Yen
With American Markets Shut For Second Day, China And Japan Come To Its Rescue
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/30/2012 06:25 -0500
With the stock markets of the "developed world" in limbo for the second straight day and leaderless as New York is paralyzed, and the US was set to be closed for a second straight day, and with futures tumbling to their lowest level in over 2 months overnight, it was time for the East to step up. And step up it did! First, it was China's turn, which while still refusing to ease outright, conducted a massive 395 billion yuan reverse repo - this operation is the biggest on record, according to Bloomberg data going back to 2004, which in turn sent China's seven-day Repo rate plunging the most since January. And because this whopping injection would prove to be promptly internalized, a few short hours later Japan followed with nothing less than QE9! Just around 2 am eastern, the BOJ announced the 9th installment in its neverending monetary farce, when it said it would proceed to monetize an additional Y11 trillion in assets. From BusinessWeek: "The BOJ expanded its asset-purchase program by 11 trillion yen ($138 billion) to 66 trillion yen, the central bank said after a policy meeting today. The range of forecasts in a Bloomberg survey was from 10 trillion yen to 20 trillion yen." Of course, in this bizarro world in which intervention is the only thing left, the latest Japanese QE had an immediate and opposite effect of that planned, sending the USDJPY lower the second it was announced, as the amount announced was disappointing to most who had expected even more easing, and the halflife was for the first time in recorded monetary intervention history, absolute zero! But at least this failed intervention for Japan, helped America, sending ES from 1393, a full 13 ticks higher, where they are now. And so the epic defense of 1400 (and 1.2900 in EURUSD) continues for a 5th straight day!
How Central Bank Policy Impacts Asset Prices Part 3: FX
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/29/2012 13:41 -0500
The actions of the world's central banks, from driving rates to the limit or beyond ZIRP into the unconventional moeny-printing (or more acquiescent QE), there is little doubt that the currency wars are under way. As SocGen notes, the spillovers from advanced economies' actions (exporting inflation) into EM currency appreciation create subsequent needs for EM bank actions at times when inflationary concerns remain high. With the Yuan at 19 year highs and suffering from outflows, the potential for QE-based inflows this time could be welcome by the CCP.
Where Should Gold Be Based on Inflation?
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 10/29/2012 12:43 -0500So with world central banks printing paper money day and night it is no surprise that Gold is now emerging as the ultimate currency: one that cannot be printed. Indeed, Gold has broken out against ALL major world currencies in the last ten years. The below chart prices Gold in Dollars (Gold), Euros (Blue), Japanese Yen (Red) and Swiss Francs (Purple):
Frontrunning: October 29
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/29/2012 06:40 -0500- Markets Go Dark Ahead of Storm (WSJ, RTRS, BBG, FT)
- MF Global Problems Started Years Ago (WSJ)
- Major Greek daily reprints Swiss accounts list, editor who published list to go on trial for violating data privacy laws (RTRS)
- Coming soon to a USA near you: Hong Kong government imposes a property tax on overseas buyers (Bloomberg)
- The pain in Spain is endless: Spain’s Pain Seen Intensifying as Slump Deepens Plight (BBG)
- Las Vegas Sands Discusses Possible Settlement With Justice Department (WSJ)
- Why Does the SEC Protect Banks’ Dirty Secrets? (BBG)
- Honda slashes forecast on China territorial spat (AFP)
- UBS shares jump on expected radical overhaul (Reuters) ...so if UBS cuts 150% of workforce, shares will hit +?
- CEOs Seeking Global Range Tilts Market to 8,000-Mile Jets (Bloomberg)
Thank GDP It’s Friday – AAPL on Sale for 10x Earnings!
Submitted by ilene on 10/26/2012 11:32 -0500That's another $190.1 Bn available to spend on IPad Minis and IPhone 5s in the Appleconomy!
Terrible Start to Tuesday – Will Apple Save the Day?
Submitted by ilene on 10/23/2012 13:54 -0500Watching the 3000 line on the Nasdaq, and AAPL.
Japanese Government Demands BOJ Do QE 9 One Month After Failed QE 8
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/22/2012 18:06 -0500
Almost exactly a month ago, the BOJ surprised most analysts with an unexpected increase in its asset purchase agreement by JPY10 trillion bringing the total to JPY80 trillion. There was one small problem though: the entire impact of the additional easing fizzled in under half a day, or 9 hours to be precise. This was, as Art Cashin summarized the following day, Japan's failed QE 8. It is now a month later, and with nothing changed in the global race to debase status quo, the time has come for the BOJ to attempt QE 9. Or that's the case at least according to the toothless Japanese government, which has formally demanded that Shirakawa do a nine-peat of what has been a flawed policy response for over 30 years now, this time with another JPY 20 trillion, or double the last month's intervention. Because according to Japanese Senkei, it is now Japan's turn to pull a Chuck Schumer and demand even mor-er eternity-er QE out of monetary authority of the endlessly deflating country. In reverting to the Moore's law of failed monetarism, we expect that a QE 9 out of Japan will have the same halflife as QE 8, if indeed the program size is double the last. At which point it will again fizzle.
Guest Post: Should Central Banks Cancel Government Debt?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2012 21:38 -0500- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- BOE
- Bond
- Budget Deficit
- Central Banks
- Debt Ceiling
- default
- Deficit Spending
- Excess Reserves
- Fail
- Federal Deficit
- Federal Reserve
- Fractional Reserve Banking
- Gilts
- Guest Post
- Housing Bubble
- Hyperinflation
- Ludwig von Mises
- Monetary Base
- Monetary Policy
- Monetization
- Money Supply
- Open Market Operations
- Purchasing Power
- Quantitative Easing
- Reality
- recovery
- Ron Paul
- Yen
Readers may recall that Ron Paul once surprised everyone with a seemingly very elegant proposal to bring the debt ceiling wrangle to a close. If you're all so worried about the federal deficit and the debt ceiling, so Paul asked, then why doesn't the treasury simply cancel the treasury bonds held by the Fed? After all, the Fed is a government organization as well, so it could well be argued that the government literally owes the money to itself. He even introduced a bill which if adopted, would have led to the cancellation of $1.6 trillion in federal debt held by the Fed. Of course the proposal was not really meant to be taken serious: rather, it was meant to highlight the absurdities of the modern-day monetary system. In a way, we would actually not necessarily be entirely inimical to the idea, for similar reasons Ron Paul had in mind: it would no doubt speed up the inevitable demise of the fiat money system. Control can be lost, and it usually happens only after a considerable period of time during which their interventions appear to have no ill effects if looked at only superficially: “Thus we learn….to be ignorant of political economy is to allow ourselves to be dazzled by the immediate effect of a phenomenon."
Guest Post: Japan And The Exhaustion Of Consumerism
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2012 10:48 -0500
What few seem willing to acknowledge is the solipsistic, narcissistic nature of this reliance on public display of consumerist fantasy for self-identity. All consumerist fashion is based on superficiality and self-indulgence, of course; but if we look at the energy, money and attention "invested" in fashion lifestyles in Japan, we might conclude it is strong evidence that there is plenty of "money and time to burn" in Japan. While that is certainly true, this reliance on consumerist excess for self-identity and pastime is also evidence of a deeply troubled economy and society. Young people have money and time to burn on outlandish costumes because few earn enough to have their own families or flats. They work part-time for low wages and live at home or in tiny one-room apartments. Few own cars because they 1) don't earn enough to support a car and 2) they're uninterested in acquiring status symbols or prestige signifiers. This is not just a generational shift: it reflects a realistic understanding that opportunities for secure, high-paying employment have diminished over the past 20 years. There are plenty of low-level jobs, but few with the guarantees that their parents took for granted.
Will We Hold It Wednesday? Dollar Dives to 79, Futures Flat
Submitted by ilene on 10/17/2012 13:30 -0500Playing in the market, with Phil.
Guest Post: The Future of America Is Japan: Runaway Deficits, Runaway Debts
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/15/2012 10:24 -0500
If you want to know how the Keynesian Cargo Cult's grand experiment in borrowing money to fund bloated fiefdoms, rapacious cartels and bridges to nowhere ends, just look west (from California) to Japan. The Japanese State, partly because they seem to believe in the Cargo Cult, and partly to avoid exposing the insolvency of their crony-capitalist financial sector, has been borrowing and spending money on a vast scale for two decades. Rather than face the fraud and corruption at the heart of American (and Japanese) finance and governance, the Keynesians just want to leave the predatory, parasitic crony-capitalist Status Quo intact and create an illusory world of bogus "demand" and grotesque malinvestment funded by ever-increasing debt. Does anyone seriously think this is the "road to recovery"? If you want a look at the fiscal future of the U.S., look west to Japan, a nation that sits precariously on a fiscal cliff a thousand feet high.
Forget China; Japan Is 'Taking Over' The World Again
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/15/2012 08:04 -0500
The Japanese Yen has been one of the strongest currencies among the developed nations of the world since the end of LTRO (up 6%). This strength (repatriation flows and or carry unwind?) combined with a dismal domestic economic growth environment appears to have pushed Japanese firms to spend spend spend for growth. The latest and greatest Softbank/Sprint deal will shift this year's Japanese corporate acquisition of foreign companies to near-record levels. As Bloomberg Briefs notes, this will be the country's largest overseas acquisition on record - exceeding Japan Tobacco's $19bn acquisition of the UK's Gallaher Group in 2007. However, this growth-buying-spree does not come cheap as ratings are under pressure and while LBO-style financing might make the deal 'cheap' at first, at some point the cycle will re-emerge; but for now - it appears the BoJ (who we are sure are watching intently) should maybe leave intervention off the table until Japan owns it all again and becomes even more too-bigger-to-fail.
Overnight Sentiment: Greek Euphoria
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/15/2012 06:14 -0500- American Express
- Bond
- Citigroup
- Consumer Confidence
- Copper
- CPI
- Czech
- Deutsche Bank
- France
- Germany
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Greece
- Housing Market
- Housing Starts
- Italy
- Market Sentiment
- Michigan
- Morgan Stanley
- NAHB
- net interest margin
- New Normal
- Philly Fed
- Portugal
- Real estate
- Reality
- recovery
- SocGen
- Unemployment
- Volatility
- Wells Fargo
- Yen
After starting the overnight trading at its lows, the EURUSD has once again seen the now traditional overnight levitation, this time with absolutely no economic news, in the process raising equity futures across the Atlantic, even as unfounded Chinese optimism for more liquidity has waned leading to the SHCOMP closing down 0.3%. Perhaps the most notable event in the quiet trading session so far has been the surge in 10 year Greek debt whose yield has tumbled to post-restructuring lows, driven by more and more hedge funds piling in to piggyback on Dan Loeb's recent public GGB purchase announcement (strength into which he has long since sold), and hopes that Greece will somehow see an Official Sector Initiative (OSI) to make recovery prospects for Private Investors more attractive: a capital impairment the ECB has said would happen only over its dead body. But in the new normal, facts and rules are for chumps, and only exist to be broken. More on this amusing stupidity here. Amusingly, this comes just as Greece’s Staikouras says the economy’s downward spiral is not over yet. But, again, who cares about fundamentals.
China, Japan, Taiwan and US: Four to Party in Diaoyutai
Submitted by EconMatters on 10/11/2012 17:00 -0500When push comes to shove, China still has the bigger gun over Japan on many other levels, and the U.S. most likely has to at least sit in the bed it’s made so far.
Non-Farm Friday – Finally Good News Can Be Good News Again
Submitted by ilene on 10/05/2012 15:02 -0500Good news, bad news, it doesn't matter. Making money on "news" requires knowing it first.





