Reuters
Sarkophagus: Hollande Wins French Presidency
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/06/2012 13:04 -0500
And so one more tumbles to the popular wave of anger and discontent.
Francois Hollande wins 51.9% of the vote according to exit polls
The 57-year-old Hollande got about 52 percent against about 48 percent for Sarkozy, according to estimates by pollsters CSA and Harris Interactive
Nicholas Sarzkoy concedes defeat in presidential election to Francois Hollande
Lies, Damned Lies And Statistics
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/06/2012 09:22 -0500According to Reuters, Italy is going to propose to the European Union that they should exempt borrowing used to pay their commercial obligations from their calculation of public debt. Monti, the article states, is also going to propose exempting the counting of public debt used for investments. You may be sure that Italy’s $211 billion of derivatives will now be entitled an “investment.” Now all of this will lower Italy’s debt to GDP ratio which is the real reason for these proposals and so even worse falsified numbers can be handed out to the Press in hopes that money will be invested in Italy based upon not just inaccurate but offically countenanced manufactured data. This way not only the debt to GDP ratio can be falsified but the growth numbers, the fiscal targets and a raft of other numbers that will no longer be real but just a systemic figment of Europe’s imagination.
A Preview Of Monday Morning In Europe
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/05/2012 21:49 -0500
While most will be following what appears to be an almost certain Hollande victory in the French presidential runoff elections tomorrow (InTrade odds around 10%), it is very likely that the Greek election will have a greater acute impact on the political and financial facade of Europe, especially in the short term. As we noted in what we dubbed our first (of many) Greek election previews, the biggest problem facing the new political regime will be its near certain inability to form a coalition government (with just 32.6% of the vote going to PASOK and New Democracy) that does not undo most of what has been achieved through popular sweat and tears over the past 2 years to assist Europe's bankers in transferring what little Greek wealth remains to fund the insolvent European bank balance sheets. This in turn could begin the latest cascading contagion waterfall, which coupled with an anti-austerity drive emanating from a newly socialist France will threaten to topple Angela Merkel's carefully constructed European hegemony.
Berkshire Annual Meeting Highlights
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/05/2012 11:16 -0500While Charlie Munger has so far to comment on the 24K content of made in the basement tribalware, he and his partner have made quite a few other statements on items ranging far and wide, during the annual Berkshire Omaha convention, which year after year represents the annual pilgrimage for thousands to a crony capitalist Mecca, and which with the passage of time, has become increasingly more irrelevant. Why? Because with a $58 billion bet (on $37.8 billion in cash and equivalents) that asset prices will go higher, it is rather clear on what side of the 'bail out' argument, and its 'all in' fallback: central planning, Warren Buffett sits.
Gold Bubble? “More People That Own Apple Stock Than Gold”
Submitted by GoldCore on 05/04/2012 11:02 -0500
Gold is down 1.6% on the week. The gold market has seen peculiar, lack lustre, low volume trading this week punctuated with sudden, oddly timed, very large sell orders. This leads to quick price falls followed either by slow, gradual recovery or a sharp bounce, prior to next bout of strangely timed sudden large sell orders.
This was clearly seen by the mysterious and massive $1.24 billion ‘Goldfinger’ trade on Monday.
Frontrunning: May 4
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/04/2012 06:06 -0500- Japan has 54 nuclear reactors, but as of Saturday, not one of them will be in operation (Guardian)
- US Readies Proposal to Clamp Down on Fracking (Reuters)
- California pension fund (CALSTRS) sues Wal-Mart, alleges bribery (Reuters)
- New Ripples for Gupta Case: Goldman Share Price, Volume Began Climbing Even Before Rajaratnam Trades (WSJ)
- China says blind dissident can apply to study abroad (Reuters)
- China paper calls Chen a U.S. pawn; envoy is a "troublemaker" (Reuters)
- Samsung’s New Galaxy S Phone Raises Heat on Apple Iphone (Bloomberg)
- Draghi predicts 2012 eurozone recovery (FT)
- Tumbling Home Ownership Marks a Return to Normal (Bloomberg)
- Zuckerberg Facebook IPO to Make Him Richer Than Ballmer (Bloomberg)
- SEC probes Chesapeake and its chief (FT)
The Fed and the ECB’s Hands Are Politically Tied... Bye Bye Market Props
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 05/03/2012 19:41 -0500
Remember, the core driving force in European policy-making is politics. Angela Merkel faces re-election in 2013. If inflation is already becoming a political issue in Germany now (though data shows that inflation actually slowed in April) Merkel is going to be highly incentivized to get it under control by appearing even more pro-austerity/ anti-monetization (more on this later). And if things get truly ugly she could even publicly threaten to pull out the Euro.
Guest Post: Should The Rich Pay More Taxes?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2012 10:30 -0500Those calling for taxing the richest more are not doing the same cost-benefit analysis I am doing that suggests that raising taxes won’t raise more revenue. But they’re not unfairly looking for a scapegoat, either. While probably the greatest culprits for the problems of recent are in government (Bush, Greenspan, Obama, Bernanke) Americans are right to be mad at the rich.
Why?
This isn’t about tax. This is about jobs, and growth. The rich, above and beyond any other group have the ability to ameliorate the economic malaise by spending and creating jobs, creating new products and new wealth. The top 1% control 42% of all financial wealth. But that money isn’t moving very much at all— the velocity of money is at historic lows. It should not be surprising that growth remains depressed and unemployment remains stubbornly high.
Swiss Gold Stored At “Decentralised Locations” – SNB Does Not Disclose Where
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2012 09:36 -0500- BOE
- Central Banks
- China
- European Central Bank
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Hugh Hendry
- Hugh Hendry
- India
- Krugman
- Middle East
- Monetary Policy
- Paul Krugman
- Precious Metals
- Real Interest Rates
- recovery
- Reuters
- Swiss Franc
- Swiss National Bank
- Switzerland
- Transparency
- Wall Street Journal
- World Gold Council
There are deepening concerns in Switzerland about the debasement of the Swiss franc. The SNB has pegged the franc to the euro and is engaged in the same ultra loose monetary policies as the Federal Reserve, BOE and the ECB. The SNB won't allow the franc to rise above an arbitrary “ceiling” against the euro Walter Meier himself said on April 5 that the SNB is ready to buy foreign currencies in "unlimited quantities." Meier’s comments regarding the vastly depleted Swiss gold reserves came after Bayram Dincer, an analyst at LGT Capital Management in Pfaeffikon, Switzerland, called on the SNB to disclose where its gold is stored, in a letter published in the respected Swiss publication Finanz und Wirtschaft. Meier said that the SNB holds its physical gold reserves “domestically and internationally, with provisions for a crisis scenario being a main factor in the decision for this decentralized storage”. “The criteria for the storage countries are: appropriate regional diversification, exceptionally stable economic and political environments, immunity for central bank investments, access to a gold market where stocks could be liquidated if necessary,” he continued. He concluded by saying that “such a decentralized storage is still preferable to an exclusive storage in Switzerland. The listed factors can change over time and that’s why the central bank is reviewing and adapting the storage locations periodically.” The SNB’s monetary policies have been imprudent in recent years and their gold sales have lost the Swiss people a lot of money.
News That Matters
Submitted by thetrader on 05/03/2012 08:09 -0500- Australia
- BAC
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank of England
- Bloomberg News
- China
- Crude
- Daniel Tarullo
- Dow Jones Industrial Average
- ETC
- European Central Bank
- European Union
- Eurozone
- Exxon
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- Global Economy
- Hong Kong
- India
- Institutional Investors
- Iran
- Israel
- Japan
- Markit
- Mary Schapiro
- Merrill
- Merrill Lynch
- Mervyn King
- Middle East
- Mohammad
- Natural Gas
- New Zealand
- Nicolas Sarkozy
- Nomura
- Nouriel
- Nouriel Roubini
- President Obama
- Recession
- Renminbi
- Reuters
- Securities and Exchange Commission
- Term Sheet
- Unemployment
- Vladimir Putin
- Yuan
All you need to read.
Frontrunning: May 3
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2012 06:16 -0500- Chinese dissident seeks exile, strains U.S.-China ties (Reuters)
- Sarkozy and Hollande lock horns on TV (FT)
- UK in furious rejection of EU bank plan (FT)
- EU Fails to Reach Deal on Capital (WSJ)
- China energy use may be capped for 2015 (China Daily)
- Buffett Trails S&P 500 for Third Straight Year (Bloomberg)
- King admits failing to ‘shout’ about risk (FT)
- Obama promises 110,000 new summer jobs for youth (Reuters)
- China sturdy enough for reforms: Geithner (Reuters)
- Geithner repeats call for stronger yuan (Reuters)
Mixed Results As Spain Sells More Bonds Than Expected, But Pays Up As Yields Again Spike - Analyst View
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/03/2012 05:38 -0500Traders were watching Spain cautiously this morning which at around 4 am Eastern sold €2.52 billion of three- and five-year government bonds, in its first bond auction since Standard & Poor's cut its sovereign rating by two notches last week. The results were mixed because while more than the maximum range of €2.5 billion was sold (on solid total demand of €8.07 billion) or €2.52 billion, Spain paid up for the privilege, with yields rising across the board, reaching just why of 5% for the 2017 bonds and more importantly pricing with tails to secondary market prices, confirming that the trend in rising yields at primary issuance is very much unsustainable. This in turn caused the EURUSD to get spooked and slide to overnight lows, a move not mimicked by broader equity futures which this morning are again in a world of their own, and now simply await to see if the Initial Claims number later will be far worse than expected in order to soar.
John Arnold Closing Centaurus Energy Master Fund As Central Planning Slowly Kills Off Commodity Trading
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/02/2012 12:57 -0500More troubles for the nat gas world, as flashing red headlines confirm the inexorable trend which started years ago with the departure of more and more hedge fund titans who no longer have an advantage in a world where only liquidity matters.
- NATURAL GAS HEDGE FUND MANAGER JOHN ARNOLD TELLS INVESTORS HE IS CLOSING CENTAURUS ENERGY MASTER FUND - RTRS
Why is this not a surprise? Simple. As the FT reported earlier, take virtually everything you know about the nuances, the complexities, the intricacies of commodity trading... and shove it. But don't forget to thank the Chairman first, because the last bastion of "veteran advantage" in what used to be a rational trading arena, is now gone.
America's "Safest Long Term Investment" Is Gold - Gallup
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/02/2012 06:39 -0500Americans feel “gold is the safest long term investment” today, a Gallup survey has found. Gold was favoured over four other types of investments perceived as the best long term choice for American investors today. 28% of the American public choose gold as their favoured investment of choice today. Real estate followed in second place, with 20% seeing it as the best long term investment. Paper assets were less popular with savings accounts and certificates of deposits (CDs) tied with stocks and mutual funds at 19%. Bonds came last at 8%. This suggests that the American public may not be as uninformed when it comes to investing as is often suggested. According to Gallup, "investing in gold has gained in popularity in recent years as low interest rates have made traditional savings instruments less attractive, and instability in the stock and real estate markets has undermined the mass appeal of those options." "Meanwhile, the rising trajectory of the price of gold over the past several years apparently offers more of the returns and stability investors seek." While some may find the Gallup poll findings worrisome from a contrarian perspective, it is not.
Frontrunning: May 2
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/02/2012 06:18 -0500- European Unemployment Rate Rises to Highest in Almost 15 Years (Bloomberg)
- Chinese Activist Leaves U.S. Embassy (WSJ)
- China April bank loans slide 30 pct from March-paper (Reuters)
- Moody's warns against lack of tax hike in Japan (Reuters)
- RIM CEO Bets on BlackBerry Without Keyboard to Challenge Apple (Bloomberg)
- European visits focus on boosting trade (China Daily)
- Martin Wolf- After the bonfire of the verities (FT)
- German Jobless Unexpectedly Up in April as Crisis Flared (Bloomberg)
- Romney Refuses to See China Progress on Yuan (Bloomberg)
- Bolivia Following Argentine Takeover Deepens Regional Divide (Bloomberg)
- Plosser Says Fed Must Guard Against Long-Term Inflation (Bloomberg)






