Monetary Policy
Traders Are Buying The Other "Fed Policy Error" Hedge
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/19/2015 09:51 -0500What else do you buy when monetary policy failure concerns loom...
Global Markets Surge Overnight On Fed Minutes Optimism; ECB Minutes Set To Keep Rally Going
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/19/2015 06:55 -0500- 200 DMA
- Aussie
- Bond
- Carlyle
- China
- Continuing Claims
- Copper
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Dallas Fed
- Donald Trump
- Equity Markets
- Eurozone
- fixed
- France
- Germany
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- headlines
- Housing Starts
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- KKR
- Monetary Policy
- Natural Gas
- Nikkei
- Philly Fed
- Portugal
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- Recession
- Reuters
- Trade Balance
- Yen
While it is still unclear just why the FOMC Minutes which are said to have made a December liftoff "more likely" unleashed a dramatic market rally, one which sent both stocks and TSYs higher, the sentiment continued overnight, with both Asian stocks surging on the US momentum, as well as Europe, where the DAX gapped solidly above the 200 DMA as most European shares advanced, led by resources, travel stocks. U.S. futures continue their ramp higher, and at last check were another 8 points, or 0.4%, in the green. But if the Fed Minutes were enough to unleash the latest leg in this rally, than the ECB's own minutes due also today, should send futures back over 2100 without much difficult, regardless of their actual content.
Did Goldman Sachs Just Find The Smoking Gun In Today's FOMC Minutes?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/18/2015 21:45 -0500The market's reaction to today's FOMC Minutes was, to some, a little odd given the "December is on" hawkish narrative being sold to the public. Stocks rallied, longer-dated bonds rallied, gold managed gains, and the US Dollar sold off... not exactly the reaction one would expect from a 'hawkish' Fed statement. But there is one thing that would explain those moves... and it appears Goldman Sachs found it buried deep inside the 12 pages of Minutes...
RBS Lays Out 10 Key Points For 2016, Warns "Political Risk" Will "Break" QE-Infinity Equilibrium
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/18/2015 19:02 -0500"The equilibrium, for now, is QE infinity – but political risk could be the breaking point"...
FOMC Minutes Show Fed Is All-In For December Rate Hike (But Depends On Data)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/18/2015 14:04 -0500With everything red since the October 28th "hawkish" FOMC meeting - which greenlit a December rate hike and convinced the world that everything is awesome in America (well why else would The 'smart' Fed raise rates?) - today's minutes suggest an FOMC that is perhaps not quite as "whatever it takes" committed to a December liftoff...
- *FOMC MEMBERS WANTED TO CONVEY DEC. LIFTOFF MAY BE APPROPRIATE
- *SOME FED OFFICIALS: UNLIKELY LIFTOFF CONDITIONS MET BY DEC.
- *FED OFFICIALS SAID ACTUAL LIFTOFF DECISION TO DEPEND ON DATA
But bear in mind there is a lot of data between now and December 16th (including payrolls) and what if stocks drop? Pre-Minutes: 68% rate-hike odds, S&P Futs 2064, 10Y 2.28%, EURUSD 1.0640, Gold $1070, WTI $40.45
The Poisonous Cocktail Of Main Street Woes And Federal Reserve Liftoff
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/18/2015 09:36 -0500Sure, the stock market had a great October with the Dow Jones Industrial Average jumping by 8.5%, but the disconnect between Wall Street and Main Street is too stark to ignore, and the Federal Reserve is about to pop the easy-money financial bubble.
Global Stocks Tread Water After Two Consecutive Terrorist Scares; Oil Rises, Industrial Metals Tumble
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/18/2015 07:03 -0500- Bank of Japan
- Bloomberg News
- Bond
- Carlyle
- China
- Copper
- CPI
- Creditors
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Equity Markets
- European Central Bank
- Federal Reserve
- France
- Germany
- Glencore
- Greece
- headlines
- High Yield
- Housing Market
- Housing Starts
- India
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- LBO
- Monetary Policy
- Monsanto
- NAHB
- NASDAQ
- New Zealand
- Nikkei
- Price Action
- Recession
- Yield Curve
If this weekend's gruesome terrorist attack on Paris ended up being hugely bullish for stocks, then two subsequent events, a stadium-evacuation scare in Hannover (where Angela Merkel was supposed to be present) and a raid in north Paris which left several dead in the ongoing manhunt against the alleged ISIS mastermind, appear to have but some question into if not stocks then algos whether a rising wave of terrorist hatred across Europe is truly what central bankers need to unleash more QE. That said, we expect the current weakness to last only until the traditional USDJPY carry ramp pushes stocks traditionally higher.
The Fed's Failed Communication Strategy - More Than Half Of FedSpeak Is "Not Useful"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/17/2015 21:00 -0500Having recently shown The Fed to go 6 for 6 in a day of FedSpeak failures to spark animal spirits, it appears this is actually not so unusual for some members of The Fed. As WSJ found, when it comes to watching the Federal Reserve, it’s a good idea to keep an eye on Atlanta and San Francisco but for 9 of the policy-makers, economists rank their 'FedSpeak' as less than useful... with soon-to-be-replaced Kockerlakota the least useful Fed speaker of all...
Worst Economic Impact Still To Come, Fed's Fischer Warns As Dollar Soars To 12-Year Highs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/17/2015 11:28 -0500The Trade-Weighted US Dollar has risen almost 19% over the past 18 months - the fastest pace of increase on record - and is now at its highest level since 2003. As we noted previously, this is not unequivocally good for American corporate profits... and if you believe The Fed's Stan Fischer - the worst effects of this soaring exchange rate are yet to come... Most of the impact of exchange rate moves come after that first year. So we’re only just getting into the business end of the impact of the dollar’s strength on the US economy. And the Fed are about to hike?
Nomi Prins: Crony Capitalism & Corruption - An Entirely Rigged Political-Financial System
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/16/2015 19:30 -0500The notion of free markets, mechanisms where buyers and sellers can meet to exchange securities or various kinds of goods, in which each participant has access to the same information, is a fallacy. Transparency in trading across global financial markets is a fallacy. Not only are markets rigged by, and for, the biggest players, so is the entire political-financial system.
DoubleLine's Gundlach Warns "These Markets Are Falling Apart"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/16/2015 12:40 -0500The odds of a December rate hike have slipped in recent days from over 70% intraday to 64.0% today as, while economists remain convinced that rates will rise in December, traders appear a little less confident. One of the most outspoken - having doubted The Fed (and questioned the economy's ability to handle even a 25bps rate hike) since Spring - DoubleLine Capital co-founder Jeffrey Gundlach said on Sunday that the Fed may hesitate to raise rates given rocky economic and financial conditions making it clear, as Reuters reports, "certainly [a Fed] No-Go is more likely than most people think. These markets are falling apart."
Stocks Jump On Hope For More Central Bank Intervention After Japan's Quintuple Recession, Syrian Strikes
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/16/2015 07:03 -0500- Belgium
- Bond
- British Pound
- Central Banks
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Consumer Sentiment
- Copper
- CPI
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Eurozone
- Flight to Safety
- Foreclosures
- France
- Germany
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- headlines
- Housing Market
- Housing Starts
- Italy
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Leading Economic Indicators
- Market Manipulation
- Middle East
- Monetary Policy
- NAHB
- Neo-Keynesian
- Nikkei
- North Korea
- Philly Fed
- Recession
- Trade Balance
- Turkey
- Volatility
- Yen
As so often happens in these upside down days, was the best thing that could happen to the market, because another economic slowdown means the BOJ, even without sellers of JGBs, will have no choice but to expand its "stimulus" program (the same one that led Japan to its current predicament of course) and buy up if not government bonds, then corporate bonds, more ETFs (of which it already own 50%) and ultimately stocks. Because there is nothing better for the richest asset owners than total economic collapse.
Goldman Assesses EM's "Original Debt Sin," Finds Burnt Turkey
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/15/2015 16:16 -0500The Bubble Finance Cycle - What Our Keynesian School Marm Doesn't Get, Part 2
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/15/2015 14:35 -0500Greenspan’s phony disinflation success led to the Fed’s embrace of fully mobilized and massively intrusive monetary policy in the guise of the Great Moderation and the wealth effects theory of financial asset levitation. In due course, Greenspan’s self-aggrandizing but purely experimental forays of massive central bank intrusion in the financial markets were supplanted by the hard-core Keynesian model of Bernanke and Yellen. Alas, they operated under the grand illusion that a domestic wage and price spiral would tell them when the domestic GDP bathtub was filled to the full employment brim, and therefore when to lift their foot from the monetary accelerator. It never happened, and they never did. The era of Lite Touch monetary policy was by now ancient history.
Mid-East Stocks, US Futures Slide As Goldman Warns Of Paris Attacks' Negative Implications For Markets
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 11/15/2015 13:30 -0500Following the weakness in the few minutes of after-hours trading on Friday's US session that overlapped with the first headlines from France, we are getting a first glimpse at the posible fallout from the Paris terror attacks. The Middle Eastern stock markets tumbled significantly with Saudi Arabia's Tadawul All Share index down 3% (biggest drop in 3 months) to its lowest since December 2012, and Dubai's FMG Index plunged 3.7% to its lowest since 2014. Short-run implication for the equity market is likely to be negative according to Goldman, with a notably higher risk premium regarding uncertainties about the medium-term political implications.



