Meltdown
Mark Cuban's Primer On HFT For Idiots
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/03/2014 20:40 -0500
High Frequency Trading (HFT) covers such a broad swathe of 'trading' and financial markets that Mark Cuban (yes, that Mark Cuban), who has been among the leading anti-HFT graft voices in the public realm, decided to put finger-to-keyboard to create an "idiots guide to HFT" as a starting point for broad discussion. With screens full of desperate "stocks aren't rigged" HFT defenders seemingly most confused about what HFT is and does, perhaps instead of 'idiots' a better term would be "practitioners."
What Happens After The Low-Hanging Fruit Has Been Picked?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/02/2014 09:30 -0500
One way to understand why the global financial meltdown occurred in 2008 and not in 2012 is all the oxygen in the room had been consumed. In the U.S. housing market, there was nobody left to buy an overpriced house with a no-document liar loan because everyone who was qualified to buy a McMansion in the middle of nowhere had already bought three and everyone who wasn't qualified had purchased a McMansion to flip with a liar loan. Once the pool of credulous buyers evaporated, the dominoes fell, eventually circling the globe. Right now China is at the top of the S-Curve, and the problems of stagnation are still ahead.
Japan Gives Residents All Clear To Return To Fukushima Disaster "Hot Zone"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/31/2014 10:54 -0500
As we reported last night, Japan's economy may once again be relapsing into a slowing phase, perversely well in advance of the dreaded sales-tax hike which many expect will catalyze Japan's collapse into another recession as happened the last time Japan had a tax hike, but that doesn't mean its population should be prevented from enjoying the heavily energized local atmosphere buzzing with the hope and promise of imminent paper-based "wealth effects" for those long the daily penNikkeistock rollercoaster.... and just as buzzing with copious gamma rays of course. Which is why for the first time in over three years, since Japan's Fukushima nuclear disaster, residents of a small district 20 km from the wrecked plant are about to be allowed to return home. Because if the honest Japanese government says it is safe, then so it must be.
Fed Needs To “Stress Test” Itself As Balance Sheet Balloons To $4.3 Trillion
Submitted by GoldCore on 03/29/2014 03:05 -0500The Federal Reserve is likely to suffer significant losses on its Treasury holdings once interest rates rise from historic lows. Indeed, the researchers at the San Francisco Fed have recently called for "stress tests" on the Fed itself. Fail to prepare ... prepare to ...
The Five-Year Fantasy Is Ending
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/18/2014 11:08 -0500
For five long years, we have pursued the fantasy that we could return to "growth" without having to fix or change anything. The core policy of the fantasy is the consensus of "serious economists," i.e. those accepted into the priesthood of PhD economists protected by academic tenure or state positions: what we suffered in 2009 was not the collapse of leveraged crony-state financialization but a temporary decline of "aggregate demand" and productive capacity. The five-year fantasy that free money would fix all the distortions and systemic problems is drawing to a close. Why can't the fantasy run forever? The two-word answer: diminishing returns. Handing out subprime auto loans works at first because it pulls demand forward: anyone who wants or needs a new car buys one now, rather than put the purchase off a year or two. Eventually the marginal buyers default and demand falls off, and the distortions cause an even greater collapse in demand and auto loan quality.
Guest Post: Why 2014 Is Beginning To Look A Lot Like 2008
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/12/2014 14:03 -0500- Alan Greenspan
- China
- Dow Jones Industrial Average
- ETC
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- Guest Post
- Head and Shoulders
- Housing Bubble
- Investor Sentiment
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- Martin Armstrong
- Meltdown
- Rate of Change
- Real estate
- recovery
- Shadow Banking
- St Louis Fed
- St. Louis Fed
- Technical Analysis
- Too Big To Fail
- Volatility
Does anything about 2014 remind you of 2008? The long lists of visible stress in the global financial system and the almost laughably hollow assurances that there are no bubbles, everything is under control, etc. etc. etc. certainly remind me of the late-2007-early 2008 period when the subprime mortgage meltdown was already visible and officialdom from Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan on down were mounting the bully pulpit at every opportunity to declare that there was no bubble in housing and the system was easily able to handle little things like defaulting mortgages. The party, once again, is clearly ending and raises the question: "If asset bubbles no longer boost full-time employment or incomes across the board, what is the broad-based, “social good” justification for inflating them?"
On the 3rd Anniversary of Fukushima, a Look Back at the Cover Up
Submitted by George Washington on 03/11/2014 14:57 -0500An ECONOMIC Expert – Rather than a NUCLEAR Expert – Briefed Japanese Prime Minister on Condition of Fukushima Reactors as the Disaster Unfolded ... Nuclear Regulatory Commission BLATANTLY Covered Up Significance of Fukushima
China Loan Creation Tumbles, Lowest Credit Growth In 20 Months
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/10/2014 10:39 -0500One month ago, when we last looked at the incredible amount of Chinese new loan issuance, a topic which even the mainstream media is slowly starting to circle in on as the primary source of hot money flow creation in the world, we found the highest loan notional issued by the country's semi-sovereign banks since 2009, and the largest one-month ever monthly total in the largest aggregated, Total Social Financial, series, which rose by an unprecedented CNY2.6 trillion, or over $400 billion in one month! That was just before the tremors surrounding first the potential defaults of several Chinese shadow-banking Trusts, and certainly before the first official corporate bond default which took place last week. Overnight, the PBOC released its latest, February, loan data. As expected, it reveals something else entirely.
Globalists Gas Game Theory
Submitted by Tim Knight from Slope of Hope on 03/09/2014 17:27 -0500I clearly have a very hard time reconciling a U.S. stock market making new all-time-highs almost daily, especially in the face of what most economists consider to be a weak domestic economy with negligible growth prospects. Moreover, when you layover the thoroughly stalled and certainly weaker overall global economic picture, it’s even harder to rationalize. Finally, throw into the mix the gravity of threatening geopolitical tensions between the U.S. and Russia, the two nations with the largest stockpiles of tactical nuclear weapons on earth, and the market actually welcomes it. Something majorly does not add up, well, to this Idiot anyways.
Guest Post: Understanding Why It Feels Different This Time
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/09/2014 15:03 -0500
There probably isn’t a more over-used phrase thrown across the media landscape than, “It’s different this time.” One can’t look at the financial markets, the political stage, and more without shaking ones head. Nothing seems to make sense. Yet if one wants to lazily answer, “It’s different this time.” Things become crystal clear. Water now seems to run uphill. The definition of words no longer mean what they once did. (we’re still marveling on what is – is) Free society means the loss of only a few freedoms per year, as opposed to everything at once. Work is a bad thing however, if someone else goes to work and pay for your things – then that’s good. You can keep your plan if you like your plan – but if we don’t like it – well – you can’t. The Federal Reserve would never monetize the debt – however if you’re a preferred dealer in the QE (quantitative easing) program – they’ll do it for you. These precarious times leave many scratching their heads. Expressed another way, When everyone is on the band wagon – except the band. You had better take notice.
Why Is Our Government (And Deep State) So Incompetent?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/06/2014 09:21 -0500
Though many may reckon the U.S. government (and its Deep State) are not so much incompetent as merely evil, we suggest incompetence sows the seeds of evil consequences. Why is our government so incompetent? Short answer: because incompetence has been fully institutionalized in every branch, every agency and every nook and cranny of the state.
GaveKal Answers "How Low Can The Renminbi Go"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/04/2014 19:28 -0500
How much farther will the RMB fall? At the outer limit, perhaps as low as 6.24, but probably much less. The reasoning is as follows. Right now the spot market is trading 0.4% weaker than the central parity. So without any further move by PBC to weaken the parity, the limit is 6.18. A move below that would require PBC to adjust the parity further downward. The biggest-ever downward adjustment in the parity was 685 pips, in May 2012. If the PBC matches that move (by adjusting the current parity down another 500 pips), the RMB could fall to 6.24.
The Greatest Propaganda Coup Of Our Time?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/01/2014 21:55 -0500- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank Run
- Bear Stearns
- Ben Bernanke
- Ben Bernanke
- Commercial Paper
- Commercial Real Estate
- Corporate America
- Countrywide
- CRAP
- Credit Default Swaps
- Crude
- Dean Baker
- default
- Dennis Kucinich
- Discount Window
- Fail
- Federal Reserve
- Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission
- Free Money
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Great Depression
- Gretchen Morgenson
- Hank Paulson
- Hank Paulson
- Henry Paulson
- Kucinich
- LBO
- Lehman
- Lehman Brothers
- Meltdown
- New York Times
- Nouriel
- Nouriel Roubini
- Real estate
- Recession
- St Louis Fed
- St. Louis Fed
- Student Loans
- TARP
- Testimony
- Timothy Geithner
- Ukraine
- Unemployment
There’s good propaganda and bad propaganda. Bad propaganda is generally crude, amateurish Judy Miller “mobile weapons lab-type” nonsense that figures that people are so stupid they’ll believe anything that appears in “the paper of record.” Good propaganda, on the other hand, uses factual, sometimes documented material in a coordinated campaign with the other major media to cobble-together a narrative that is credible, but false. The so called Fed’s transcripts, which were released last week, fall into the latter category... But while the conversations between the members are accurately recorded, they don’t tell the gist of the story or provide the context that’s needed to grasp the bigger picture. Instead, they’re used to portray the members of the Fed as affable, well-meaning bunglers who did the best they could in ‘very trying circumstances’. While this is effective propaganda, it’s basically a lie, mainly because it diverts attention from the Fed’s role in crashing the financial system, preventing the remedies that were needed from being implemented (nationalizing the giant Wall Street banks), and coercing Congress into approving gigantic, economy-killing bailouts which shifted trillions of dollars to insolvent financial institutions that should have been euthanized. What I’m saying is that the Fed’s transcripts are, perhaps, the greatest propaganda coup of our time.
Ukraine Bank Runs Could Soon Be Seen In EU And U.S.
Submitted by GoldCore on 02/28/2014 10:01 -0500"If you have physical gold or silver, you are in a golden position,” Celente said. Despite the many risks of today, Celente saw light at the end of the tunnel. He said that there are opportunities in “clean food”, breakthrough alternative energy, alternative medicine and in digital education and internet learning.







