fixed
"Shadow Convexity" Means The Death Of Modern Portfolio Theory
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2015 17:30 -0500The entire global financial system is leveraged to the 'Modern Portfolio Theory' concept that stocks and bonds are always anti-correlated. It is impossible to estimate how many trillions of dollars are managed according to the simple 60/40 mantras but let us just assume something north of $1.4 trillion and something south of "more money than God." However, the truth about the long-term (132-year) historical relationship between stocks and bonds is scary. The last three decades of extraordinary anti-correlation has been an era of falling rates, globalization, accommodative monetary policy, and very low volatility of CPI. With the global economy now at the zero bound, those days are over.
Swedish Nazi Creates "Accommodation Centers" For Refugees As Turkey Insists "We're Not A Concentration Camp"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2015 17:06 -0500Submitted for your consideration: 1) "A man from northern Sweden who has praised Adolf Hitler on Facebook and participated in Nazi demonstrations has answered a call from Sweden's Migration Agency for volunteers willing to offer accommodation to refugees," 2) "I said this to Merkel too. No one should expect Turkey to turn into a concentration camp where all the refugees stay in."
Morgan Stanley Q3 Earnings Crash, Revenues Miss By $1.2 Billion; Volatility And Burst Chinese Stock Bubble Blamed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2015 06:29 -0500While the big TBTF banks managed to hide much of their ugly balance sheet exposure, and prevent it from hitting the income statement in Q3 as reported previously, while covering up prop trading losses as well as they possibly could, the banks without trillions in deposits were less able to do so: first it was Jefferies, then Goldman posted its worst quarter in years, and now here comes the bank also known as Margin Stanley, which moments ago reported Q3 EPS of $0.34, which even if adjusted for various "one-time" items, at $0.48, not only missed consensus of $0.63 wildly, but it also missed the lowest range of the estimate range ($0.53-$0.70).
Futures Flat As Algos Can't Decide If Chinese "Good" Data Is Bad For Stocks, Or Just Meaningless
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/19/2015 05:58 -0500- Australia
- Bond
- Central Banks
- China
- Consumer Sentiment
- Copper
- CPI
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Deutsche Bank
- Equity Markets
- fixed
- Flattener
- General Electric
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- Global Economy
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- High Yield
- Housing Market
- Jim Reid
- Michigan
- Morgan Stanley
- NAHB
- Nikkei
- Reality
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- Trading Strategies
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- University Of Michigan
- Wells Fargo
The key overnight event was the much anticipated, goalseeked and completely fabricated Chinese economic data dump, which was both good and bad depending on who was asked: bad, in that at 6.9% it was below the government's 7.0% target and the lowest since Q1 2009, and thus hinting at "more stimulus" especially since industrial production (5.7%, Exp. 6.0%) and fixed spending also both missed; it was good because it beat expectations of 6.8% by the smallest possible increment, and set the tone for much of Europe's trading session, even if Asia shares ultimately closed largely in the red over skepticism over the authenticity of the GDP results. Worse, and confirming the global economy is now one massive circular reference, China accused the Fed's rate hike plans for slowing down its economy, which is ironic because the Fed accused China's economy for forcing it to delay its rate hike.
"Good News" - China GDP Beats Expectation Leaving Fed 'Relieved', Stocks Disappointed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/18/2015 21:16 -0500AsiaPac stocks were generally lower heading into the all-important Chinese macro data (S&P -6pts, Japan -0.7%, China -0.2%) as JPY erased Friday's ramp and crude dropped back below $47. The PBOC left the Onshore Yuan fix practically unchanged (following Friday's significant devaluation). Then the data hit... China GDP beat expectations (printing 6.9% YoY vs 6.8% exp) but is still the lowest growth since Q1 2009. Industrial Production missed (printing 5.7% YoY vs 6.0% exp). Retail Sales beat (10.9% YoY vs 10.8% exp). The initial reaction was kneejerk buying in USDJPY and stocks but that is fading as "good news" will relieve The Fed's angst over growth...
Goldman Sachs Fires Analysts For Cheating On "Compliance" Tests
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2015 10:55 -0500Just because no one has ever manipulated, fixed, or otherwise rigged any markets yet, doesn’t mean they won’t try, which why it’s nice to know that honest firms like Goldman are on the job when it comes to watching for any kind of nefarious shenanigans.
Buying Panic Fizzles As Option Expiration Looms
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/16/2015 05:54 -0500- Bond
- Carry Trade
- China
- Citigroup
- Cleveland Fed
- Consumer Sentiment
- Copper
- Core CPI
- CPI
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Eurozone
- fixed
- General Electric
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- headlines
- High Yield
- Honeywell
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Japan
- Jim Reid
- Market Share
- Michigan
- Middle East
- Monetary Policy
- NASDAQ
- New Zealand
- Nikkei
- NYMEX
- OpEx
- Philly Fed
- Turkey
- University Of Michigan
- Yen
- Yuan
In the absence of any key economic developments in the Asian trading session, Asian stocks traded mostly under the influence of the late, pre-opex US ramp momentum courtesy of another day of ugly economic data in the US (bad econ news is good news for liquidity addicts), closing solidly in the green across the board, led by China (+1.6%) and Japan (+1.1%) thanks in no small part to the latest tumble in the Yen carry trade, which mirrored a bout of USD overnight weakness. And since a major part of the risk on move yesterday was due to Ewald Nowotny's comments welcoming more QE, news from Eurostat that Eurozone CPI in September dropped -0.1% confirming Europe's deflation continues, should only be greeted with even more buying as it suggests further easing by the ECB is inevitable.
Oct 16 - Fed's Dudley: Uncertainty about China creates uncertainty about US outlook
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 10/15/2015 17:14 -0500News That Matters
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Goldman Suffers Terrible Quarter After FICC, Prop Trading Revenues Plunge; Banker Comp At Five Year Lows
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/15/2015 07:02 -0500Once again, Jefferies' one-month early glimpse at Wall Street trading revenues proved to be spot on. After the boutique mid-market banks reported a total collapse in fixed income trading revenues (which ended up negative following massive charge offs), everyone was looking at the biggest hedge fund among the TBTF banks - Goldman Sachs - to see just how bad the trading environment really is. The answer came moments ago, and the answer is bad. Very bad.
World's Largest Leveraged ETF Halts Orders, Citing "Liquidity Constraints"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/14/2015 22:39 -0500First The Bank of Japan destroyed the Japanese bond market, and then, back in May we warned that The Bank of Japan had 'broken' the stock market. Now, it appears the all too obvious consequences of being the sole provider of buying power in an antirely false market are coming home to roost as Nomura reports the "temporary suspension" of new orders for 3 leveraged ETFs - the largest in the world - citing "liquidity of the underlying Nikkei 225 futures market."
Oct 15 - US 10-year yields fall below 2% amid weak economic data
Submitted by Pivotfarm on 10/14/2015 16:57 -0500News That Matters
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A Desperate Sweden Looks To "Fix" Broken QE With Massive Muni Monetizing Madness
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/14/2015 11:00 -0500Way back in June we documented the “curious” case of Sweden’s broken QE and when we used the term “broken”, we didn’t just mean that inflation expectations weren’t moving higher. We meant that bond yields were rising as the adverse impact from the illiquidity "premium" surpassed the price appreciation benefit from frontrun central bank buying. Fast forward three months and Sweden looks set to “solve” the broken QE problem and by extension ensure it can stay in the currency war games by expanding the list of eligible assets to muni bonds.
Gold Jumps As China Devalues Yuan By Most In 2 Months, "Boosts Reforms" Of Corporate Bond Bubble
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/13/2015 21:35 -0500AsiaPac stocks are extending losses in early trading asit appears our fears about the Chinese coporate bond market bubble are also on the minds of Chinese regulators as they look to "boost reforms." After the PBOC has fixed the Yuan stronger for 8 straight days, the onshore and offshore Yuan has weakened appreciably in the last 24 hours and PBOC has devalued Yuan by 177pips - the biggest in 2 months (as PBOC researchers push to "speed up Yuan internationalization" and implicitly inclusion in the SDR basket).
'Socialist' Sanders Vs 'Crony' Clinton: First Democratic Debate Begins - Live Feed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/13/2015 19:52 -0500Admittedly it's not Mayweather-Pacquiao, but Las Vegas is buzzing ahead of tonight's rumble-in-the-jungle between Bernie and The Battle-axe. While Joe Biden remains the most notable absentee (or will he?) there are three other 'debaters' to carry water and towels for Hillary and Bernie as they drag one another left-er and left-er and more populist-er. In the pre-fight Sanders has lobbed some awkward Iraq War questions at 'hawkish' Hillary but as Clinton's 2008 campaign manager notes, "she's rolled out Latinos for Hillary, Women for Hillary, and met the leadership of Black Lives Matter; she has checked a lot of boxes walking into this debate."
HSBC Is Now "Highly Risk Averse" Amid Growth Worries, Loss Of Central Bank Put
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 10/13/2015 18:30 -0500A confluence of circumstances have conspired to make asset allocation a somewhat vexing task these days. The so called “tricky trinity” is comprised of the following three factors: decelerating global growth, the absence of a policy put, and risk premia offering but a limited buffer. For HSBC, this means "remaining highly risk averse" going forward.



