This page has been archived and commenting is disabled.

Tyler Durden's picture

Loans Versus Bonds Relative Value: Week of June 18





The toxic grabfest is ending. This is best seen by the inversion in the secured/unsecured classes. While the loan universe moved 9 bps tighter over last week, the slow HY bus is still trying to load up on those Neiman Marcus bonds, hoping to see this piece of paper get taken out at par. Here's a hint - it won't.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

RIEF Outperforms S&P by 2.06% MTD, RIFF Plunges





The high/low beta stratification seems to have finally worked out for RIEF, although likely too late as anxious investors have said "basta", and also just in time to watch RIFF get annihilated with a -7.79% absolute (ly disastrous) performance MTD. No surprise all fees there have been waived. At this rate of decline the "Futures" Fund certainly has no future. How a "slow-trading, global futures and forwards fund" can lose money in this environment when even Joe Sixpack's makeshift garage quant operation has realized the pattern is to buy futures all day and sell them at 3:59:59 is simply beyond comprehension.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Daily Highlights: 6.22.09





  • Asian stocks rose, led by automakers and financial companies,
  • European Central Bank’s Ewald Nowotny said the bank is likely to keep interest rates steady.
  • European stocks fell as the World Bank said the global recession will be deeper than it predicted in March
  • Federal Reserve is considering creating a utility to replace the Wall Street banks that handle US repo market transactions.
  • German business confidence increases in June, signaling an end in recession.
  • Unemployment and consumer debt are reducing home ownership by would-be buyers.
  • US airlines get thumbs down from frequent travelers.
  • World Bank predicted that the global economy will shrink 2.9% this year.
  • Carlsberg A/S is close to selling its brewery in Braunschweig, Germany.
 
Tyler Durden's picture

Frontrunning: June 22





  • Wallgreen's conference call: Consumers shopping closer to payday, saving more, using less credit
  • Insiders apparently don't watch CNBC, don't smoke greenery, as they sell shares at fastest pace in two years (Bloomberg)
  • The truth - Nobody has any idea what is going on: World Bank, Roubini see pain, IMF, Soros see recovery (Bloomberg and WSJ)
  • And... World Bank cautions against recovery talk - does this mean 10 year sabbatical for CNBC (Telegraph)
  • Once a $250 billion company, Nortel set to generate less than $2 billion for its assets in liquidation (WSJ)
 
Tyler Durden's picture

The Fledgling Conflicts Of Interest At The Nouveau Rating Agencies





A lot has been said recently over the much-maligned traditional rating agencies: S&P and Moody's. The rampant conflicts of interest over the past decade which everyone on Wall Street was all too aware of, somehow were a shock to politicians such as Barney Frank. In fact these very conflicts have been proposed to be the root of the credit and mortgage crisis (one can see how that is not a futile argument: if an excel workbook crashes your PC if you try to assume declining housing prices someone should have raised a red flag somewhere). Of course, that is a naive conclusion but not entirely without merit. In fact, odds are that the next time the market swoons by 40-60%, Barney Frank will refocus populist anger at exactly these rating agencies which have so far managed to escape relatively unscathed.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Filings Disclose Goldman Sachs' AIG Collateral Demands Were Reason For AIG Implosion





Bloomberg out with an article disclosing what every "tinfoil" hat wearer has known for a long time, namely that it was precisely Goldman's collateral extractions out of AIG that were the cause for the firm's collapse, and the ensuing financial catastrophe that to this day has been propped up only thanks to the US government's backstop of nearly $10 trillion in various worthless assets.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

PIMCO Does Not Believe In Relative Value





In the accompanying presentation, it is easy to see why Bill Gross' PIMCO is highly bullish on credit of any variety. As the table below demonstrates, taken straight out of the biggest bond fund's May 2009 presentation "Investing for the Journey and the Destination: What it means across the Capital Structure" PIMCO doesn't see any overvalued instruments in the credit realm: MBS, IG, EM and HY/Loans all have wonderfully green and positive metrics in the valuation column.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

On The Uselessness Of LIBOR





Most financial experts are aware that the only reason the economy has not yet collapsed entirely, is due to the trillions in governmental safeguards and industrial subsidies. Zero Hedge has written extensively on the topic, and it is nowhere more obvious than here, that virtually the entire financial system is backstopped by explicit and implicit guarantees. And in true pro-cyclical fashion, the expectation for permanent governmental crutches can be best seen in some of the same metrics that in the post-Lehman days markedly went off the charts, most notably the LIBOR rate.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Sunday Readings





 
Tyler Durden's picture

Barack Obama Chimes In On Coercive Government Actions, Quotes MLK





"The Iranian government must understand that the world is watching. We mourn each and every innocent life that is lost. We call on the Iranian government to stop all violent and unjust actions against its own people. The universal rights to assembly and free speech must be respected, and the United States stands with all who seek to exercise those rights.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Treasuries Still At Negative Repo Rates





Lots of queries lately as to why 10 years (and other bonds on the curve) are still at markedly negative repo rates: i.e. the phenomenon of negative interest for lenders. This is an interesting topic which I will touch on again soon, especially with recently implemented 300 bps fees for delivery fails. Across The Curve has discussed this issue recently and I point to his post for a good primer. An even better primer is straight out of the New York Fed "Repurchase Agreements with Negative Interest Rates." Recommended Sunday reading.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Saturday Readings





  • Steve Jobs had a liver transplant 2 months ago (WSJ)
  • Iran's political turmoil creates dilemma for Obama at home and overseas (Bloomberg)
  • Cutting the Gordian Knot of GE Theory (AxiomaticEconomics)
  • The Plaza stirs with 30 For Sale listings for a total of $250 million (NYT)
  • Fear the dark side of China's lending spree (Caijing)
 
Tyler Durden's picture

TGI Failure Friday: One North Carolina, One Georgia Bank, One Kansas Failure





For the 4 people who are still keeping track of the complete failure that is our banking industry, today the FDIC closed down three more banks. This is what - 40, 50, 60? banks that have failed year to date. I used to keep track few months ago. Now, not so much.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

TGI Failure Friday: One North Carolina, One Georgia Bank, One Kansas Failure





For the 4 people who are still keeping track of the complete failure that is our banking industry, today the FDIC closed down three more banks. This is what - 40, 50, 60? banks that have failed year to date. I used to keep track few months ago. Now, not so much.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Goldman Sachs Principal Transactions Update: 631 Million Shares





 

Latest NYSE Program Trading data out. Program Trading volume continues to decline, with 3.4 billion shares traded, down 700 million from the week before.

 
Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!