Volatility
4 Telltale Signs The Credit Cycle Is Turning Now
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/30/2015 20:26 -0500"... As the tide of leverage goes out, the full extent of irresponsible lending becomes apparent. The previously virtuous cycle between risk spreads and fundamentals goes into reverse, with lower prices, defaults, and downgrades forcing leveraged investors to sell, leading to even lower prices."
Fashion Company SQBG Tries To Crush Shorts, Force Squeeze After Chairman Urges Investors To Pull Borrow
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/30/2015 15:16 -0500"Tengram has instructed its broker that it will not permit borrowing of any of its shares by short sellers who are only interested in reducing the value of the Company’s stock price for their short-term gain. We urge each of you to contact your broker today and inform them that your shares may not be made available to be borrowed by short sellers.”
Another Hedge Fund Bites The Dust: Trafigura Shuts Down Its Flagship Metals Fund
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/30/2015 14:17 -0500While the storm clouds continue to build above Trafigura, we now know the fate of Galena and why its CEO Letchford departed the company in a hurry last week: according to a follow up from Bloomberg, Trafigura has decided to close the flagship Galena Metals Fund, the latest hedge fund victim of the rout in raw materials markets from oil to copper.
The IMF Confirms Yuan Inclusion In SDR Basket At 10.92% Weight, Above JPY And GBP
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/30/2015 12:03 -0500The IMF’s Executive Board decision today means that the yuan will be included in the SDR basket from Oct. 1, 2016, effectively anointing the yuan as a major reserve currency and represents recognition that the yuan’s status is rising along with China’s place in global finance. The weight in the basket will be 10.92%, larger than JPY and GBP. However, as politically-motivated as this decision may have been, now comes the hard part for China.
Gold Demand in China Heading For Record and Reserves Increase 14 Tonnes In October
Submitted by GoldCore on 11/30/2015 10:52 -0500While gold prices continue to languish in the doldrums and are on course for their worst month since 2013, global demand and especially Chinese retail, investor and official demand continues to remain very robust. Indeed, China looks likely to see a new record demand for gold annually again in 2015.
BTFD "Is Coming To An End" JPM Warns, As It Lowers Equity Allocation Most In 6 Years
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/30/2015 07:57 -0500"We think that the equities risk-reward will be less attractive than it was in the past few years. We reduce our equities OW in a balanced portfolio to a minimal one, at 5% vs benchmark, the lowest we have had since the current upcycle started. The long period of indiscriminately buying any dip might be coming to an end."
World's Largest Pension Fund Suffers $64 Billion Loss After Doubling Down On Stocks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/30/2015 07:37 -0500Late last year, Japanese PM Shinzo Abe effectively forced the $1.1 trillion Government Pension Investment Fund to double its domestic equity allocation. With Kuroda providing perpetual Nikkei plunge protection, and with Abenomics set to bring about an economic renaissance, what could possibly go wrong?...
Futures Rebound On Latest Chinese Intervention, Renewed Hopes For "Moar From Mario"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/30/2015 06:49 -0500- Australia
- Barack Obama
- Barclays
- Bill Gates
- Black Friday
- BOE
- Bond
- Brazil
- Central Banks
- Chicago PMI
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Copenhagen
- Copper
- CPI
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Dallas Fed
- Danske Bank
- Equity Markets
- European Central Bank
- Federal Reserve
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- headlines
- High Yield
- International Monetary Fund
- Iran
- Janet Yellen
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Monetary Policy
- Nikkei
- OPEC
- Reserve Currency
- Saudi Arabia
- Shenzhen
- Turkey
- Volatility
- Volkswagen
- Yuan
Without a rerun of last Friday's Chinese stock market rout, European traders could focus on what "really matters", namely how much of the ECB's upcoming 20 bps rate cut and €20 billion QE expansion (with Commerzbank saying Draghi may even hint at Europe's QE3) is priced in, and whether the ECB's actions are just modestly priced in, or more than fully, and just how big the "sell the news" event will be.The result: the Euro falls to a new 7 month low, the dollar spot index hits a new all time high, and European stocks and US futures stage another remarkable overnight comeback on the usual low volume levitation and central bank intervention.
Chinese Stocks Tumble As Offshore Yuan Surges Most In 2 Months After Apparent PBOC Intervention
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/29/2015 22:27 -0500Update - Chinese stocks continue to plunge... Offshore Yuan surges on intervention.
Aside from 3 very small adjustments, The PBOC has fixed the Yuan weaker for the last 20 days, driving the mid-line to 6.3962 - the weakest since August 28th. After Chinese stocks collapsed on Friday, they are holding the losses for now as the biggest question remains just what the weighting will be for Yuan inclusion in The IMF's SDR basket (which looks set to be announced tomorrow - US time). Metals are tumbling (with Iron ore down 3.7%) and broad AsiaPac stocks are down around 1% as brokerages in China are plunging (Haitong -9.2%),
China Plunges Most In Three Months, Pushing "Black Friday" Into The Red For Global Stocks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/27/2015 06:46 -0500After several months of artificial, centrally-planned calm in Chinese markets, where "malicious sellers" found out the hard way the Politburo means business, overnight the relative quiet in Chinese stocks since August broke with a bang when the Shanghai Composite tumbled as much 6.1% before closing down 5.5%, the biggest drop in three months and the largest weekly loss since the depth of the Chinese rout in mid-August while a gauge of Chinese volatility surged from the lowest level since March.
Turkey Drops "Independence" From Central Bank Mandate As NATO's Favorite Autocrat Strikes Again
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/26/2015 16:40 -0500“We should focus on the meaning rather than individual words"...
After Arresting Hundreds Of Stock Traders, China Cracks Down On "Malicious" Metals Sellers Next
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/26/2015 12:24 -0500The China Nonferrous Metals Industry Association has submitted a request to Chinese regulators to probe "malicious" short-selling in domestic metal contracts amid recent price declines. Becase it is always the "malicious" sellers who are the cause of all the world's problems, never the "malicious" buyers, especially when said buyers are the central banks themselves.
"We Reduced Our Short In The Euro" - Did Goldman Just Hint Draghi May Do Nothing Next Week
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/25/2015 13:51 -0500So if Draghi pulls a "Draghi" on December 3, and stuns the market by admitting he merely jawboned the ECB's "assured" easing to death, with the EUR now pricing in both a 15 bps rate cut and more QE, and thus making any actual by the ECB meaningless (and why should the ECB actually launch a bazooka round when jawboning is enough) you have been warned.
There is little difference between rich and poor in America
Submitted by globalintelhub on 11/24/2015 22:03 -0500The further you go towards the tails of the bell curve, the more similar social characteristics. In a society that has been even more polarized, we increasingly see similarities between the very wealthy, and the very poor. The declining middle class is more and more a world of it's own (as the elite used to be).
In Summary, the Superclass "Elite" UHNWI and the ultra poor have the following in common:
- globalintelhub's blog
- Login or register to post comments
- Read more
The Real Value Of Cash
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/24/2015 16:30 -0500With the fundamental and economic backdrop becoming much more hostile toward investors in the intermediate term, understanding the value of cash as a "hedge" against loss becomes much more important. As John Hussman recently noted: "The overall economic and financial landscape, then, is one where obscene valuations imply zero or negative S&P 500 total returns for more than a decade — an outcome that is largely baked-in-the-cake regardless of shorter term economic or speculative factors. Presently, market internals remain unfavorable as well. Coming off of recent overvalued, overbought, overbullish extremes, this has historically opened a clear vulnerability of the market to air-pockets, free-falls and crashes."




