recovery
Italy Is "Willing To Temporarily Suspend Schengen" In Response To Refugee Crisis
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/02/2015 08:52 -0500Europe's refugee crisis just took a dramatic turn for the worse, and strikes at the very hear of Europe's Shengen customs union which has allowed borderless travel within Europe for decades. As Bloomberg reports, the Italian Province of Bolzano in Northern Italy said in a statement that it agreed with the Italian government on request by German Federal State of Bavaria by "communicating a willingness to restore border controls at Brenner and temporarily suspend the Schengen agreement."
Frontrunning: September 2
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/02/2015 06:34 -0500- Markets on edge as policymakers flex muscles (Reuters)
- European shares recover from rough ride (Reuters)
- For Stock Markets, the Moment When Humans Matter (WSJ)
- Puerto Rico's PREPA, bondholders have framework for deal (Reuters)
- Hundreds of migrants protest at Budapest station, want to go to Germany (Reuters)
- New Whale Seen Moving Tokyo Markets (BBG)
China Stocks Fail To Close Green Ahead Of National Holiday Despite Constant Intervention, US Futures Rebound
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/02/2015 05:51 -0500Since today was the last day of trading for Chinese stocks this week ahead of the 4-day extended September 3 military parade holiday to mark the 70th anniversary of the allied victory over Japan, and since Chinese stocks opened to yet another early trading rout coupled with the PBOC's biggest Yuan strengthening since 2010 as we observed earlier, there was only one thing that was certain: massive intervention by the Chinese "National Team" to get stocks as close to green as possible. Sure enough they tried, and tried so hard the "hulk's" green color almost came through in the last hour of trading and yet, despite the symbolic importance of having a green close at least one day this week ahead of China's victory over a World War II foe, Beijing was unable to defeat the market even once in the latest week which will hardly bode well for Chinese stocks come next week.
The Economics Of Bernie Sanders
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 15:55 -0500If we could put the economics of Bernie Sanders into a nutshell, it would be this: Burden private enterprise with one directive after another, and then demonize it when it ultimately falls down under the awful weight of taxes, higher costs, and mandates. While many people believe that instituting the Sanders economic agenda would help turn the USA into another Sweden or Denmark, the more likely outcome would be turning this country into another Venezuela.
The Mark Of A Bear (Market)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 14:35 -0500The discussion of why "this time is not like the last time" is largely irrelevant. Whatever gains that investors have garnered during the recent bull market advance will be wiped away in a swift and brutal downdraft. However, this is the sad history of individual investors in the financial markets as they are always "told to buy" but never "when to sell."
ConocoPhillips Fires 10% Of Global Workforce, Warns Of "Dramatic Downturn" To Oil Industry
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 14:06 -0500Where the great oil crash hits close to home for most Americans, is when firms such as Houston based ConocoPhillips announce that the E&P giant is about to terminate 10%, or 1,800 people, of its global workforce, in the next several weeks as it copes with low oil prices. "Our industry is undergoing a dramatic downturn, which has caused us to look at our future workforce needs. As we have assessed the implications of lower prices on our business, we’ve made the difficult decision that workforce reductions will be necessary.”
ABN Amro Warns There Is A 40% Chance Mario Draghi Expands ECB QE "As Soon As This Week"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 13:41 -0500Just two days before the September 3 ECB governing council meeting and press conference, ABN Amro released the genie from the bottle, when its head macro strategist Nick Kounis said the he now sees "a much bigger risk that the ECB will step up QE as soon as this week’s meeting. We see this probability at around 40%, so it is an increasingly close call.
September 2015: We Officially Enter The Danger Zone
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 10:36 -0500Is September 2015 going to be one of the most important months in modern American history?
Peak Construction Spending?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 09:55 -0500Construction spending grew at 13.7% YoY in July. It has only grown at a faster pace than that once - at the very peak of the idiocy in Q1 2006. So that got us wondering... how is it that Construction Spending is surging as Lumber Prices are collapsing? (unless homes are now made of Twitter share certficates). The answer is simple - lag... and we have seen this picture before...
US Manufacturing Plunges To 2-Year Lows As New Orders, Employment Tumble
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 09:06 -0500Following disappoint PMIs from around the world, the US decoupling meme took another knock today as Markit PMI printed 53.0 (from 53.8) - its lowest in almost 2 years, led by a plunge in the employment subindex. Weakness was also evident in new factory orders. As Markit notes, "U.S. manufacturing sector continues to struggle under the weight of the strong dollar and heightened global economic uncertainty." On the heels of Milwaukee and Dallas Fed weakness, ISM Manufacturing printed a disastrous 51.1 (vs 52.5 expectations) - the lowest since May 2013. Employment tumbled, as did New Export ordedrs, but unadjusted New Orders plunged to its lowest since 2013, which is a problem given the massive inventory builds that have saved the world in the last few months.
The Best And Worst Performing Assets In August: It Was A Good Month For Pet Rocks, Bad For "Hedge" Funds
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 08:56 -0500What Does Last Week’s Record Bounce Mean For Stocks?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 09/01/2015 07:26 -0500Whatever the message is in these mega intra-week rebounds (if there is one), we're afraid it just hasn’t been the “out of the woods” bullish sign that many were hoping it was.
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)
The Oligarch Recovery: Low Income Americans Can't Afford To Live In Any Metro Area
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/31/2015 21:20 -0500We were told we needed to bail out Wall Street in order to save Main Street. Well the results are in...
Wall Street has never done better, and Main Street has never done worse.
How China Cornered The Fed With Its "Worst Case" Capital Outflow Countdown
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/31/2015 18:24 -0500China has just cornered the Fed: not just diplomatically, as observed when China's PBOC clearly demanded that Yellen's Fed not start a rate hiking cycle, but also mechanistically, as can be seen by the acute and sudden selloff across all asset classes in the past 3 weeks. Now Yellen has about 365 days or so to find a solution, one which works not only for the US, but also does not leave China a smoldering rubble of three concurrently burst bubbles. Good luck.




