Market Share
Surprise: Tech Company Valuations Are Completely Made Up
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/18/2015 09:55 -0500We thought private tech company valuations looked ridiculous, but as the VC world will patiently explain to you, things like cash flow and operating costs actually don't matter, and "valuation" doesn't mean what you thought it meant.
The 5 Most Crowded Trades on Wall Street: Part 1
Submitted by EconMatters on 03/16/2015 13:35 -0500I would say Apple is the most dangerous holding on the street right now for portfolio managers.
The ECB Should End QE Next Month
Submitted by EconMatters on 03/15/2015 22:01 -0500I am not sure how long Mario Draghi can carry on this QE Charade, but it is quite obvious that there is nothing more to be gained from the program.
From Yellen Put To Yellen Massacre
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/12/2015 07:27 -0500- Apple
- BIS
- BLS
- Bond
- Brazil
- BRICs
- Carry Trade
- Central Banks
- China
- Corruption
- CRAP
- Crude
- default
- European Union
- Evans-Pritchard
- Federal Reserve
- Hong Kong
- Janet Yellen
- Lehman
- Market Crash
- Market Share
- Monetary Policy
- Morgan Stanley
- Quantitative Easing
- Recession
- recovery
- Smart Money
- Stress Test
- Yen
- Yuan
- Zurich
Yellen has created a narrative about the US economy, especially the (un)employment rate, and with the narrative is now firmly in place, Yellen and her stooges can claim they have no choice but to hike In short, Janet Yellen will go down into history as the person responsible for what may be the biggest economic crash ever, or at least delivering the final punch of the way into it, a crash that will make the rich banks even much richer. And there is not one iota of coincidence in there. Yellen works for those banks. The Fed only ever held investors’ hands because that worked out well for Wall Street. And now that’s over. Y’all are on the same side of the same trade, and there’s no profit for Wall Street that way.
Frontrunning: March 12
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/12/2015 06:30 -0500- American Express
- Apple
- B+
- BAC
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank of England
- Barclays
- Bond
- Capital One
- Central Banks
- China
- Citigroup
- Deutsche Bank
- Evercore
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- General Electric
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Greece
- Insider Trading
- Keycorp
- LIBOR
- Market Conditions
- Market Share
- Merrill
- Morgan Stanley
- Motorola
- Natural Gas
- New York City
- Newspaper
- Pepsi
- Raymond James
- Real estate
- Reuters
- Risk Management
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Serious Fraud Office
- Stress Test
- VeRA
- White House
- Yuan
- As reported here first: The U.S. Has Too Much Oil and Nowhere to Put It (BBG)
- Dollar Drops From 12-Year High as S&P Futures, Bonds Gain (BBG); Dollar Bulls Retreat From 12-Year High to Euro With Fed in View (BBG)
- Clinton Private Email Plan Drew Concerns Early On (WSJ)
- ECB Bond Buying Not Needed With Economy Improving, Weidmann Says (BBG)
- China Feb new yuan loans well above forecast (Reuters)
- U.S. probing report Secret Service agents drove car into White House barrier (Reuters)
- Kerry tells Republicans: you cannot modify Iran-U.S. nuclear deal (Reuters)
- PBOC Pledges to Press on With Rate Liberalization Amid Slowdown (BBG)
- China Prepares Mergers for Big State-Owned Enterprises (WSJ)
"We Have Front-Row Seats To An Imminent Market Shock", Hedge Fund Billionaire Warns
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/11/2015 21:50 -0500"Central banks are not all singing and all dancing," and cannot avoid the consequences of what they are doing, concluding, "you and I have got grandstand seats here [to an imminent market shock]," and investors are about to "find out just how illiquid it really is out there."
Apple Unveils World-Changing Wrist-Band - Live Feed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/09/2015 12:50 -0500Judging by the euphoric exaggeration and fanboyism on mainstream media this morning, today's Apple Watch (not iWatch, definitely not iWatch) unveiling promises to be "world-changing" for the 'wearables' industry (as well as numerous "first time ever..." comments). Of course, there are 'watches' on the market already, but as Reuters Jason Fields 'jokes', the Apple Watch, of course, does more. The face is high resolution and in color. It even has apps that allow you to do a few of the things you’d be able to do if only you could muster the strength to dig your hand into the front pocket of your jeans, or do a little digging in your handbag.
US Will Never Gain Oil Market Crown, IEA Chief Says
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/02/2015 12:36 -0500No matter how much oil the United States produces over the next few years, it will never become the next Saudi Arabia in the global oil market, according to Fatih Birol, the new executive director of the International Energy Agency (IEA). What's especially interesting about this forecast is that it directly contradicts what Birol said only three months ago, and he gave no explanation for his change of mind. “The United States will never be a major oil exporter. Their import needs are getting less but the US is not becoming Saudi Arabia,” Birol told the conference. “Their production growth is good to diversify the market but it will not solve the world’s oil problems.”
Warren Buffett Releases Monster 43-Page Half-Century Letter To Berkshire Faithful
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/28/2015 09:40 -0500The day the Buffet "value-investing" fanatics have been looking forward to all year, almost as much as the annual pilgrimage to Omaha, has finally arrived - hours ago Warren Buffett released his historic, 50th annual letter to shareholders, which is extra special because as the Oracle notes in the foreword, "Fifty years ago, today’s management took charge at Berkshire. For this Golden Anniversary, Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger each wrote his views of what has happened at Berkshire during the past 50 years and what each expects during the next 50."
5 Things To Ponder: Weekend Catch Up
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/27/2015 17:25 -0500With the "Great Greek Tragedy" now behind the markets, for the time being, all eyes have turned towards the Nasdaq's triumphant march back to 5000. (The graphics department at CNBC have been working overtime on banners and bugs for when it happens....watch for them.) For now, it is all about the hopes of a cyclical upturn in the Eurozone economy supported by the ECB's QE program starting next month. Market participants have been bidding up stocks globally in anticipation that the ECB's program will pick up where the Fed left off, and the flood of liquidity will find its way back into asset prices
EM Euro Issuance Will Be Highest In A Decade On QE
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 02/27/2015 08:17 -0500- Apple
- BOE
- Bond
- Brazil
- CBOE
- China
- Copper
- CPI
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Department Of Commerce
- European Central Bank
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- Fisher
- Greece
- headlines
- Ireland
- Japan
- Lloyds
- Market Share
- Mexico
- NASDAQ
- Nasdaq 100
- New York Fed
- OPEC
- Quantitative Easing
- RBS
- recovery
- Reuters
- Richard Fisher
- Russell 2000
- Saudi Arabia
- Sovereigns
- Trade Deficit
- Ukraine
- Volatility
Euro-denominated emerging market sovereign issuance will soar to its highest levels in 10 years on the back of the European Central Bank's quantitative easing programme, as issuers outside the eurozone seek to take advantage of falling euro yields, according to bank analysts.
"This Shorting Opportunity Is As Great As 2007-2009", Billionaire Crispin Odey Warns
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/24/2015 15:12 -0500"For me the shorting opportunity looks as great as it was in 07/09, if only because people are still looking at what is hap-pening and believe that each event is an individual, isolated event. Whether it’s the oil price fall or the Swiss franc move, they’re seen as exceptions. ... we used all our monetary firepower to avoid the first downturn in 2007-09, so we are really at a dangerous point to try to counter the effects of a slowing China, falling commodities and EM incomes, and the ultimate First World effects. This down cycle is likely to be remembered in a hundred years . Sadly this down cycle will cause a great deal of damage, precisely because it will happen despite the efforts of the central banks to thwart it."
Tesla: Bonfire Of The Money Printers' Vanities
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/21/2015 12:00 -0500The trouble with the money printing madness in the Eccles Building is that it generates huge deformations, misallocations and speculative excesses in the financial markets. Eventually these bubbles splatter, as they have twice this century. The resulting carnage, needless to say, is not small. Combined financial and real estate asset markdowns totaled about $7 trillion after the dotcom bust and $15 trillion during the 2008-2009 financial crisis. The Wall Street casino is now festooned with giant deadweight losses waiting to happen. But perhaps none is more egregious than Tesla - a crony capitalist con job that has long been insolvent, and has survived only by dint of prodigious taxpayer subsidies and billions of free money from the Fed’s Wall Street casino.
Why The Price Of Oil Is More Likely To Fall To 20 Rather Than Rise To 80
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/16/2015 17:00 -0500This is just the beginning of the oil crisis.
Why Citi Thinks Oil Is Going To $20
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/09/2015 13:53 -0500The recent rally in crude prices looks more like a head-fake than a sustainable turning point, suggests Citi's Ed Morse, noting that short-term market factors are more bearish, pointing to more price pressure for the next couple of months and beyond. While the shape of the oil price recovery is unlikely to be 'L'-shaped in their view (more likely 'U', 'V', or 'W'-shaped recovery), Citi warns the oil market should bottom sometime between the end of Q1 and beginning of Q2 at a significantly lower price level in the $40 range (perhaps as low as the $20 range for a while) - after which markets should start to balance, first with an end to inventory builds and later on with a period of sustained inventory draws.




