Transparency
Frontrunning: January 18
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/18/2013 07:47 -0500- American Express
- Apple
- B+
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Barclays
- BOE
- Boeing
- Capital One
- China
- Citigroup
- Credit Suisse
- Dell
- European Union
- France
- GE Capital
- General Electric
- Glencore
- India
- Japan
- Las Vegas
- Leo de Bever
- Madison Avenue
- Medicare
- Morgan Stanley
- Natural Gas
- Nomura
- recovery
- Reuters
- Sirius XM
- Student Loans
- Timothy Geithner
- Toyota
- Transparency
- Tronox
- WABC
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- Westamerica
- Yen
- Yuan
- Foreign Hostages Die in Algeria’s Battle With Terrorists (Bloomberg)
- The latest bank to soon join the currency wars: McCafferty Says BOE Must Keep Open Mind on New Policy Tools (Bloomberg)
- US debt talks complicated by timing (FT)
- BOJ eyes open-ended asset buying, agrees new inflation goal (Reuters)
- AmEx Says U.S. Card Income Fell 42% as Loss Provisions Increased (BBG)
- Call to raise age for US’s Medicare (FT)
- Obama Promise to Raise Middle Class Living Already Seen in Peril (BBG)
- China Exits Slowdown as Quarterly Growth Tops Forecasts (BBG) - actually, as new Politburo says to make it appear that way
- Britain to drift out of European Union without reforms (Reuters)
- Republicans weigh interim debt-limit hike (FT)
- Abe's aide says Japan shouldn't fret if yen falls to 100 vs dlr (Reuters) ... and it was 90 just a few days ago
- PBOC May Seek More Liquidity Operations (Dow Jones)
Guest Post: A Message To The 'Left' From A 'Right Wing Extremist'
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/16/2013 19:06 -0500
Some discoveries are exciting, joyful, and exhilarating, while others can be quite painful. Stumbling upon the fact that you do not necessarily have a competent grasp of reality, that you have in fact been duped for most of your life, is not a pleasant experience. I came to see a dark side to the Democratic Party that had always been there but which I had refused to acknowledge. During the rise of any despotic governmental structure, there is always a section of the population that is given special treatment, and made to feel as though they are “on the winning team”. For now, it would appear that the “Left” side of the political spectrum has been chosen by the establishment as the favored sons and daughters of the restructured centralized U.S. However, before those of you on the Left get too comfortable in your new position as the hand of globalization, I would like to appeal to you for a moment of unbiased consideration. I know from personal experience that there are Democrats out there who are actually far more like we constitutionalists and “right wing extremists” than they may realize. I ask that you take the following points into account, regardless of what the system decides to label us...
Guest Post: Is American Justice Dead?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/09/2013 22:08 -0500
Every nation-state has a body of laws woven into the fabric of society. As Peruvian economist Hernando de Soto has commented on extensively, the stronger the rule of law, the stronger the economy. And by "stronger" laws, I mean laws that are impervious to tampering for personal or political gains. The connection between a sound judiciary and economic health is readily comprehensible, except maybe to a politician... businesses and individuals are far more likely to invest capital in a country with understandable laws that are impartially and universally enforced than if the opposite condition exists. That's because the lack of a consistent body of law breeds uncertainty and adds a huge element of risk for entrepreneurs. Which brings us back to the matter at hand – American justice on a slippery slope.
What Obama’s Nominations Mean: The Military Is Being Downsized … But Covert Operations Are Gearing Up
Submitted by George Washington on 01/08/2013 13:21 -0500The CIA Is Taking Over the Dirty Work in Fighting America’s Wars
Guest Post: The HFT-Induced Extinction Of Retail Investors
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/06/2013 13:49 -0500
The term "invasive species" has been used to describe new types of plants or animals that have been introduced to a new area, whereupon they change the local biosystem. The sudden appearance of new lifeforms in an environment can cause rapid losses in some of the species present prior to this appearance. On occasion, however, the new players can overwhelm the stabilizing factors in the system, which undergoes dramatic changes, eventually stabilizing in a new configuration that is highly detrimental to many of the original players in the system. Which brings me to today's invasive species. Many of the characteristics of successful invasive species are shared by HFT algorithms. This is driving the retail investor to extinction, through the erosion in their margins brought about by HFT. In the presence of HFT, the unsophisticated investor pays a higher price on the buy and receives a lower price on the sell than would be the case otherwise. The professional traders manage to maintain their margins--the losses of the unsophisticated are the profits of the algos.
Replaying Chris Christie's Epic Anti-Boehner Meltdown
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/02/2013 17:46 -0500
Earlier today, in what can only be summarized as an epic meltdown, NJ governor Chris Christie proceeded with an even more epic rant against House speaker John Boehner, in narrow terms, and House Republicans in broader, for killing the $60 billion Sandy Assistance bill, whose funding would have offset one full year of the just legislated tax hikes on the rich which would add $62 billion annually to the Treasury (or alternatively would have been unfundable for the next 2 months while the US struggles to pay its mandatory bills courtesy of having breached the debt ceiling). Alternatively, all Americans could just agree to accept less welfare and entitlement benefits to show their solidarity for New Jersey and fund the recovery of the Tristate area by a "shared sacrifice" instead of going the default route and demanding even more deficit spending - something that would naturally saddle the next generation with even more pain, not the current, far more entitled one - but in this country that is an absolutely ludicrous proposition. Below is a clip of the entire Christie performance which is a must see for sheer indignation entertainment value alone.
Guest Post: The Dangerous Blindspots of Clueless Keynesians
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/02/2013 10:28 -0500
The fundamental Keynesian project is that the Central State and Central Bank should manage market forces whenever the market turns down. In other words, the market only "works" when everything is expanding: credit, profits, GDP and employment. Once any of those turn down, the State and Central Bank "should" intervene to force the market back into "growth." The sharper the downturn, the greater the State/Central Bank intervention. This accounts for the martial analogies of State/CB responses: "bazookas," "nuclear option," etc., as the market is overwhelmed with ever greater fiscal/monetary firepower. After basically voiding the market's ability to price risk and assets, the Keynesians believe the market will naturally resume pricing risk and assets at "acceptable to Central Planning" levels once fiscal and monetary stimulus is dialed back. Keynesian policy is to punish capital accumulation and reward leveraged debt expansion. Rather than enforce the market's discipline and transparent pricing of risk, debt and assets, Keynesians have explicitly set out to re-inflate destructive, massively unproductive credit bubbles. The entire Keynesian Project, however, has numerous blindspots.
FOR THE RECORD: GATA, Ted Truman And Gold … Another Stunning Revelation
Submitted by lemetropole on 01/01/2013 22:05 -0500- Alan Greenspan
- Australia
- Bank of England
- Barack Obama
- BIS
- Central Banks
- Chris Powell
- ETC
- European Central Bank
- Federal Reserve
- Foreign Central Banks
- Institute For International Economics
- Krugman
- Market Manipulation
- Monetary Policy
- New York Times
- None
- Ohio
- Paul Krugman
- Spencer Bachus
- SPY
- Trade Deficit
- Transparency
- Treasury Department
- United Kingdom
- World Bank
On May 10, 2000 a GATA delegation consisting of Reg Howe, Frank Veneroso, Chris Powell and Bill Murphy met with Denny Hastert, The Speaker of the House in the United States Congress; Spencer Bachus, the Chairman of the House Subcommittee on Domestic and International Monetary Policy; and Dr. John Silvia, the Chief Economist of the Senate Banking Committee. We presented each of them our 100 page "Gold Derivative Banking Crisis" document and personally delivered it to the staff of every House and Senate Banking Committee member.
Blowing Up Now: The Transfer Of French Nuclear Technology To China
Submitted by testosteronepit on 12/28/2012 21:04 -0500Selling nuclear and industrial secrets and know-how to China in order to conclude a deal that had been “aborted”...
Generation Y Wakes Up From The American Dream, Faces An American Nightmare
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/26/2012 10:15 -0500
Three and a half years after the worst recession since the Great Depression, the earnings and employment gap between those in the under-35 population and their parents and grandparents threatens to unravel the American dream of each generation doing better than the last. We have noted a number of times that these divides are growing and warned of the social tension this could create and, as Bloomberg notes, it does not appear to be getting any better, Generation Y professionals entering the workforce are finding careers that once were gateways to high pay and upwardly mobile lives turning into detours and dead ends. "This generation will be permanently depressed and will be on a lower path of income for probably all of their life - and at least the next 10 years," as middle-income jobs are disappearing. A 2009 law school graduate sums it up rather succinctly: "I had a lot of faith in the system, the mythology that if you work really hard you can achieve anything, and the stock market always goes up. It was pretty naïve on my part."
Does Libor Manipulation Deserve The Death Penalty?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/24/2012 09:51 -0500
Bloomberg's William Cohan released a provocative piece last night, headlined by the even more provocative "UBS Libor Manipulation Deserves the Death Penalty." We can only assume that Cohan is being metaphorical - after all, despite the rare occasional recent criminal charge no one has still gone to prison for the biggest coordinated manipulation of a benchmark fixed income market for years: something previously relegated to the fringes of crackpot conspiracy theories - after all, so many people were in on it, how can they possibly all keep their mouths shut - you know, the usual excuse against massive conspiracy theories, at least until they become conspiracy fact. Yet one wonders: will current and future ongoing market manipulations ever cease when there is no real deterrent: after all spending a few years in jail is certainly worth a few million in ill-gotten proceeds, even assuming the termination of a career in finance. Is Cohan being rhetorical? Or has the time for some true vigilante justice finally come? Because in a world increasingly best portrayed by the 2009 movie "The International" where one has to "go outside" a captured legal system to get real justice, is vigilantism eventually coming to every town near you, once the money illusion ends? And a bigger question - is this the main preemptive reason for the gun control push seen so vividly in recent days and months?
The Crisis of Conflicts at the New York Fed: Circling the Wagons to Set Up Ex-Goldmanite William Dudley As President
Submitted by EB on 12/17/2012 11:01 -0500- AIG
- American International Group
- B+
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank of New York
- Blackrock
- Citigroup
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- Federal Reserve Bank of New York
- FOIA
- General Electric
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Jamie Dimon
- JPMorgan Chase
- Monetary Policy
- New York Fed
- Open Market Operations
- Ron Paul
- Timothy Geithner
- Transparency
- William Dudley
New Fed minutes reveal powerful CEO voted to make William Dudley president of FRBNY and grant him conflicts waivers for investments in CEO's own company.
Frontrunning: December 14
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/14/2012 07:31 -0500- Apple
- Barack Obama
- Bond
- China
- Citigroup
- Credit Suisse
- Deutsche Bank
- DVA
- European Central Bank
- Evercore
- Exxon
- Federal Reserve
- Greece
- India
- Iran
- Japan
- JPMorgan Chase
- Keefe
- LIBOR
- Medicare
- Merrill
- NASDAQ
- Newspaper
- Nomura
- Pharmerica
- President Obama
- Quiksilver
- ratings
- Raymond James
- Reuters
- Shenzhen
- Six Flags
- Stress Test
- Transparency
- Wall Street Journal
- Wells Fargo
- White House
- Yuan
- Obama, Boehner hold "frank" meeting amid "fiscal cliff" frustration (Reuters)
- Rice Ends Bid Amid Criticism (WSJ)
- EU summit delays crucial decisions (FT)
- EU moves to cap bank bonuses at 2 times annual salary (CBC)
- Europe Wins a Battle, but Not Yet the War (WSJ)
- Banks Spurn Europe Bond Rush Amid Central Bank Loan Largesse (BBG)
- German-French Sparring Over Euro Caps 2012 Crisis Fight (BBG)
- Fed begins stress tests on bank liquidity (FT)
- Draghi’s rallying cry for new EU powers (FT)
- EU Seeks Plan to Handle Failing Banks Amid Cost Concerns (BBG)
- Berlusconi says Monti has strong EU backing (FT)
- Abe Set for Japan Victory Faces 7-Month Window to Keep Hold (BBG)
- Japan's Abe would try to keep China ties calm-lawmakers (Reuters)
The Central Bank Backlash: First Hong Kong, Now Australia Gets Ugly Case Of Truthiness
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/12/2012 23:06 -0500Glenn Stevens, RBA Governor: "Central banks can provide liquidity to shore up financial stability and they can buy time for borrowers to adjust, but they cannot, in the end, put government finances on a sustainable course... They can't shield people from the implications of having mis-assessed their own lifetime budget constraints and therefore having consumed too much."
USA Seen More Corrupt Than UK, Japan, And Barbados
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/05/2012 09:42 -0500
Looking at Transparency International's Corruption Perceptions Index 2012, it's clear that corruption is a major threat facing humanity. Corruption destroys lives and communities, and undermines countries and institutions. It generates popular anger that threatens to further destabilise societies and exacerbate violent conflicts - and as is clear from the chart below, the red (more corrupt perceptions) are creeping across Europe. The Corruption Perceptions Index scores countries on a scale from 0 (highly corrupt) to 100 (very clean). While no country has a perfect score, two-thirds of countries score below 50, indicating a serious corruption problem in the world. The US ranks 19th - perceived as more corrupt than the UK, Japan, Barbados, and Hong Kong (but less corrupt that France). In Transparency's words: "Corruption amounts to a dirty tax, and the poor and most vulnerable are its primary victims."






