Yuan
Behold: A Chinese Liquidity Crunch
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2015 16:31 -0500What do you do when daily open FX interventions are sucking liquidity from the system but you need to save your RRR cuts for emergencies? This...
Who Will Be The Bagholders This Time Around?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2015 13:06 -0500Anyone betting China's GDP is really expanding at 7% and the U.S. economy will grow by 3.7% next quarter is angling to be a bagholder. Once global assets roll over for good, it's important to recall that somebody owns these assets all the way down. These owners are called bagholders, as in "left holding the bag." Those running the rigged casino have to select the bagholders in advance, lest some fat-cat cronies inadvertently get stuck with losses.
China Exclaims "We Were Wronged" - Demands Fed Delay Rate Hike, Reiterates Blame For Market Rout
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2015 08:52 -0500"China's exchange rate reform had nothing to do with the global stock market volatility, it was mainly due to the upcoming U.S. Federal Reserve monetary policy move," Yao said. "We were wronged."
Frontrunning: August 27
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2015 06:20 -0500- Virginia TV journalists killed by suspect with 'powder keg' of anger (Reuters)
- Policeman shot to death and three women stabbed, one fatally, in Louisiana (Reuters)
- China Intervened Today to Shore Up Stocks Ahead of Military Parade (Reuters)
- Margin Calls Bite Investors, Banks (WSJ)
- "Computer glitch" is preventing dozens of mutual funds, ETFs from promptly pricing their securities (WSJ)
- Oil prices rise more than 4 percent as equities rally (Reuters)
- Oil Industry Needs Half a Trillion Dollars to Endure Price Slump (BBG)
Aggressive Chinese Intervention Prevents Another Rout, Sends Stocks Soaring 5% In Last Trading Hour; US Futures Jump
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/27/2015 05:48 -0500- Australia
- Belgium
- Bond
- Central Banks
- China
- Continuing Claims
- Copper
- Creditors
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- default
- Greece
- High Yield
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Insurance Companies
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Money Supply
- NASDAQ
- Natural Gas
- Nikkei
- Personal Consumption
- Portugal
- Price Action
- Real estate
- Reuters
- Shenzhen
- Switzerland
- Ukraine
- Volatility
- Yuan
After a 5 day tumbling streak, which saw Chinese stock plunge well over 20% and 17% in just the first three days of this week, overnight the Shanghai Composite was hanging by a thread (and threat) until the last hour of trading. In fact, this is what the SHCOMP looked like until the very end: Up 2.6%, up 1.2%, up 2.8%, up 0.6%, up 2%... down 0.2%. And then the cavalry came in: "Heavyweight stocks like banks and insurance companies helped pull up the index, and it’s possibly China Securities Finance entering the market again to shore up stocks," Central China Sec. strategist Zhang Gang told Bloomberg by phone. Net result: the Composite, having been red just shortly before the close, soared higher by 156 points or 5.4%, showing the US stock market just how it's down.
What Would Happen If Everyone Joins China In Dumping Treasurys?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2015 22:10 -0500On Tuesday evening, we quantified the staggering cost of China’s near daily open FX operations in support of the yuan. In short, the new currency regime has led the PBoC to dump more US paper in the past two weeks than it had YTD. In conclusion, we asked if anyone else was set to join China in liquidating US Treasurys at a never before seen pace. Here's the answer and what it means for the US economy and monetary policy going forward.
Japan's Kuroda Denies Existence Of Currency War As China Devalues Yuan To Fresh 4 Year Lows, Injects CNY150bn Liquidity
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2015 20:20 -0500The night began much like any other morning in Asia - with pure comedy gold from Japanese leadership with BOJ's Kuroda saying he is "not concerned about currency wars, there is no currency war," adding that he has "no plans for further easing." That coincided with a drift lower in Japanese stocks from the US close - but mots of Asian stock markets were green buoyed by America's victory against malicious sellers for the first time in a week. Meanwhile, in China, margin debt drops to a 7-month lows (but is still up 133% YoY). But as rumor-mongers face death squads and any broker caught not buying with both hands and feet faces prison, it is no surprise that Chinese stocks are higher in the pre-open (A50 +5%, CSI +2.7%) but large corporate bond issues are being canceled willy nilly even as China devalues Yuan to fresh 4-year lows (6.4085) and adds CNY150bn liquidity.
"I Fear For The Chinese Citizen"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2015 16:20 -0500The idea of a change towards a domestic consumption-driven economy is being revealed as a woeful disaster. You can’t magically turn into a consumer-based economy by blowing bubbles first in property and then in stocks, and hope people’s profits in both will make them spend. Because the whole endeavor was based from the get-go on huge increases in debt, the just as predictable outcome is, and will be even much more, that people count their losses and spend much less in the local economy. While those with remaining spending power purchase property in the US, Britain, Australia. And go live there too, where they feel safe(r). I fear for the Chinese citizen. Not so much for Xi and Li. They will get what they deserve.
Bill Gross Asks The $64 Trillion Question: Is China Dumping Treasurys?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2015 14:04 -0500Gross: China selling long Treasuries ????
— Janus Capital (@JanusCapital) August 26, 2015
What If The "Crash" Is As Rigged As Everything Else?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/26/2015 07:51 -0500Take your pick - here's three good reasons to engineer a "crash" that benefits the few at the expense of the many.
Is Asia Set For Another Financial Crisis? Here's Goldman's Take
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/25/2015 21:20 -0500"Given the size of foreign holdings of Asian equity and debt, should foreigners reduce their portfolio holdings by 2-3% over the course of a month, it would broadly offset the region’s current account surpluses, leaving their external balances in a shakier position. During the 'taper tantrum' period, foreigners sold markedly more than 3% of their portfolio holdings through June and July 2013, highlighting the risk that portfolio outflows could cause further Asian currency weakness."
China Devalues Yuan To Fresh 4-Year Lows, Arrests Top Securities Firm Exec As Stocks Slide Despite Rate Cuts
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/25/2015 21:17 -0500Update: Chinese Police arrested managing director Xu Gang of China's No.1 brokerage CITIC Securities
The Asia morning begins mixed in stock markets, The PBOC explains itself "this is not a shift in monetary policy," - except it is the first such set of measures since 2008, further deleveraging as China margin debt drops CNY1 Trillion from June peak to lowest since March, Regulators begin probing securities firms (and their malicious short sellers), Index futures trading fees will be raised and trading positions restricted. Stocks are limping only modestly higher (after the rate cuts) as Yuan is fixed at 6.4043 - the lowest since August 2011.
The Latest Currency War Entrant: India Warns May Retaliate To Chinese Devaluation
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/25/2015 19:30 -0500Although we've talked plenty about the impact of the yuan deval on Asia-Pac and LatAm, we haven’t yet mentioned India where yesterday, in the midst of the turmoil, central bank governor Raghuram Rajan sought to calm nervous markets by reassuring the world that India is not, for now anyway, in any danger thanks to ample FX reserves and a low CA.Be that as it may, economic realities are economic realities and a currency war is a currency war, which is why, we suppose, the Indian government’s chief economic advisor Arvind Subramanian thinks the country might just have to hit back.
Devaluation Stunner: China Has Dumped $100 Billion In Treasurys In The Past Two Weeks
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/25/2015 19:18 -0500... in the past two weeks alone China has sold a gargantuan $106 (and over) billion in US paper just as a result of the change in the currency regime!
Is China Quietly Targeting A 20% Devaluation?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/25/2015 18:08 -0500"Some Chinese agencies involved in economic affairs have begun to assume in their research that the yuan will weaken to 7 to the dollar by the end of the year, said people familiar with the matter. [Their] projections suggest a depreciation of more than 8 percent by Dec. 31 and about 20 percent by the end of 2016."


