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Overnight Sentiment: Depressive Off, Manic On

Tyler Durden's picture




 

When it comes to sovereign bond issuance out of Europe the market either continues to be blissfully ignorant or is purposefully stupid: a few hours ago Spain sold €3.18 billion in 12 and 18 month bills, which was more than the expected €3 billion, and which, while coming at higher rates than before, set off a futures buying spark. What however has been pointed out over and over is that issuance of Bills that come due (by definition) within the LTRO's 3 year maturity is meaningless: all it does is concentrate and front-load maturity risk. After all what happens if and when the ECB were to ever not roll the LTRO forward? As such, the only true Spanish bond issuance test this week comes on Thursday when the country issues 10 year bonds. Everything else is merely designed to take advantage of a headline driven market. Specifically, Spain issued €2.09 billion in 364-day bills, which priced at an average yield of 2.623% vs 1.418% at auction on March 20, and at a 2.90 Bid to Cover compared to 2.14 previous. The yield on the second tranche, or €1.086 billion in 546-Day bills soared from 1.711% on March 20 to 3.11% as the Spanish curve again flattens, and despite the rise in Bid to Cover from 3.92 to 3.77, the internals were largely meaningless. Once again, when it comes to true paper demand, the only ones that matter are those that mature outside of the LTRO's 3 years. However today this sleight of hand has worked, and the Spanish 10 year is again under 6.00%, if only for a few hours, sending equity futures higher across the board. Elsewhere, proving once again that no other indicator is better at ramping up stocks, is the coincident indicator known as confidence, German Zew for April came in at 40.7 in April, much higher than expectations of 35, on what however we don't know: dropping markets, soaring inflation, or a return to a declining trendline. Even BofA noted that "There seems to be some disconnect between the latest releases of "hard data" (industrial production, orders received) and the investors expectations." Finally, the Royal Bank of India surprisingly cut its rate from 8.5% to 8.0%, as at least one country can not wait for Bernanke to do his sworn duty of CTRL-P'ing. Oh, and Japan, which has 1 qudrillion Yen in debt, promised to give the IMF $60 billion. So when Japan needs a bail out, we now know that Argentina will step up.

Full overnight data report from Bank of America:

Market action

Overnight, most Asian equity markets sold off for the second day in a row. Investors were worried about economic data that showed foreign direct investment into China fell for the fifth consecutive month. In addition, the region's investors are becoming increasingly nervous about Spain's borrowing costs, which broke through the 6% barrier yesterday. 

Overall, the MSCI Asia Pacific Index declined 0.5%. The worst-performing regional market was the Shanghai Composite, which fell 1.0%. The Korean Kospi shed 0.4% and the Hang Seng dropped 0.2%. Japan's Nikkei lost 0.1%. On the flip side, the Indian Sensex is up 1.2%.

In Europe, equities are enjoying a solid rally, up 1.0% in the aggregate, after Spain held an auction for T-bills where demand was strong. The true test comes this Thursday, when Spain tries auctioning off longer-term debt. At home, futures are pointing to a strong opening. The S&P 500 is set to open 0.6% higher.

The dollar is weakening against a basket of other major currencies. The DXY index is down 0.1%. Commodity prices are higher, with WTI crude oil trading 80 cents higher, at $103.74 a barrel, and gold up $1.08 an ounce, to $1,652.90.

Overseas data wrap-up

In a sign that global trade momentum is slowing, non-oil domestic exports from Singapore were weaker than expected in March, tumbling 16.8% mom. That was below consensus expectations of a 4.3% contraction. From a year ago, Singapore's exports are down 4.3%.

Inflation in the UK remains above the central bank's target, at 3.5% yoy, in March. That is up 0.1pp from February's rate and above market expectations for a flat reading this month. Despite a slowing economy and high unemployment rate in the UK, which should bring down the inflation rate, inflation remains sticky. In the short term, rising oil prices and fiscal austerity measures that increase indirect taxes, such as the VAT rate, have boosted consumer prices. Longer term, these measures will sap growth and put downward pressure on consumer prices.

In the Euro area, the inflation rate rose to 2.7% yoy in the final March release, up from the 2.6% rate recorded in preliminary report. This marks the fourth consecutive month that headline inflation in the Euro area has remained at 2.7%. Normally, when an economy is plagued by high and rising unemployment and a weak economic outlook (the Euro area is expected to contract 0.5% this year), inflation drifts lower. However, in the near term, the recent run up in energy prices and increases in indirect taxes, such as the VAT rate, have countered the primary drivers of inflation, keeping the inflation rate sticky. Looking ahead, we believe that the main macroeconomic drivers of inflation should pull the inflation rate down to 1.8% by the fourth quarter of this year.

Unexpectedly, the ZEW indicator of investor confidence increased in April. The current situation index for Germany rose to 40.7 in April (up from March's 37.6). The market was looking for a decline to 35.0. Investor's expectations rose for the fifth consecutive month, to 23.4, above expectations of a decline to 19.0. In March, the expectations stood at 22.3. Investors are especially bullish about the prospects of the chemical industry (including pharma), electronics and machinery, and construction. There seems to be some disconnect between the latest releases of "hard data" (industrial production, orders received) and the investors expectations. Soft surveys, such as today's ZEW, are more upbeat, while the hard data points to weaker growth.

Today's events

At 8:30 am, we will be sorting through the March Housing Starts and Permits report. We look for housing starts to increase to 705,000 in March. Building permits were up in February, which should translate into more starts. At 9:15 am, we expect industrial production to expand 0.3% MoM in March after coming in flat in February, taking the capacity utilization rate to 78.5%.

 

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Tue, 04/17/2012 - 07:11 | 2350837 Irish66
Irish66's picture

Japan, which has 1 qudrillion Yen in debt.......bullish

Tue, 04/17/2012 - 07:15 | 2350839 Ghordius
Ghordius's picture

"a few hours ago Spain sold €3.18 billion in 12 and 18 month bills, which was more than the expected €3 billion, and which, while coming at higher rates than before, set off a futures buying spark"

purpose accomplished, carry on. the media preparation bombardment was interesting, though

Tue, 04/17/2012 - 07:16 | 2350840 AUD
AUD's picture

the Royal Bank of India surprisingly cut its rate from 8.5% to 8.0%

Why surprisingly?

Tue, 04/17/2012 - 07:20 | 2350842 Ghordius
Ghordius's picture

"After all what happens if and when the ECB were to ever not roll the LTRO forward?" LOL, the chance of the ECB not rolling over a part of the LTRO is quite slim. The question is how much and at what rates.

Draghi and the ECB have created a very controlling instrument. It changes a lot in the "game", IMHO.

Tue, 04/17/2012 - 08:03 | 2350878 taraxias
taraxias's picture

I didn't junk you but I should have.

What's so controlling about conjuring money out of thin air and bailing insolvent banks and insolvent sovereigns?

It changed the game for a while, until the next dose of morphine is needed, and the next, and the next........The bad news is, what can not be sustained will not be sustained. Then they turn the planet into a killing field.

Wake the fuck up. You're either a paid shill (most likely) or a complete idiot to hold these criminals in such high regard when they are openly and blatantly perpertrating crimes against humanity.

Tue, 04/17/2012 - 08:22 | 2350909 Eugend66
Eugend66's picture

The ECB only holds USD and Gold, nothing else for sale. If the ECB must defend the EUR then what they will do, sell USDs for USTs or sell USD for Gold? Some of their (ECB) 'shopping' looks better now?

Tue, 04/17/2012 - 11:48 | 2351671 Ghordius
Ghordius's picture

peace, taraxas, junk away if you want - I don't get goodies for greenies. how can I possibly prove that I am commenting what I really think?

I do not consider the current monetary setup as evil. it's set up like a credit card, and governments are getting deep in red, yes.

is a credit card evil? or even a wife that can't resist using it until it breaks?

my musings are about "the next steps". currency wars are not straightforward, at a certain point you often have braking attempts - like the succesful one the USD had 1980 with Volcker jacking up rates to 18%-20%.

what I see with the LTRO is some planning for a future breaking attempt - with a novel focus on how and not necessarily when.

which brings the "control your banking system" factor in the equation - in a very european manner. we'll see...

Tue, 04/17/2012 - 07:24 | 2350845 orangegeek
orangegeek's picture

Elliott Wave counts show a bounce coming today.

Europe is up over 1% across the board today - US markets should do about the same.

 

http://bullandbearmash.com/index/nasdaq/hourly/

http://bullandbearmash.com/index/sp-500/hourly/

http://bullandbearmash.com/index/djia/hourly/

Tue, 04/17/2012 - 07:24 | 2350847 Mr Sir
Mr Sir's picture

The market forgets that Greece NEVER stopped issuing short term bills. Greece issued bills two weeks ago and at no point during their crisis were they not able to place 6 month or 1 yr bills because very simply (LTRO or not) bills are issued and right-sized to be taken down by domestic banks. The domestic banks need to roll their short term bills outstanding and they will always do so. Spain will ALWAYS be able to issue short term bills no matter what. This is not news. Any moron who bought Greek bonds 2 years ago on the back of Greece having just issued short term bills to their domestic banks eventually lost 80% of their money.  

Tue, 04/17/2012 - 07:24 | 2350849 Ghordius
Ghordius's picture

"...the fourth consecutive month that headline inflation in the Euro area has remained at 2.7%..."

It just reminds me that Ben Bernanke is worried he can't raise inflation expectations enough... perhaps he posts on ZH?

Tue, 04/17/2012 - 07:25 | 2350850 neevarp
neevarp's picture

Its the Reserve Bank of India (not royal bank of India).

 

Please edit the article to reflect the same..

Tue, 04/17/2012 - 07:31 | 2350855 Robslob
Robslob's picture

 

 

Details details neevarp...funny, Central Banks are destroying the world with useless Control-P units and you want someone to get their name right...lololololololol?

Tue, 04/17/2012 - 08:05 | 2350879 Levadiakos
Levadiakos's picture

he cant because you commented on it 

Tue, 04/17/2012 - 07:29 | 2350854 disabledvet
disabledvet's picture

"neither/nor." you've already explained it Tylers' Durden: "fixed market"...as all debt markets are of course. Governments are SUPPOSED to win...yes, yes?! Anywho "what a paltry amount." Wait 'till the Italian auctions...http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=W5D07c0dJuQ

Tue, 04/17/2012 - 07:34 | 2350857 HD
HD's picture

Bullish Lithium!

Tue, 04/17/2012 - 07:42 | 2350863 LeBalance
LeBalance's picture

what ZHer does not see the source of plenty?

just a snap of my old fingers and the game continues.

and does anyone wish to face to yawning gates of "game over?"

of course not.

game over is paying for the binge.

acknowledging the addiction.

 

the bank is buying everything.

there is no other source of funds.

everyone is complicit.

we are all high and we all do not want to stop being high.

 

oh *sure* there are *real* *funds* in play.

coming in from the *sidelines* annnnnnnyyyyyy minute.

s u r e.

r i g h t.

 

/Alien acid squid viper venom from Planet Satire drips into deep forest pools of blue in dark green forests./

/jungle jaguar barks his territory and opens her eyes.  Is it time to take their skins?/

 

/so many times a populace has been asked if it is truly suicidal.  Any each time it screams *yes.*/

Tue, 04/17/2012 - 08:40 | 2350976 Venerability
Venerability's picture

Tyler - I told you yesterday, based on Technical Analysis of Propaganda, the Eurozone Shorts had simply become too loud and too shrill, which tends to be a "tell."

On the very bright side, Princess Dennis's tirade against Gold Stocks means we are now in for a nice Gold Stock Rally, if the PM sector's proponents push just a teensy, eensy bit.

The XAU, HUI, and other PM indices are now at levels not seen since the construction of the Great Pyramid of Giza - or possibly, that day the Wheel Was Invented and Crimex could not stop it.

Tue, 04/17/2012 - 11:51 | 2351683 Ghordius
Ghordius's picture

priceless - please post more

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