Turkey
10 Year Bond Shakedown Continues: Rate Hits 2.873%
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/19/2013 06:03 -0500- 10 Year Bond
- Alan Greenspan
- Bad Bank
- Bank of America
- Bank of America
- Bank of England
- Bill Gross
- BOE
- Bond
- Borrowing Costs
- CDS
- Central Banks
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Copper
- Credit Conditions
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- European Central Bank
- European Union
- Eurozone
- fixed
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Greece
- headlines
- Ireland
- Janet Yellen
- Jim Reid
- Monetary Policy
- New York Times
- Nikkei
- Portugal
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- recovery
- Repo Market
- SocGen
- Testimony
- Trade Balance
- Trade Deficit
- Turkey
- Volatility
- Wall Street Journal

It's all about rates this largely newsless morning, which have continued their march wider all night, and moments ago rose to 2.873% - a fresh 2 year wide and meaning that neither Gross, nor the bond market, is nowhere near tweeted out. As DB confirms, US treasuries are front and center of mind at the moment.... the 10yr UST yield is up another 4bp at a fresh two year high of 2.87% in Tokyo trading, adding to last week’s 20bp selloff. As it currently stands, 10yr yields are up by more than 120bp from the YTD lows in early May and more than 80bp higher since Bernanke’s now infamous JEC testimony. We should also note that the recent US rates selloff has been accompanied by a rapid steepening in the rate curve. Indeed, the 2s/10s curve is at a 2 year high of 250bp and the 2s/30s and 2s/5s are also at close to their highest level in two years.
Physical Gold Demand Surges 53% In Q2, Total Supply Down 6% - Price Falls 35%
Submitted by GoldCore on 08/15/2013 08:35 -0500The latest World Gold Council Gold Demand Trends report, which covers the period April-June 2013, confirms again how recent falls in the gold price were due to speculators selling paper gold rather than a decline in actual demand for physical gold.
It highlights, once again, that the price falls have generated significant increases in demand, most notably from store of wealth, jewelry, bullion coin and bar buyers in Turkey, Dubai and the Middle East, Vietnam, India, China and the rest of Asia.
Meanwhile speculators, primarily banks and hedge funds, exited their positions in the gold ETFs and futures markets. This led to liquidations of just 402 tonnes of ETF gold worth only $18.3 billion.
The Summer Doldrums Are Upon Us
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/06/2013 05:55 -0500- Australia
- Bloomberg News
- BLS
- Bond
- China
- Copper
- Crude
- European Union
- Eurozone
- Fannie Mae
- Fisher
- Freddie Mac
- Gilts
- headlines
- Housing Market
- Iraq
- Italy
- Jim Reid
- Monetary Policy
- Nikkei
- Non-manufacturing ISM
- President Obama
- RANSquawk
- Standard Chartered
- Tax Fraud
- Trade Balance
- Turkey
- World Gold Council
- Yuan
The summer doldrums continue. Overnight news included an expected 25 bps rate cut in Australia to a new record low of 2.50%, although the statement surprised by not retaining its expected dovish outlook. Perhaps this is due to the PBOC finally folding and despite raging for weeks that it was dead serious about its tightening experiment, injected another CNY12 billion in its banks via 7-day reverse repos at 4.0% compared to the previous, July 30 CNY14 billion 7 day injection at 4.40%. The Chinese central bank came, saw, and didn't like what it found in the Chinese interbank liquidity situation. Whether and how this will change the Politburo's reform agenda, and whether the provided liquidity will do much if anything, remains to be seen. Elsewhere, in Europe, German factory orders soared 3.8% on expectations of +1.0%, however all driven by Paris airshow orders which boosted bulk orders, and without which orders would have fallen -0.7%. The UK upward momentum continues with Industrial Production's turn now to soar to the highest since January 2011, while Italian GDP declined less than expected, dropping -0.2%, on expectations of a -0.4% slide. In other words Europe continues to rep and warrant that it does not need any assistance from the ECB despite a complete lock up in private lending and credit creation. Good luck with all that.
Is Egypt On The Verge Of Engineered Civil War?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 08/03/2013 18:35 -0500
When one examines the impending disaster in Egypt, it is important to avoid using a narrow lens and take into account the bigger picture. An Egyptian civil war will not ultimately be about Egypt. Rather, it will be about catalyzing the whole of the Middle East towards breakdown and drawing in larger nations in the process, including the United States. It will also be about triggering energy price increases designed to give cover to the collapse of the dollar's world reserve status. If globalists within our government and within central banks allow the dollar to die today, THEY will be blamed for the collapse that follows. THEY will be painted as the villains. But, if they can create a crisis large enough, that crisis becomes the scapegoat for all other tragedies, including dollar debasement. Egypt is just one of many regions in the world where such a crisis can be fabricated. Right now, it seems to be the most opportune choice for the elites.
LBMA Data: Beyond The Smoke And Mirrors
Submitted by GoldCore on 08/02/2013 06:52 -0500The LBMA clearing statistics therefore essentially represent huge daily trading through unallocated accounts, most of which is classified as spot delivery, but which is backed by very small physical metal foundations. The clearing statistics while interesting, need to be made more transparent and granular beyond the headline data. Otherwise they tend to obscure rather than illuminate.
As The Crisis Deepens, Gold Flows East - Epilogue
Submitted by GoldCore on 08/01/2013 06:47 -0500There is no doubting the massive reserves of fossil fuels still lying close to or just beneath the earth’s surface. One of the key points made in the first edition of Insight back in February is that we must factor in the cost of processing those fossil fuels before they can enter the energy market. The future of energy production is as much as about the economic cost of processing those supplies as it is about the extraction.
Dylan Grice On The Intrinsic Value Of Gold, And How Not To Be A Turkey
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/31/2013 18:23 -0500Today’s bizarre confluence of negative real interest rates, money printing, eurozone sovereign default, aberrant asset prices, high unemployment, political polarization, growing distrust… none of it was supposed to happen. It is the unintended consequence of past crisis-fighting campaigns, like a troupe of comedy firemen leaving behind them a bigger fire than the one they came to extinguish. What will be the unintended consequences of today’s firefighting? We shudder to think.
Guest Post: Egypt After Morsi
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/28/2013 11:02 -0500
With the bloodiest weekend since the ouster of Mubarak, it seems the supposed coup-less people's revolution appears to be edging ever closer to civil war. Egypt lies at the heart of the Arab revolution, even if the original spark occurred in Tunisia. But Egypt – with its strategic location, stable borders, large population, and ancient history – has been the principal power of the Arab world for centuries, defining the movement of history there like no other. This implies that the overthrow of Egypt’s democratically elected president, Mohamed Morsi, will have much broader repercussions. Europe's bloody revolutions of the 19th century changed the status quo forever and while the Arab world might not be so deeply affected, the near future there will certainly be neither peaceful nor stable.
Welcome To Jiangsu, China's Flashing Red Canary-In-The-Coalmine
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/26/2013 12:46 -0500
We've discussed Jiangsu before (dead pigs, TBTF Solar companies, and bird flu) but the Chinese province (that is big enough to be a Top 20 global economy with GDP greater than that of G-20 member Turkey and 79 million people) is on the brink of collapse under the weight of its own debt (cough Detroit cough). As China's leaders attempt to rein in over-capacity industries, tamp-down residential real-estate bubbles, and generally unwind "...the greatest misallocation of capital the world has ever seen, which was China’s 2009 stimulus," Jiangsu stands head-and-shoulders. With debt far higher than its peers, its mainstay industries (shipbuilding and solar panel manufacture) drowning in over-capacity, and massive 'empty' property developments now starved of funding, Jiangsu "can potentially pose a systemic and macro economic risk to the country."
Futures Fade For Second Day In A Row
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/26/2013 06:07 -0500- Abenomics
- Bank Lending Survey
- Barclays
- BLS
- BOE
- Bond
- BTFATH
- Central Banks
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- Consumer Prices
- Copper
- CPI
- Credit Suisse
- Crude
- Federal Reserve
- France
- Germany
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- headlines
- India
- Italy
- Janet Yellen
- Japan
- Kazakhstan
- M3
- Mexico
- Michigan
- Monetary Policy
- Nikkei
- Price Action
- RANSquawk
- recovery
- Testimony
- Turkey
- Ukraine
- Unemployment
- White House
For the second consecutive day futures have drifted lower following a drubbing in the Nikkei which was down nearly 3% to just above 14K (time to start talking about the failure of Abenomics again despite National CPI posting the first positive print of 0.2% in forever and rising at the fastest pace in 5 years) and the Shanghai Composite which dropped to just above 2000 once again, after PBOC governor Zhou saying that China has big economic downward pressure and further reiterated prudent monetary policy will be pursued. This is despite Hilsenrath's latest puff piece which pushed the market into the green in yesterday's last hour of trading and despite initial optimism which saw stocks open higher following forecast-beating EU earnings gradually easing and heading into the North American open stocks are now little changed. It may be up to the WSJ mouhtpiece to provide today's 3pm catalyst to BTFATH, or else it will be up to the circular and HFT-early released UMichigan confidence index to surge/plunge in order to push stocks on any red flashing news is good news.
Key Events And Market Issues In The Coming Week
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/22/2013 06:39 -0500With earnings season in full swing as some 20% of the S&P is expected to report, the quieter macro picture moves to the backburner especially with the Fed now silent for a long time. Looking at key central banks events, at the Turkey central bank meeting this week, Goldman expects that the bank is more likely to deliver a moderately hawkish “surprise” and hike the lending rate by 100bp to 7.5% (7.0% for primary dealers), and leave the key policy (1-week repo) and the borrowing rates unchanged at 4.5% and 3.5%, respectively. Among the other central bank meetings this week, benchmark rates are expected to remain unchanged in New Zealand, Philippines and Colombia, in line with consensus, while a 25bp cut is expected to be announced at the Hungary MPC meeting.
India Gold Imports To Rise 5% To Over 900 Tonnes In 2013
Submitted by GoldCore on 07/18/2013 08:39 -0500There’s a Madman at the Wheel… Someone Stop Him Before We Crash
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 07/16/2013 10:04 -0500At this point any sane person would scream, “STOP.” The driver is clearly a madman and shouldn’t be let anywhere near the driver’s seat. Moreover, he’s totally lost all credibility and isn’t to be trusted.
Inflation Is Too Low? Are You Kidding Us Bernanke?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/12/2013 19:05 -0500
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said this week that inflation in the United States needs to be higher. It almost seems as if Bernanke is trying to purposely hurt the middle class. But what Bernanke will never admit is that the official inflation rate is a total sham. The way that inflation is calculated has changed more than 20 times since 1978, and each time it has been changed the goal has been to make it appear to be lower than it actually is. If the rate of inflation was still calculated the way that it was back in 1980, it would be about 8 percent right now and everyone would be screaming about the fact that inflation is way too high...
Bernanke Sends Stocks To New All-Time Highs
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 07/11/2013 06:02 -0500The only story this morning remains Bernanke's after hours speech, which solidly trumped the FOMC minutes in market impact, and which, in addition to ramping US equity futures to just about new all time highs, sent the EURUSD soaring by almost the same amount (+300 pips) as the actual QE1 announcement on March 18, 2009. Such is the power of verbal currency warfare, when Bernanke hasn't acutally done anything and merely hinted the Fed is as confused as ever about what to do. Of course, as Commerzbank notes this morning, the U.S. economy would have to lose a lot of momentum for the Fed to cancel tapering, and the central bank would only expand the purchase program if the economy collapses, but none of that matters to the "wealth effect" for the 1% where economic destruction simply means more wealth.





