Next up: Article 15 to be implement in the US between the POMO hours of 10:15 am and 11:00 am, where any headline on Reuters or Bloomberg has to be precleared by an FRBNY NYU intern. Once again we get confirmation that when it comes to decisions on who really runs the country, the Primary Dealers who cancelled their entire POMO order book, come on top.
Deplorable Portugal 12 Month Auction Validates Belgium Decision To Pull Sovereign Issuance Due To "Market Conditions"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/16/2011 07:22 -0500Earlier today Portugal had a deplorable bond auction of €1 billion in 12 month Bills, which saw the interest rate paid jump to nearly 4.5% even as general demand indicated by Bid to Cover plunge from 3.1 to 2.2. And even so, the bulk of the purchasing was from Asia, read China, as the last thing Japan needs now is to rescue a insolvent Portugal, according to a finance minister disclosure. From Reuters: "The 12-month T-bill yield rose to 4.331 percent from 4.057 percent in an auction on March 2, in line with analyst expectations of around 4.3 percent and with the secondary market. It also stayed below record levels seen in December." Alas, while Portugal purchased a few days of funding, it merely confirmed that it is now effectively bankrupt as paying 4.3% for 12 months worth of debt indicates the Rubicon has long been passed. Look for Portugal to be bailed out any minute. And in attempting to avoid the same fate, Belgium decided to "postpone" its own bond issuance of 6 year benchmark notes on concern investors will puke all over the paper. "Belgium delayed the sale of a new six-year benchmark bond on Tuesday due to market volatility caused by the Japan earthquake and explosions at a nuclear power station there. Plans to issue the new bond, maturing in June 2017, were announced on Monday, with Deutsche Bank, KBC Bank and Morgan Stanley mandated as joint bookrunners. The markets are so volatile at the moment and attention is concentrating on what is happening in Japan," debt agency chief Anne Leclerq told Reuters." Luckily unlike Portugal which has no choice but to raise debt at every opportunity, Belgium has the choice to await greener pastures. For now.
Morgan Stanley Sees Recent Market Conditions As Reminiscent Of August 2007 Quant Crash, As "Don't Fight The Fed" Groupthink Trade Fizzles
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/24/2011 09:26 -0500
Something scary this way comes from Morgan Stanley's Quantiative and Derivative Strategies: "market conditions over the last two weeks are somewhat reminiscent of that during the August 2007 ‘Quant Crisis’. In only a few days, a number of quantitative long-short equity funds experienced unprecedented losses in seemingly ‘normal’ market conditions. We do not suggest here that the magnitude of hypothetical losses match those from 2007, however, there is little question that the rotation has drawn attention of many quant investors." In other words, the massive groupthink trade that we have been warning about for months may be about to claim its first mass casualties. The just released report by author Charles Crow elaborates what many have been suspecting, yet few dared to voice: "Recent substantial factor movements in Europe have contributed to portfolio volatility and, in some cases, abrupt performance degradation. Portfolios positioned to take advantage of prevailing factor trends may have suffered substantially over the last two weeks." Is the groupthink trade about to end? If so, does that mean the funds will be forced to stop "not fighting the Fed" as this is really the only factor-driven trade that has made sense. If so, we have reached the critical point where being aligned alongside the Fed has no incremental marginal returns, at least for the non-Primary Dealers. This could promptly transform to a watershed event, especially since as Morgan Stanley adds, the market currently has "relatively low liquidity" to absorb the fringe moves.
Harrah's Pulls IPO Due To "Market Conditions"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/19/2010 07:51 -0500Once again we are left scratching our heads how a market trading near its year highs can constitute a "market condition" out for an IPO, but that's precisely what happened to mega LBO Harrah's which as of this morning is no longer going private. Of course, the only market condition involved is not having Getco as your DMM, which is willing to bid up all shares below a certain threshold, only to subsequently go ahead and cell to Citadel in dark pools. Where those shares go afterwards, only Brian Sack knows. The biggest loser however in today's fiasco is John Paulson who is now stuck with holding $710 million of equity in a company that may or may not be viable post the tens of dividend recap deals that are sure to follow the failed IPO.
"Unfavorable Market Conditions" - KKR Pulls US Offering
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/09/2010 16:55 -0500It's official - KKR has pulled its US Offering (S-1). It appears distribution is actually a relevant metric when it comes to pricing overbloated, DOA PE corpses (especially when the memory of BX and FIG is still fresh). HFTs get an F for pushing the market up 10% on next to negative volume. And since when is a parabolic move up of almost 10% considered "Unfavorable Market Conditions." Just how much bullshit is going on behind the scenes of this market?
Brazil's BES Investimento Pulls Bond Deal On"Market Conditions", Company Is Local Unit Of Portuguese Bank
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/05/2010 09:49 -0500This week showed just how jittery the IPO sentiment was, with so many IPOs pulled on "market conditions" even including perpetual cash cows such as porn sites. Now the weakness in the market is shifting to bonds. The latest casualty is Brazil's BES Investimento bank which has postponed a $350 million bond on "market conditions." We are not so sure if the reason is with "market conditions" or whether the true reason has to do with BES being a local unit of Portugues bank Banco Espirito Santo S/A. We anticipate any corporate entities that have a relation with an increasing number of European countries will soon become locked out from the capital markets.
"Market Conditions" Is Back; Energy Transfer Cancels $1.75 Billion Note Offering One Day After Launch
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/21/2010 20:27 -0500Damn, those windows of opportunity sure are brief: it seems syndicators now think the high frequency trading mentality has taken over the primary market. Less than 24 hours after launching a $1.75 billion unsecured note offering, Energy Transfer Equity pulled the very same refinancing attempt. Zero Hedge Capital Markets, Inc. is happy to undercut all eight (yes, eight) members of the underwriting syndicate and place the offering at one tenth the proposed underwriting fee, and will even provide a highly confident letter (that has the simple contingency that the placement be done only if the equity market has had twenty successive 1%+ up days and not a single downtick in the past 24 hours). If ETE management finds our terms attractive, they know how to reach us.
MF Global Cancels $250 Million 10 Year Bond Offering Due To "Market Conditions"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/01/2009 14:34 -0500What? Huh? Market Conditions? Have they seen the market today? Credit and equity markets have now completely decoupled.
Trader commentary:
Hearing the [MF Global Ltd "MR"] USD250m SEC registered 10y issue has been pulled due to market conditions. JPM sole books. Co-mgrs: Citi, MF, Wm Blair. Rated Baa2/BBB.
That's not good for the equity bubble chasers. Credit is always right in the end. And if even JPM can't sell an IG bond, the window is now closed, except for the momos chasing every offer higher.


