Natural Gas
Frontrunning: May 9
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/09/2012 06:39 -0500- Borrowers Face Big Delays in Refinancing Mortgages (WSJ)
- Greek left attacks ‘barbarous’ austerity (FT)
- Would-be suicide bomber was U.S. informant (Reuters)
- Cameron says Euro needs single government: report (Reuters)
- Demonstrators targeting BofA annual meeting (Reuters)
- Moody’s Bank Downgrades Risk Choking European Recovery (Bloomberg)
- Lehman E-Mails Show Wall Street Arrogance Led to the Fall (Bloomberg)
- What Hollande must tell Germany (Martin Wolf) (FT)
- Why France Has So Many 49-Employee Companies (BusinessWeek)
Guest Post: Why the Job Market Will Continue Shrinking
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/08/2012 13:59 -0500
The paradox of an advanced post-industrial economy is that the number of jobs needed declines even as the cost of living rises. The fundamental dynamic of America's job market is simple: we need relatively few workers to provide the absolute essentials of life even as the cost-basis of the economy inexorably rises. In other words, there are fewer jobs even as the costs of maintaining a "middle class" life rise. The solution to the post-industrial decline of labor is not unproductive "make-work" jobs and borrowing trillions of dollars until the system implodes, it's lowering the cost basis of the entire economy and culture, which means eliminating all the systemic sources of unproductive friction.
Frontrunning: May 7
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/07/2012 06:25 -0500- Greek pro-bailout parties lack majority, final poll results (Reuters)
- Greek Election Gridlock Raises Risk for Bailout, Euro Future (Bloomberg)
- Socialist Hollande ousts Sarkozy as French leader (Reuters)
- Merkozy End Means Franco-German Gulf; Greek Voters Rebel (Bloomberg)
- Election swing leaves Greece teetering (Kathimerini)
- Merkel's Coalition Appears to Suffer Loss in German State (WSJ)
- The Only Solution to the Eurozone Crisis (FT)
- Cameron Faces Clamour From Party Right (FT)
- Falcone’s LightSquared Said to Get Week Credit Extension (Bloomberg)
- Hungary plans three-year, 15 billion euro IMF deal: state sec (Reuters)
- Putin pledges unity on return to Kremlin (Reuters)
Berkshire Annual Meeting Highlights
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/05/2012 11:16 -0500While Charlie Munger has so far to comment on the 24K content of made in the basement tribalware, he and his partner have made quite a few other statements on items ranging far and wide, during the annual Berkshire Omaha convention, which year after year represents the annual pilgrimage for thousands to a crony capitalist Mecca, and which with the passage of time, has become increasingly more irrelevant. Why? Because with a $58 billion bet (on $37.8 billion in cash and equivalents) that asset prices will go higher, it is rather clear on what side of the 'bail out' argument, and its 'all in' fallback: central planning, Warren Buffett sits.
Greece: “We Are Their Greatest Fear”
Submitted by testosteronepit on 05/04/2012 10:56 -0500But the system is gummed up.
Guest Post: Future Economy, Future Stability, Future Careers
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2012 11:34 -0500"I would very much like to learn your thoughts on what careers may be viable for our children. With the future likely to change our lives so dramatically, where do you see opportunities for some form of career growth and some form of stability?"
Answer:
- Let go of old models of financial security. Do not assume a government job means 30 years of security and a fat pension thereafter. That's the past, not the future.
- Assume monopolies and cartels imposed by the State will be disrupted and implode. The key example here is the sickcare system imposed by the State. For decades people have seen sickcare expand year after year, and so it seems sensible to assume that joining healthcare a.k.a. sickcare was a path to security.
- The best career strategy going forward is to assemble multiple skillsets. What we know is that current models will be disrupted, but we cannot know the future. Thus we cannot know which skillsets will be demand. That may change constantly; "security" will flow not from clinging to failing institutions for 30 years but by being flexible and adaptive.
Non-Manufacturing ISM Slides, Posts Biggest Miss In 12 Months
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2012 09:12 -0500
Two days ago, the Manufcaturing ISM soared, trouncing expectations, in a very perplexing print because as the very next day we learned via ADP that manufacturing jobs dropped by 5,000 in April. Today, however, things are back to normal as the indicator that tracks the far greater component of US GDP: the Services ISM, just printed at 53.5, missing expectations of 55.3 wildly, and down from the previous print of 56.0. This was the biggest miss in 12 months, and the lowest print since December; it also printed below the lowest Wall Street forecast. That this should not be surprising to anyone we hope is a given: weak ADP but strong Claims (and now a drop in the employment Index); soaring Manufacturing but plunging Services, China expanding but China contracting, and so on: when we said that "Baffle them with Bullshit" is an official policy we were not joking. Remember: when in doubt ask: what would Schrodinger's cat do?
News That Matters
Submitted by thetrader on 05/03/2012 08:09 -0500- Australia
- BAC
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank of England
- Bloomberg News
- China
- Crude
- Daniel Tarullo
- Dow Jones Industrial Average
- ETC
- European Central Bank
- European Union
- Eurozone
- Exxon
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- Global Economy
- Hong Kong
- India
- Institutional Investors
- Iran
- Israel
- Japan
- Markit
- Mary Schapiro
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- Mervyn King
- Middle East
- Mohammad
- Natural Gas
- New Zealand
- Nicolas Sarkozy
- Nomura
- Nouriel
- Nouriel Roubini
- President Obama
- Recession
- Renminbi
- Reuters
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Term Sheet
- Unemployment
- Vladimir Putin
- Yuan
All you need to read.
Havoc and Opportunity in Natural Gas
Submitted by testosteronepit on 05/02/2012 17:06 -0500The point of maximum pain.
John Arnold Closing Centaurus Energy Master Fund As Central Planning Slowly Kills Off Commodity Trading
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/02/2012 12:57 -0500More troubles for the nat gas world, as flashing red headlines confirm the inexorable trend which started years ago with the departure of more and more hedge fund titans who no longer have an advantage in a world where only liquidity matters.
- NATURAL GAS HEDGE FUND MANAGER JOHN ARNOLD TELLS INVESTORS HE IS CLOSING CENTAURUS ENERGY MASTER FUND - RTRS
Why is this not a surprise? Simple. As the FT reported earlier, take virtually everything you know about the nuances, the complexities, the intricacies of commodity trading... and shove it. But don't forget to thank the Chairman first, because the last bastion of "veteran advantage" in what used to be a rational trading arena, is now gone.
Daily US Opening News And Market Re-Cap: May 2
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/02/2012 07:06 -0500In the early hours of the European session, continental markets opened higher, reacting to yesterday’s positive performance in the US. Sentiment quickly turned as continental Europe released its respective Manufacturing PMI figures, with even the core European nations recording declines in the sector and lower-than-expected readings. Despite the poor data, some major cash markets are clinging on to positive territory, as the CAC and DAX indices both trade higher. The Spanish and Italian markets, however, tell a different story. With both their respective PMIs recording significant declines, both now trade lower by around 2% apiece. Against the flow of bad Eurozone news, the UK has released an expectation-beating Construction PMI figure, going somewhat against last week’s breakdown of the official GDP statistics. Markit research cites strength in commercial work and new orders as the main driver for the growth. The downbeat data from Europe has taken its toll on EUR/USD, currently trading lower by over 90 pips, but the pair has come off the lows in recent trade. GBP/USD has mirrored the moves in the EUR and trades lower by over 40 pips, however some support has been gained from the strong Construction PMI.
Frontrunning: May 1
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/01/2012 06:06 -0500- Europe focus of global May Day labour protests (BBC)
- Occupy movement's May Day turnout seen as test for its future (Reuters)
- BofA to Cut From Elite Ranks, will fire 2000 (WSJ)
- Man Group Has $1 Billion Outflows; Shares Slide on Cash Concern (Bloomberg)
- Obama Fails to Stem Middle-Class Slide He Blamed on Bush (Bloomberg)
- Berlin insists on eurozone austerity (FT)
- This must be really good for AMZN's 1.5% operating profit margins: Microsoft muscles in on ebooks (FT)
- Ohio Union Fight Shakes Up Race (WSJ)
- How to Lose $7.8 Billion and Still Be Top of the Rich List (WSJ)
- Hollande Seen Bowing to Debt Crisis in Socialists’ Balancing Act (Bloomberg)
- BP profit falls as Gulf spill costs still weigh (Reuters)
Daily US Opening News And Market Re-Cap: April 30
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/30/2012 06:47 -0500All major European bourses are trading lower with the exception of the DAX, which holds just above the open by a modest margin. Adidas ranks among the top performers in the German index, following the report of a strong set of sales figures, contributing to the positive trade. Spanish concerns continue to build up as Standard & Poor’s took ratings action on 16 of the country’s banks, downgrading the notable names of Banco Santander and BBVA. Although the move was not a surprise as this is the usual procedure following a sovereign downgrade, both Santander and BBVA, along with the IBEX are in negative territory. The Bund is seen higher amid a generally risk-off theme to markets this morning. Volumes have been relatively light, however a slight pick-up has been observed in recent trade, grinding the security upwards in the last hour or so. EUR/USD continues to experience weakness and now trades close to a touted option expiry of 1.3200, as traders seek the safety of the USD across a number of currency crosses.
On Student Loans, Accounting Gimmicks, Electric Cars, FX and a note on SS
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 04/29/2012 07:12 -0500Thoughts on last and next week.
First Real Greek Bailout: Electricity
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/28/2012 19:35 -0500
While Greece has had its fair-share of EURs funneled to it and through it over the course of the last year or two, it appears they have now created their first 'internal' bailout as things go from bad to worse. As Athens News reports, Greece will provide EUR250mm in emergency funds to its ailing electricity providers to prevent a California-style energy crisis. This liquidity injection to the country's power utlities was yet another unintended consequence of government intervention action. An increasing number of consumers stopped paying their electricity bills following the TROIKA's Greek government's infliction of EUR1.7bn property taxation via the electricity providers. The main power utility PPC had a liquidity hole blown through it as non-payments mounted and while regulators claimed the system needed at least EUR350mm to stay afloat, the government has agreed to allow PPC to hold EUR250mm of the property tax it has collected on behalf of the state until June 30 - by which time, it is hoped the utility will have managed to secure other lending facilities. Quite an incredible move - to force the electricity provider to gather the property taxes - and while this attempt clearly failed we suspect the next move will be food-and-water-rationing without proof of tax payment.





