Newspaper
Frontrunning: October 18
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2012 06:39 -0500- American Express
- Annaly Capital
- Australia
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Barclays
- China
- Citigroup
- Corporate America
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Deutsche Bank
- Exxon
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- Germany
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- India
- Insider Trading
- Italy
- Keefe
- Market Conditions
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- Moore Capital
- Morgan Stanley
- Natural Gas
- Newspaper
- Nomura
- Paul Volcker
- Pepsi
- Private Equity
- Prudential
- ratings
- Raymond James
- Reuters
- SAC
- Toyota
- Trade Balance
- Unemployment
- Verizon
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- Germany will pay Greek aid (Spiegel)
- Spain Banks Face More Pain as Worst-Case Scenario Turns Real (Bloomberg)
- China’s Growth Continues to Slow (WSJ)
- Executives Lack Confidence in U.S. Competitiveness (WSJ)
- Poor Market Conditions will See 180 Solar Manufacturers Fail by 2015 (OilPrice)
- Wen upbeat on China’s economy (FT)
- Gold remains popular, despite the doubts of economists (Economist)
- Armstrong Stands to Lose $30 Million as Sponsors Flee (Bloomberg)
- IMF urges aid for Italy, Spain but Rome baulking (Reuters)
- EU Summit Highlights Financial Divide (WSJ)
- FOMC Straying on Price Target, Former Fed Officials Say (Bloomberg)
- Putin defiant over weapons sales (FT)
Overnight Sentiment: Greece Greets Latest Eurozone Summit With 24 Hour Strike
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2012 06:14 -0500Today Europe awakes to yet another Eurozone summit, one at which such topics as Greece, Spain, the banking union project or a economic/budgetary union will have to gain further traction, if not resolution. In fact Greece could hardly wait and has already launched it latest 24 hour strike against austerity. The same Greece which demands a 2 year, €30 billion extension from Europe to comply with reform, a move which Europe has/has not agreed to as while the core have said yes to more time, all have refused to fund Greece with any more money. Alas the two are synonymous. As SocGen predicts unless there is some credible progress today, all the progress since the September ECB meeting, which has seen SPGB 10 Year yields decline from 690 bps to sub 550 bps, may simply drift away. And as everyone knows, there is never any progress at these meetings, except for lots of headlines, lots of promises (the Eurozone June summit's conclusions have yet to be implemented) and lots of bottom line profits by Belgian caterers. Elsewhere, Spain sold 3, 4 and 10 year bonds at declining yields on residual optimism from the pro forma bailed out country's paradoxical Investment Grade rating. In non-hopium based news, Spanish bad loans rose to a record 10.5% in August from 10.1% previously while the oldest bank in the world, Italy's Banka Monte dei Paschi was cut to junk status. All this is irrelevant though, as no negative news will ever matter again in a centrally-planned world. Finally the only real good news (at least until it is revised)came out of the UK, where retail sales posted a 0.4% increase on expectations of a 0.2% rise from -0.2%.
Frontrunning: October 15
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/15/2012 06:30 -0500- Australia
- Blackrock
- California Public Employees' Retirement System
- China
- Citigroup
- Credit Suisse
- Creditors
- Crude
- default
- Evercore
- France
- Global Economy
- Greece
- Hong Kong
- Japan
- Keefe
- Lazard
- Merrill
- Morgan Stanley
- Natural Gas
- New Zealand
- Newspaper
- Raymond James
- Real estate
- Realty Income
- recovery
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Wall Street Journal
- World Bank
- Yuan
- Hilsenrath Humor du jour: Bernanke Advocates Stronger Currencies (WSJ)
- Auditors want two more years for Greece on deficit (Spiegel)
- More bluster: Schaeuble Rules Out Greek Default as Samaras, Troika Bargain (Bloomberg)
- And even more bluster: De Jager Says Greece Needs to Make Fiscal Reforms Immediately (Bloomberg)
- Global Economy Distress 3.0 Looms as Emerging Markets Falter (Bloomberg)
- Central bank governor stresses inflation control (China Daily)
- Greek Yields Reach Post Debt-Swap Low as Bunds Slip on Schaeuble (Bloomberg)
- Roth and Shapely win Nobel prize for economics (Reuters)
- Fed chief rounds on stimulus critics (FT)
- IMF Board Sees Biggest Power Shift Reshuffle in Two Decades (Bloomberg)
- EU Girds for Summit as Nobel’s Glow Fades on Crisis Response (Bloomberg)
- Japan security environment tougher than ever (Reuters)
No, the Gulf Oil “Sheen” Is Not Oil Coming from the BP Wreckage
Submitted by George Washington on 10/12/2012 13:04 -0500BP’s Explanation Is Incorrect
Frontrunning: October 10
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/10/2012 06:14 -0500- Apple
- Bain
- Bank of England
- Barack Obama
- Barclays
- BOE
- Budget Deficit
- China
- Citigroup
- Corruption
- Credit Suisse
- Exxon
- Fitch
- France
- General Electric
- Germany
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Greece
- Hong Kong
- Housing Bubble
- International Monetary Fund
- Janet Yellen
- Japan
- Keefe
- Merrill
- Mervyn King
- national security
- Newspaper
- Raymond James
- Real estate
- Reuters
- Roger Penske
- Spectrum Brands
- Vladimir Putin
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- Yuan
- U.S. Military Is Sent to Jordan to Help With Crisis in Syria (NYT)
- IMF Weighing New Loans for Europe (WSJ)
- Romney Targets Obama Voters (WSJ)
- China’s Central Banker Won’t Attend IMF Meeting Amid Island Spat (Bloomberg)
- Japan Calls China PBOC Chief Skipping IMF Meeting ‘Regrettable’ (Bloomberg)
- German media bristles at hostile Greek reception for Merkel (Reuters)
- The End Might Be Near for Opel (Spiegel)
- IMF sounds alarm on Japanese banks (FT)
- Cash Tap Stays Dry for EU Banks (WSJ)
- Goldman in Push On Volcker Limits (WSJ)
- IMF Vinals: Further Policy Efforts Needed to Gain Lasting Stability (WSJ)
- King signals inflation not primary focus (FT)
On Merkel's Gamble
Submitted by Bruce Krasting on 10/09/2012 12:38 -0500Was the trip a terrible plan, or one that achieved the desired objectives?
Overnight Sentiment Liquid: IMF Cold Water And PBOC Reverse Repo Gusher
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/09/2012 06:30 -0500Overnight sentiment is decidedly negative, following the across the board cut of growth forecasts by the IMF late yesterday. The only bright light was the PBOC dumping 265 billion yuan ($42.1 billion) in reverse repos in an open-market operation (a liquidity adding operation) whose only purpose was to roll the massive reverse repo from before the Golden Week. The resulting 2% jump in the Shanghai Composite came as traders expect an imminent rate cut by the PBOC. The irony of course is that as long as Reverse Repos are the liquification instrument of choice, the local central bank will do nothing else in an economy which is once again overheating in several industries, the most important of which continues to be housing. Furthermore, as long as the spectre of a 15% surge in pork prices is over the horizon, the PBOC will do nothing. Period. Elsewhere, as BBG summarizes, FX is mostly modestly lower with the AUD outperforming on rising iron ore price. Metals mostly modestly lower despite the crippling South African strike which has now migrated to catch iron ore mines as well. Treasury yields moderately lower, partly in catch-up after yesterday’s holiday. Bund yields modestly higher sovereign-to German yield spreads mixed with mostly modest changes. Few if any macro economic news today.
Frontrunning: October 4
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/04/2012 06:35 -0500- Apple
- Australia
- Australian Dollar
- B+
- BAC
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Barack Obama
- BBY
- Best Buy
- Capstone
- China
- Citigroup
- Copper
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- Deutsche Bank
- Evercore
- Gambling
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Japan
- JPMorgan Chase
- KIM
- Kraft
- Lazard
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- Middle East
- Morgan Stanley
- NASDAQ
- Natural Gas
- Newspaper
- Nomura
- Nortel
- Portugal
- RBS
- Real estate
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- SAC
- Standard Chartered
- Starwood
- Toyota
- Trade Deficit
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- Romney dominates presidential debate (FT)
- What Romney’s Debate Victory Means (Bloomberg)
- Obama Lead Shrinks in Two Battlegrounds (WSJ)
- "Everything will fall apart unless the Spanish conditions are extremely tough" German policy-maker (Telegraph)
- Draghi Stares at Spain as Brinkmanship Keeps ECB Waiting (Bloomberg)
- RBS facing loss after Spanish property firm collapse (Telegraph)
- Burdened by Old Mortgages, Banks Are Slow to Lend Now (WSJ)
- The Woman Who Took the Fall for JPMorgan Chase (NYT)
- European Banks Told to Hold On to $258 Billion of Fresh Capital (Bloomberg)
- Europe Weighs More Sanctions as Iran’s Currency Plummets (Bloomberg)
Wake Up America, We Are Being Distracted From the Real Issues by MSM Lackeys
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 10/03/2012 16:10 -0500The mainstream media is attempting once again to draw the public’s opinion towards issues that are ultimately fringe issues that impact a small percentage of us in order to ignore the large-scale major issues that affect all of us.
AMERICAN Government Forces Re-Start of Japanese Nuclear Reactors
Submitted by George Washington on 10/03/2012 10:58 -0500Americans Are Largely Responsible for Japan’s Ongoing Nuclear Policy
Some "Curious" US And French Military Deployments
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/29/2012 14:29 -0500Regular readers are aware that periodically, usually weekly, Zero Hedge presents critical naval updates demonstrating the positioning of key US maritime assets, primarily strategic aircraft carriers. The location of these indicates far more what US foreign policy is focused on at any moment, than propaganda distributed for general consumption via the coopted media. Today, however, instead of focusing on aircraft carriers, using Stratfor analysis, we present several broad "curious" US and French military developments.
In America, Journalists Are Considered Terrorists
Submitted by George Washington on 09/29/2012 01:24 -0500While Government Pretends America Values Freedom of the Press, Real Journalists Are Treated As Terrorists
European Risk Is Back: CDS Surge, Spain 10 Year Back Over 6%, Germany Has Second Uncovered Auction In Three Weeks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/26/2012 05:14 -0500Remember when we said two months ago that one way or another the market will need to tumble to enforce the chain of events that lead to Spain demanding the bailout which has long been priced in, and (especially after yesterday's violent protest) Rajoy handing in his resignation? Well, it's "another." After nearly 3 months of suspending reality, in hopes to not "rock the boat" until the US presidential election, reality has made a quick and dramatic appearance in Europe, where after a day in which the EURUSD tumbled, events overnight have finally caught up. What happened? First, ECB's Asmussen said that the central bank would not participate in any debt restructuring, confirming any and all hopes that the ECB would ever be pari passu with regular bondholders were a pipe dream. Second, Plosser in the US said additional QE probably won't boost growth which has reverberated across a globe in which the only recourse left is, well, additional QE. Finally, pictures of tens of thousands rioting unemployed young men and women in Madrid did not help. The result: Spain's 10 Year is over 20 bps wider, and back over 6%, Germany just had a €5 billion 10 Year auction for which it only got €3.95 billion in bids, which means it was technically a failure, and the second uncovered auction in one month, and finally CDS across the continent, not to mention the option value that is the Spanish IBEX which may fall 3% today, have finally realized they are priced far too much to perfection and have, as a result, blown out.
Is Draghi's Bond-Buying Dream Circling The Drain As ECB/Bundesbank Lawyer Up?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/24/2012 19:30 -0500
Following closely on the heels of our recent (now must read) discussion of the potential illegality of Draghi's OMT, Reuters is reporting the somewhat stunning news that the ECB and Bundesbank are getting lawyers to check the legality of the new bond-buying program. Germany's Bild newspaper - via the now ubiquitous unnamed sources - said in-house lawyers were checking both what proportions the program would have to take on and how long it would have to last for it to breach EU treaties (that specifically ban direct financing of state deficits). While Draghi - full of bravado - likely said whatever he felt was necessary at the time to stop the inversion in the Spanish yield curve, it is becoming clearer that, as usual, the premature euphoria (in the complacent belief that central banks can solve every problem with a wave of the magic CTRL-P wand) was misplaced. Bild goes on to note that this matter could be referred to the European Court of Justice - and the ECB/Buba were preparing for such an event. Of course, since every other rumor in recent months, most of which have originated in credible media, has proven to be a lie, it is likely this is also merely leaked disinformation to push the German case, i.e. anti-Europe.
There's No Engine for Global Growth Pt 1 (China)
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 09/23/2012 15:21 -0500
Imagine if the world found out that China’s growth and recovery post 2008 were largely based on fraudulent data and garbage development projects fueled by easy money and rampant corruption on the part of Chinese officials?






