Bond
The Coincidences Are Just Too Eerie: This Is The Last Time CCC Yields Were Here And Rising
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/13/2015 15:08 -0500When was the last time the same index was at precisely 17.24% and rising? The answer: the weekend Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy
JPM Takes The Axe To iPhone Sales Estimates, Says Consensus Is 10% Too High
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/13/2015 12:26 -0500"1Q16 bears potential downside risks, while 2Q16 Street estimates seem unrealistic: TSMC saw 10% order cuts in November, which we believe is from Apple business with the impact during the end of 1Q16 or early 2Q. We believe 45-50mn is a more reasonable target. We expect to see meaningful stock price corrections for Apple supply chain names in 1Q16 with lowered Street expectations and disappointing Apple sell-through numbers."
Peter Schiff Exposes The Real Problem Facing The Fed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/13/2015 10:30 -0500The real problem for the Fed will be how foolish it will look if it does raise by 25 basis points and is then forced by a slowing economy to lower rates back to zero soon after liftoff. At that point, the markets should finally understand that the Fed is powerless to get out of the stimulus trap it has created. But it looks like the Fed would rather look foolish later when it's forced to cut rates, than look foolish now by not raising them at all. The Fed’s rocket to nowhere will hover above the launch pad for a considerable period of time before ultimately falling back down to Earth.
The Eerie Echo Of 2007: It Really Is Bear Stearns, All Over Again
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/13/2015 10:19 -0500In a supreme twist of irony, Bear Stearns is back - maybe not the firm itself - but the people who were in charge of its distressed and junk bond trading group, and just like the summer of 2007, it is an ex "Bear"-run hedge fund that was the first to gate, just as the credit cycle is turning and the default cycle has begun, as we explained last week, just one day before everyone's attention finally focused on junk debt.
December 16, 2015 - When The End Of The Bubble Begins
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/12/2015 21:00 -0500
Can the third great bubble of this century survive a Fed that finally wants to get off the zero bound after its way too late, but can’t do it anyway without a massive crash inducing cash drain from Wall Street? And in the teeth of the next recession to boot? Yes, the end of the bubble does begin on December 16th.
Market Panics As "China's Warren Buffett" Detained In "Richter Scale 9 Event"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/12/2015 14:00 -0500China’s sweeping crackdown on sellers, “manipulators”, frontrunners, financial journalists and anyone else “suspected” of acting in such a way as to sow fear and uncertainty in the wake of the dramatic meltdown in Chinese equities that unfolded over the summer has ensnared money managers, high profile executives, and government officials alike. Earlier this week, it reached a crescendo with the disappearance of Guo Guangchang, known to some as “China’s Warren Buffett. We now have a bit more in the way of color regarding Guo’s detention and sure enough, he’s being “held in connection with an investigation.”
Morons At The Precipice
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/12/2015 13:25 -0500Seven years of zero rates, massive monetary inflation and incessant market backstopping have desensitized and anesthetized. Rational thought ultimately succumbed to "perpetual money machine" quackery. And now all of this greatly increases vulnerability to destabilizing market dislocations, as senses are restored and nerves awakened. "A lot of this looks like late 2007 or early 2008," warns one manager, but today, market mispricing is systemic and global – virtually all securities classes at home and abroad.
3 Signs We've Reached 'The Top' In The Financial System
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/11/2015 19:00 -0500Duh. It was so obvious looking back. This is not a consequence-free environment... it’s time to find safety.
Stocks Slammed To Worst Week Since Black Monday Amid Crude & Credit Carnage
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/11/2015 16:35 -0500Weekend Reading: Risk - That Is All
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/11/2015 16:30 -0500While the world patiently waits for Janet Yellen to raise interest rates this month, the markets have been unable to decide as of yet whether such an event is good or bad thing.
These Are The World's Most Actively Traded Distressed Bonds
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/11/2015 14:17 -0500The table below lists the bonds with the largest one-day volume among those that traded yesterday on TRACE at a spread of 1,000 basis points or more than their government benchmark.
Turkey Is Tanking - Lira Plunges Most In 6 Months; Stocks, Bonds Hammered
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/11/2015 13:18 -0500While one could take their pick of bloodbathery today, Turkey seemed like an appropriate place to focus as its bond yields are exploding higher, currency collapsing, and stocks plunging to the lowest since March 2014. How long before Erdogan decrees all of this impossible and fires another 'dependent' central banker?
Junk Bond Prices Tumble To 2009 Levels
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/11/2015 11:42 -0500With the biggest single-day drop in over 4 years, US High-Yield bond prices have collapsed to their lowest levels since July 2009. Crucially, it's not just energy companies as the painful illqiuidty has careened across the entire space, not helped by fund liquidations and the biggest outflows since August 2014.
Bail-Ins “Undermine Confidence” In Banks - Lead to Suicide of Pensioner
Submitted by GoldCore on 12/11/2015 11:36 -0500A tragic example of this was seen in Italy in recent days when a pensioner committed suicide after having his life savings wiped out in a bank bail-in. A pensioner from near Rome, hanged himself after his €100,000 (£72,000; $110,000) investment in Banca Etruria bonds were wiped out in a bail-in. A suicide note was left by the pensioner criticising the bank.
Goldman Takes Aim At This "Superstar" Bond Manager, Hinting He Could Be The Next "Third Avenue"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 12/11/2015 10:58 -0500"Templeton Global Bond ($100bn in total; $59bn in mutual funds) – BEN’s largest fixed income fund – has seen meaningful outflows YTD (-$7.6bn from retail; -13% annualized rate) and could persist given the deterioration in excess performance (-460bps vs. benchmark YTD)."




