Quantitative Easing
Avoid This Accident Waiting To Happen In Investment Markets
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/10/2014 19:25 -0500Success in investing, in other words, comes not from over-reach, in straining to make the winning shot, but simply through the avoidance of easy errors. There is now a grave risk that an overzealous commitment to benchmarking is about to lead hundreds of billions of dollars of invested capital off a cliff. When a sufficient number of elephants start charging inelegantly towards the door, not all of them will make it through unscathed.
October Was A "Trailer" For Real Market Turmoil, Don't Hold Your Breath For Policymakers
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/10/2014 12:10 -0500"When the next period [of real market turmoil] appears... there is a very real possibility that the (central banks and major governments) cavalry’s thundering hooves will cause investors to get even more frightened and run away, perhaps having lost confidence in the effectiveness of the central bankers’ toolkit..."
Oil Price Slide – No Good Way Out
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/09/2014 17:45 -0500We often hear that if there is not enough oil at a given price, the situation will lead to substitution or to demand destruction. Because of the networked nature of the economy, this demand destruction comes about in a different way than most economists expect–it comes from fewer people having jobs with good wages. With lower wages, it also comes from less debt being available. We end up with a disparity between what consumers can afford to pay for oil, and the amount that it costs to extract the oil. This is the problem we are facing today, and it is a very difficult issue.
Frontrunning: November 7
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/07/2014 07:31 -0500- Apple
- B+
- BAC
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Barack Obama
- Barrick Gold
- Brazil
- Capstone
- Central Banks
- China
- Citigroup
- Consumer Credit
- Corruption
- Credit Suisse
- CSC
- Deutsche Bank
- DVA
- European Central Bank
- European Union
- Eurozone
- Evercore
- Fannie Mae
- France
- Freddie Mac
- General Motors
- Germany
- Hong Kong
- Iraq
- KKR
- Main Street
- Matt Taibbi
- Merrill
- Newspaper
- Obamacare
- Poland
- Private Equity
- Quantitative Easing
- Raymond James
- recovery
- Reuters
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Standard Chartered
- Third Point
- Ukraine
- Unemployment
- Vladimir Putin
- Wells Fargo
- White House
- Yuan
- The $9 Billion Witness: Meet JPMorgan Chase's Worst Nightmare (Matt Taibbi)
- Explains the midterm results: Optimism precedes job data (Reuters)
- EU Dream Ebbs Amid Weak Growth, Putin's Jets, 25 Years After Wall Came Down (BBG)
- SEC Probing Trading Activity at Apple Supplier GT Advanced (WSJ)
- Boehner touts bills to repeal Obamacare, build Keystone (Reuters)
- China Gold Buying Means Price Floor to Standard Chartered (BBG)
- High-Speed Ad Traders Profit by Arbitraging Your Eyeballs (BBG)
- Central Banks Can’t Be ‘Only Game in Town’ Boosting Economies (BBG) - less talking, more getting to work
Federal Reserve Counterfeiting Approaches 100%
Submitted by Sprott Money on 11/06/2014 13:00 -0500At the end of 2008, the U.S. Federal Reserve embarked upon a monetary policy so extreme and so reckless that it had to invent a (new) euphemism for what it was doing, since if it simply used the old euphemism, even the puppet-politicians of the U.S. government would have rebelled at this monetary insanity.
Inside The Minds Of Central Bankers
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/06/2014 12:06 -0500"Central bank policies are no longer about the general state of an economy, or about jobs numbers, they’re about the threat of specific price levels. Now, I think that unlike the western press, Yellen and Draghi and other central bankers are acutely aware of what Kuroda stated yesterday. But perhaps I give them too much credit."
Futures Flat With All Eyes On ECB's Mario Draghi, Who Will Promise Much And "Probably Do Nothing"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/06/2014 07:13 -0500- Australia
- B+
- Bank of England
- Bank of Japan
- BOE
- Bond
- Central Banks
- China
- Continuing Claims
- Copper
- Crude
- Deutsche Bank
- European Central Bank
- Eurozone
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- headlines
- Hong Kong
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Italy
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Momentum Chasing
- Monetary Policy
- Monetary Policy Statement
- Natural Gas
- New Zealand
- Nikkei
- Non-manufacturing ISM
- Precious Metals
- Price Action
- Quantitative Easing
- RANSquawk
- Reuters
- Saudi Arabia
- Unemployment
- Wall Street Journal
- Yen
With last night's latest Japanese flash crash firmly forgotten until the next time the trapdoor trade springs open and swallows a whole lot of momentum chasing Virtu vacuum tubes, it is time to look from east to west, Frankfurt to be precise, where in 45 minutes the ECB may or may not say something of importance. As Deutsche Bank comments, "Today is the most important day since.... well the last important day as the ECB hosts its widely anticipated monthly meeting." Whilst not many expect concrete action, the success will be judged on how much Draghi hints at much more future action whilst actually probably doing nothing.
ECB: Everything Can't Be
Submitted by Marc To Market on 11/05/2014 07:47 -0500What if we were as skeptical of the reports on the ECB as we are of the Fed ?
WGC: "Improving GDP Benefits Gold Demand"
Submitted by Sprout Money on 11/05/2014 07:03 -0500There is a very strong correlation between the GDP and the demand for gold, even in mature markets!
Only A Few Years Left Until The Nikkei Hits Dylan Grice's Price Target Of 63,000,000
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2014 15:38 -0500"Japan is no Zimbabwe. Neither was Israel, yet from 1972 to 1987 its inflation averaged nearly 85%. As its CPI rose nearly 10,000 times, its stock market rose by a factor of 6,500 … Regular readers know that I don’t generally make forecasts, but that every now and then I do go out on a limb. This is one of those occasions. Mapping Israel’s experience onto Japan would take the Nikkei from its current 9,600 [as of October 2010] to 63,000,000. This is our 15-year price target." - Dylan Grice
Japan's The Tinder That Set The World's Bad News On Fire
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2014 12:40 -0500We’ve been keeping the long lost idea of our long lost society alive by squeezing our own children wherever we can, and telling them that if they only work hard enough, they can be whoever they want to be. But they can’t, that notion is also long lost. When you keep home prices artificially high, homeowners don’t suffer as much, even if they bought at insanely high prices, but the suffering is switched to potential buyers, who remain just that, potential, while they live in their mom’s basements for years. A surefire way to kill a society while everyone’s eagerly awaiting the growth that is just around the corner and will forever remain there. Take it from your kids. Take it from somewhere else in the world. And that’s where we’re now passing a barrier: there’s no-one to take it from anymore.
Markets Slide As European Central Bankers Mutiny: Challenge Draghi, Just Say No To QE
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/04/2014 10:29 -0500Game changer? It appears there is a mutiny afoot in Europe as Reuters and Bloomberg report that a number (rumored to be between 7 and 10) central bankers are set to challenge ECB head mario Draghi's leadership style and question his decisions on quantitative easing. As Reuters reports, bankers faulted his secretiveness and communication style making it hard for ECB to take bolder steps. Stocks are not happy and peripheral bond risk is cracking higher.
10 Examples Of The Extreme Incompetence That Now Pervades The Federal Government
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/03/2014 22:11 -0500There has always been a substantial level of incompetence at federal agencies, but under the Obama administration incompetence has risen to unprecedented levels.
Alan Greenspan To Marc Faber: "I Never Said The Fed Was Independent"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/03/2014 22:02 -0500"I was on a panel with Alan Greenspan a week ago... I said, you mean to say that the Federal Reserve is not independent? He immediately said, Marc, I never said the Fed was independent. In other words, the Fed and the Treasury and the government is basically one and the same."
"Japan is engaged in a Ponzi scheme"
"The oil price decline is not necessarily very good for the US - if oil prices went lower, it may actually have an adverse impact on the US economy"
Japan's Monetary Pearl Harbor
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/03/2014 15:21 -0500The Bank of Japan's surprise expansion of financial stimulus strikes me as the monetary equivalent of Pearl Harbor --not in the sense of launching a pre-emptive war (though the move does raise the odds of a global currency war), but in the sense of a leadership pursuing a Grand Strategy to the point of self-destruction because they have no alternative within their intellectual and political framework. Trying to "fix" a sclerotic, inefficient state-cartel economy by boosting inflation--the ultimate goal of Japan's Monetary Pearl Harbor-- is a self-liquidating path to destruction.





