New York Stock Exchange
Frontrunning: March 28
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/28/2014 06:35 -0500- Apple
- B+
- Baidu
- Bank of England
- Bitcoin
- Boeing
- Bond
- Carlyle
- China
- Citigroup
- Consumer Sentiment
- Crack Cocaine
- Credit Suisse
- Creditors
- Crude
- Detroit
- Deutsche Bank
- Dreamliner
- Exxon
- fixed
- Ford
- Japan
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- Merrill
- Michigan
- Middle East
- Morgan Stanley
- New York State
- New York Stock Exchange
- Nikkei
- Ohio
- Personal Income
- Private Equity
- Raymond James
- Real estate
- Reuters
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Stress Test
- Toyota
- Viacom
- Wells Fargo
- Yuan
- Crimea Resolution Backed by U.S. Barely Gets UN Majority (BBG)
- Russian Buildup Stokes Worries (WSJ)
- As reported here first: China’s Developers Face Shakeout as Easy Money Ends (BBG)
- U.S. House Poised to Clear Sanctions Called Putin Warning (BBG)
- Bitcoin Prices Plunge on Report PBOC Orders Accounts Shut (BBG)
- Search for lost Malaysian jet shifts significantly after new lead (Reuters)
- Russian fund taps China and Middle East (FT)
- Long battle looms between U.S. college, athletes seeking to unionize (Reuters)
- Official warns EU-US trade deal at risk over investor cases (FT)
- New iPhone likely out in September, Nikkei daily says (AFP)
The Word from the Bundesbank
Submitted by Marc To Market on 03/26/2014 12:30 -0500What is the Bundesbank thinking?
Frontrunning: March 26
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/26/2014 06:45 -0500- B+
- Barack Obama
- Barclays
- Bitcoin
- Blackrock
- Carlyle
- China
- Citigroup
- General Motors
- Housing Market
- International Monetary Fund
- Ireland
- Jamie Dimon
- JPMorgan Chase
- Keefe
- KKR
- Lloyds
- Merrill
- New York Stock Exchange
- New York Times
- News Corp
- Nikkei
- Obamacare
- President Obama
- Private Equity
- Raymond James
- Reality
- Reuters
- Richard Blumenthal
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Sirius XM
- Toyota
- Transparency
- Ukraine
- One-Ship Ukraine Navy Defies Russia to the End (WSJ)
- Crimea-Induced Trading Surge Stokes Moscow Exchange Rally (BBG)
- Moscow says Ukraine stops Russian crews disembarking in Kiev (Reuters)
- New images show more than 100 objects that could be plane debris (Reuters)
- Anger of Flight 370 Families Explodes in Beijing (BBG)
- Murdoch Promotes Son Lachlan in Succession Plan for Empire (BBG)
- Facebook to buy virtual reality goggles maker for $2 billion (Reuters)
- Syrian Regime Exploits Rebel Despair (WSJ)
- King Digital IPO price may not bode well for stock (Reuters)
- Rothschild in Twitter Spat as Bakries Cut Ties With Miner (BBG)
Guess Which Precious Metal Is Controlled By The Russians
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/24/2014 09:43 -0500
Palladium is like the Rodney Dangerfield of precious metals. It never gets any respect. If you ask someone about precious metals, in fact, just about everyone has heard of gold and silver. And occasionally platinum. But palladium is one of those obscure precious metals that few people think about, or even know about. Palladium is widely used in a variety of industrial applications, from spark plugs to catalytic converters to hydrocarbon ‘cracking’ to electronic components. And here’s something most people don’t know: most of the world’s palladium is mined in Russia.
Government Agency Warns If 9 Substations Are Destroyed, The Power Grid Could Be Down For 18 Months
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/19/2014 19:49 -0500
What would you do if the Internet or the power grid went down for over a year? Our key infrastructure, including the Internet and the power grid, is far more vulnerable than most people would dare to imagine. These days, most people simply take for granted that the lights will always be on and that the Internet will always function properly. But what if all that changed someday in the blink of an eye? According to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission's latest report, all it would take to plunge the entire nation into darkness for more than a year would be to knock out a transformer manufacturer and just 9 of our 55,000 electrical substations on a really hot summer day. The reality of the matter is that our power grid is in desperate need of updating, and there is very little or no physical security at most of these substations.
NY Attorney General Probing HFT "Fairness & Predatory Behavior": Did He Just Kill The Virtu IPO?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/18/2014 08:57 -0500
It seems the blatant unveiling of the HFT market's Holy Grail trading - Virtu (1 loss in 1238 days) - has raised some attention as Bloomberg reports, NY AG Eric Schneiderman has opened a broad investigation into whether U.S. stock exchanges and alternative venues provide high-frequency traders with improper advantages. As one European lawmaker noted, "the area of high-frequency trading is lacking suitable regulation," and Schneiderman warned "this new breed of predatory behavior gives a small segment of the industry an enormous advantage over all other competitors." We wonder how this will affect Virtu's IPO given regulation is risk factor #1!
Frontrunning: March 11
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/11/2014 06:40 -0500- Apple
- B+
- BAC
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Barclays
- Barrick Gold
- Berkshire Hathaway
- Bitcoin
- Bond
- Carl Icahn
- China
- Citigroup
- CSCO
- Evercore
- GE Capital
- General Electric
- General Motors
- Hong Kong
- Institutional Investors
- Ireland
- Keefe
- Lloyds
- Medicare
- Merrill
- Morgan Stanley
- NASDAQ
- New York Stock Exchange
- NFIB
- NYSE Euronext
- Obama Administration
- Private Equity
- Puerto Rico
- Raymond James
- Real estate
- Reuters
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- State Street
- Ukraine
- Vladimir Putin
- Wells Fargo
- Malaysia Says Stolen Passport User Had No Links to Terror Groups (BBG)
- Malaysia military tracked missing plane to west coast (Reuters)
- Freescale loss in Malaysia tragedy leads to travel policy questions (Reuters)
- Top German body calls for QE blitz to avert deflation trap in Europe (Telegraph)
- Firms Suffer 23% Drop in Asia Fees Amid Search for Cash (BBG)
- Putin Dismisses U.S. Proposal on Ukraine (WSJ)
- Lenovo says China strike an IBM matter, but it won't cut wages (Reuters)
- Congress to Investigate GM Recall (WSJ)
- New hedge funds face life or death battle for funding (FT)
- Muni Bond Costs Hit Investors in Wallet (WSJ)
- BOJ keeps stimulus in place, cuts view on exports in warning sign (Reuters)
- ECB Homes In on Risky Assets as Inspectors Fan Out Across Europe (BBG)
- Snowden: "The Constitution was violated" (Reuters)
Frontrunning: February 19
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/19/2014 07:48 -0500- AIG
- Apple
- B+
- BAC
- Barack Obama
- Barclays
- Capital One
- Capstone
- Charles Schumer
- China
- Citigroup
- Comcast
- CSCO
- David Einhorn
- DRC
- European Union
- Evercore
- Ferrari
- Ford
- General Mills
- General Motors
- Greenlight
- Housing Starts
- Insider Trading
- Morgan Stanley
- Mortgage Industry
- national security
- Natural Gas
- New York Stock Exchange
- Newspaper
- People's Bank Of China
- President Obama
- Private Equity
- Raymond James
- RBS
- recovery
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Time Warner
- Ukraine
- Verizon
- XTO energy
- Yen
- Yuan
- Ukraine leader denounces coup bid, West weighs sanctions (Reuters)
- Time to buy Imodium calls: Kuroda Easing Doomed as Yen Seen Missing 120 Level (BBG)
- Teens Disappear From U.S. Workforce (BBG)
- Fed Sets Rules for Foreign Banks (WSJ)
- Quant Funds Feel Investor Bite After Underperforming (BBG)
- China Probes Qualcomm, InterDigital Over Monopoly Concerns (WSJ)
- Capital One says it can show up at cardholders' homes, workplaces (LATimes)
- SEC Gains Power to Take Profit Made From Insider Trading (BBG)
500 Years of History Shows that Mass Spying Is Always Aimed at Crushing Dissent
Submitted by George Washington on 01/09/2014 11:57 -0500It’s NEVER to Protect Us From Bad Guys
Party Like Its 1914
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/04/2014 15:53 -0500
Forget the last two day's decline. The consensus opinion for 2014 is pretty uniform: stocks will go up modestly, bond will decline in similar fashion. Job growth will grind higher, as will inflation. The Fed will taper its bond-buying program, slowly. And so it may all come to pass... But ConvergEx's Nick Colas ponders what could go wrong, or at least different. Top of his list: fixed income volatility, in conjunction with stock market valuations that are, at best, average. Colas reflects ominously on 1914, where if you read the papers of the day you would have seen much of the same "Yeah, we got this" tone that prevails today. As the great market sage Yogi Berra once opined, “It’s tough to make predictions, especially about the future.” Either way, a cautious outlook is the better part of valor so early in the year.
How Will The Economy Improve In 2014 If Almost Everyone Has Less Money To Spend?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/01/2014 13:48 -0500
Is the U.S. consumer tapped out? If so, how in the world will the U.S. economy possibly improve in 2014? Most Americans know that the U.S. economy is heavily dependent on consumer spending. If average Americans are not out there spending money, the economy tends not to do very well. Unfortunately, retail sales during the holiday season appear to be quite disappointing and the middle class continues to deeply struggle. And for a whole bunch of reasons things are likely going to be even tougher in 2014. Families are going to have less money in their pockets to spend thanks to much higher health insurance premiums under Obamacare, a wide variety of tax increases, higher interest rates on debt, and cuts in government welfare programs. The short-lived bubble of false prosperity that we have been enjoying for the last couple of years is rapidly coming to an end, and 2014 certainly promises to be a very "interesting year".
Caption Contest: Nutcracker On The NYSE
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/31/2013 15:21 -0500
We are not exactly sure why the ballerinas of the Nutcracker can be found on the floor of the TV studio formerly known as the New York Stock Exchange (currently owned by the Atlanta-based ICE), but we are sure there is a good reason.
Guest Post: The Stock Market Has Officially Entered Crazytown Territory
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/27/2013 15:35 -0500
It is time to crank up the Looney Tunes theme song because Wall Street has officially entered crazytown territory. Stocks just keep going higher and higher, and at this point what is happening in the stock market does not bear any resemblance to what is going on in the overall economy whatsoever. So how long can this irrational state of affairs possibly continue? Stocks seem to go up no matter what happens. If there is good news, stocks go up. If there is bad news, stocks go up. If there is no news, stocks go up. On Thursday, the day after Christmas, the Dow was up another 122 points to another new all-time record high. In fact, the Dow has had an astonishing 50 record high closes this year. This reminds me of the kind of euphoria that we witnessed during the peak of the housing bubble. At the time, housing prices just kept going higher and higher and everyone rushed to buy before they were "priced out of the market". But we all know how that ended, and this stock market bubble is headed for a similar ending.
'It's Not What You Know, It's Who You Know' As Frat Boys Dominate Wall Street
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/23/2013 17:51 -0500
As students vie for 2014 internships, Bloomberg finds a fraternity-based network whose Wall Street alumni guide resumes to the tops of stacks, reveal interview questions with recommended answers, offer applicants secret mottoes and support chapters facing crackdowns. Despite apparent crackdowns on cronyism, nepotism, and fraternism; it seems nothing has changed as "secret handshakes" and the fraternity pipeline helps undergraduates beat odds three times steeper than Princeton University’s record-low acceptance rate... "People like people who are like themselves," notes one recruiter, seemingly proven by the fact that JPMorgan employs 140 Sigma Phi Epsilon members with BofA and Wells Fargo even more.
Of Keynesian Cul-De-Sacs And The Fed Creating More Financial Market Uncertainty
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/09/2013 19:52 -0500
Although the U.S. stock market continues to hit new nominal highs on a nearly daily basis, the U.S. economy bumps along at a lackluster pace. This disconnect has been achieved by a massive Fed experiment in monetary stimulation. Through the combination of seemingly endless maintenance of zero interest rates and the injection of some $1trillion a year of synthetic money into fixed-income markets, the Fed is hoping that the boom it is creating on Wall Street will lead to a boom on Main Street. In reality, this a very dangerous economic gamble of enormously high stakes. As we have seen in the recent past, financial bubbles can leave catastrophe in their wake.




