Market Share
Saudis Could Face An Open Revolt At Next OPEC Meeting
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/21/2015 12:57 -0500OPEC next gathers December 4 in Vienna, just over a year since Saudi Oil Minister Ali Al-Naimi announced at the previous OPEC winter meeting the Saudi decision to let the oil market determine oil prices rather than to continue Saudi Arabia’s role of guarantor of $100+/bbl oil. Despite the intense financial and economic pain this decision has inflicted on Saudi Arabia, its fellow OPEC members, and other oil producers, the Saudis have given no indication they plan to alter course. Given the Saudi decision’s positive impact on their and their Gulf Arab allies’ relative position within OPEC and its negative impact on OPEC outsiders, it is possible, perhaps even likely, the Saudis will face an OPEC outsider revolt at the December 4 OPEC meeting.. with three possible outcomes - Reconociliation, Separation, or Divorce.
Low Oil Prices Could Break The "Fragile Five" Producing Nations
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2015 13:40 -0500Persistently low oil prices have already inflicted economic pain on oil-producing countries. But with crude sticking near six-year lows, the risk of political turmoil is starting to rise. There are several countries in which the risks are the greatest – Algeria, Iraq, Libya, Nigeria, and Venezuela – and, as we noted previously, RBC Capital Markets has labeled them the “Fragile Five.”
Frontrunning: August 20
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2015 06:39 -0500- Crude prices fall towards $40 on global glut (Reuters)
- China Central Bank Injects Most Funds Since February as Money Rates Increase (BBG)
- Divided Fed Puts Yellen on Hot Seat (Hilsenrath)
- So Long September: Bond Traders Defer Their Date With the Fed (BBG)
- More Foods Boast Non-GMO Labels—Even Those Without GMO Varieties (WSJ)
- UN to let Iran inspect alleged nuke work site (AP)
- IAEA says access to Iran's Parchin military site meets demands (Reuters)
- Time to End Quarterly Reports, Law Firm Says (WSJ)
Echoes Of 1997: China Devaluation "Rekindles" Asian Crisis Memories, BofA Warns
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/19/2015 17:29 -0500Even before the latest shot across the bow in the escalating global currency wars, EM FX was beset by falling commodity prices, stumbling Chinese demand, and a looming Fed hike. And while, as Barclays notes, "estimating the global effects China has via the exchange rate and growth remains a rough exercise," more than a few observers believe the effect may be to spark a Asian Financial Crisis redux. For their part, BofAML has endeavored to compare last week’s move to the 1994 renminbi devaluation, on the way to drawing comparisons between what happened in 1997 and what may unfold in the months ahead.
Cyanide Thunderstorms Feared As Mystery Deepens Around $1.5 Billion Tianjin Explosion
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/18/2015 16:20 -0500The story behind the deadly chemical explosion that rocked China’s Tianjin port last Wednesday continues to evolve amid fears that the public could be at risk from the hundreds of tonnes of sodium cyanide stored at the facility. Indeed, new samples show that the cyanide level in the water around the site is some 28 times the safety standard. It looks as though determining who actually owns Ruihai will be complicated by the fact that in China, it’s not uncommon for front men to hold shares on behalf of a company’s real owners. In an effort to pacify the country’s censored masses, party mouthpiece The People’s Daily said 10 people, including the head and deputy head of Ruihai had been detained since Thursday. Finally, initial estimates put the cost of the blast at bewteen $1 billion and $1.5 billion.
It's Not The Economy Stupid: It's The Fed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/16/2015 10:12 -0500Today many are talking about the economy, but that’s all they’re doing: talking. Doesn’t matter if its today’s politician, CEO’s from the largest corporations, some national or regional business association figure-head, right down to academia with its self-perpetuating gaggle of Ivory Tower economic aficionados. All they are doing is paying lip-service to the problems. And the reason? They can’t do anything about it because as of today, the U.S. economy is being controlled high-handedly by The Federal Reserve. The U.S. economy has never before been under the command and control of a single entity – until now. Today the Fed. entices nearly all businesses to focus on short-term games of financial engineering rather than on core business principles to grow. This is what a stance at the zero bound gives rise to.
Why Crude Oil's Carnage Has Only Just Begun
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/14/2015 11:16 -0500If crude’s slump back to a six-year low looks bad, Bloomberg notes that it’s even worse when you reflect that summer is supposed to be peak season for oil, and “it will get more so as refiners go into maintenance.”
Don't Look Now, But The Subprime Auto Bubble May Be Bursting
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/13/2015 19:15 -0500"Losses on car loans taken out by bad-credit borrowers are continuing to climb. What's driving the rise? Nomura has an idea."
HTC Worth Less to Investors than Cash on Hand
Submitted by EquityNet on 08/13/2015 06:31 -0500What was once the most popular Android manufacture in the world, HTC’s market price has now fallen below the value of its own cash reserves of roughly $1.4 billion. According to Calvin Huang of Sinopac Financial Holdings Co. in Taipei, “HTC’s cash is the only asset of value to shareholders. Most of the other assets shouldn’t be considered in their valuation because there’s more write-offs to come and the brand has no value.”
Cash-Strapped Saudi Arabia Hopes To Continue War Against Shale With Fed's Blessing
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2015 19:35 -0500In an irony of ironies, Saudi Arabia is set to take advantage of the very same forgiving capital markets that have served to keep its US competition in business as persistently low oil prices and two armed conflicts look set to strain the Kingdom's finances.
Why Apple Is Falling Again: Bank of America Cuts AAPL From Buy To Neutral, Lowers Price Target
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/05/2015 06:09 -0500Curious why after its massive drubbing yesterday, which led to the second highest volume day for AAPL stock in 2015, the phone market is down another 1.3% this morning? The reason: Wall Street's momentum chasing penguins have re-emerged, and moments ago Bank of America, right on time as in just after the stock broke its 200 DMA and entered a correction, decided to downgrade AAPL from Buy to Neutral, lowering its price target from $142 to $130.
Here's Why Apple Just Entered A Correction
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/04/2015 07:53 -0500Apple is down 12% from exuberant earnings highds just a few days ago and has broken below a crucial technical support level at its 200-day moving average (something it has not done in over 2 years). While the parade of bullish analysts and fan boys continues to have faith that Apple TV, iCar, or iWatch will bring about the next leg of the 'no brainer' rally to trillion-dollar market cap levels, perhaps, just perhaps, there is a crack in the armor of the "as goes Apple so goes America" company. As Engadget reports, Apple has slipped to third place in China -behind Xiamoi and fast-growing rival Huawei...
Frontrunning: August 4
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/04/2015 06:32 -0500- Apple
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bond
- Bulgaria
- Carbon Emissions
- China
- Citadel
- Corruption
- Creditors
- Crude
- Daimler
- default
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Greece
- High Frequency Trading
- High Frequency Trading
- Hong Kong
- Ken Griffin
- LIBOR
- Market Share
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- Natural Gas
- NBC
- Oaktree
- PIMCO
- Puerto Rico
- ratings
- RBS
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Tata
- Turkey
- UK Financial Investments
- Wall Street Journal
- Yuan
- Unhappy Voters Shake Up Presidential Race (WSJ)
- China stock exchanges step up crackdown on short-selling (Reuters)
- China Dethroned as World’s Most Liquid Stock Market After Curbs (BBG)
- Xiaomi retakes the smartphone lead in China as Apple slips (Engadget)
- Impact of EPA’s Emissions Rule on Industry to Vary (WSJ)
- Citadel’s Ken Griffin Leaves 2008 Tumble Far Behind (WSJ)
- Greece says expects bailout deal by Aug 18 (Reuters)
Knife-Catching Hedge Fund Oil Bulls Dump Crude At Fastest Pace In 3 Years
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/27/2015 13:51 -0500Hedge Funds' net long position in WTI Crude collapsed 27% (the biggest single 'dump' in over 3 years) ahead of the big plunge last week (and is now down almost 60% in the last month - the most since 2010). Part of a broader deflationary collapse in commodities, as Bloomberg reports, long positions dropped to a two-year low while short holdings climbed 25%, erasing more than $100 billion in market value from the 61 companies in the Bloomberg E&P stock index. With crude supplies still almost 100 million barrels above the five-year average, "there's a lot more room for prices to slide," warned one trader, "it's going to take a long time for this to work itself out."
World Trade Slumps By Most Since Financial Crisis
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/23/2015 21:45 -0500As goes the world, so goes America (according to 30 years of historical data), and so when world trade volumes drop over 2% (the biggest drop since 2009) in the last six months to the weakest since June 2014, the "US recession imminent" canary in the coalmine is drawing her last breath...



