Real estate
Life In A Cashless World: How Cash Became A Policy Tool – An Interview With Dr. Harald Malmgren
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/06/2015 07:45 -0500- B+
- Blythe Masters
- Borrowing Costs
- Central Banks
- China
- Collateralized Debt Obligations
- Drug Money
- Estonia
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Ford
- France
- Gambling
- Gerald Ford
- Germany
- Greece
- Italy
- Japan
- Main Street
- MF Global
- Monetary Policy
- Mortgage Backed Securities
- National Debt
- Personal Income
- Real estate
- Reality
- Recession
- recovery
- Reserve Currency
- Roman Empire
- Sovereign Debt
- Treasury Department
- World Trade
- Yen
Banks in the US and Europe are trying to develop a cashless transactions system. The concept is to establish a comprehensive ledger for a business or a person that records everything received and spent, and all of the assets held – mortgages, investment portfolios, debts, contractual financial obligations, and anything else of market value. There would be no need for cash because the ledger would tell you and anyone you were considering a transaction with how much is available and would be transactable at any specific moment. This is not a dreamy idea. Blythe Masters is leading a new business effort to develop a universal cashless system. Not only is she gathering significant investor interest, but the Federal Reserve and various US Government agencies have become keenly interested in the potential usefulness and efficiencies of a universal cashless system
The Margin Debt Time-Bomb
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/05/2015 18:00 -0500We are our own worst enemies...
August Payrolls Miss, Rise Only 173K, Even As Prior Revised Higher; Hourly Earnings Rise More Than Expected
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/04/2015 07:35 -0500The "most important and anticipated payrolls number ever", or at least since the last payroll number, is out and it is a doozy at only 173K, it is a huge miss to the 217K expected (and almost in line with LaVorgna's forecast). This was the worst monthly payrolls number since Marhc, and the second lowest number in 19 months. However, the curious twist is that the July and June NFPs were both revised higher to 245K, making the net revision up The unemployment rate dropped to just 5.1%, below the 5.2% expected, and well below July's 5.3%, further boosting the Fed's case that labor slack is evaporating.
Perfect Storm Of Worldwide PMI Slippage
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/02/2015 12:57 -0500Given “highly accommodative” policy almost everywhere, and so little gained; it isn’t a good sign particularly after eight incessant years of it and the lagged effects from the renewed “dollar” wave still to be withstood. Every year was supposed to be “the year”, but 2015 was a surefire lock according to orthodox versions. The real difference, unlike past years, is that everything is going wrong so far just as predicted by the “strong dollar.”
China Scrambles To Enforce Capital Controls (Which Is Great News For Bitcoin)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/02/2015 11:11 -0500"China is imposing fresh controls to prevent too much money from leaving the country, in an effort to keep badly needed funds at home to battle a deepening slowdown in the world’s No. 2 economy." This is undsiputedly bad news for China, but Blythe Masters would be the first to admit, escalating Chinese capital controls would be just the thing bitcoin needs to surge, and surpass, it previous all time highs...
What Declining Global Reserves Mean For Bond Yields: Goldman's Take
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/02/2015 06:51 -0500As Deutsche Bank put it on Tuesday, we've officially reached the end of the "Great Accumulation" as slumping Chinese growth, plunging crude, and an imminent Fed hike have put enormous pressure on emerging economies’ accumulated stash of FX reserves and that means that buyers of USD assets are becoming sellers at the expense of global liquidity and the perpetual bid for some core paper. Now, Goldman has weighed in, noting that the rise in foreign FX reserves held by non-G-7 countries that started around 2003-04 (at around US$1trn) appears to have ended for good.
Trump: The Art Of The Bureaucrat
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 17:55 -0500A President Trump may be able to make small changes here or there, “But the setting of the bureau’s activities is determined by rules and regulations which are beyond his reach.” Presidents come and go, but the unelected bureaucracy always remains. For all his simpleton bluster, even the mighty Trump is no match for the leviathan.
Rigor Mortis Of The Robo-Machines
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 13:30 -0500Call it the rigor mortis of the robo-machines. About 430 days ago the S&P 500 crossed the 1973 mark for the first time - the same point where it settled today. In between there has been endless reflexive thrashing in the trading range highlighted below. As is evident, the stock averages have not “climbed” the proverbial wall of worry; they have jerked and twitched to a series of short-lived new highs, which have now been abandoned. Surely most thinking investors have left the casino by now. So what remains is chart driven trading programs, racing madly up, then down, then back up again - rinsing and repeating with ever more furious intensity.
Frontrunning: September 1
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 06:34 -0500- B+
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Brazil
- California Public Employees' Retirement System
- China
- Congressional Budget Office
- Crude
- David Einhorn
- Eurozone
- Fail
- Greenlight
- Gross Domestic Product
- headlines
- Hong Kong
- Kuwait
- NASDAQ
- Natural Gas
- Obama Administration
- Real estate
- recovery
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- Transparency
- Wall Street Journal
- Yuan
- Charting the Market: New Month, Same China (BBG)
- China jitters send stocks tumbling (Reuters)
- Oil falls on weak China factory data (Reuters)
- Euro zone factory growth eases in August despite modest price rises (Reuters)
- Euro-Area Joblessness Falls to Lowest Level Since Early 2012 (BBG)
- Clinton friend advised on U.S. politics, foreign policy (Reuters)
- Korea exports slump as Asia's woes deepen (Reuters)
US & China Stocks Are Plunging After PMI Hits 6.5-Year Low, PBOC Strengthens Yuan Most Since Nov 2014
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/31/2015 22:21 -0500Following China's official PMI print at a 3-year low, Caixin's PMI collapsed to 47.3 - the lowest sinec March 2009. Despite another CNY150bn liquidity injection (but the biggest strengthening of Yuan since Nov 2014 and a financial conditions tightening in FX trading), China, US, and Japanese stocks are plunging... SHCOMP -4%, Dow -280, NKY -340
Preparing For A Potential Economic Collapse In October
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/31/2015 17:30 -0500There’s no question that the world economy has been shaky at best since the crash of 2008. Yet, politicians, central banks, et al., have, since then, regularly announced that “things are picking up.” One year, we hear an announcement of “green shoots.” The next year, we hear an announcement of “shovel-ready jobs.” And yet, year after year, we witness the continued economic slump. Few dare call it a depression, but, if a depression can be defined as “a period of time in which most people’s standard of living drops significantly,” a depression it is.
Another Bit of Palo Alto For You
Submitted by Tim Knight from Slope of Hope on 08/31/2015 15:26 -0500For the low price of $3.4 million you can call this place your own personal palace.
Guest Post: Stanley Fischer Speaks - More Drivel From A Dangerous Academic Fool
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/31/2015 14:51 -0500With every passing week that money markets rates remain pinned to the zero bound by the Fed, the magnitude of the financial catastrophe hurtling toward main street America intensifies. When the next financial bubble crashes it can only be hoped that this time the people will grab their torches and pitchforks. Stanley Fischer ought to be among the first tarred and feathered for the calamity that he has so arrogantly helped enable.
Frontrunning: August 31
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/31/2015 06:31 -0500- Hilsenrath: Fed Appears to Hold Line on Rate Plan (WSJ)
- Europe, Asia stocks set for worst monthly drop in three years on China, Fed (Reuters)
- Beijing abandons large-scale share purchases (FT), if only for a few hours
- China’s Next Problem: Paying for Its Stock-Market Bailout (WSJ)
- Crises Put First Dents in Xi Jinping’s Power (WSJ)
- Man Group’s China Chief Said to Assist Police in Probe (BBG)
It Gets Even Uglier In Canada
Submitted by testosteronepit on 08/30/2015 22:02 -0500Businesses get “crunched” in the Oil Patch, consumers lose it, indexes hit Financial Crisis levels.




