Unemployment
In "Permazero", Fed's Bullard Admits US May Be Entering Permanent Period Of Lower Inflation And Interest Rates
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2015 09:20 -0500The most important thing Bullard said in his speech titled "Permazero" is that the the US may be entering a permanent period of lower inflation and interest rates. Wait, wasn't ZIRP and QE supposed to push the US economy, boost inflation and hike rates? Good to know 7 years later that the biggest monetary experiment in history did precisely the opposite of what it was supposed to achieve.
"Social Explosion" Begins In Greece As Massive Street Protests Bring Economy To A Fresh Halt
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2015 08:46 -0500Housing Bubble - Part Deux
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2015 08:39 -0500The housing recovery without mortgage originations is coming to its inevitable conclusion.
Frontrunning: November 12
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2015 07:40 -0500- Stock futures little changed as Yellen comments awaited (Reuters)
- Draghi stimulus hint underpins stocks, knocks euro (Reuters)
- Black Friday's Losing Its Mojo and Retailers Might Be Relieved (BBG)
- Macy’s Fights Downward Spiral With Bet on Off-Price Backstage Stores (WSJ)
- Greece Comes to a Standstill as Unions Turn Against Tsipras (BBG)
- Euro zone production falls more than expected in September (Reuters)
- Valeant played a key role in building, operating Philidor RX (Reuters)
Euro Crushed By Draghi's Latest "Whatever It Takes" Moment; Fed Speaker Barrage On Deck
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/12/2015 06:59 -0500- BOE
- Bond
- Central Banks
- China
- Continuing Claims
- Copper
- CPI
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Equity Markets
- Exxon
- Fail
- fixed
- Glencore
- headlines
- High Yield
- Housing Starts
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Iraq
- Italy
- Janet Yellen
- Jim Reid
- Lehman
- M2
- Market Share
- Monetary Policy
- NASDAQ
- Nikkei
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- Reuters
- Testimony
- Unemployment
- Yuan
The biggest event overnight came from Europe, where Draghi managed to once again jawbone the Euro lower by ober 50 pips when he told European lawmakers in a prepared testimony that downside economic risks are "clearly visible," repeating his October press conference statement, adding that the ECB will reexamine degree of accommodation in December as "inflation dynamics have somewhat weakened." And the statement that crushed the Euro: "If we were to conclude that our medium-term price stability objective is at risk, we would act by using all the instruments available within our mandate to ensure that an appropriate degree of monetary accommodation is maintained." I.e., another "whatever it takes" moment.
Record Number Of Women Now Live In Parents' Basement, Lack Of Weddings Blamed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/11/2015 20:00 -0500"Eternal happiness can wait. Millennials are much less likely to be married than their parents were at their age, and marriage often serves as an impetus to move out."
"Irreversibly Broken & Dysfunctional" - There's Something Wrong In The Markets
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/11/2015 12:35 -0500Today’s dilemma – for financial markets and central bankers – is that pushing back against nascent “risk off” unleashes another forceful bout of “risk on.” At this point, it’s either Bubble on or off – destabilizing either way. The global Bubble has grown too distended and the market backdrop too dysfunctional. Central bankers over the past 25 years have created excessive “money,” while incentivizing too much finance into financial speculation. There is now way too much “money” crowded into the securities and derivative markets, and the upshot is an increasingly hostile backdrop for leverage and speculation.
December Is Not The 'Done Deal' The Market Thinks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/11/2015 11:15 -0500Listening to the mainstream media would imply that the Fed has made the decision already; but Fed Funds Futures are priced (as-of 11/10/2015) for only a 66% chance of the Fed raising to 0.25%-0.50% in December. It isn't the foregone conclusion you would think after watching CNBC. We do not think the Fed will have enough time of relative solace to raise even once before a global slowdown/recession is obvious in the U.S.
Global Stocks Break 5 Day Losing Streak As Poor Chinese Data Sparks Hope For More Stimulus
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/11/2015 07:00 -0500- Apple
- Aussie
- Bank of England
- BOE
- Bond
- China
- Copper
- CPI
- Credit Crisis
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- default
- Equity Markets
- fixed
- Gambling
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Government Stimulus
- headlines
- Hong Kong
- Insider Trading
- Investment Grade
- Italy
- Jim Reid
- New York Stock Exchange
- NFIB
- Nikkei
- Portugal
- Precious Metals
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- Rating Agency
- recovery
- Shenzhen
- Unemployment
- Wholesale Inventories
For the third day in a row, China dominated the overnight newsflow with the latest industrial output data, which printed at 5.6% missing expectations of a 5.8% increase, and was tied with March for the lowest print since late 2008.
Caught On Tape: University of Missouri Media Professor Incites Mob Violence Against Reporter For Doing His Job
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/10/2015 23:50 -0500Meet Melissa Click. Assistant Professor of Mass Media at the University of Missouri, and woman who was caught on video asking for “muscle” in order to physically remove a reporter from reporting on a story in a public place. Yes ladies and gentleman, welcome to America’s college campuses. If you haven’t seen this video, you must watch it immediately... (and put down any sharp objects before you do).
Destroying The "Technology Always Creates More Jobs Than It Destroys" Meme
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/10/2015 13:36 -0500Believers in "technology always creates more jobs than it destroys" never address the knotty issues of taxpayer subsidies, secular trends of higher labor costs, the eradication of low-skill jobs that pay enough to live on without taxpayer subsidies, or the structural surplus of conventional labor and capital--the scarcity value of both are dropping to zero. While many hope that every low-skill person can become a high-skilled worker, training people doesn't create jobs for them.
Obama Explains Why 'The Greatest Corporate Power Grab In History' Is "The Right Thing For America"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/10/2015 09:25 -0500While some have called The Trans-Pacific Partnership, "the most brazen corporate power grab in American history," President Obama tells Americans - in an Op-Ed released today - that "it’s the right thing to do for our economy, for working Americans and for our middle class" Despite indepedent analysis that appears to confirm the creeping corporate coup d’état along with the final evisceration of national sovereignty, President Obama explains - in simple words - ObamaTrade is "a trade deal that helps working families get ahead," due, inhis opinion, to the "toughest global labor laws" which will allow American workers to compete on a so-called "level playing field."
About That Surge In Retail & Construction Jobs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/09/2015 20:25 -0500As one witty observer noted over the weekend, "no one with an IQ greater than their shoe size, save corrupt, captured American economists, buys the fake October unemployment report," and while we agreed with the pretext of his thesis, we thought a quick sanity check on the sudden surges in Retail employment and Construction jobs and wage growth would help clarify a few things for those who 'believe' in miracles. As the following two simple charts show, we have seen this odious pattern of mal-investment, mis-allocation, and erroneous executuve extrapolation before... and it did not end well.
Ron Paul: Does The Bell Toll For The Fed?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/09/2015 19:10 -0500The failure of the Fed’s policies of massive money creation, corporate bailouts, and quantitative easing to produce economic growth is a sign that the fiat money system’s day of reckoning is near. The only way to prevent the monetary system’s inevitable crash from causing a major economic crisis is the restoration of a free-market monetary policy.
The End Of The Fed's Self-Deluding Feedback Loop Of False Information
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/09/2015 15:55 -0500The world is bankrupt after thirty years of borrowing from the future to throw a party in the present, and the authorities can’t acknowledge that. But they can provide the conditions for disguising it, especially in the statistical hall of mirrors that once-upon-a-time produced meaningful signals for the movement of capital. The Dow, the S&P, and the NASDAQ are the only signaling mechanisms that the legacy media pays attention to, and the politicos take their cues from them, in a feedback loop of false information that begets more delusional positive psychology in those same markets.



