Meltdown
Bloodbath: Emerging Market Assets Collapse As China Selloff Triggers Panic
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/24/2015 09:17 -0500On the heels of China's "failure" to send the PBoC to the rescue with an RRR cut over the weekend, battered EM assets were hit hard again on Monday as stocks, bonds, and currencies all went into panic mode as the global meltdown gathers pace.
Why The Bear Of 2015 Is Different From The Bear Of 2008
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/24/2015 07:27 -0500Are there any conditions now that are actually better than those of 2008? Or are conditions now less resilient, more fragile and more dependent on unprecedented central bank interventions?
Mid-East Meltdown Continues: Stocks Sell-Off Across Petrodollar States
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/24/2015 06:52 -0500"Regional buyers need a lot of conviction to step in front of this speeding train [especially] in context of a rapidly changing economic environment."
US Equity Futures Are Crashing
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/23/2015 21:52 -0500Moments ago, without any specific catalyst, US equity futures just plunged when in thin, illiquid tape, a seller took out about 30 consecutive bid levels and as of last check, the ES was down as much as -48 to just 1923, or 2.5%, after being down a modest -13 minutes ago.
Caught On Tape: Massive Explosion At US Weapons Depot In Japan
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/23/2015 12:20 -0500
The Demands For Another Fed Bailout Have Begun
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/22/2015 19:15 -0500Is it any wonder that with "personal finance experts" such as these, that the personal finances of America have never been worse?

Jim Chanos' Dire Prediction On China: "Whatever You Might Think, It's Worse"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/22/2015 16:50 -0500"People are beginning to realize the Chinese government is not omnipotent and omniscient. In fact, like many of us, sometimes they don't have a clue."
Making Sense Of The Sudden Market Plunge
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/22/2015 13:56 -0500The eventual outcome to all this is captured brilliantly in this quote by Ludwig Von Mises, the Austrian economist: "There is no means of avoiding the final collapse of a boom brought about by credit expansion. The alternative is only whether the crisis should come sooner as the result of a voluntary abandonment of further credit expansion, or later as a final and total catastrophe of the currency system involved." The credit expansion happened between 1980 and 2008, there was a warning shot which was soundly ignored by ignorant central bankers, and now we have more, not less, debt with which to contend.
Mal-Asia: Politcal, Currency Crises Converge As Stocks Head For Bear Market
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/21/2015 19:10 -0500As the great EM unwind continues unabated, we’ve noted that in some hard-hit countries, the terrible trio of falling commodity prices, decelerating Chinese demand, and looming Fed hike has been exacerbated by political turmoil. Now, we turn to Malaysia where an already tenuous situation just got worse as PM Najib Razak is now facing calls for a no-confidence vote amid allegations he embezzled some $700 million from the country's development fund.
Plunge Protection Teams Of The World, Unite!
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/21/2015 10:48 -0500Central bankers are watching Marx's dictum all that is solid melts into air play out in global stock markets with a terror informed by the scalding memories of 2008's global financial meltdown. The herd must be turned away from selling by any means available, and at this point, that means coordinated buying by all the world's Plunge Protection Teams.
AAPL Is No Longer The "Most Important Stock": Presenting The Top 50 Hedge Fund Longs And Shorts
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/20/2015 13:24 -0500For all those who need validation that they are part of a big hedge fund hotel club, which implicitly means there are few if any incremental fast money buyers left, and wish to know the top hedge fund holdings, here is a list of the 50 stocks which according to Goldman "matter the most" to hedge funds, the stocks which appear among the largest 10 holdings of hedge funds.
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.
Keeping The Bubble-Boom Going
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/19/2015 16:15 -0500To keep the credit induced boom going,policy makers have convinced themselves that more credit and more money, provided at ever lower interest rates, are required. Why then, as The FOMC Minutes just showed, do the decision makers at the Fed want to increase rates? If Fed members follow up their words with deeds, they might soon learn that the ghosts they have been calling will indeed appear — and possibly won’t go away. The sooner the artificial boom comes to an end, the sooner the recession-depression sets in, which is the inevitable process of adjusting the economy and allowing an economically sound recovery to begin.
Momo No Mo' - BofAML Warns Stocks "Close To A Tipping Point"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/19/2015 15:50 -0500Momentum traders - relying on the 'trend is your friend' theme - may have a rude awakening soon as momentum stocks trade at a stunning 50% premium to the market (vs an average 20%). As BofAML notes, high growth, high multiple names that have been leading the market over the past year are showing some signs suggest we are close to a tipping point. The growth-to-value spread is at its highest since the peak of the dotcom bubble in 2000 and, as Subramanian ominously notes, when momentum ends, it ends badly - with an average loss of 25% over the next 12 months.
The S&P's 13th Trip Thru 2,100 Since Feb 13th: Call It Monetary Rigor Mortis - The Bull Is Dead
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/18/2015 15:30 -0500The robo machines pushed their snouts through 2100 on the S&P index again yesterday. This was the 13th time since, well, February 13th that this line has been re-penetrated from below. But don’t call it an omen of bad luck; its more like monetary rigor mortis. The bull market is dead, but the robo-machines and talking heads of bubble vision just don’t know it yet.


